Friday, October 31, 2014




PERFORMANCE

The Joyce Theater
Soledad Barrio & Noche Flamenca

"Following well-deserved critical accolades for her previous Joyce seasons, Soledad Barrio and her astounding company, Noche Flamenca, come back with Noche Flamenca y Antigona, featuring a night of flamenco with excerpts from Sophocles’ tragic tale. Again the company performs to live music, propelling the dancers to an incredible height of drama that “goes straight for the expressive tension that seems to be at flamenco’s very heart” (The New York Times) and elicits cheers from sold-out houses of loyal fans."

The Joyce Theater is in the middle of Chelsea.  Tonight is Halloween.  The streets will be packed with thousands of grown people in full costume.  It should be fun.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014



LECTURE

Socrates in the City
Eric Metaxas - Guest
Dick Cavett - Interviewer

"Every five years SITC does something more off-beat than usual. On October 28th, our guest is none other than our own Eric Metaxas, who has written a new book on MIRACLES. Since Eric cannot interview himself, we found the best guest host imaginable — Emmy-Award-winning television talkshow legend, Mr. Dick Cavett! Please join us for a conversation on a very important, intriguing, and provocative topic!" 

Tuesday, October 21, 2014




LINCOLN CENTER

Avery Fisher Hall
New York Philharmonic

Alan Gilbert - Conductor
Lang Lang - Piano

Mozart - Piano Concerto No. 17
Mozart - Overture to The Magic Flute
Mozart - Piano Concerto No. 24

Lang Lang Performs Mozart with Alan Gilbert and the NY Philharmonic Tonight



Lang Lang Performs Mozart with Alan Gilbert and the NY Philharmonic Tonight
Music Director Alan Gilbert will lead the New York Philharmonic in a one-night-only all- Mozart program featuring the Piano Concertos Nos. 17 and 24, with Lang Lang as soloist, and Overture to The Magic Flute, tonight, October 21, 2014, at 7:30 p.m.
"Lang Lang brings a completely personal quality to everything he performs," Alan Gilbert has said. "Mozart's music is uniquely challenging to the performer -- it has to be stylish and shaped, but ultimately human -- but there's nothing more fun or gratifying. You have to tell the story of the music. The story of Mozart is everybody's story, and it's an important one."
Lang Lang has performed with the New York Philharmonic 82 times, including his Philharmonic debut in 2002.
Artists
Music Director Alan Gilbert began his New York Philharmonictenure in September 2009, the first native New Yorker in the post.  "The Philharmonic and its music director Alan Gilbert have turned themselves into a force of permanent revolution."
Repertoire
After Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-91) moved to Vienna in 1781, he earned much of his income through public concerts in which he played his own music. His popularity with Viennese concertgoers can thus be gauged from the number of piano concertos he wrote each year. The peak was in 1784, when he produced six new concertos, including the Piano Concerto No. 17, one of only six works in the genre published during the composer's lifetime .The concerto may not have actually been written for Mozart's own use, however, but rather at the request of Gottfried von Ployer for his daughter, Barbara (often called Babette) - one of the most engaging and cultivated members of Viennese society, and one of Mozart's most gifted pupils in both piano and composition. It is said that at that time Mozart had a pet starling who could whistle the first five measures of the concerto - though it is unknown which came first, the starling's talents or the concerto. Igor Stravinsky led the Philharmonic's first presentation of this concerto, with soloist Beveridge Webster, at Carnegie Hall in January 1937; Jeffrey Kahane performed and conducted the Orchestra's most recent presentation of the concerto in February 2006.
A freemason, Mozart completed his opera famously filled with Masonic symbolism, The Magic Flute, in 1791. Utilizing a libretto by fellow Mason Emanuel Schilkaneder, which drew upon popular German and Austrian fairy tales, the Singspiel (a popular style that featured both spoken dialogue and singing) follows Tamino and his traveling companion Papageno, who rescue the Pamina from the clutches of her evil mother, the Queen of the Night. Finished only a few days before the opera's premiere, the Overture is a wonderfully energetic preview of the adventure to come, weaving story and music together to form an unusually unified masterpiece. The Magic Flute was ultimately one of Mozart's greatest successes, but the composer died less than two months after its premiere at Schikaneder's Freihaus-Theater auf der Wieden in Vienna, and the piece would be his final complete work. Ureli Corelli Hill, founding President of the Philharmonic Society of New York, conducted the Orchestra's first presentation of the Overture in November 1843 at the Apollo Rooms; its most recent performance was in April 2011, led by Alan Gilbert.
Mozart composed his Piano Concerto No. 24 in Vienna in 1786, barely a month before the premiere of The Marriage of Figaro. It is widely considered to be among the composer's finest achievements, completed during one of his most creatively rich periods, when he was not only finishing Figaro but also working on several other pieces including Piano Concertos Nos. 22 and 23. The darkness of the Piano Concerto No. 24 and its minor key make it stand apart from its immediate predecessors, and it calls for the largest orchestra of his piano concertos, giving it a uniquely symphonic texture. It was premiered in April 1786 at Vienna's Burgtheater. The New York Philharmonic first performed this concerto in October 1944, with Robert Casadesus as soloist and Artur Rodzin?ski conducting, and most recently in March 2010, with Jeffrey Kahane leading from the keyboard.

