Common Field Projects

Ecosomatics & Environmental Movement

The Common Field is a space for exploring the living relationship between body, land, and community.

It is a place where movement, ecology, creativity, and collaboration meet — a field of shared inquiry into how we inhabit the world and how the world moves through us.

At its heart, The Common Field is an invitation to notice our participation in the wider, interwoven fabric of life. Through practices rooted in ecosomatics, outdoor movement, creative process, and embodied research, we explore how environment, culture, and personal experience shape one another.

This ongoing project offers room for:

  • collaborative research and creative partnerships

  • workshops and outdoor movement explorations

  • community-based embodiment practices

  • projects connecting somatics, ecology, and the arts

It is a space where curiosity is welcome, where experimentation is encouraged, and where embodiment becomes a way of sensing and responding to the world around us.

The Common Field grows through shared practice — through stepping outdoors, paying attention, moving with what is present, and discovering how creativity unfolds when we meet the environment as partner.

If you’re interested in participating or collaborating, you can get in touch directly.

Recent Projects

Movement Arts Meeting (MAM), July 2025

An international gathering of Amerta Movement practitioners in An Sanctioir, West Cork. This annual meeting is a collaborative space for practitioners to share movement, bodies meeting land, time, and each other in shared practice.

Forest Dream Us (ongoing, started in 2023)

The Forest Dream Us is an ongoing, living conversation between movement, voice, and nature. The project is led by Rosie O'Reagn with the support of Broken Crow Theatre. Together we explore our connections with trees through movement, voice and the world of dreams.

I'm a member of Breaking Cover Collective, a collective of artists whose common interest is performance and ecology, creating collaborative projects as a response to climate change.

Common Field Moments