Contact Dance
Film Festival

Contact Dance Film FestivalContact Dance Film FestivalContact Dance Film Festival

Contact Dance
Film Festival

Contact Dance Film FestivalContact Dance Film FestivalContact Dance Film Festival
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  • Box Office
  • Schedule
  • Trailers
  • About
  • Artistic Direcetor
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  • It Takes a Team
  • Awards
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  • Funders
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About

Contact Dance International Film Festival

The Contact Dance International Film Festival (CDIFF) celebrates films featuring momentum-based dance by creators and dancers in the field of Contact Improvisation and related dance forms that are also momentum, touch, or relationally based. It provides a unique opportunity for both film and dance lovers to experience the joy, chaos, and intimacy of human connection through physical movement. The Festival is presenting its sixth season from October 11 to 12, 2025, online Eventive Platform and in person.

What is Contact Improvisation?

 Contact Improvisation is a style of dance that cannot always be clearly defined. Rather, its ambiguity and adaptability are often seen as one of its greatest attributes. 

This is Kathleen Rea's definition of Contact Improvisation:

  

  • Contact Improvisation is a social dance involving touch, in which momentum between two or more people is used to create and inspire dance movements.
     
  • Contact Improvisation evolved from explorations of a group of dancers many centred around Oberlin College in the early 1970s, which included Steve Paxton, Nancy Stark Smith, Danny Lepkoff, Lisa Nelson,      Karen Nelson, Nita Little, Andrew Harwood, and Ray Chung.
     
  • One of the founders of Contact Improvisation Steve Paxton, was strongly influenced by his training in Aikido a Japanese Martial arts practice. Looking at the principles of CI its commonality with Aikido is clear.
     
  • Techniques include rolling point of contact, balancing over a partner's centre of gravity, "listening" with one's skin surface,  and “surfing” momentum. While there is technique involved, the aesthetic I reach for is the quality of the relationship and communication within a  dance.
     
  • It is typically practiced in a jam situation in which people gather to improvise together.
     
  • Dancers move with a constantly changing physical reality. In Contact Improvisation, there are no set leaders and followers as in other social dance forms. Instead, there is a back-and-forth with dancers sometimes leading, sometimes following, and all variations between these two roles.
     
  • The form is potentially accessible to all people, including those with no previous dance training and people with physical disabilities. I say potentially because "-isms" such as racism and ableism as well as misogyny historically have reduced or inhibited access. The -isms and issues that are embedded in the broader cultures in which CI is practiced show up on the dance floor. There has been a growing movement to address these “ism” in CI but also resistance to this as well.

     
  • Another limitation to access has been the lack of consent culture in Contact Improvisation communities, both on the dance floor and off. Since the "me-too" movement there has been a growing understanding of the value of building and supporting consent culture in      Contact Improvisation, along with some backlash against this movement. 


  • I believe much of the resistance to addressing “isms" and consent culture comes from the idea that CI is an egalitarian form that transcends “isms”. The reality however for people who are marginalized by society is that “isms” show up on the dance floor.

     
  • This definition of Contact Improvisation is my personal feeling of what Contact Improvisation is to me. Others will describe it differently,      and this variance and diversity of opinions are for me one of the strengths of Contact Improvisation. One of the founders, Nancy Stark      Smith, wrote: “Throughout CI’s development, a gentle anarchy has prevailed      over its organization.” I feel that this gentle anarchy is a fundamental aspect of the form.

REAson d'etre dance

REAson d'etre dance  produces CDIFF.  REAson detre dance strives to provide artistic expression through movement, inclusive of age, ability, and level background. We stage and program works based on Contact Improvisation enabling us to utilize the inclusiveness that can be a part of this dance form. Our vision is for both professional dancers and everyday people to be inspired and invigorated by Contact Improvisation. This mandate involves initiatives that work to dismantle racism and ablism and other "isms" as their existence hinders us in achieving our mandate. We are committed to examining the art form of contact improvisation and acknowledging its history of inequity, ablism, and racism. We strive to engage in a continuing process of educating ourselves and acting for change.


We believe that increasing accessibility breaks down barriers to dance, creating stunning humanity that is the heart of the artistic aesthetic we reach for. 


Our contact dance jams are the root from which all our programming grows. Our jams are a mix of performance, research, rehearsal, and incubator. A musician improvises, sweeping dancers into explorations of different themes. We believe teaming Contact Dance with exceptional live music deepens the form. The jams build community. It's about relationships, with the quality of communication being the aesthetic measure. 


Classes in functional movement help Contact Dancers move with ease and prevent injury. We see healthy movement as beautiful and reach for it as an artistic aesthetic.

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