Fast Track Zouk Lambada – January 2026
Ready to level up your Zouk Lambada this January in Kraków?
This Fast Track is designed to build solid foundations and sharpen your technique, step by step.
⚠️ Limited spots
Only 7 leaders & 7 followers
➡️ Pre-registration opens Monday
Send a message to Monika
messenger: https://www.facebook.com/angelikaviktoria/
email: monikapieszkaa@gmail.com
Location
Kontakt – Przestrzeń Ruchu i Tańca
Szpitalna 40, 31-024 Kraków, Poland
️ https://maps.app.goo.gl/26a86FavVtkPwXLCA
Dates & Schedule
Thursdays: January 8, 15, 22 & 29
⏰ 18:00 – 19:15
• 08.01 – Basics
• 15.01 – Basic Head Movements
• 22.01 – Simple & Double Turns
• 29.01 – Chicote
✨ Participation
• Kontakt standard pass 40 PLN (per class) or monthly pass
• Multisport + 10 PLN
For who?
• All levels welcome
• Dancers discovering Zouk Lambada
• Dancers wanting to improve technique, clarity & flow in Zouk
Dress code
⚠️No outside shoes
Socks or clean dance shoes obligatory.
Questions?
DM Clément or Monika
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Biography
Clément L-K taught Brazilian Zouk for over 10 years, in Paris and internationally, until 2025.
Throughout these years, he developed a strong interest in pedagogy, movement quality, and body awareness, placing sensation and respect for the body at the core of his teaching.
In 2015, he founded Zouk Inspiration, a community through which he developed a pedagogy promoting diversity, creativity, and physical awareness in Brazilian Zouk. This space became a laboratory for exploration, allowing dancers to grow beyond stylistic labels and focus on fundamentals, connection, and personal expression.
Driven by curiosity, Clément traveled worldwide to train with leading dancers and teachers, immersing himself in a wide range of Brazilian Zouk approaches such as RioZouk, NéoZouk, MZouk, LambaZouk, and Flow. These experiences shaped his understanding of movement and led him to develop his own concept, Natural Way, an approach centered on organic movement, efficiency, and authenticity.
In 2025, Clément completed his Lambada Mastery training and decided to return to La Réunion. This period marked a significant transition in his artistic journey. His perspective on Zouk and Lambada evolved, leading him to see them not as separate dances, but as two expressions of the same movement language.
He then began a new phase of research, where Zouk and Lambada became two faces of a single dance, sharing common structures, principles, and intentions.
Today, this exploration takes shape in a new approach he calls Zouk Lambada — a vision that bridges tradition and evolution, structure and connection, grounding and flow.

