Shiva Rea was born in Hermosa Beach, California, in 1967; her father, liking the image ofNataraja, dancing Shiva, named her after that Hindu deity. She studied dance anthropology at UCLA, completing her master's thesis in 1997 on "hatha yoga as a practice of embodiment". She studied under yoga and tantra masters including Swami Sivananda Saraswati and Daniel Odier. She practised the vigorous Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga for ten years, adopting a more restorative style when she became pregnant. She teaches Vinyasa flow yoga, having created her own style called Prana Vinyasa, and yoga trance dance. She teaches in the USA and many countries around the world, touring each year. Teachers are similarly trained in the USA and around the world in 200, 300 and 500 hour courses in her Prana Vinyasa yoga, which claims to combine tantra, yoga, and ayurveda. She has contributed to publications including Yoga Journal and Yoga International.
Honours and distinctions
The author and yoga therapistJanice Gates honoured Rea with a chapter of her 2006 book Yoginis. Rea has contributed invited forewords to Mark Stephens's book Yoga Adjustments: Philosophy, Principles, and Techniques, to Alanna Kaivalya's book Myths of the Asanas: The Stories at the Heart of the Yoga Tradition, and to Lorin Roche's book The Radiance Sutras: 112 Gateways to the Yoga of Wonder and Delight. She has been called one of America's leading yoga teachers. The Library Journal described Rea as a "big name" and a "well-established instructor", whose DVDs embodied the "highest production values". In 2009 she created Global Mala Day to coincide with the United Nations International Day of Peace. The Los Angeles Times described her as one of "yoga's rock stars". Vanity Fair called her "the Madonna of the yoga world" in a desert photo shoot; the photographer, Michael O'Neill portrayed her in Dancer pose wearing bikini briefs and an outsize bead necklace, with two tigers in a featureless flat landscape. The article said she was "the best-known instructor of Vinyasa flow yoga" and famous for "Yoga Trance Dance". It stated that she visits up to thirty-five countries every year on her teaching tours.
Controversy
In 2017, Bizzie Gold of Buti Yoga published "An Open Letter to Shiva Rea" criticising her claim to be teaching traditional yoga.
Works
Books
1997 Hatha Yoga as a Practice of Embodiment, UCLA thesis
2014 Tending the Heart Fire: Living in Flow with the Pulse of Life. Sounds True.
Videos
2006 Sun Salutations: awakening the flow
2006 Yoga Shakti
2006 Yoga Trance Dance
2007 Fluid Yoga
2007 Fluid Power
2007 Radiant Heart Yoga
2007 Fluid Yoga Spinal Stretch
2007 Fluid Yoga Standing Strength
2008 Flow Yoga for Beginners
2009 Surf Yoga Soul
2009 Daily Energy - Vinyasa Flow Yoga
2009 Creative Core + Upper Body
2009 Daily Energy Flow - Yoga Upper Body Core Stretch