"Dance video" is a unique artistic genre that encompasses the aesthetics of dance and video. It captures dancers on and off the stage, and offers an insight into the power of motion to explore the souls of dancers. The 2009 Jumping Frames Dance Video Festival, which kicked off Sunday afternoon at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing, is a chance for artists and audiences to share the unlimited possibilities of dance videos in an artistic context.

The festival opened with "Coffee With Pina", by Israeli visual artist Lee Yanor. Yanor spent three years travelling with dance guru Pina Bausch in Paris, France and Wuppertal, Germany, and kept records of Bausch's intimate moments at her own home studio. The film, mixed with the footage of Agua and Rough Cut, two of Bausch's masterpieces, creates a stream of consciousness that immerses viewers in beauty, strength, and the intense enjoyment of life.
Yanor used super 8 millimeter film and video to create the production. Her camera focuses on the characters on the margins of the stage. She transfers musical elements from parts of the performance to other parts, and introduces sounds of trains, wind and rain into the soundtrack and created layer upon layer of image.