Yuruken (Body Study Practice Group) Open Day
◆April 2023 Implementation
Schedule
Thursday, April 20, 2023, 11:00-16:00
Target
Professionally active dancers or actors/performers interested in physical expression
Fees Charge
3,000 yen
Capacity capacity (of boat, hall, aeroplane, airplane, etc.)
15 persons
Venue Venue
Dance Base Yokohama (https://dancebase.yokohama/main2/access)
KITANAKA BRICK&WHITE BRICK North 3F
5-57-2 Kitanaka-dori, Naka-ku, Yokohama City, Kanagawa Prefecture Minatomirai Line Bashamichi Station Exit 2a “Yokohama Kita Directly connected to “Yokohama Kitanaka Knot
How to apply/Inquiries
Please send an email to teita.iwabuchi@gmail.com.
Please pay the cost directly to Iwabuchi on the day of the event. We would appreciate it if you could keep the change.
◆Completed] February 2022 Implementation
Date] Wednesday, February 23, 2022
[Venue] Dance Base Yokohama
[Application] https://body-research0223.peatix.com
Schedule
Wednesday, February 23, 2022, 11:00-16:00
Target
Professionally active dancers or actors/performers interested in physical expression
Contents Contents
Share the training you are doing at the Physical Research and Training (YURUKEN)
Fees Charge
2,000 yen
Capacity capacity (of boat, hall, aeroplane, airplane, etc.)
10 persons
Venue Venue
Dance Base Yokohama (https://dancebase.yokohama/main2/access)
KITANAKA BRICK&WHITE BRICK North 3F
5-57-2 Kitanaka-dori, Naka-ku, Yokohama City, Kanagawa Prefecture Minatomirai Line Bashamichi Station Exit 2a “Yokohama Kita Directly connected to “Yokohama Kitanaka Knot
Application Application Method
Please register through DaBY Peatix ( https://body-research0223.peatix.com).
◆Lecturer Profile
Teita Iwabuchi
Teita Iwabuchi
(DaBY Choreographer in Residence)
DaBY Artist in Residence He majored in theater at Tamagawa University, where he also studied Japanese dance and butoh, and from 2007 to 2015 performed in butoh performances by the late Ko Murobushi, a deep influence that continues to this day. 2005: Began creating works focusing on “body structure” and “the interaction of the body with space and music. Since 2010, she has collaborated with musicians such as Nosei Otani and Shuta Hasunuma on collaborative works on the relationship between body and music. 2012, “Hetero” (co-choreographed by Kaori Seki) won the French Embassy Prize for Young Choreographers at the Yokohama Dance Collection EX 2012 and the French Centre National de Danse Contemporaine (CNDC). As his own method, he developed “Reticular Body,” an expressive methodology based on butoh and martial arts, utilizing Japanese body and sensitivity, and inspired by biology and brain science. Part-time lecturer at Tamagawa University and J. F. Oberlin University.