Human Contact: Explorations in the art of Contact Improvisationa
a weekend workshop with Karl Frost
February 18-19 at Wildcat Studio (2545 8th Street) in Berkeley, CA

THE WORKSHOP IS FULL. TO BE PUT ON THE WAIT LIST, WRITE TO info@bodyresearch.org

Contact Improv is an open ended investigation of bodies moving through contact. There are no rules and no one technique defines the practice, but within it are a plethora of techniques, practices, and studies. This workshop looks at the intersections of the emotional body and the physical body and of solo movement exploration and contact improvisation. We’ll borrow perspectives from somatic-psychology and paratheatrical work to explore

- moving from the emotional body
- mindfulness in movement
- personal and transpersonal material
- letting go of the ‘social self’ to move deeper layers
- the balance of using the mind and letting go of the mind.
- cultivating supportive presence that allows us all to get a bit more vulnerable and exposed in our movement explorations.
- taking everything that inch farther that turns it into something new
- looking into the self for an embodied poetics that transcends self

warm ups will be based in yoga asana and mindfulness practices
to help us drop in. We’ll also mix in a bit of contact technique to
support our explorations of an embodied sense of meaning in
movement. Mind work, Body work, and some sweat!

 

Saturday /Sunday 12-6
$150 - $250 sliding scale
The workshop is full. To be put on a wait list, write to info@bodyresearch.org

Karl Frost, director of Body Research Performance,
has been exploring and teaching Contact
Improvisation since the late 80s. His teaching
and performance work has been showcased
in over 20 countries on 5 continents. He is a
grad student at UC Davis, where he recently
completed his MFA in Choreography and
where he currently pursues a PhD in Ecology.

 

a

Of his performance work...

 

“ utterly compelling!” Brett Fetzer, The Stranger, Seattle, April 2004
“ extremely interesting” Ann Wagner, The Stranger, Seattle, Sept 2004
“ the most surprising performance experience i've ever had and ... one of the most rewarding.” Brendan Kiley, The Stranger, Seattle Oct 2005

 

“…something startling and strangely beautiful to behold.” Molly Rhodes, SF Weekly August 2007