Gustavo Naveira

Gustavo Naveira (1960 - ) is an Argentine tango dancer and teacher having contributed to the detailed analysis of the movements of dancing to Argentine tango.

Contents

Biography

He played the guitar from age 7 to 20 and studied guitar at the conservatory for 3 years. He has been dancing since the age of 20 and appeared in the tango lesson movie with Sally Potter in 1997 and he formed a group with Fabian Salas and Pablo Veron during preparation for that movie. He has been dancing with Giselle Anne since approximately 1995. They are known for their intellectual approach to dance as teachers.

Personal life

He is the father of two young dancers, Federico and Ariadna Naveira, from a previous marriage with Olga Besio, also a tango dancer and his former dance partner.

Relationship with tango nuevo

In 2009 he published programmatic essay New Tango [1] in which he states: There is great confusion on the question of the way of dancing the tango: call it technique, form, or style. The term tango nuevo, is used to refer to a style of dancing, which is an error. In reality, tango nuevo is everything that has happened with the tango since the 1980s. It is not a question of a style... The words tango nuevo express what is happening with tango dancing in general; namely that it is evolving. Tango nuevo is not one more style; it is simply that tango dancing is growing, improving, developing, enriching itself, and in that sense we are moving toward a new dimension in tango dancing...There has been much recent discussion, in the community of tango dancers, on the problem of the embrace, dividing the dance into open or closed style, which is also a matter of great confusion. Open embrace or closed embrace, dancing with space or dancing close, these are all outmoded terms. This is an old way of thinking, resulting from the lack of technical knowledge in past eras. This simple and clumsy division between open and closed is often used by those who try to deny the evolution of the dance, to disguise their own lack of knowledge. Today it is perfectly clear that the distances in the dance have a much greater complexity than a simple open or closed... We have learned, and we have developed our knowledge. The result of this is a dance of greater possibilities, and also of a much more artistic quality.

Notes and references

  1. ^ Tango, A History of Obsession, Virginia Gift, 2008, ISBN 1-4392-1462-X (self published, appeared first in 2009)

External links

San Francisco Chronicle article about Gustavo Naveira and Giselle Anne