
SFD+I PERFORMANCE COHORT SHOWCASE
Four new works by Undercurrent, Nia-Amina Minor, Mark Haim, Kara Beadle
JUL 31 | 7:30 PM
AUG 1 | 2 PM + 7:30 PM
12th Ave Arts Mainstage |1620 12th Ave, Seattle, WA 98122
Presented through the Seattle Festival of Dance + Improvisation
About the Evening
Velocity Dance Center presents the Seattle Festival of Dance + Improvisation Performance Cohorts: Showcase, with works by renowned choreographers Undercurrent, Nia-Amina Minor, Mark Haim, and Kara Beadle. The performances are a culmination of two to three weeks of intensive training and rehearsal for dancers across many backgrounds and skill levels during the festival. Sharing the stage are advanced students from across the US in the Professional Cohort, and adult dancers in the Beginner and Intermediate Cohorts. The Performance Cohorts Showcase is a unique opportunity to immerse yourself in Seattle’s vibrant contemporary dance scene, and witness Seattle’s up-and-coming talent.
ARTIST BIOS
KARA BEADLE
NIA-AMINA MINOR
UNDERCURRENT
MARK HAIM
SEATTLE FESTIVAL OF DANCE + IMPROVISATION
The Seattle Festival of Dance + Improvisation is a vibrant month-long immersion in the Seattle dance community, and a chance to explore with dance practitioners experimenting at the leading edge of dance technique, creative practices, and dance improvisation. Grounded in SFD+I’s nearly 30 years of community-building and intergenerational collaboration, this festival is a gateway for new dancers to connect with artists making work in the Seattle dance and improvisation community, and a chance for Seattle-based artists to train and research with internationally renowned artists.
During our Seattle Festival of Dance + Improvisation, Velocity also presents work by local and visiting faculty members. These presentations range from work-in-process sharings to larger scale productions, and are often one-night-only presentations. We also commission artists to work with participants to create new work that is shared during the festival.
PROGRAM SUPPORT
The Seattle Festival of Dance + Improvisation is made possible with generous support from the Seattle Office of Arts and Culture, and the King County Festival and Events Fund. It is also supported by our community of individual donors, community partners, and arts advocates. If you would like to join this community of sponsors, please contact Erin O’Reilly at erin@velocitydancecenter.org.
ACCESSIBILITY INFORMATION
12th Ave Arts is fully accessible for wheelchairs and walkers. The lobby and bathrooms are at street level, and seating is available without the need for an elevator or stairs. The venue is also equipped with an Assistive Listening Device.

Kara Beadle (they/them) is a movement artist, dance educator, and massage therapist based in Seattle, WA. As a non-binary, neuro-queer dance maker, Kara values queering dance through humor, improvisation, and object/human relationships to explore their interest in the interplay between neurodivergence, gender-nonconformance, the pressure to fit into society, and performative art. Kara is a lead collaborator of Heap, a Seattle-based performance troupe created with musician and handyman extraordinaire Andy Zacek and several rotating artists. Their experimental theatrics celebrate abundance, while critiquing overconsumption. Inside the fantasy worlds they build, Heap designs absurd scenarios between objects and bodies to subvert objectification and flaunt our lust for inanimate things.
Since 2019, Heap has performed in NYC’s Estrogenius Festival, On The Boards Spectacle Spectacular, Next Fest Northwest: Rupture/Reverence, Texas Dance Improvisation Festival, Show 5, Georgetown’s Art Attack, The Shed’s Being Mode Residency Showing: Character Arc, Open Flight Studio’s Flight Deck Residency Showing, 18th and Union’s Portable Performance Festival, Velocity Dance Center’s Fall Kick-off: Portals, Launch, TakePause, and The Seattle International Dance Festival. Kara is a 2025/2026 City Artist Grant Recipient which has helped fund their project, Automorphs, which puts audiences on bikes to witness performance along Seattle streets from behind the handlebars.
*Photo by Devin Muñoz

Undercurrent is an evolving experimental entity facilitating floorwork classes, interdisciplinary performances, movement innovation, immersive retreats, university courses, and community gatherings since 2017 under the direction of Hilary Grumman. After earning her BFA from CalArts, Hilary pursued floorwork training with Piso Móvil, Flying Low, Psico-Físico, RUBBERBAND, Jorge Crecis, Adam Barruch, Tunç Leech Lisovest Parkour, Ihsan Rustem, Moving Air, Duela-Cemento, A Surprised Body, CONTINUUM, Breaking, and Ákos Hargitay’s Bodyparkour. Drawing from these stylistically and geographically diverse methods, followed by 9 years of independent floorwork research as an Artist in Residence at Fremont Abbey, Hilary has developed a cohesive, meticulous, meditative, and rigorous movement technique. This approach intertwines biomechanical safety and energetic efficiency with innovative inversions, full-body engagement, and fluid choreographic sequencing. Undercurrent now leads courses in this technique at the University of Washington and Cornish College of the Arts and workshops at art and activist organizations globally, including FIDCDMX with La Infinita Estudio, New York City Center with NVA & Guests, Mosswood Hollow Retreat Center, Mark Morris Dance Center, Peridance Center, Dance Complex Boston with co/motion, Bodies of Empowerment SF, EDGE Ciudad de México, and AWID Forum Brazil. For local dancers, Hilary hosts additional movement investigation and community-building events under the umbrella of Undercurrent through collaborations with contemporary artists and educators, such as Nicole von Arx, Babatunji Johnson, Ground Grooves, Ballet Rituals, Lavinia Vago, 2nd Best Dance Company, and RUBBERBAND dancers. Undercurrent’s immersive choreographic works that delve into the thrill of kinesthesia, communal care, and risk have been commissioned by Kawasaki AiR at UW, Walk Don’t Run, CO–, Actualize AiR, Cornish Dance Theater, Seattle Art Fair, Sessions in Place, The Round, Ode at Mini Mart City Park, et al. As an individual and co-creator, Hilary is invested in pedagogy, collective caretaking, activist organizing, experiential design, submersive performance, perpetual curiosity, and being outside. Undercurrent’s creative process and teaching practice are co-directed by dance artists Alethea Alexander and Hilary Grumman. Dive deeper at DanceUndercurrent.com*Photo by Jazzy Photo

