Carly grew up in a cult. The experience partly inspired her latest show
Carly Sheppard is perhaps best known for experimental performance, but a coincidental meeting with a fellow dancer convinced her to go back to her roots.
Dancer and choreographer Carly Sheppard joined forces with Alisdair Macindoe to create the "made-up magical land" of The Shepherds. (Supplied: Tiffany Garvie)
She was at a golf course in Torquay for an event to mark the 100th Sidney Myer Fellowship. Past recipients like Sheppard were invited to apply for funding to create a new work.
"Alisdair Macindoe came up to me and was like, 'Hey, we don't really know each other, but do you want to apply for this thing together?'" Sheppard tells ABC Radio National's Awaye!.
"I'm a Sheppard too on my mum's side," Macindoe continued. "Let's explore that."
Together Sheppard and Macindoe created a darkly comedic choreographic work about a pair of lost sheep in a slaughter paddock, The Shepherds, set to premiere this week at the inaugural Australian Dance Biennale as part of Melbourne arts festival Rising.
Sheppard — a descendant of the Takalaka people of North Queensland — was thrilled by the coincidence of meeting Macindoe. It brought to mind the idea of being a visitor on someone else's land — a feeling she has living in Melbourne.
Having grown up off Country and without learning her language or dances, Sheppard feels like an "orphan of the colony".
"Alisdair is [also] exploring his place, but [there's] also the symbolism of us working together, both settlers in Melbourne, but him being a settler in [Australia]."
Their dance work explores many ideas of what it means to be a "shepherd". For Sheppard, the idea is linked to the cult she grew up in.
"The concept of a shepherd to me is a Judaeo-Christian biblical concept that is connected to a bunch of trauma and some serious schisms in my upbringing," she says.
"It is also reflective of what has happened to our people: the missions, missionaries, the idea there is a deity who has given one group of people dominion over others."
All these ideas could've meant The Shepherds felt overstuffed. But Sheppard says she and Macindoe found an elegant solution.
"We created a cult and a ceremonial event for this cult, and it's pretty cool and intense.
"You can build this thing for the stage, but actually what you're building is the ceremony. The work itself is the ceremony."
The Shepherds is in some ways an artistic homecoming for Sheppard.
"What's been such a blessing about this situation and Alisdair wanting to work with me is it is in line with my commitment that I made to start dancing again and start choreographing again," she says.
Sheppard trained in dance and choreography at NAISDA Dance College and Victorian College of the Arts, but, over the years, her relat
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