Art in NYC: Hilma af Klint at the Guggenheim Museum

Art in NYC: Hilma af Klint at the Guggenheim Museum

The Guggenheim Museum presents Hilma af Klint: Paintings for the Future; on view until April 23, 2019

Hilma af Klint, Group IV, The Ten Largest, No. 7, Adulthood, 1907
Hilma af Klint, Group IV, The Ten Largest, No. 7, Adulthood, 1907 from untitled series; tempera on paper mounted on canvas, 315 x 235 cm The Hilma af Klint Foundation, Stockholm / Photo: Albin Dahlström, the Moderna Museet, Stockholm

The Guggenheim Museum in New York City presents an extensive expose of works by Swedish artist Hilma af Klint. Stunning and mysterious, af Klint’s large and small paintings of abstract forms and shapes were created years before Abstract art took its place in the hearts and minds of artists and the public.

A graduate of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm, af Klint started developing her own expressive language from 1906. Stripped bare from imagery, her works were way ahead of the established giants of Abstractionism like Kandinsky, Mondrian or Malevich. Yet af Klint’s art remained unknown to the public partly due to her belief that the world was not ready for her art and in accordance with her wish to show her works 20 years after her death.

Many of af Klint’s paintings were inspired by and served as a medium to express the spiritual beliefs which emerged from occult teachings and Theosophy. The cycle of the large bright-colored canvases at the entrance of the exhibition was conceived as The Paintings for the Temple. The lively palette of pastel colors with pink symbolizing femininity, yellow for masculinity, and gentle blue for the universal unity express the unseen world channeled through the art. Walk up the spiraling hall of the museum to absorb the art created a century ago in all its untouched novelty.

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Nightlife in NYC: Seven-String Guitar Recital by Oleg Timofeyev at Russian Samovar

Nightlife in NYC: Seven-String Guitar Recital by Oleg Timofeyev at Russian Samovar on June 27, 2019

The World’s Leading Expert on the Russian Guitar Oleg Timofeyev performs an instrumental program “The Golden Age of Russian Guitar” at the legendary Russian Samovar on Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 8.30 pm
Contributed by Lena Khandros
Guitarist Oleg Timofeyev
Guitarist Oleg Timofeyev / Image courtesy of the artist

Perhaps some of you have noticed occasional guitars in the famous masterpieces of Russian literature:  for example, Natasha Rostova dances to her uncle’s guitar playing in Tolstoy’s “War and Peace,” or Telegin plays a polka on his guitar in Chekhov’s “Uncle Vanya.” But barely anybody knows that from its very beginning in the 1790s, the Russian guitar tradition has been very different from the Western-European one.  To make the matters worse, by the end of the 20th Century, this unique and exciting tradition was pretty much abandoned in Russia. 

Oleg Timofeyev is the person behind the world-wide revival of the Russian seven-string guitar (or semistrunka).  In 1999 he defended his Ph. D. dissertation on the subject, at Duke University.  Since then he recorded more than 30 CD albums, featuring different repertoires:  classical, contemporary, Russian-Romani (“Gypsy”), Jewish, and even Georgian.  Since 2006 he produces annual Russian Guitar Festivals, that bring players from Russia, Ukraine, Belorus, Kyrgyzstan, France, Germany, Sweden, Norway, and Australia. 

But most of Timofeyev’s activities, including his festivals, happen far away from the City.  It is of particular interest for New Yorkers, then, to attend his intimate, engaging performance at the Tolstoy Lounge.  For every piece he will be playing on his original 1912 guitar by Mikhail Eroshkin, Timofeyev will tell a story that will put the music in its historical and cultural context.  For example, he will share with you a shockingly light-wing variations on the Russian anthem “God Save the Czar,” and will explain the roots of the disproportional popularity of Oginski’s Polonaise in Russian and Soviet culture.

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Program

Polonaise melancholique, Ignatz von Held (1766-1814)

Allegro – Kozaque – Air Russe, A. Swientitsky (ca. 1803)

Folie d’Espagne, Andrei Sychra (1773–1850) God Save the Tsar!

Cachucha Pietro Pettoletti,(ca. 1795-ca. 1870?)

