Capoeira News
Women’s Capoeira Encounter 2013
Jan 31st
The Women’s Capoeira Encounter 2013 is being organised by our very own Formanda Mariana Potiguara and UTS Capoeira Club. This event celebrates International Women’s Day (the 8th of March).
This yearly event promotes Capoeira for Women, introducing Capoeira as a sport and form of art to the Sydney community. Capoeiristas from different ages, backgrounds, groups and levels of Capoeira have the same intention for this event : to make new friends, share knowledge and experience, and to be inspired by each other.
Visit our Facebook page for more information about the event.
Mariana will be back on the 25th of August!
Aug 25th
Mariana will be back teaching the class this Saturday (as in 25th August – 11am)! It will be her first class to us as Formanda, which is exciting!
This should be a great class. Time to train hard and prepare as we start the final month before our 3rd Batizado.
Now that Mariana is back, she will also be offering some complimentary trial classes if you or your friends are interested in trying Capoeira.
Trial classes are scheduled for:
Thursday 30th of August, 2012 at 6:30pm (Newtown)
Saturday 1st of september, 2012 at 11:00am (UTS)
Tuesday 4th of september, 2012 at 6:30pm (UTS)
Look forward to seeing you in training!
Arrepiado
2010 Review
Feb 21st
For the UTS Capoeira Club 2010 has been mainly about the batizado & troca de cordão, i.e. the grading & changing of cords, which was held in October. This is a very important event in capoeira, as it gives all club members & capoeiristas a chance to get graded, change cords, and learn from their master and each other. This was the very first such event that the UTS Capoeira Club had organised, so it was a very special occasion for all of us.
Mestre Boneco, one of the best and most respected capoeiristas in the world, was invited especially from LA for this batizado. Leading up to the grading, he gave one week of intensive and informative workshops, in which most of the club members participated and learned a lot. Other guests from Sydney attended the grading, which was a great success.
A lot of work and effort was necessary to get this event set up, and organisation started already at the beginning of the year. Several fundraising parties were held, as well as a chocolate fundraising campaign. All club members helped in the organising and raising money to fund the batizado.
Other events throughout the year included several traditional “gincana” competitions, where new members are welcomed into the club and are given their white (or “raw”) cord, as well as a capoeira nickname. Many new beginners joined the UTS Capoeira Club in the course of the year.
To diversify the training some special training sessions were held at Five Dock Gymnasium. The focus of these training sessions was on acrobatic movements, such as back flips and somersaults. As the gym is equipped with professional gymnastics and acrobatics equipment these moves can be practised specifically there.
On a few occasions Professora Potiguara went overseas to take part in capoeira events and gradings in Brazil and the USA. Much knowledge and many new moves and techniques are always brought back from such events and are passed on the club members.
The club also represented well at the UTS Open day, amazing the crowds with their energy, enthusiasm and spectacular performance.
Until the next update…Axe!
Cientista
Batizado
Nov 18th
Firstly, thanks.
Thanks to Mestre Boneco for coming out to Australia for our batizado. It really meant a lot to us. Not only did we get a chance to meet and get to know you better, learn from your extensive experiences, we also got your blessing in the form of a recognition of our skills and commitment and validation of the group. This is no doubt, the first of many great batizados you will supervise from our quality group.
Thanks to Professora Potiguara, for taking the step and organising the batizado for us. Thanks for believing in us, and for giving us the confidence to learn more, to play more. I know that Capoeira isn’t about the colour chord you wear, but our batizado is about the recognition of all the hard work we have done, plus it really does feel good to get a new chord. I’m pretty sure I speak for all here.
I have heard many a master say (Mestre Boneco included) that as you learn more in Capoeira, you realise how much you still have to learn. The first step of course, is realising that this is true in life as well, not just in the roda. I now understand more about what this means, from listening to Mestre Boneco in the workshops, from training with my new chord and from reflecting on the batizado.
I once saw a Capoeira game between Mestre Boneco and Mestre Curumim. The anticipation, as a relative beginner, of watching these two great Capoeiristas go at it with amazing kicks, flips, twists, strength, agility etc was met with a game that even more impressive than all of that. In the entire game, not one kick was kicked, not one flip was flipped, in fact the most complicated move I saw was a ginga switch, and it was not a short game. This has impressed me for a number of years now, but I have finally understood why.
It takes decades to get to the stage where you can go into a roda and just ginga.
There is no way a beginner could enter a roda and not do anything, but Mestre Boneco can! We start with nothing, and we slowly build up our skills, adding kicks, acrobatics, movements, takedowns, etc. The next stage is using all the movements we know in appropriate places sand circumstances until we have mastered the movements and the art of Capoeira. Finally, the minimalist emerges. This is pure art, once you have mastered your particular art, you can start exploring just what you can accomplish with less and less, but only once you know all the fundamentals and complexities. The minimalist movement in art includes some of the most talented and technically gifted artists. The real skill is seeing what you can do without all of that. Minimalist painters know this when they paint a black square canvas. Authors know this when their book is finished, not when no more can be added, but when no more can be taken out. Poets know this when they write a haiku. Musicians know this when they write a song with one note (or even no music).
Less is more
Those who know nothing try to do everything, and those who know everything try to do nothing. A beginner in a roda will try doing all their moves that they know all at once, a Master will do the opposite, they will try and complete as many things as possible with the fewest movements.
I am nowhere near this stage, I am still developing my game, I still have many movements to learn, my technique is not perfect, and I have along way to go before it is. The point of this realisation, is that I now know what I am aiming for. I have a long term Capoeira goal. I know what kind of Capoeirsta I want to be, and will be. Not only has this cemented a long term goal, it has changed my short term goal. I will now try as hard as I can to know when to apply the right movement. The technique of the perfect rasteira is the first step in know exactly when not to apply the perfect rasteira!
So watch out in the roda, I will be trying to do less and less!
Mestre Boneco’s January Newsletter
Jan 23rd
Check out Mestre’s Boneco’s January Newsletter!!!
Articles on their activities in LA, great Capoeira photos, training tips, songs and an awesome picture of yours truely, Professora Potiguara!!
GU Magazine
Jan 8th
Check out what people are saying about us here. An article in GU Health magazine.
Australia Capoeira Brasil Website Revamp
Jan 8th
The Australia Capoeira Brasil website has taken a major mea lua de compasso to the face and is being completely renovated to make it more user friendly and easy for students and beginners to get information specific to there needs.
Stay tuned for more exciting changes. Coming soon – Flickr photo galleries, Contact Us forms, general spunk additions…