Monday, October 20, 2014



PERFORMANCE

Merkin Concert Hall
What Makes It Great?

"Spring" & Summer"
from Vivaldi's Four Seasons


http://vimeo.com/107526879

http://www.kaufmanmusiccenter.org/mch/event/what-makes-it-great-spring-summer#sthash.HMArWVsp.dpuf


"Hear Vivaldi’s masterpiece with new ears! Rob Kapilow reveals what even serious classical music aficionados don’t know about The Four Seasons: each “season” was originally attached to a sonnet of mysterious authorship which the music illustrates line by line. During the performance, each line of the poetry will be projected as it occurs in the music, allowing the piece to come alive in a completely new way."

Sunday, October 19, 2014




RECITAL

Carnegie Hall
Maurizio Pollini - Piano

  • SCHUMANN Arabeske in C Major
  • SCHUMANN Kreisleriana
  • CHOPIN Prelude in C-sharp Minor, Op. 45
  • CHOPIN Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat Minor
  • CHOPIN Berceuse in D-flat Major
  • CHOPIN Polonaise in A-flat Major

"A perfect combination of intellect and insight grace Maurizio Pollini’s performances, bringing a fabulously sensitive touch, subtlety, and a grasp of form that is unparalleled. The Boston Globe declared, “Pollini makes an elegant craftsman. The result is exceptionally intelligent expression, craft so accomplished it thrills on its own terms.” Pollini returns to Carnegie Hall in one of the season’s most eagerly awaited recitals."

"Both born in 1810, Robert Schumann and Frédéric Chopin are celebrated as pioneers of Romanticism. Though their compositional styles both exhibit improvisational qualities and a devotion to counterpoint, their works are aesthetically distinct and their creative lives very different. Chopin was on the whole a composer for piano, straying only occasionally to other instruments or to orchestral works (and, in those cases, to accompany the solo piano). Schumann, on the other hand, wrote for many instruments and in nearly every genre, including symphonies, as well as vocal and chamber music. The pianistic outputs of both composers, however, are now staples of the concert repertoire and pose great technical and interpretive challenges to the artist.

While Chopin was a celebrated piano virtuoso, a hand injury cut short Schumann’s career as a concert pianist, and he began to favor writing and composing. He co-founded the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, a journal in which he commented on new music of the day. He is particularly well known for his first and last reviews, each of which heralded the arrival of a young musical genius: Chopin in 1831 and Brahms in 1853.

Though the composers lived in different regions (Chopin mostly in Paris, Schumann in Leipzig and other German cities), traveled in different circles, and had little if any personal contact, they obviously respected each other and their works. Chopin dedicated his F-Major Ballade to Schumann, and Schumann dedicated Kreisleriana, on tonight’s program, to Chopin."
 



Thursday, October 16, 2014




MUSEUM

Metropolitan Museum of Art
Cubism: The Leonard A. Lauder Collection

  

teaser
Exhibition Location: First-floor special exhibition galleries
Press Preview:  Tuesday, October 14, 10:00 a.m.–noon
Cubism: The Leonard A. Lauder Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art will be the most important exhibition of the essential Cubists—Georges Braque (French, 1882–1963), Juan Gris (Spanish, 1887–1927), Fernand Léger (French, 1881–1955), and Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881–1973)—in more than 30 years. The exhibition and accompanying publication will trace the invention and development of Cubism using iconic examples from the Leonard A. Lauder Collection, with its unparalleled holdings in this foundational modernist movement. The exhibition will mark the first time that the Collection, which Mr. Lauder pledged to the Museum in April 2013, is shown in its entirety. The exhibition, which opens October 20, 2014, will present 79 paintings, works on paper, and sculpture: 17 by Braque, 15 by Gris, 15 by Léger, and 34 by Picasso. Rich in modernist pictures by Picasso and Braque, the exhibition will also include an unprecedented number of papiers collé by Juan Gris and a stunning array of Léger’s most famous series, his Contrasts of Forms

Over the past 40 years, Leonard Lauder has selectively acquired masterpieces and seminal works to create the most important collection in private hands of works by the four preeminent Cubist artists: Mr. Lauder made his first two Cubist acquisitions in 1976 and continues to add to the Collection, which is distinguished by its quality, focus, and depth. 
In coordination with Mr. Lauder’s announcement of the gift of the Cubist works, the Metropolitan Museum, with support from a group of trustees and supporters, including Mr. Lauder, has established a new research center for modern art, housed at the Metropolitan. The Leonard A. Lauder Research Center for Modern Art will serve as a center for scholarship, archival documentation and collections, and innovative approaches to studying the history of Cubism, its origins and influence. The Center has been envisioned by Mr. Lauder as a means to transform the presence of modern art at the Metropolitan in dialogue with its encyclopedic collections. With its own dedicated two-year fellowships—with two new recipients arriving each year—the Center will also sustain focused research on all aspects of modernism, the Leonard A. Lauder Collection and the Metropolitan Museum’s growing holdings of early and mid-20th-century art. 
The exhibition will be accompanied by a publication edited by the co-curators of the exhibition—Emily Braun, Curator of the Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection and Distinguished Professor of Art History at Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, and Rebecca Rabinow, the Leonard A. Lauder Curator of Modern Art and Curator in Charge of the Leonard A. Lauder Research Center for Modern Art at the Metropolitan Museum. The publication will serve as an essential resource for the study of these four artists and their role in inventing and extending the definitions of Cubism. It includes 22 essays by 17 preeminent scholars in the field, who have used the works in the Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection as the basis for new discoveries and interpretations. It will also publish 25 years of sustained research on the works in the Collection – their provenance, exhibition history, and inclusion in earlier canonical studies of Cubism.

