faculty
explore advaya’s teachers

Explore advaya's faculty of teachers, scientists, practitioners, philosophers and storytellers, 
who share multidimensional, local and diverse 
narratives from across the world.

Bayo Akomolafe picture

Bayo Akomolafe

5 courses
Sophie Strand picture

Sophie Strand

3 courses
Satish Kumar picture

Satish Kumar

1 courses
Vandana Shiva picture

Vandana Shiva

6 courses
Veronica Strang picture

Veronica Strang

1 courses
Manda Scott picture

Manda Scott

2 courses
Beloved Sara Zaltash picture

Beloved Sara Zaltash

1 courses
David Abram picture

David Abram

2 courses
Dr Andreas Weber picture

Dr Andreas Weber

5 courses
David Whyte picture

David Whyte

1 courses
Helena Norberg-Hodge picture

Helena Norberg-Hodge

2 courses
Dr. Predrag Slijepcevic picture

Dr. Predrag Slijepcevic

1 courses
Charles Eisenstein picture

Charles Eisenstein

3 courses
Aisha Paris Smith picture

Aisha Paris Smith

2 courses
Brontë Velez picture

Brontë Velez

3 courses

Julia Adzuki

Julia Adzuki works with transformative processes across the fields of visual, relational, performance and sound art. Her embodied enquiry explores underlying frictions of the human-environmental crisis through the sensuous relation of inner and outer landscapes.

Born in 1980 in Beechworth Australia, Julia studied at Victorian College of the Arts, School of Arts in Tasmania and has an MA in Choreography & New Performance Practices from DOCH & Stockholm University of the Arts.

It was a curiosity with ephemeral sculpture that led her to the Swedish Arctic in 2002, where she worked with ice and snow for 7 years. There, in response to a sense of uprootedness, Adzuki made Root Shoes that turned her practice towards performance, film and the somatic movement practice Skinner Releasing.

Through the releasing process, in collaboration with people with deaf/blindness, Adzuki developed Resonant Bodies; an acoustic instrument from a hollow tree for experiencing the physicality of sound, that has toured art museums in Sweden as part of Kännbart exhibition.

In 2009 she founded SymbioLab together with Patrick Dallard, creating a mobile laboratory for experiential ecology and an ongoing touring project. Together they continue the work with tactile sound and in addressing environmental grief through the art of lament, in the Styx Valley of lutruwita Tasmania and in Sweden.