L’illusion perdue and the Orphan’s song, Nikolay Alexandrov (1818-1884)

Polonaise in E Major, Michał Ogiński

Polonaise in G Minor, (arr. by Sychra)

Waltz, Pavel Ladyzhensky

As Beyond the Dear River, Mikhail Vysotsky

Ukrainian Song (1791-1837)

Ukrainian Dance, Vasily Sarenko (1814-1881)

 

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Date & Time: Thursday, June 27, 2019 – doors open at 7.30 pm / music from 8.30 pm

Venue: 256 W 52nd St, New York, NY 10019   

The Next Festival of Emerging Artists with Miranda Cuckson

The Next Festival of Emerging Artists with Miranda Cuckson

Submitted by Jennifer Wada

Violinist Miranda Cuckson
Violinist Miranda Cuckson ; Photo credit John Rogers, Spectrum

The Next Festival of Emerging Artists has been described as holding a “unique place in the vastly diversifying field of new music.” Led by the festival’s founder and artistic director, Peter Askim, the young musicians of Next Festival 2019 are joined by violinist and contemporary music star Miranda Cuckson for a program including the U.S. premiere of Toshio Hosokawa’s “Hika” (2015) for violin and string orchestra, and Toru Takemitsu’s “Nostalghia” (1987) for violin and string orchestra; as well as three works for string orchestra alone: Aaron Jay Kernis’s “Sarabanda in Memoriam” (2004), Reena Esmail’s “Teen Murti” (2018); and the world premiere of a work by Peter Askim. www.next-fest.org
National Sawdust
Date: Sunday, June 2, 2019, at 7:00 pm
Tickets: $25 in advance, $29 at the door
Venue: https://nationalsawdust.org/event/the-next-festival-of-emerging-artists/

Beyond NYC: Piano Recital by Vassily Primakov and Oxana Mikhailoff at Bronxville Women’s Club

Beyond NYC: Piano Recital by Vassily Primakov and Oxana Mikhailoff at Bronxville Women’s Club

An all-Schumann program of the Complete Piano Sonatas, preceded by Dr. Liza Yui lecture “Schumann – The Complicated Genius”, is on Saturday, May 4, 2019 at 7:30 pm at the Bronxville Women’s Club

Composer Robert Schumann, pianist Oxana Mikhailoff, pianist Vassily Primakov, musicoligist Dr. Lisa Yui
Robert Schumann; lithograph by Josef Kriehuber [Public domain]; pianist Oxana Mikhailoff, pianist Vassily Primakov, musicologist Dr. Lisa Yui / images courtesy of the artists
Robert Schumann, the most intimate yet the least understood of the Romantic composers of the mid-19th century, has an air of mystery about his music. Oxana Mikhailoff’s and Vassily Primakov’s performance of the Complete Sonatas at the Bronxville Women’s Club will lift the veil of mystery from Schumann’s music. The lecture “Schumann – The Complicated Genius” by musicologist Dr. Lisa Yui is preceding the program.

The pianists of high-acclaim, Mikhailoff and Primakov are well regarded by the critics and the public. American Record Guide compares Primakov’s playing to Gilels’ noting that since “Gilels, how many pianists have the right touch?” Mikhailoff is well-known for her poetic and sensitive style, essential for bringing Schumann’s music to the audience.

The concert promises to be an unforgettable night of music and fun! Join the musicians in the charming setting of the Bronxville Women’s Club. Bring your friends and family for the joy of music!

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Opera in NYC: Mozart’s Don Giovanni at the Met Opera

Opera in NYC: Mozart’s Don Giovanni at the Met Opera

The most Romantic Mozart masterpiece fills the Met Opera house with delightful music and incredible singing; performances run thru April 18, 2019

Luca Pisaroni as Don Giovanni and Rachel Willis-Sørensen as Donna Anna in Mozart's "Don Giovanni."
Luca Pisaroni as Don Giovanni and Rachel Willis-Sørensen as Donna Anna in Mozart’s “Don Giovanni.” Photo: Marty Sohl / Met Opera

Delicious music, dynamic staging, and incredible singing are all on view in the Metropolitan Opera production of Mozart’s Don Giovanni. Bringing much-needed theatricality and energy to the centuries-old genre of dark comedy, the vibrant arias of the sopranos that vie for and suffer from the frivolity and ferocity of the Don are contrasted with the lower register voices of the male cast, who are well-meaning but helpless. The built-up tensions can only be resolved by a divine intervention, stressing the intransigent nature of philanderers and seducers. And Mozart’s music rescues the improbable plot!

This year Don Giovanni cast features bass-baritone Luca Pisaroni and baritone Peter Mattei alternating in the title role, bass Ildar Abdrazakov and bass-baritone Adam Plachetka as Don’s servants, and an exciting line-up of sopranos Rachel Willis-Sorensen, Federica Lombardi, Aida Garifullina, Guanqun Yu, and Susanna Philips in the roles of Donna Anna, Donna Elvira, and Zerlina.

On the first 3 nights of the performances the tender and soaring lines by grieving Donna Anna (Rachel Willis-Sorensen) and the wordy and artistically rich roles of Leporello (Ildar Abdrazakov) and the Don (Luca Pisaroni) were rightfully rewarded by the audience. Thanks to the tactful casting the old tale looks fresh and engaging. But the strongest round of applause still belongs to Mozart for his unbeatable musical fete.

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