Dance Workshop

Dance Workshop
The course is led by Reut Nahum

In this course for children aged 8 to 14, participants experiment with dance, music, materials, and objects, and create their own dances.

In this Dance Workshop, we playfully and theatrically explore movements for dance and give children’s imagination plenty of room for creative dance-making. We experiment with dance, music, materials, and objects, and create original dances from them. The children learn to use their bodies as a means of expression and communication in a creative way. At the end of the semester, parents and friends are invited to a small presentation of the dance sequences developed.

Reut Nahum

Reut Nahum was born in Haifa, Israel in 1992. After graduation from to the Jerusalem Academy for Music and Dance and the Jerusalem Conservatory Reut left Israel to continue her professional training at L’avant-Scene Danse in Lausanne under the direction of Jânia Batista. She performed in differnt formations in Switzerland and Brazil and then became an apprentice at the Budapest Dance Theater under the direction of Bella Foldi to deepen her understanding and performance skills in contemporary dance.
From 2013 on Reut has been based in Zurich. To further develop herself as an emerging young artist in the field of performance and dance within the freelance scene she has been involved in various projects within Switzerland and abroad.
Reut is a Contakids teacher and regularly teaching dance classes for children.

Wednesdays, 17:00 – 18:00 (1st semester 26/27)

  • Price per semester (22 lessons): CHF 440

Duration:

1 hr

German / English

For children aged 8 to 14.

Children with disabilities are warmly welcome.

The course takes place every Wednesday afternoon (except during Zurich school holidays) and is offered on a semester basis.

Tanzhaus Zürich

Studio 1

Wheelchair accessible

Line drawing of three intertwined, animal-patterned figures in dance-like poses: a spotted, giraffe-like figure at the top, a striped, tiger-like figure in the middle, and a dotted, leopard-like figure at the bottom right, connected by sweeping yellow lines of movement.