Katja Wulff


Katja Wulff, also Käthe Wulff,, was a German-Swiss expressionist dancer and dance instructor. She attended Rudolf von Laban's dance classes and became associated with the Dada movement. She ran a dance school and was still teaching there at the age of 90.

Life and career

Born in Hamburg, Wulff was educated as a teacher of drawing and gymnastics from 1912 to 1915. From 1913/14, she took dance lessons with Gertrud Falke, and also attended a 1914 summer class on Monte Verità with Rudolf von Laban, dance theoreticist and pioneer of modern dance. She moved to Zürich in 1916 and studied for three years with Laban and Mary Wigman. She graduated in 1918 with a Diploma of Pedagogy in tänzerisches Turnen und Kunsttanz. She founded, together with Suzanne Perrottet, a school for eurythmy. She worked for three years on the Amalfi coast and Capri.
In 1923, Wulff founded a school of Ausdruckstanz in Basel where she still taught at the age of 90. She directed a dance company, Tanzstudio Wulff, from 1926, with Mariette von Meyenburg as choreographer. They collaborated with Paul Sacher, Max Bill, Max Sulzbachner and Méret Oppenheim. She had contact with Dada artists such as Jean Arp and Sophie Taeuber-Arp. She performed at the Tänzerkongresse in Germany from 1928 to 1930 and at the 1939 Landesausstellung in Zürich.
In 1936, Wulff became a Swiss citizen. She married Charles Ferdinand Vaucher, a dancer, actor and stage director from Basel, in 1937. They were divorced in 1947. Wulff died at age 101 in the in Basel.
The dancer Mary Delpy noted that she walked like a queen, had perfect posture, and continued to teach beyond the age of 90
Her nachlass is held by the.

Literature