Cubism was the most influential art movement of the 20th century: it radically destroyed traditional illusionism in painting, revolutionized the way we see the world (as Juan Gris said), and paved the way for the pure abstraction that dominated Western art for the next 50 years. Led by Picasso and Braque, the Cubists dismantled traditional perspective and modeling in the round in order to emphasize the two-dimensional picture plane. Cubist collage introduced fragments of mass-produced popular culture into pictures, thereby changing the very definition of art.

More than half of the Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection focuses on the six-year period, 1909-14, during which Braque and Picasso—the two founders of the Cubist movement—collaborated closely. Their partnership began in earnest in the fall of 1908, when the visionary dealer Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler exhibited Braque’s most recent paintings in his Paris gallery. Henri Matisse is known to have disparaged Braque’s pictures as “painting made of small cubes;” the term Cubism first appeared in print in Louis Vauxcelles’s review of the Kahnweiler exhibition. The Collection includes two landscapes from this historic show: The Terrace at the Hôtel Mistral (1907), which marks Braque’s transition from Fauvism to Cubism, and the iconic Trees at L’Estaque (1908), which inaugurates Cubism.

By 1909 Braque and Picasso were inseparable. As Picasso later recounted, “Almost every evening, either I went to Braque’s studio or he came to mine. Each of us HAD to see what the other had done during the day. We criticized each other’s work. A canvas wasn’t finished until both of us felt it was.” A pair of identically sized paintings from 1911 in the Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection—Braque’s Still Life with Clarinet (Bottle and Clarinet) and Picasso’s Pedestal Table, Glasses, Cups, Mandolin—exemplify a pivotal moment in the history of Cubism, when the two artists began to picture objects from different points of view in an increasingly shallow space. Only a few clues were retained to help viewers decode the picture, the profile of an instrument or the tassel of a curtain. As the works hovered on the brink of illegibility, Braque and Picasso began to introduce “certainties,” as Braque called them: painted letters and words and, soon after, actual pieces of rope, newspaper, sheet music, and brand labels. They inspired other artists to incorporate all kinds of unorthodox materials into works of art.

The Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection contains such landmark paintings as Picasso’s landscape The Oil Mill (1909), which was one of the first Cubist pictures reproduced in Italy. After seeing it in the December 1911 issue of the Florentine journal La Voce, the Italian Futurists were inspired to modernize their style and engage in a rivalry with their French peers. Picasso’s Still Life with Fan: “L’Indépendant” (1911), in the Collection, is one of the first works in which he experimented with painted typography, in this case the gothic type masthead of L’Indépendant, the local newspaper of Céret in the foothills of the Pyrenees.

Braque’s Fruit Dish and Glass (1912), the very first Cubist papier collé (paper collage) ever created, is also in the Collection. Collages were a revolutionary Cubist art form in which ready-made objects were incorporated into fine art. In the summer of 1912, while vacationing with Picasso in the south of France, Braque saw imitation wood-grain wallpaper in a store window. He waited until Picasso left town before buying the faux bois paper and pasting it into a still-life composition. Braque’s decision to use mechanically printed, illusionistic wallpaper to represent the texture and color of a wooden table marked a turning point in Cubism. Braque later recounted, “After having made the papier collé [Fruit Dish and Glass], I felt a great shock, and it was an even greater shock for Picasso when I showed it to him.”

Braque and Picasso shared an interest in aviation, which extended to Braque’s nickname, “Wilb[o]urg” (after Wilbur Wright). The most famous example of their aviation puns is Picasso’s The Scallop Shell: “Notre Avenir est dans l’Air” (1912). This oval-shaped painting is simultaneously a representation of a tabletop and a blatantly flat canvas. The still-life elements of the work include a trompe l’oeil rendering of a pamphlet that had been issued by the French government in February 1912 to raise public support for military aviation. Picasso included it as a witty reference to his and Braque’s daring, groundbreaking Cubist enterprise.

Picasso’s synthetic Cubist masterpiece Woman in a Chemise in an Armchair (1913-14) is one of the artist’s most radical and imposing paintings. This provocative and highly eroticized image was hailed by André Breton in his seminal text Surrealism and Painting (1928). Additionally the Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection holds examples of two key Cubist sculptures: a rare cast of Picasso’s Head of a Woman (Fernande) (1909), which introduced the analytic Cubist style into three dimensions, and The Absinthe Glass (1914), which signaled the end of traditionally modeled sculpture. Each of the six casts in the edition was hand-painted by Picasso and includes an actual perforated tin absinthe spoon, thus blurring the boundaries between a multiple and a unique work of art.

