The former home of composer Douglas Lilburn (ONZ) in Thorndon, Wellington has been offered as a residence for New Zealand composers for over 15 years. The property is administered by the Lilburn Residence Trust, who ensure that the property is used in a manner befitting the legacy of New Zealand’s most important composer of the 20th century. The Trust normally offers use of the house to the composer holding the New Zealand School of Music Composer-in-Residence. If that composer does not require the house, then the Trust calls for applications from other New Zealand composers. Each composer lives in the house, paying a modest rent, for up to a year.
Penelope Axtens took up residence in March 2025. Axtens is a New Zealand-born composer with a distinguished international career, studied in Auckland and Wellington before gaining recognition with the NZSO and RNZ Concert's Music 2000 Prize. After years working in London and Berlin, including a senior role at Sony Classical, she returned to Aotearoa in 2024 and has recently produced new works for cello, harp, and piano, including commissions by international performers.
The nine-month residency offers Axtens a chance to reconnect with Aotearoa's music community while living and composing at the residence. As Axten writes: "I am genuinely thrilled and honoured to be selected Composer-in-Residence for 2025. I am very grateful to Creative New Zealand, the Lilburn Residence Trust and the NZSM for this exceptional opportunity to compose fulltime while living at the celebrated Lilburn Residence. Having recently returned to Aotearoa New Zealand, this residency feels wonderfully timed for me, and I am very much looking forward to creating new music that explores themes of identity and belonging, while reconnecting with the NZSM and creative communities in Wellington."
Walk up the grand Hunter Building stairs while listening to Douglas Lilburn's Staircase Music (an electroacoustic composition with a backstory!). Be greeted with a glass of bubbles and canapes in the Hunter Common Room. Move into the Hunter Council Chamber for a concert that includes works by Lilburn alongside the premiere of Sheen and Shadow by current Composer-in-Residence Penelope Axtens, and offerings from some of the composers who have lived in the house since the Lilburn Residence Trust was formed 20 years ago. Hear the world premiere of Ross Harris's Light is Where You Are (in memory of Vincent O'Sullivan). Return to the Hunter Common Room for the auction of works by John Drawbridge, Anne Noble, Joanna Paul, Doreen Blumhardt, Shane Cotton, Dick Frizzell, Layla Walter, Gregory O'Brien and more. Lilburn’s Glass Music – not heard since 1971 – will farewell guests as they exit the Hunter Building. Experienced auctioneer, former Porirua City Councillor and Chair of the Pātaka Foundation Euon Murrell QSM will conduct the auction.
Refreshments and a chance to view auction items from 5.30 pm. Concert commences at 6 pm.
Tickets are available here.
Auction Catalogue here
This concert and charity auction are in support of the stabilizing the bank on the Western side of the Lilburn House.
SOUNZ The Centre for New Zealand Music has released a podcast series that examines the history and inhabitants of the Lilburn Residence. Titled The Magpie House its host Kirsten Johnstone weaves together the stories that surround the house and its inhabitants into a Forest-Gump-like saga of war and music, cold-war espionage and persecution, the search for identity and a place to call home.
Listen to the four episodes below:
Episode 1: Landfall In Unknown Seas
Episode 3: Lilburn of the Valley
Episode 4: The Resonance Chamber