ALLENDALE, Mich. -- As global influences grow in West Michigan, Grand
Valley continues to expand the quality and stature of performances
during the Fall Arts Celebration. Since its start in 2003, the FAC has
featured the champions of arts and humanities for the benefit and
enjoyment of the entire community.
“The Fall Arts Celebration is a marvelous opportunity to lend voices and
visuals to our expanding sphere of knowledge and experience,” said
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Dean Fred Antczak. “It is an
ambitious undertaking to raise the bar of excellence year after
year.”
The celebration begins September 8 with performances by four new faculty
members whose reputations promise to change the face of the Department
of Music. Music at Grand Valley “Debut” will feature works from
Saint-Saens, David, Prokofiev and Beethoven.
“We are delighted to bring these distinguished faculty members to Grand
Valley to benefit not only our students, but also the community,” said
Danny Phipps, chair of the Music Department.
Internationally acclaimed piano soloist and chamber musician Mark
Markham comes to Grand Valley following 10 years as a member of the
keyboard faculty at the prestigious Peabody Conservatory of Music, and
the last 12 years as pianist and collaborator with famed American
soprano Jessye Norman.
Mark Williams has performed for every U.S. president since Ronald
Reagan. As principal trombonist with the USAF Concert Band in
Washington, D.C., for 14 years, he performed in all 50 states and
throughout Europe and Asia. In 2004 Williams was selected as Band Career
Field Manager at the Pentagon where he served with distinction for four
years. In addition to his performance career, Williams was trombone
instructor at Shenandoah University in Virginia, and has presented
clinics and master classes throughout the U.S.
MingHuan Xu, new assistant professor of violin, will enchant the
audience with her solo performance of Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso
in A minor, op 28, by Camille Saint-Saens (1863). Xu made her recital
debut in Beijing at age 6, won first prize at age 11 at the Beijing
Young Artists Competition, and made her New York debut as a soloist with
the New York Youth Symphony when she was 18. Her latest recital and
chamber music performances have brought her to Carnegie-Weill Recital
Hall, Merkin Hall, Symphony Space, and the Smithsonian Institute. Xu has
studied at the prestigious Curtis Institute of Music, at Northwestern
University, and is completing her doctoral work at Stony Brook
University.
The concert will end with a performance of music from the finale of
Beethoven’s only opera, “Fidelio,” which addresses rescue and freedom
from tyranny and oppression and is just as relevant a theme today as
when it was written. The performance will feature the University Arts
Chorale and members of the Grand Valley’s vocal faculty as soloists.
On the podium for “Fidelio” will be nationally known pedagogue and
conductor Henry Duitman, who will be making his debut as the new
director of Grand Valley’s Symphony Orchestra. Duitman spent 22 years as
the director of the Northwest Iowa Symphony Orchestra, and 23 years on
the faculty at Dordt College in Sioux Center, Iowa, and has conducted
festival and honors bands and orchestras in Florida, Iowa and Minnesota.
Also performing at the “Debut” concert is Grand Valley’s New Music
Ensemble, under the direction of Assistant Professor Bill Ryan. The
ensemble has received international recognition over the past year for
their performances and recording of Steve Reich’s “Music for 18
Musicians.” They have been invited to play Carnegie Hall in April.
Other Fall Arts Celebration events include:
• Distinguished Academic Lecturer - Stephen Greenblatt, Ph.D. “Cultural
Mobility: The Strange Case of Shakespeare’s ‘Cardenio’” on September 24,
at 7 p.m., in the L.V. Eberhard Center, second floor, Robert C. Pew
Grand Rapids Campus.
• Art Gallery Exhibit - “Separation as Together: Soonjung Hong and
Eunmee Lee, Korean Ceramists at GVSU.” Opening reception on October 7,
from 5-7 p.m. Exhibit open through October 31, in the GVSU Art Gallery,
Performing Arts Center, Allendale Campus.
• Dance Stars Across America - “Coast-to-Coast” October 24, 8 p.m., and
October 25, 2 p.m., Louis Armstrong Theatre, Performing Arts Center,
Allendale Campus.
• Poetry Night - “An Evening of Poetry and Conversation with Natasha
Trethewey and Paul Muldoon,” October 29, 7 p.m., L.V. Eberhard Center,
second floor, Robert C. Pew Grand Rapids Campus
Tickets are required for Dance Stars Across America, “Coast-to-Coast.”
All other events are complimentary. For more information call (616)
331-2180 or visit www.gvsu.edu/fallarts.
Downloads available:
Fall Arts Celebration 2008
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