Still lifes with flutes, guitars, mandolins, violins, and sheet music are indicative of Braque’s and Picasso’s personal pastimes as well as their enthusiasm for popular vaudeville tunes. Their word play and images combine ribald jokes and erudite references, high and low, as well as allusions to the Cubist movement and commentary on world events. In Violin: “Mozart Kubelick” (1912), for example, Braque indulged in a double entendre by including the name of the famed Czech violinist Jan Kubelik (1880-1940). The first three letters of his name (“KUB”) were those of a common bouillon cube, a foodstuff widely advertised on posters of the period, much to the delight of Braque and Picasso, who appreciated the pun on the word “Cub”ism. Violin: “Mozart/Kubelick” was one of three pictures by Braque that Kahnweiler sent to the New York Armory Show of 1913, the exhibition that introduced European modernism to the American public. It became one of the most caricatured Cubist images in the American press, which delighted in pointing out that Braque had put the “cube in Kubelik” and also that he had misspelled the maestro’s name.

Legend has it that, a few years earlier, on his way to visit Picasso at the Bateau-Lavoir, the rundown artist complex in Montmartre, Kahnweiler had glanced into the open window of Juan Gris’s studio and asked to see his work. In late 1912, the dealer began representing Gris. Whereas Braque and Picasso exhibited exclusively with Kahnweiler, Gris sent work to the annual Salon displays, bringing wider visibility to the new Cubist style. The Futurist artist Umberto Boccioni, for example, was directly influenced by Gris’s Head of a Woman (Portrait of the Artist’s Mother) after he saw it at the spring 1912 Salon des Indépendants. Gris took the analytic Cubism of Braque and Picasso and made it his own with precisely delineated compositions, flattened planes, and rhythmic surface patterns that prefigure the synthetic Cubism of the war years.  

The Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection contains an unparalleled selection of six painted collages that Gris created during the first half of 1914. Several of them incorporate wry references to the fictional criminal mastermind Fantômas, the subject of a wildly popular crime series. The shadowy Man at the Café (1914) hides his face behind a newspaper, made up of an actual clipping whose headline pointedly reads: “Bertillonage/ One will no longer be able to fake works of art.” Gris alludes to the criminal identification systems, or Bertillonage, of Alphonse Bertillon, one of the fathers of forensic science, whose methods were featured in the storylines of the Fantômas films. With mock suspense, Gris suggests that, having read about the latest criminal detection methods in the newspaper, the man at the table will escape the authorities once again—as will the Cubist masterminds in their games of visual deception.

In 1913, Kahnweiler added Fernand Léger to his stable of artists. Like Gris, Léger developed Cubism into a distinctive and influential style, in which dynamic intersections of spherical, cylindrical, and cubic forms evoked the new, syncopated rhythms of modern life. The Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection features several important works from Léger’s series Contrasts of Forms, wherein Léger worked out his primary oppositions of light and dark, angled and curved planes, color and line. The jaunty image of The Smoker (1914), with its body reduced to basic geometric parts, anticipates the dehumanization that Léger would experience first-hand during World War I. Gris and Picasso, both Spanish citizens, remained in France during the war. Picasso’s political sentiments are evident in the Collection’s Playing Cards, Glasses, Bottle of Rum: “Vive la France” (summer 1914; partially reworked 1915). Braque and Léger were among the many French artists who were mobilized to the Front. Léger was injured and after more than a year’s hospitalization he began working on Composition (The Typographer) (1918-19), one of the largest Cubist works ever painted. Its mural-like size anticipates his collaboration in the 1920s with the architect Le Corbusier. Composition (The Typographer), the definitive version of a series of three, reflects the affinity Léger felt toward the anonymous working man and his fascination with the trappings of modern Paris, from advertisements to architecture. Léger drew on his background as an architectural draftsman in celebrating the beauty of machines and in this way led Cubism into a new modernist machine aesthetic.

Leonard A. Lauder Research Center for Modern Art
The new Leonard A. Lauder Research Center for Modern Art will foster research, programming, and publications on the Met’s collections of modern art and on Cubism’s enduring impact in the 20th and 21st centuries. It is supported by an endowment funded by generous grants from Museum trustees and supporters, including Mr. Lauder. 

Under the auspices of the Center, the Metropolitan has awarded its inaugural fellowships for terms to begin in September 2014.  Two two-year fellowships for pre- and post-doctoral work will be awarded annually. Additionally senior scholars will be invited for residencies at the Museum. Through a program of lectures, study workshops, dossier exhibitions, publications, and a vibrant web presence (available via www.metmuseum.org/laudercenter), the Center will focus art-historical study and public appreciation of modern art generally and on Cubism in particular, and serve as a training ground for the next generation of scholars. The Center will eventually include a library and an archive on Cubism donated by Mr. Lauder.