Nia-Amina Minor is a movement artist, choreographer, curator, and educator originally from Los Angeles. Her work focuses on the body and what it carries using physical and archival research to converse with memory. She approaches her practice as an imaginative space grounded in rhythm where improvisation, Black vernacular movement, and choreography meet. Nia-Amina has received regional and national commissions for her choreographic and film work and has a working background as a performer and dramaturg. She is co-founder of Black Collectivity, a collaborative project that celebrates embodied research through performance and curation.
As a performer, Nia-Amina has worked with artists such as dani tirrell, Zoe Juniper, Will Rawls, Alice Gosti, Keyes Wiley, and Amy O’Neal. From 2016-2021 she was a Company Artist at Spectrum Dance Theater under the direction of Donald Byrd. Nia-Amina has also provided dramaturgical assistance to choreographers Jade Solomon-Curtis and Donald Byrd. In her work as a curator, she has developed programming at On the Boards, Wa Na Wari, Velocity, and Base, and Friends of the Waterfront Park. From 2014-2016, she was a co-founder and curator of Los Angeles based collective, No)one Art House. As an educator, she has taught, guest lectured, and been a visiting artist at Cornish College, University of Minnesota, CalArts, University of Washington, Western Washington University, Saddleback College, Cypress College, and UC Irvine. Nia-Amina received her MFA in Dance from UC Irvine and a BA from Stanford University. She was Dance Magazine’s 25 Artists to Watch in 2021, and one of Seattle Magazine’s Most Influential People in 2025. Nia-Amina is currently on faculty at Cornish College of the Arts at Seattle University.
*Photo by Devin Muñoz

Mark Haim has been making dances and teaching dance for 35 years.
Born in New York City, he began studying classical piano at age 6, and eventually attended the Manhattan School of Music Preparatory Division, where, in addition to studying piano with Rosetta Goodkind, he studied theory, composition and chamber music. He was accepted to the Dance Division of The Juilliard School on an honorary scholarship, graduating with a BFA degree. There, he performed in works by Paul Taylor, Antony Tudor, Jose Limon and Anna Sokolow, and began choreographing. He received his MFA in Dance in 2006, in the first graduating class of the Hollins/ADF MFA program.
From 1984 -1987, he directed Mark Haim & Dancers, which performed at the Riverside Dance Festival in NYC, and at various theaters and venues in the US, Luxembourg, and Holland. From 1987-1990, he was Artistic Director of the Companhia de Danca de Lisboa, one of Portugal’s first publicly-funded modern dance companies. There, he created 8 dances for the company, and commissioned 10 premieres, extensively touring Portugal, along with performances in Spain, and Italy.
Mark has been commissioned to create new works for many dance companies in the US, Europe and Asia, among them the Nederlands Dans Theater, Ballet Frankfurt, the Limon Dance Company, the Joffrey II Dancers, the Rotterdamse Dansgroep, the Silesian Dance Theater, the Companhia de Danca de Lisboa, CoDanceCo, the TRANS Dance Co., and Ballet Pacifica. He has restaged his works on companies such as The Joffrey Ballet, the Bat-Dor Dance Company of Israel, Djazzex and the Juilliard Dance Ensemble. He has also created works for numerous university dance departments throughout the US.
His 80-minute solo, “The Goldberg Variations,” created between 1994 and 1997, was co-commissioned by the American Dance Festival and the Danspace Project. With pianist Andre Gribou, The Goldberg Variations has been presented at the ADF, the Danspace Project in St. Mark’s Church in New York, the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, On The Boards in Seattle, the Munye Theater in Seoul, S. Korea, the First Progressive Dance Festival in Prague, the Theater for the Young Spectator in Ekaterinburg, Russia, and at over 25 theaters around the U.S. It was also on the performance roster of the Lincoln Center Institute from 2000-2002 and has been on the roster of sister educational institutes in Albany, Rochester and Utica, NY.
Since 2002, he has been a guest choreographer at The Wooden Floor, an after-school organization in Santa Ana, CA that has promised hope and opportunity to nearly 400 low-income youth annually. He has created four new works there, from Los Angelitos, a 20-minute work for 25 dancers to What Is Too Strong For Breaking, a 30-minute work for over 80 dancers.
Mark was Senior Artist-in-Residence at the University of Washington in Seattle (2002-2008), Visiting Associate Professor at Reed College, and has been on the faculties of the American Dance Festival and NYU-Tisch School of the Arts He has also guest-taught at the North Carolina School of the Arts, Ohio University, University of Illinois, the New World School of the Arts, Hollins University, Cornell University, the Rotterdamse Dansacademie, Dance Space and Peridance in New York City, and has been guest-teacher at schools and companies in Argentina, Belgium, Chile, Holland, Germany, Italy, Latvia, Portugal, Poland, Russia, and Japan.
He is a recipient of a 1987 NYFA Choreographers Fellowship, a 1988 and 1996 NEA Choreographers Fellowship and grants from the NPN Suitcase Fund, ArtsLink, Inc., the Harkness Foundation, the Jerome Foundation, and The Seattle Office for Arts and Cultural Affairs. He was awarded the Scripps/ADF Humphrey-Weidman-Limon Fellowship for Choreography. Mark is a Fulbright Senior Specialist.
*Photo by Spencer Baker