Facilitators

Charlie Morrissey

Charlie is a choreographer, performer, teacher and curator whose work with movement spans more than 35 years. He works across theatre, gallery, landscape and community contexts in the UK and internationally.

His practice moves fluidly between performing, teaching, making and producing — each informing the other. He’s interested in how movement and performance can build connection and resilience, invite attention to the present, and open space for complexity, queerness and change.
Charlie co-curates Wainsgate Dances, an artist-led space for experimental dance in a former chapel in Yorkshire. His work draws on long-term collaborations with artists including Steve Paxton, Lisa Nelson, Siobhan Davies and Kirstie Simson, and continues to evolve through collective practice and curiosity about how we move — together and in the world.

The Apple Returns to the Tree

The title references Steve Paxton’s early musings about the experience of the Newtonian apple as it falls from the tree. It acknowledges the time that’s passed since then, and the incredible journey and evolution of Contact Improvisation as a series of questions and experiments; as a diaspora of bodies; a form; and a complex web of extrapolations and transformations.

I will return to some of the basic propositions and questions of CI; to how we notice ourselves as bodies/masses in relation to physical forces in a physical world — to visit them anew, to roll our bodies on the body of the earth, to observe ourselves and simultaneously be ourselves as we fall and rise again, as we slide and jump, and bounce and tumble along with the questions, propositions and particularities of the other bodies we negotiate as we go.

This workshop will also attend to the experience of the ensemble — to how we sense being alongside and with when we move. We’ll explore the subtle, shifting dynamics of many bodies in motion: how energy and tone pass between us, how we jam, surf, and ride the waves of momentum, stillness, and change. We’ll work with multi-directional listening — a physical peripheral awareness that allows us to receive information from the space and others as we simultaneously transmit it through our own actions and attention. This is an exploration of how movement communicates and reverberates across a shared field, how perception extends beyond the self into the collective attention.

I will be calling on my own versions and developments of materials I met and explored in the studio with Steve Paxton and Lisa Nelson to inform our explorations, and those materials (for the spine, and for the senses, among others) will be woven into my own questions about movement, experience and imagination — how we include, in our image of the experience of the apple falling, the other parts of its journey and its return to the tree to fall again.
This is an invitation to widen attention, to include perceived impossibilities, and to dive into the adventure of Contact Improvisation all over again.

The work will be explored via simple scores which allow for each person’s own layers of complexity to be noticed and included; there will be physical maps and pathways to research and play with, as well as perceptual and imaginative explorations in solo, duet, trio, and ensemble constellations.

This workshop invites us to see movement as both individual and collective attention — a continual conversation between gravity, imagination, and one another.

Jennie Zimmermann

Somatics and Dance / Body-Mind Centering®

Jennie has been dancing Contact Improvisation for more than 15 years and is a Body-Mind Centering® Somatic Movement Educator. Her work is mainly somatic and improvisation based and offers spaces to explore and reflect on elementary and dynamic processes of communication, activity and regeneration, self-care and relationship.

She followed the Laban Bartenieff Movement Analysis Programme at Eurolab Berlin and studied naturopathy, intuitive and process-based bodywork approaches and herbal medicine since 2001.
For many years she co-organized and performed in the street theatre company mosaique in fire, dance and stilt shows.
Together with Jo Bruhn she organizes Contact Time.

Jo Bruhn

Contact Improvisation

Jo Bruhn is a passionate dancer, performer and CI teacher.
Since 2001 he dedicated his life to performing arts in various facets. As acrobat, fire show artist, as stilt walker, as actor, choreographer and most important – as dancer.
The intense work with Nancy Stark Smith inspired Jo’s teaching, dancing and his artistic approach to dance.

Jo took part in the Contemporary Dance education “Dance Intensive” at the Tanzfabrik Berlin and in countless workshops in CI, Axis Syllabus, Klein Technique, acrobatics with various teachers like Jörg Hassmann, Frey Faust, Britta Pudelko amongst many others.
Recently deep inspiration came from Atsushi Takenouchi and his work with Jinen Butoh.
Jo is part of the “Contact companI” and co-organizer of CI festival “Contact Time” and works as a solo artist and in collaboration with others like Aude Fondard (Dance – theater „Designed to Die?“), Jennie Zimmermann (mosaique, Contact Time).

Irene Pons

Guest teacher

Irene has spent the past few years exploring the practice of Contact Improvisation as a nomadic practitioner. For the last three years, she has been studying at Towards – Centre for the Practice and Research of Contact Improvisation in Thailand, inspired from teachers like Sasha Dodo, Dolores Dewhurst Marks, and Ekaterina Basalaeva, among others. Her work blends her passions for bodywork, dance, and visual arts, resulting in projects that reflect her interests.

Pedro Paz

Guest teacher

Pedro Paz, born in Lisbon in 1978, is a renowned dance, somatic movement, and contact improvisation teacher in Portugal, with a 25-year professional career as a dancer, choreographer, educator, and artistic director.

Trained at the National Conservatory of Portugal, he has performed with Ballet Gulbenkian (PT), Lisbon Dance Company (PT), Contemporary Northern Ballet (PT), Batsheva Ensemble (Israel), and Dansgroep Krisztina de Châtel (Amsterdam).
In 2000, he co-founded Amalgama Dance Company, for which he directed and created 12 full-length live-scored dance productions between 2000 and 2008.
Active in diverse cultural, community, and independent art initiatives, he recently created and choreographed the closing ceremony performance for Boom Festival 2025.
Currently, he teaches Qi Gong (Energetic Practices) and Somatic Movement at the Escola Superior de Medicina Tradicional Chinesa.
He is also the founder, mentor and curator of Arrábida Dance Labs, a collaborative project now in its 32nd edition. Pedro is currently pursuing a Master’s degree in Performing Arts at Universidade Nova de Lisboa.