Mr. Lauder always intended that his collection would serve as a catalyst for further and sustained study of early modern art.  The presence of his extraordinary Cubist collection at the Museum will transform the Metropolitan’s galleries and programming, just as his support of the Center will ensure that modern art remains a focus of continued study at the highest levels of scholarship.  




Tuesday, October 14, 2014



LINCOLN CENTER

Metropolitan Opera House

Le Nozze di Figaro - Mozart




"The Met season opens with Music Director James Levine conducting a new production of Mozart’s eternal masterpiece, directed by Richard Eyre, who sets the action in a 18th-century manor house in Seville during the 1930s. Dashing bass-baritone Ildar Abdrazakov, our Figaro, leads a dazzling cast, including Marlis Petersen as his bride, Susanna, Peter Mattei as the philandering Count, Amanda Majeski as the long-suffering Countess, and Isabel Leonard as the libidinous pageboy Cherubino. Designer Rob Howell (Carmen, Werther) utilizes a revolving set to keep the story bubbling along."

"A sparkling new production... joyful music-making... The youthful cast dug into their roles with gusto and sang with style... A memorable performance of Mozart's immortal comedy." (Associated Press)

"A swiftly paced, playful evening... Eyre skillfully built the comic ensembles to climaxes that made you laugh out loud... A happy Marriage at the Met." (Wall Street Journal)

"A ravishing, intricately wrought evening of music, humor and emotional depth... An evening like this is the strongest argument for the continued vigor of the Met." (New York Magazine)

"James Levine, making his first appearance on an opening night in four years, led an appealing cast and the great Met orchestra in an eloquent, richly detailed performance of this multilayered Mozart masterpiece." (New York Times)

Ildar Abdrazakov "brings a dark, solid voice and stylish phrasing to Figaro"... Peter Mattei as Count Almaviva is "terrific. His voice has depth, body and lyrical allure." Amanda Majeski's voice "is ample and expressive...she sang with nuance and taste and made a vulnerable countess." As Susanna, Marlis Petersen's "singing is clean and beautiful, but also unusually textured and plush for the part." (New York Times)

“Isabel Leonard, a young mezzo destined for a stellar career, has to be the most engaging [Cherubino] since Frederica von Stade”(Bloomberg).



Saturday, October 11, 2014




LINCOLN CENTER

Avery Fisher Hall
New York Philharmonic

Alan Gilbert - Conductor
Lisa Batiashvili - Violin

Christopher Rouse - Thunderstuck (World Premier - New York Philharmonic Commission)
Haydn - Symphony No. 103, Drumroll
Brahms - Violin Concerto


Here's a video by the violinist.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M4jHpRyUQ-k


Here's a video by the composer of Thunderstuck.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCSs5mLtZ8s



MUSIC | MUSIC REVIEW
The Rock Beat of His Youth, Echoing Again in August Precincts

Rouse’s World Premiere and Batiashvili Plays Brahms

By DAVID ALLENOCT. 10, 2014
Few composers are lucky enough to have an advocate like the New York Philharmonic’s music director, Alan Gilbert. According to the Philharmonic archives, Thursday’s premiere of Christopher Rouse’s new homage to soft rock, “Thunderstruck,” at Avery Fisher Hall, was the 36th performance Mr. Gilbert has given of his composer-in-residence’s work since February 2010.

“Thunderstuck” is not Mr. Rouse’s first attempt to combine the rock music of his youth with his compositional skills.  “Bonham” (1988), for eight percussionists, was a tribute to the great Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham. “Thunderstuck” wears its influences less strongly, its brassy riffs and drum-kit interruptions paying tribute to the likes of Jefferson Airplane, and specifically to Jay Ferguson’s “Thunder Island” (1978). It’s designed to be a fun concert opener, and it is.

But “Thunderstuck” and the rest of this Philharmonic program are the perfect illustration of why I — like others — am becoming frustrated by Mr. Gilbert. His commitment to new work, and especially to Mr. Rouse, is vital and laudable. It’s one way he’s changing “the template for what an American orchestra can be,” as Anthony Tommasini wrote in The New York Times. Yet even in contemporary music, let alone older repertory (bar Carl Nielsen), I have rarely heard Mr. Gilbert achieve special insight. “Thunderstuck” itched to thrum along more quickly, and its syncopations deserved greater rhythmic incision and textural clarity.

Mr. Gilbert often programs Mr. Rouse with Haydn or Brahms, and they made up the bulk of this concert. Lisa Batiashvili, the Philharmonic’s new artist-in-residence, began her tenure with Brahms’s Violin Concerto. Ms. Batiashvili charmed with this work in New York, as recently as last year, and the concerto has appeared in four of the Philharmonic’s past six seasons. Every violinist has things to say about this overfamiliar piece, and Ms. Batiashvili played it bracingly, without any sense of routine. She pushed the tonal envelope but never to breaking point, and sang with ravishingly long lines in the slow movement.


Her choice of Ferruccio Busoni’s cadenza, which began with a thunderous timpani roll, provided a clever link to Haydn’s Symphony No. 103. It opens with a similar crash, lending the symphony its nickname, the “Drumroll.” Mr. Gilbert’s Haydn was clean and tidy, and the Philharmonic’s strings sounded agreeably chirpy. But where was the joyous development, the poetry of phrasing, the wit and wonder that make Haydn Haydn? Just as with the Brahms, I listened in vain for a distinctive vision from the podium.

