Workshops

Join in the fun at one of our workshops! This could be anything from tie-dye t-shirt making, monument building, hat making, or theatre.

If you have a talent for the extraordinary, we'd love to hear from you. Host your own session on anything from one-legged yoga to the fine art of sepak takraw, finger-puppetry, or opera.

Use the "ADD" button to add a new workshop, lend your expertise to an existing workshop, or simply indicate which workshops you'd like to participate in.


contact event director »

 
Creative Talents and Skills
Name Workshops Description
Bob Lukasik Mixed Media: Sand & Water With the information overload and all the left brain workouts we'll be having, some of you may be in the mood for a little right brain balancing act. Join me on the nearby beach to get tactile and create a large-scale sand sculpture installation (sand quality permitting, of course).

Liane Haig Kite-making Join us for an afternoon of kite-making. Using an array of materials and an assortment of bits and bobs, help us fill the sky with your creative and colourful flying contraptions.

Andre Matarazzo Let's read music For those who are not familiar with music notation, it can be pretty frightening looking at the pentagram with all its scattered notes. It really looks like a Klingonian language one takes decades to master. But in fact you can learn the basics in just 30 minutes right here on Stream and cancel your urge to utter: Wow, people who can read this are really really smart!.

Oliver Laubscher Contagious Werewolf Marathon Werewolf is a social game of accusations, lying, bluffing, second-guessing, assassination, and tribe hysteria.

David Rowan A participatory behavioural psychology experiment Be part of an experiment to replicate a project by US psychologist Dr Arthur Aron, which (if it works) will boost your social life in half an hour. And probably be a lof of fun.

Arnon Katz Diving into the collective unconscious with Tarot cards. Carl Jung was the first psychoanalyst to attach importance to tarot symbolism. He may have regarded the tarot cards as representing archetypes: fundamental types of persons or situations embedded in the collective unconscious of all human beings. We will learn and read together the Tarot cards and will try to explore our collective unconscious...

contact event director »