Philippa Cullen

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Philippa Ann Cullen (24 March 1950 – 3 July 1975)[1] was an Australian dancer, choreographer, teacher and performance artist who was notable for her innovative dance performances incorporating the use of the theremin and the development of movement-sensitive floors. From the late 1960s until 1974 she taught movement and dance at many venues, in Australia and overseas. Her most important classes took place on Sunday mornings in the quadrangle of Sydney University, and were attended by dancers, actors, musicians and artists.[1]

Life and work[]

Born in Melbourne,[2] Cullen became a pupil at the Bodenwieser Dance Studio, Sydney, at the age of eight. During her dance studies, she appeared in works choreographed by Margaret Chapple, Keith Bain and Jacqui Carroll including Bain's Primitive Suite.[3] Cullen graduated from Sydney University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1970, majoring in English, Italian, Fine Arts and Medieval History.[3]

Cullen performed across Sydney, at venues such as Hogarth Galleries, the Art Gallery of New South Wales and The Domain.[4] Her artistic goal was to "free dancers from what she saw as the ‘tyranny’ of music by having them generate their own as they performed" by exploring new relationships between dance and electronic devices.

Cullen's first performance with theremin was in 1972, in collaboration with composer Greg Schiemer, electrical engineer Phil Connor and architecture student Manuel Nobleza. Homage to Theremin II consisted of four different shaped and sized theremins, each with its own antenna, which allowed her and her dancers to actually generate sound themselves. Her best known works are Utter and Lightless.

An Australia Council for the Arts grant in 1972 funded her travel to the UK and Europe, Africa, Nepal and India, including study at the Folkwang Hochschule in Essen.[Note 1] At the Institute of Sonology in Utrecht she studied electronics, mathematics and computer composition.[5] It was here she developed ideas for pressure sensitive floors.[6] She had met the composer Karlheinz Stockhausen during his brief tour of Australia in 1970, they corresponded, and worked together from 1972 until 1974. During that time she inspired and developed the choreography and ideas for Inori, a meditative work in which a dancer conducts an orchestra with positions and gestures of prayer based on Mudras. In July 1973 she and her dance ensemble performed with theremins at the Oeldorf Group.

After returning to Australia in early 1974, she organised, and with dancers and musicians performed at, a long Seminar held at Sydney’s Central Street Gallery (1–11 July). This was followed in September by performances at the Ewing Gallery in Melbourne, and the 24-Hour Concert at Sydney’s Hogarth Galleries in October, which included a twenty-four hour chess game and a tea ceremony. In early 1975 she performed in the Computers and Electronics section of the Australia 75 arts exhibition in Canberra, and at Mildura’s Sculpture Triennial.[3][4]

Aged 25, Cullen died in Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu, India, on 3 July 1975.[1]

Cullen was the subject of an archival exhibition in 2016 curated by Stephen Jones, Dancing the music: Philippa Cullen 1950–75.[6] She is featured in the Know My Name exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia.[4] The Dancer – A Biography for Philippa Cullen by Evelyn Juers was published by Giramondo in October 2021.[1] Cullen’s movement-sensitive floors are held at the University of Adelaide and have inspired a younger generation of dancers and choreographers, including the work of the Utter Stories Team.[7]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Stephen Jones' Philippa Cullen: Dancing the Music claims Cullen studied with Pina Bausch, but Evelyn Juers The Dancer – A Biography for Philippa Cullen confirms she did not.

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d Juers, Evelyn (2021). The Dancer – A Biography for Philippa Cullen. Giramondo Publishing. ISBN 9781925818888. Philippa Ann Cullen was born at the Jessie McPherson Community Hospital in Melbourne on Friday 24 March 1950. // Philippa died in Kodaikanal on 3 July 1975 at 2.30 a.am. and was creamted the same day at 6 p.m., according to a letter dated 5 July to Mr Cullen from Dr Desai
  2. ^ "Phillippa Cullen". Design & Art Australia Online. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  3. ^ a b c "Papers of Philippa Cullen". Trove. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  4. ^ a b c Know My Name. Canberrra, ACT: National Gallery of Australia. 2020. ISBN 978-0-642-33487-9. OCLC 1143495525.
  5. ^ Jones, Stephen (December 2004). "Philippa Cullen: Dancing the Music". Leonardo Music Journal. 14: 65–73 (70). doi:10.1162/0961121043067307. hdl:10453/1016. ISSN 0961-1215. S2CID 57568341.
  6. ^ a b Gallasch, Keith (17 August 2016). "Tribute to a pioneering dance media artist". RealTime (134). Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  7. ^ "The Utter: Stories Team". Utter: Stories. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
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