Thursday, October 9, 2014




MUSEUM

Metropolitan Museum of Art
From Assyria to Iberia

Today we finally went to see the exhibit.  It was spectacular.  This follows our attending a lecture on Sunday and a lecture yesterday.  We were prepared to see the artifacts.

In Empires’ Remnants, Wonders of Survival
‘Assyria to Iberia,’ at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

By HOLLAND COTTERSEPT. 18, 2014

Crossing Borders and Stretching Boundaries

Karsten Moran for The New York Times 

What are we losing? News reports tell us that the terrorist group referred to as the Islamic State is not only destroying architectural monuments in Syria and Iraq, but is also doing brisk business selling looted antiquities abroad. The specifics of these sales — what has gone where — are so far unclear. But you can get a sense of what might be heading for destinations unknown with a visit to “Assyria to Iberia at the Dawn of the Classical Age” at the Metropolitan Museum, a big, complicated, magnificently esoteric show of a kind the Met persists in doing better than anyone, even as audiences increasingly shy away from the unfamiliar.

In reality, you know more about this material than you may imagine. The bulk of the exhibition is set in a part of the world that’s in the headlines every day: the Middle East, or as the Met prefers to call it, the Near East, embracing Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, Syria and part of Turkey. And it’s territory that to some degree we all live in: multiethnic, multilingual and polyreligious. As in most of the world, nationalism is rife; rule is top-down; violence recurs. So do peace, neighborliness and cultural exchange, with material, ideas and people crossing borders and stretching boundaries.

Globalism, fueled by commerce and curiosity, is the show’s overarching theme, though the globe that it’s dealing with is a relatively contracted one, defined by a specific time frame: the first millennium B.C., when the Age of Bronze became the Age of Iron.
The introductory gallery presents a world on the cusp of change. The old Homeric civilizations — the Mycenaeans on the Greek mainland, the Minoans on Crete — are on the wane, but internationalist traffic is fully underway. You can feel its crosscurrents flowing in the appearance of exotic objects, dating back to the 14th century B.C., on Greek islands: on Rhodes, in a ceramic painted with a Near Eastern theme called the “Master of Animals”; on Euboia, in a faience cat figurine with a distinctly Egyptian look and gold jewelry that has Babylon written all over it.

Then, in the ninth century, comes drama and trauma, as the Assyrian empire, native to northern Iraq and a type-A culture if ever there was one, assumed military dominance. A tight-lipped, staring stone portrait of one of its major kings, Ashurnasirpal II, stands at the entrance to the Assyrian section, like a rocket rooted in the earth. An inscription on his chest both spells out his cosmic sovereignty as “king of the universe,” and details the geographic coordinates of his realm: from the banks of the Tigris to the Mediterranean’s shores.

A lot of art, and most imperial art, is propaganda, and the Assyrians were committed self-advertisers. The high relief images of larger-than-life supernatural beings that lined their palaces — a muscle-bound, hawk-headed guardian spirit in the show is one — were, whatever their religious or political meaning, a species of shock-and-awe art, designed to spook you, bring you to your knees. Carved illustrations of episodes from Assyrian history, some scaled to billboard size, preached a uniform principle: Might makes right.

If proof were needed that beauty must be accepted as an ethically neutral concept, here it is. A panoramic seventh-century wall relief depicting an Assyrian clash with the Elamite kingdom of Iran is so lightly and deftly cut as to look, from a distance, like a fine-weave tapestry. Only when you get closer does its image come into focus: battle as an airless, soundless scene of mutual mass murder — war as we never see on the evening news — with men slashing, skewering and bludgeoning one another as corpses pile up.

In a smaller, separate related panel nearby, the chaos has passed. A post-skirmish banquet is in progress, with the Assyrian king and his queen decorously toasting each other in a garden. The equanimity produced by just rule appears to prevail. But if you look carefully up to the left, you’ll see a severed head — of the vanquished Elamite king — hanging in a tree.

You’ll also notice something odd about the faces of the royal couple: In an otherwise pristine carving, their eyes have been gouged and their noses and mouths chiseled away. They may have been vandalized by soldiers in the Babylonian armies that brought Assyria down in the early seventh century. No power lasts forever. And as much as the Met show is a display of imperial might, it is also a roll call of states and kingdoms gone — Elamite, Philistine, Hittite — leaving their DNA embedded in art that itself has only barely survived.

In one case, the disaster was modern. In the early 20th century, the German archaeologist Baron Max von Oppenheim (1860-1946) shipped a cache of monumental stone Syro-Hittite sculptures from northeastern Syria to Berlin, where he kept them stored in a former iron foundry. During an Allied air attack in 1943, the foundry was bombed and went up in flames. When hoses were trained on the smoldering ruins, many of the still-hot basalt sculptures exploded.

