Rheannan Port

Rheannan Port is a Lama Lama, Ayapathu and Kuku Yalanji woman with over 20 years of experience working within Indigenous arts and culture as a dancer, choreographer and educator.

About Rheannan Port

Rheannan Port is a Lama Lama, Ayapathu and Kuku Yalanji woman with over 20 years of experience working within Indigenous arts and culture as a dancer, choreographer and educator. She is currently a Lecturer in Dance (Indigenous) at the Victorian College of the Arts (VCA) and the Wilin Centre for Indigenous Arts and Cultural Development with a special interest in Indigenous dance pedagogy.

Publications

Brown, C., & Port, R. (2022). Body Time for Reckoning with Space and Place. https://findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au/scholarlywork/1759289-body-time-for-reckoning-with-space-and-place

Video Transcript

How would you like to introduce yourself?

So, I belong to the Lama lama,  Ayapathu and Kuku Yalanji  people of Cape York Peninsula, and  I’ve been living and working here in the  lands of the Wurundjeri Woi  Wurrung and Bunurong and Boon wurrung  peoples of the Eastern  Kulin Nation since 2008.  Yeah, so it’s been a long way from home,  but I found my place  here as my new found home  and where I get to live, learn and raise  my children and, yeah, create a life with  my family down here.

Can you tell us about your study and work as a dancer leading to doing your Masters?

