Do you want this account to represent:
individual
You need to be a member of dance-tech to add comments!
Comments are closed.
Do you want this account to represent:
individual
If you are representing an organization, what kind of organization?
other
First Name (Required: even if you are representing an organization you must use your name)
Annabel
Last Name (Family Name)
van Baren
About Me (human/individual)/interests, work..short bio/ THis is the most important. It is the only way to know that you are not a SPAMBOT!Be generous!
Annabel van Baren teaches at the University of Applied Sciences in Utrecht, the Netherlands, where she spreads the joys and finesses of English literature, language, and humour to future teachers of English. After receiving MA degrees in Gender Studies and English (cum laude) she was a post-graduate scholar at York University, Toronto and Roehampton University, London, UK. Her interests are everyday movements, ‘healthy’ vs. ‘unhealthy’ bodies, ‘mind over matter’, and the power of storytelling. These engagements result in various projects, both solo and collaborative. Annabel is experimenting with making sculptures founded on people’s personal narrations; in progress is a dance video series, in which several questions are investigated, such as “how to portray the feeling of sweaty palms?”; she is planning a documentary project on the ritualised aspects of daily movements, together with everyday-friend and visual anthropologist Domitilla Olivieri. Lastly, Annabel has collaborated as an external expert with the Dutch annual festival of contemporary dance and performance (Springdance) and she is excited about the book she’s translating and editing on contemporary Flemish theatre.
Occupation ( maximum of three):
Independent Educators (consultant/ instructors/ workshop leaders/ lecturers/ researchers)
English is the main language of this site, but let us know which language you would use in this network besides English:
Dutch, possibly some German or French and a pinch of Italian.
Comments
this is Marlon.
very interesting research!
welcome to the network!
I invite you to watch this podcast:
http://www.dance-tech.net/profiles/blog/show?id=1462368%3ABlogPost%...
or here:
http://dancetechnet.blip.tv/#824922
I think that there is an interesting and subtle articulation of the postmodern and the post-human body in her approach to training with the "Tunning Scores".
I would like to find more about this intersection,
cheers,
Marlon