Nearly 30,000 fragments were preserved, and, in 2001, painstaking restoration began. One example of it, a six-foot-long statue of a creature with a human head, a bird’s body and a scorpion’s tail, is in the show. In its original palace setting, it served as a fearsome gatekeeper. In its present blown-apart, patched-together state, it looks unsightly and almost illegible, an irreversibly maimed casualty of war.

For obvious reasons, less conspicuous, packable objects have always had a better a chance of staying out of harm’s way, and the show, organized by Joan Aruz, curator in charge of the museum’s Near Eastern art department, is rich in them. Assyria certainly produced its share: A smartphone-size ivory relief of a lioness attacking — or is it embracing? — a young man is one of the outstanding things and, on loan from the British Museum, one of the great sculptures in New York at present. (A matching version, even better preserved, was looted from the Iraq Museum in Baghdad in 2003.)

But when it came to moving precious portables around, the Phoenicians — merchants by trade, explorers by nature, whose city-state lined the Levantine coast — commanded the field. In a sense, they are, with Assyrians, the show’s other great Iron Age power, though in a recessive, businesslike way. Assyria’s might was strictly land based; Phoenicians plied the sea, coming and going from ports in Lebanon and Syria to Egypt, Greece, Cyprus, Italy and Spain, dropping off and picking up as they went.

Through objects they created, or copied or transported, their presence is everywhere: It’s there in a gleaming gilded silver bowl with Assyrian and Egyptian divinities in a clinch at its center; in cosmetic boxes made from giant seashells, a luxury item in vogue from Greece to Mesopotamia; and in statuettes of gods and demons so widely and commonly traveled that they were unlikely to be considered entirely foreign anywhere. Thanks in part to Phoenician mobility, Etruscans in central Italy, citizens of Cyprus, and Babylonians in southern Iraq were, at least in their art, on a cosmopolitan par.

At the end of the seventh century, more change. Babylonia became the new Assyria, as ruthless as its predecessor in erasing resistance, and as ingenious in visually asserting its own imperial brand, most noticeably in glazed brick mosaic images of lions and dragons that covered its palaces. Ahead lay the fluorescence of Classical Greece and the rise of Persia, marching in from the east, sweeping all before it like dust.


Looked at one way, the Met show is basically a story of multiple destructions, a fatalistic narrative sugarcoated with fabulous art. Seen from another angle — and neither view is true without the other — it’s primarily a tale of absolutely stunning human invention, invention inspired by reasons good and bad, but stunning either way. And for certain it’s a story — a reminder — of what museums are for. By telling us what, almost despite ourselves, we’ve managed to keep from the past, it suggests the scope of what we’ve lost and are still in danger of losing, and compels us to make every possible effort to lose no more.





How commerce and conquest spread the ancient cultures of the Middle East across the Mediterranean


October 9, 2014 Updated: October 9, 2014 02:51 PM

Today, the city of Mosul is the front line of the battle against Islamist extremists. Reports about the looting and damage of archaeological sites in Iraq warn that the world is in danger of losing important evidence of the country’s cultural heritage. 

And that danger is not just limited to ancient Iraqi buildings, sculptures and artefacts, but evidence of life, society and culture from across the Middle East – Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Egypt, Israel and Turkey – and beyond to the eastern ­Mediterranean.

Assyria to Iberia at the Dawn of the Classical Age at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art is an ambitious exhibition that traces the rich interaction between the people across these lands around the first millennium BC. It is, according to the exhibition’s curator, Joan Aruz, a unique approach. 

On display are wall reliefs, monumental sculptures, carvings in ivory, metalwork and jewellery – 260 works of art on loan from 41 museums across the globe. 

“We never see these cultures in contrast. Nobody’s put this era together so that we can see the cross-currents of interaction and the magnificent flowering of the arts that took place as a ­result of this cross-fertilisation of ­cultures.”

Assyria was originally one of many small states that existed in the Middle East in the second millennium BC. But the Assyrians embarked on an aggressive military expansion and at its peak in the 8th and 7th centuries BC, theirs was probably the largest empire the world had yet seen, spanning 1,600 kilometres westward from their base in modern-day Mosul as far as the Mediterranean.

“They developed a very strong army and they began to conquer their neighbours. In part it is because a lot of the other territorial states that kept them in check were destroyed and Egypt was no longer a big player so they were able to develop,” says Aruz. 

The Assyrians could be brutal and people who refused to pay tribute were attacked, cities were sacked and entire populations forcibly resettled.

One of the first works on display is a powerful example of Assyrian sculpture – a statue of the Assyrian king Ashurnasirpal II, who reigned from 883-859BC. Ashurnasirpal was known for mercilessly putting down rebellions and the inscription on the stone torso records his military campaigns in the west reaching as far as the “Great Sea” – the ­Mediterranean.

But the exhibition paints a much broader sweep than mere war. Yes, it is a story of conflict and conquest but, also, commerce, global communication and artistic curiosity – the flow of trade, commerce and ideas around the Near East and ­beyond. 

Central to this are the Phoenicians – expert seafarers who built ships that could carry large amounts of cargo and who, from their base on the Levantine coast, criss-crossed the Mediterranean acquiring the raw materials that their artisans turned into luxury goods.

