Be True Yoga -

Events

WORKSHOPS

Fundamentals First and Foremost with Nikki Costello
Sunday, September 19
1:00 – 3:00 pm

Your first experience with yoga is often as good as your first teacher. If you’re new to yoga or looking to refine your practice with a master, this introductory workshop series is for you.

Nikki Costello, a certified Iyengar Yoga teacher, has been teaching yoga for 16 years and was previously certified in Jivamukti Yoga and Anusara Yoga. Her vast experience and receptivity to the various yoga traditions and what they offer, are a gift to students looking for that inspirational teacher who always stays close to the beginner’s mind.

The fundamentals workshop is a monthly series but will also be available as individual sessions. Oct.-December dates will follow.

Cost: $45.00 with pre-registration. $50.00 drop-in on day
of workshop.

Shakti Power with Julie Dohrman
Sunday, October 3
1:00 – 3:00 pm

Fire up your practice with certified Anusara teacher, Julie Dohrman,one of New York City’s most dynamic teachers. A workshop for intermediate to advanced students looking to expand their practice and let loose with seriously playful asanas. Be prepared to play your edge.

Cost: $45.00 with pre-registration. $50.00 drop-in on day
of workshop.

 

EXHIBITIONS

Joan Busing
Monoprints
Joan Busing is a Westchester-based printmaker who has exhibited widely in museums and galleries throughout the country and whose work appears in many private collections. She works at her printmaking studio in New York City and teaches at her school for gifted high school art students in Westchester. Her monoprints are on exhibit at Be True Yoga and are available for purchase. Visit www.joanbusing.com for more information.


Janice Lipman
Ceramic Teapots
Janice Lipman was born and raised in Durban, South Africa but has lived in New York since 1984. She is profoundly influenced by the richness of the South African culture - its colors, shapes and textures are all echoed in her work. Teapot shapes are reminiscent of traditional homes and dots are akin to beads that are so much a part of African culture. Her love of color, form and decoration are what moves her more than functionality. Her work is sometimes whimsical, sometimes earthy and always handmade with joy. A White Plains resident, Janice recently exhibited her teapots in New York City at the Tea Salon in Chelsea Market. She is a member of the Mamaroneck Artists Guild and is a devoted yogini.