I grew up in a small country town in the  eastern part of Cape York  Peninsula and it was very remote.  So I did most of my primary school years  there and then went  away to secondary school.  But I always had opportunities in my  community to learn traditional dance.  After I completed my secondary studies,  there was an opportunity  to join or audition for  NAISDA Dance College, which stands for  the National Aboriginal  Islander Skills Development  Association, NAISDA Dance College in  Sydney. I did a two-week  audition in Sydney and then  the following year joined to complete a  certificate and a diploma of dance.  So I did all my training as a late  learner in dance, in contemporary dance  at NAISDA in Sydney.  From there, after graduating, I went on  and joined Bangarra Dance Theatre.  It was a company that I always wanted to  get into and I spent  four years with the company.  So it’s been an interesting journey  through dance. The unique thing about  NAISDA and what they  offer is that I didn’t have the  opportunity to learn Western dance  techniques in my home  community and that was offered at NAISDA.  So I got to train in  jazz, ballet, modern, tap  and different dance forms at NAISDA as  well as traditional  Aboriginal and Torres Strait  Islander culture and that’s the core  component of NAISDA’s curriculum.  It was at NAISDA where I really learned  how to work with many different  Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander  community and nations and  part of the program was that  elders would come down from various  communities, teach us their songs and  dances and then through  that experience we’d then go back to  their communities whether it was an  Aboriginal community  or a Torres Strait Islander community and  we got to present it  back to the community  the knowledge and culture that we learned  at NAISDA at that time. So  I really credit NAISDA for  giving me the foundation of how to now  negotiate the complexities of cultural  knowledge within a  contemporary dance space.  After completing NAISDA, I actually as a  student of NAISDA, I had  the opportunity to have  a small performing opportunity with  Bangarra through the Sydney  Olympics opening and closing  ceremony as a volunteer at NAISDA and I  got to do the awakening  segment and then the closing  segment with Christine Anu, Island Home.  And so that was like  an introductory to how  Bangarra worked and then after completing  NAISDA, I put an  expression of interest to  the artistic director at the time and was  given a six-week  secondment with the company and then  in 2003 was offered full-time employment  and I was with the company  for four years at that time.  I got to work under the direction of then  artistic director Stephen Page,  choreographer Frances Rings and cultural  knowledge holder […  …] and as well  as the other company members. So yeah, I  was with the company for  four years. I toured regional,  metropolitan and also went on national  and international tours.  So that was a wonderful  experiences. I got to perform in Hawaii,  three islands in Hawaii,  perform at the Kennedy Center  in Washington, New York, London. So yeah,  it was a really exciting  time and lots of like the great  opportunity to perform stories from this  place, this island,  Australia and to take that  internationally and to tell our stories  in the way that we do through dance. Can you tell us about your other dance work?   So after my time with Bangarra, I became  an independent artist and that was quite  a challenging time because  through NAISDA and Bangarra you learn a  particular way of moving and telling your  stories and then as an independent artist  you really have to interrogate what is  your, what is your choreographic style or  what is your way of telling stories.  It took me a long time to really unlearn,  particularly Bangarra’s dance technique  and their way of  storytelling in order to find my own.  So I did a lot of, in Victoria, I did a  lot of teaching back at students with and  without dance training and  I think it was through there  that I really got a taste of how to  really articulate what my practice was  going to be or how it  was going to be developed.  So it was through going back to  community, going back and working with  just non-dance trained bodies to be  really able to see how the body moves  with the instructions  and how can we respond to certain  elements that is part  of our cultural identity.  And out of that, you know, I started  getting an interest in studying.  I also became a mother during that time  of transitioning from professional dancer  to then an independent artist and it was  through the Wilin Centre for Indigenous  Arts and Cultural Development  here at the Southbank Campus, Victoria  College of the Arts that I, and through  the graduate certificate in Indigenous  Arts and Culture that I was able to work  through the different  elements of my dance artistry.  So, yeah, it was that. That was a  six-month block study. I completed that  and that sort of gave me the tools also,  the administration tools to support my  independent dance identity.  So for, you know, over the years, I did a  lot of community work, worked at certain  festivals with different community  organisations here and elders  and other artists from here.  So one of those sort of other great  opportunities for being an independent  artist, I got to work with Short Black  Opera on their work, Pecan Summer, which  is a collection of First Nation artists,  classical singers coming together to tell  a story about, a story  about Yorta Yorta people.  And so I was invited by the artistic  director, Professor Deborah Cheetham, and I  got to be part of a opera, not as an  opera singer, but as a  dancer to support that production.  So it was really, that was exciting. And,  yeah, so there’s many different elders  from various communities that invited me  to work within their community and that  has been both a privilege and a great opportunity.  And to tell my story at the same time.  And that sort of, having children and  still wanting to be part of the dance  community, that was a hard  sort of space to navigate.  And I found, you know, studying a master  of fine arts dance by research enabled me  to be a full time mum, but also I got to  explore what my dance practice is.  And my research question at the time was,  how does my cultural  identity inform my dance practice?  So there was a real deep investigation of  my three cultural identities and the  intersection of where my dance training  and practice came into it.  So I spent two years exploring that and  completed a master of fine arts in dance  by research here at the  Victoria College of the Arts.  And my thesis is titled Aboriginal  Contemporary Dance Practice: Embodying Our  Ways of Knowing, Being and Doing.  Through dance storying, almost forgot that. What are some of your approaches to choreography?  Can you tell us about ‘embodied storying’?   Absolutely. I think by research it gave  me time and space to  really look deeply into  even our interpretation or our connection  with the English  language. And I found storytelling  just didn’t sort of give the fluidity or  the depth of intimacy  that we as First Nation  people have with our country and the  elements that make up  country for us, whether it’s  land, sea, waterways, or sky. And so the  word that I use was  dance storying, and that was  like more circular, as in there’s more  ways in which that I  could tell my story and it  didn’t feel linear. And I feel like  sometimes using the word  storytelling, it’s very one  direction and very speaking at, not with.  And so with the words  dance storying, that became how I  felt my embodied knowledge and how I  create and how I make was  more aligned with that. So in my  thesis you would have saw that, well  there is a section there that  I spoke to about old ways for  new ceremonies. And that is a framework  that I developed based on  my knowledge and experience  of looking at cultural knowledge and  looking at traditional Aboriginal dance  and the dance that I  grew up learning from the old people.  How, pretty much how do I place that  cultural knowledge? How do  I negotiate that cultural knowledge  within a contemporary dance  framework? And what are the  negotiations that need to occur or  happen? And for example, like I always  use, is it my story to  tell? And if it’s not my story, well  that’s a start point. Like if it’s not  your story, then what  right do I have in telling that story? So  and that’s what I think is  important about dance making,  choreographing is you really need to take  time to research and take  time to really listen to what,  you know, what the stories need to be  told through the embodied, my embodied  knowledge. And so yeah,  I look at whether it’s, whether the  information that I’m about to share, is  it supposed to be for  private or public settings? Again, whose  story is it? Is it my hereditary  privilege to be accessing  that information and then claiming it as  my own? So really, there’s a  very deep, sensitive process  that I go through in creating works. And  then, you know, using the  contemporary dance framework,  I can then create an abstract  interpretation of my connection with  place without having to  cross over into knowledge that’s not  really accessible or  knowledge that’s not mine. So  the contemporary dance framework I use is  very, it’s something that  I’m still working on, how I  tell my like how I embed Indigenous  knowledges into that  particular way of choreographing and  sharing of stories. But it’s very, and I  learned that process  when I was at NAISDA,  and I learned that through Bangarra. And  I’ve just found my way of telling my  story. But it was through  those two art organisations and college  that I was able, I feel  I’m now in a position to  create and develop my way of telling  story through where I am  now, which is at the university.