“There were the people who were either conquered and then became vassals of the Assyrians and then there were people like the Phoenicians who paid tribute and were allowed to operate semi-independently. But they filled the Assyrian coffers in order to reach that status,” says Aruz.

“They mastered the art of navigation where they could go across islands, island-hopping, to speed up travel, rather than always hugging the coast. They reached past the Strait of Gibraltar, which was the end of the known world at the time, called the Pillars of Hercules. They established a base at Carthage and went as far as Portugal and Spain and the Atlantic coast of Morocco, so they had a very great reach,” says Aruz.

These maritime networks were exploited by the Assyrians. They did not have a navy, had little access to the sea and therefore relied on the Phoenicians to secure access to the riches of the West, especially silver from southern Iberia.

At archaeological sites throughout the Mediterranean, objects have been found with popular Middle Eastern motifs, such as griffins, human-headed birds and sphinxes. These were made in the Middle East and could have found their way west through trade but they were also made by local artisans who incorporated this imagery into their own work. These imported and locally produced artefacts were also found in the tombs of the wealthy in Greece and Italy and included monumental cauldrons with animal-head attachments on the rim.

“The Phoenicians contributed in the sending of technology and expert craftsmen. They stimulated an orientalising era and the Assyrians absorbed these influences. 

“The Phoenicians also transmitted the alphabet to the West. This was the greatest gift that they gave, which changed the course of writing and literature,” says Aruz. 

However, not even these famed maritime traders were immune from the Assyrians’ thirst for control. Eventually they were conquered and restrictions placed on their business, particularly in their prized trade in cedarwood from Lebanon.

“But before that there were periods where they were left quite independent. They were merchants, traders, explorers, navigators, shipbuilders – the Assyrians benefited from that.”

But more war and upheaval were to follow. Towards the end of the 7th century BC, the Babylonians began to push back the Assyrians, eventually destroying the capital, Nineveh. Babylon was rebuilt on a grand scale and the exhibition shows its glorious rise, with a model of the famed Ishtar Gate and Processional Way, along with several actual reliefs from these monuments.

For a time, Babylon was a global nexus of culture, economy and religion. But it would not last long, just 100 years. Ahead was classical Greece and another great empire, the Persians, who came from the east to sweep it all away.

“The show begins with the arts of the Assyrian worlds. Then we go to the Phoenician homeland and also to Cyprus, colonised by the Phoenicians. Then we go to the Mediterranean and trace a route from Samos to Rhodes to Crete to the sanctuaries of Delphi and Olympia. 
“We also have objects from Carthage and Tunisia and then we examine a Phoenician shipwreck that went down off the coast of southern Spain,” says Aruz.

“So people travel. It is like The Odyssey. You are on a voyage of discovery.”



Wednesday, October 8, 2014



PERFORMANCE

Brooklyn Academy of Music
Shakespeare's Sonnets

Watch the video!

http://www.bam.org/theater/2014/shakespeares-sonnets

This was interesting!

The production was 2 hours and 45 minutes long.  I tell you that so you can see they had to entertain and hold the audience's attention for quite a while.

The sonnets were presented in German with English subtitles.  The costumes were stylized in the Shakespearean/Elizabethan period.  The music was progressive but never so atonal or unconventional that each song could not finish without resolution.  The staging was stark and minimalist with dramatic static and dynamic lighting, much like a ballet.  There was creativity everywhere in everything.

The director/creator was Robert Wilson who was born and raised in Waco, Texas and later studied business administration at the University of Texas in Austin.  He moved to Brooklyn in the early 1960s and has become an exceptional experimental theater stage director and playwright.  He is considered by many as the world's foremost avant-garde "theater artist."

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/09/arts/robert-wilson-puts-shakespeares-sonnets-in-german-onstage.html?module=Search&mabReward=relbias%3Ar%2C%7B%221%22%3A%22RI%3A7%22%7D&_r=0

Please, go to the site above to see the New York Times review and a few pictures.  It's worth the visit.





MUSEUM

Metropolitan Museum of Art
Lecture - Members Only

Assyria to Iberia at the Dawn of the Classical Age

September 22, 2014–January 4, 2015

At its height in the eighth to seventh century b.c., the Assyrian Empire was the dominant power of the ancient Near East and the largest empire the world had yet seen, reaching from Assyria (present-day northern Iraq) to the Mediterranean. As Assyria expanded, the Phoenician city-states of the Levant—precariously located along the edge of Assyrian territory—were compelled to expand and strengthen their maritime trade networks to the west. The mercantile connections they established along the northern coast of Africa and the southern coast of Europe to the Strait of Gibraltar and beyond, to the Atlantic, became conduits for raw materials, luxury goods, images, and ideas between the Near East and the Mediterranean.
This landmark exhibition will trace—through some 260 works of art on loan from major collections in Western Europe, the Caucasus, the Middle East, North Africa, and the United States—the deep roots of interaction between the ancient Near East and the lands along the shores of the Mediterranean and their impact on the artistic traditions that developed in the region. Parallels will also be drawn between works in the exhibition and those in the Metropolitan Museum's permanent collection of ancient Near Eastern art.