Can you talk a bit more about how you bring cultural and contemporary dance together?

So here I’ve been here at the Victoria  College of the Arts as a  lecturer in dance for the past  three years. My specialisation is  Indigenous Pedagogy and  Practice. I teach into the Master  of Dance coursework. A subject that I  developed is Body, Time,  Space and Place and that looks at  over the course of the semester that  really looks at individuals who are  enrolled in the subject to  look at or to interrogate their personal  and cultural identity as an  inroad to their knowingness.  And so I feel like I facilitate rather  than lecture in that  subject is facilitate how  do they safely explore what their dance  expression is going to be.  And I also introduce cultural  knowledge and we look at the historical,  cultural, political and social events  that have shaped the  place that we perform. So we really look  at it’s a very 360  perspective on dance from an Indigenous  worldview and we work through how do  artists or students enrol in that  subject, how do they find  their way of telling the stories that’s  not only safe for  themselves but safe for others  and they’re taking the time to find what  their practice is about. Are you planning to do a PhD?  So I’m not yet enrolled in a PhD, but  it’s something that  I’ve been thinking about.  I think there’s a part, sort of a journey  or a thread that’s come  through my masters that I feel  like I could develop or build upon. So  yeah, it is in the  immediate future. So looking at  either the year or the next year, 12  months or 24 months. So I’m about to see  what my options are,  but it will be in dance. It’ll be about  cultural revitalization,  education and healing. And so how  that comes together in a PhD, I don’t  know yet, but that’s how  they’re my areas of interest.

How does your role at VCA work between the Wilin Centre and School of Dance?

So I work between VCA Dance for three  days and then one day at the Willem  Centre for Indigenous  Arts and Cultural Development and yeah I  don’t feel they’re two  different roles. I get to  speak about Indigenous dance pedagogy and  practice in both of those spaces.  Part of my role here in Leadership and  Services is I mentor the First Nation  students that are here  in the undergrad and the Master of Dance  course. So there’s also  that connection I have with the  students and also at the Wilin Centre  I’m a lecturer in the  subject Stories of Place which  is a core component of the Victoria  College of the Arts first  year students studying a BFA here  and that’s a subject that really explores  stories of place from an Indigenous  perspective and from  the First Nation peoples of this place.  So and that’s a subject  through the Wilin Centre that  I get to be part of and that’s for one  whole semester. So every  student in the Bachelor of  Fine Arts in their first year will  complete this subject in order to  continue their studies here at VCA.

How are Indigenous Knowledges being integrated into dance pedagogy?

I think often I come to work and I think,  “How amazing is this?”  I get to be in a dance studio or get to  be with colleagues who  have come across the world.  And at dance, we get to speak dance, we  get to speak about dance making.  It’s conversations about  dance all day, every day here.  And so there’s always this really  vibrant, exciting time.  And also sharing, like sharing is a big  part of embedding Indigenous knowledges  into the curriculum.  And by doing it in a way that I feel  culturally safe, but also for those who  are learning from Indigenous dance  practitioners and educators,  is that what can be retransmitted or  reproduced or being able to set those  boundaries up as well through a  pedagogical framework.  So there’s lots of  sharing, but in a safe space.  And most of my dance workshops, or when I  go into teaching, into the other modules  here at the Victoria College of the Arts,  is that I get to take the students also  outside and we go to the Wilin Gardens  and we really explore how it feels to  like take off your shoes  and connect with the grounds.  And when we do connect with the ground,  that space between our feet and the  earth, who’s, you know, how do we  acknowledge country in a way where it’s  embodied and it feels deep, like it’s  respectful and meaningful.  And so really working outside the  parameters of, you know, dancing within a  traditional white dance space, taking  students out and really connecting and  responding to the environment is a core  part of my teaching.

 You have instigated some amazing opportunities for students beyond the studio. What are some of the effects these experiences are having on the students?

Absolutely. So I, here at VCA Dance,  there’s an opportunity each  year to develop and deliver  different subjects within the Bachelor of  Fine Arts and also in the  Masters I just teach into  the Body Time Space and Place. But over  the years I had the  opportunity to learn and develop the  other subjects here. So this year  recently I took a group of students over  to Indonesia. So we went  to Java Surakata Solar City and we got to  work with a performing  arts institute EC in Indonesia  and we spent two weeks where students  from VCA Dance through the  Global Traveling Studio  subject. They got to spend time with  another institute and learn  traditional Javanese dance  and then it gave our students the  opportunity to develop their pedagogy and  teach the students in  Indonesia. And then over that two-week  period or week and a half we  had there myself and another  educator from EC college. We got to  co-choreograph and collaborate on our  student work and so that  was really exciting working with a dance  educator in Indonesia  coming together and both sharing  different experiences and knowledges of  dance and both working  together to merge our choreographic  practices together and it was really good  to work with to have  that opportunity available  but also to see how students are now  learning to develop their network and  their dance community  not just here in Australia but elsewhere  as well. So that was  really exciting and also  through the Master of Dance coursework  the subject that I teach into we in the  first year so it was  the inaugural Master of Dance group we  got to go to Yorta Yorta  country on the Dookie campus and  spent a one-week dance intensive there  and so that was a really  exciting moment too to see how  students learn and respond to different  Aboriginal nations and hopefully through  the subjects that they take here at VCA  that they get to learn how to approach  and the right way in going and  approaching community  or dancing on country.

 

What opportunities does working within a university offer in relation to your own practice or praxis?

Absolutely. I think I’m going to forever  be developing and  understanding what my practice is.  I think there’s also political factors,  social factors that will also influence  the direction of  where my practice will go.  I think it’ll be the PhD where I’ll  allocate my time and energy to find a  topic that I’m going to be interested in.  I feel like the university, as an  academic, researching is always going to  be part of how I create and make work and  how that will keep  evolving my dance practice.  Here and wherever it takes me.

What kind of impacts would you like your teaching and research to have going forward?

For me, it’s about creating  opportunities. It’s about really  encouraging independent  dance artists, First Nation dance artists  to consider coming  through the academy and studying  and seeing how the academy can also  support their dance  practice. Because it’s worked  for me and being able to create pathways  for First Nation dance  artists to come through  study and then to share and develop them  as dance researchers going forward.

How did/do you manage living off Country so far away from your homelands?

Yeah, I find this is, I’m still grappling  with the idea of on country, off country.  I think for me, I am part of country  whether I’m physically  there or not, the way I speak,  who I am, the way I move, my  characteristics, all of me is part of  country whether I’m physically  on the lands of my Lama Lama, Ayapathu    Kuku Yalanji ancestry or  whether I’m on the other side  of the world.  I feel like I carry country in the way in  which I embody and experience the world.  The difference is, although I say in  saying all of that, and I  know that I’m not on the  lands that is my, that I am away from  home physically, it means  that I’m just not a traditional  custodian of the place  where I am right now.  The on country, off country  question is always interesting.  I think I would understand it or how I  answer that is I’m just  not a traditional custodian  of the place where I meet today.

How do you approach teaching dance to young people?

I think being a dancer and a  choreographer, every day I get to play  and make up stories and I get to  have fun. So I think often we overthink,  as we get older we  overthink and that blocks our  creativity. So I always get students of  all different ages to  first play and remember to  play in creating dance and to find joy in  that. And through that joy  I then set a task, I give  the students a word and it could be tree,  it could be rock, it  could be waves. So I use  words or elements in our surroundings  that’s relevant to the  students and that they can  connect with. And then through that we  workshop different ideas. So  we look at different layers,  we look at different heights, we look at  different shapes that each of those  different tasks that I  set make or they look like. So I try to  include or in that moment of  interaction with young people,  whether it’s an introductory to dance or  they’ve had previous experience and  opportunities to learn  dance, I get them to take away skills for  them to then create and  make and become future  choreographers where they can just use  small little tools around  them to build and to tell  their story. So and that’s, I do that as  well with the students I  teach in the master’s level.  It’s just giving them the tools and the  skills to find their way of  connecting to their surroundings  and how, what is their relationship to  certain elements within  the environment. So it’s very  similar, it’s just I work at a different  pace and I use different languages to  bring out the different  ideas that I need the students to share.  What I try to bring is, you  know, ideas or again using  elements around for them to find their  connection, but I will share  a story of how I’m connected  with that particular element or so I do  share what my story is and  how I’m connected with that  particular idea and then I then ask the  students to then find their  connection and it’s through  that connection that I guide them  through, you know, embedding cultural  knowledge or bringing  knowledge that’s specific to their family  and tradition. So I  find that it’s a two-way  relationship in choreographing and  developing content with young students.

What do you see as some of the most exciting Indigenous-led research underway in Australia now?

I think we’re very slow in picking this  up, but a founding member  of Bangarra Dance Theatre  and my former teacher at NAISDA Dance  College, Monica Stevens, started  researching and completed  a Masters in Digital  Technology and Dance.  I feel like digital technology is a  fantastic media for our mob  to tell our stories through  dance.  It’s really exciting to see where and how  having access to digital technology where  we can take dance practice to, whether  it’s here in Australia  or in different parts of  the world where they’re very innovative  with digital technology.