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Igor Stravinsky/ 2011 - Satoshi Kinoshita
IGOR STRAVINSKY/ 2011  
( Satoshi Kinoshita )

Series: Prints on paper: Portraits 3
Medium: Giclée on Japanese matte paper
Size (inches): 16.5 x 11.7 (paper size)
Size (mm): 420 x 297 (paper size)
Edition size: 25
Catalog #: PP_0208
Description: From an edition of 25. Signed, titled, date, copyright, edition in pencil on the reverse / Aside from the numbered edition of 5 artist's proofs and 2 printer's proofs.



"My music is best understood by children and animals."

- Igor Stravinsky



Igor Stravinsky -

Igor Fyodorovich Stravinsky (Russian: Игорь Фёдорович Стравинский, transliterated: Igorʹ Fëdorovič Stravinskij; Russian pronunciation: [ˌiɡərʲ ˌfʲjodɐrɐvʲɪtɕ strɐˈvʲinskʲɪj]); 17 June [O.S. 5 June] 1882 – 6 April 1971) was a Russian, and later French and American, composer, pianist, and conductor.

He is acknowledged by some as one of the most important and influential composers of 20th century music.[1][2][3] He was named by Time magazine as one of the 100 most influential people of the century.[4] He became a naturalized French citizen in 1934 and a naturalized US citizen in 1945. In addition to the recognition he received for his compositions, he achieved fame as a pianist and a conductor, often at the premieres of his works.

Stravinsky's compositional career was notable for its stylistic diversity. He first achieved international fame with three ballets commissioned by the impresario Sergei Diaghilev and performed by Diaghilev's Ballets Russes (Russian Ballets): The Firebird (1910), Petrushka (1911/1947), and The Rite of Spring (1913). The Rite, whose premiere provoked a riot, transformed the way in which subsequent composers thought about rhythmic structure, and was largely responsible for Stravinsky's enduring reputation as a musical revolutionary, pushing the boundaries of musical design.

After this first Russian phase, Stravinsky turned to neoclassicism in the 1920s. The works from this period tended to make use of traditional musical forms (concerto grosso, fugue, symphony), frequently concealed a vein of intense emotion beneath a surface appearance of detachment or austerity, and often paid tribute to the music of earlier masters, for example J.S. Bach and Tchaikovsky.

In the 1950s he adopted serial procedures, using the new techniques over his last twenty years. Stravinsky's compositions of this period share traits with examples of his earlier output: rhythmic energy, the construction of extended melodic ideas out of a few two- or three-note cells, and clarity of form, of instrumentation, and of utterance.

He published a number of books throughout his career, almost always with the aid of a collaborator, sometimes uncredited. In his 1936 autobiography, Chronicles of My Life, written with the help of Walter Nouvel, Stravinsky included his well-known statement that "music is, by its very nature, essentially powerless to express anything at all."[5] With Alexis Roland-Manuel and Pierre Souvtchinsky he wrote his 1939–40 Harvard University Charles Eliot Norton Lectures, which were delivered in French and later collected under the title Poétique musicale in 1942 (translated in 1947 as Poetics of Music).[6] Several interviews in which the composer spoke to Robert Craft were published as Conversations with Igor Stravinsky.[7] They collaborated on five further volumes over the following decade.

References:

1. ^ Page 2006; Théodore and Denise Stravinsky 2004, vii.
2. ^ Anonymous 1940.
3. ^ Cohen 2004, 30.
4. ^ a b Glass 1998.
5. ^ Stravinsky 1936, 91–92.
6. ^ The names of uncredited collaborators are given in Walsh (2001).
7. ^ Stravinsky and Craft 1959.

-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igor_Stravinsky



The Rite of Spring -

The Rite of Spring, original French title Le sacre du printemps (Russian: Весна священная, Vesna svyashchennaya), is a ballet with music by Igor Stravinsky; choreography by Vaslav Nijinsky; and concept, set design and costumes by Nicholas Roerich. It was produced by Sergei Diaghilev for his Ballets Russes ballet company and had its première in Paris on 29 May 1913.

The music's innovative complex rhythmic structures, timbres, and use of dissonance have made it a seminal 20th century composition. In 1973, composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein said of one passage, "That page is sixty years old, but it's never been topped for sophisticated handling of primitive rhythms...", and of the work as a whole, "...it's also got the best dissonances anyone ever thought up, and the best asymmetries and polytonalities and polyrhythms and whatever else you care to name."[1]

A performance of the work lasts about 33 minutes.

Note:

1. ^ The Unanswered Question – Six Talks at Harvard, Leonard Bernstein, Harvard University Press, 1976, p 357

-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rite_of_Spring


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Series Prints on paper: Portraits 3
Frantz Fanon/ 2011Isaac Asimov/ 2011Theo van Gogh/ 2011Mikhail Bakhtin/ 2011Marcel Proust/ 2011Orson Welles/ 2011Martin Heidegger/ 2011Alban Berg/ 2011Igor Stravinsky/ 2011Tom Dowd as a boy/ 2011Sri Aurobindo/ 2011György Ligeti/ 2011
Luigi Nono/ 2011Hermann Rorschach/ 2011Serge Gainsbourg/ 2011Paul Verlaine/ 2011Charles Baudelaire/ 2011Stéphane Mallarmé/ 2011Søren Kierkegaard/ 2011Françoise Sagan/ 2011Robert Mapplethorpe/ 2011Ed Wood in Glen or Glenda/ 2011The Amazing Criswell/ 2011Pierre Boulez/ 2011
Ron Geesin/ 2011Tokyo Rose/ 2011Lewis Carroll/ 2011Jan Švankmajer/ 2011Albert Camus/ 2011Raymond Jones/ 2011Fukusuke/ 2011Leonard Cohen/ 2011Gottlob Frege/ 2011Wolfman Jack/ 2011Lightnin' Hopkins/ 2011Rubin Carter/ 2011
Steve Reich/ 2011John H. Hammond/ 2011Billie Holiday/ 2011Nick Cave/ 2011Salvador Dalí/ 2011Man Ray/ 2011Thomas Edison/ 2011Carl Jung/ 2011Truman Capote/ 2011H. C. Speir/ 2012Buster Keaton/ 2012James Baldwin/ 2012
Alex Haley as a young man in the U.S. Coast Guard/ 2012Arthur C. Clarke/ 2012Stanley Kubrick/ 2012Dennis Hopper/ 2012Otto K. E. Heinemann/ 2012Jeff Buckley/ 2012Harriet Beecher Stowe/ 2012Woody Allen/ 2012Terry Riley/ 2012Albert Hofmann/ 2012Rick Griffin/ 2012Robert Crumb/ 2012
Stuart Sutcliffe/ 2012Klaus Voormann/ 2012Bill Graham/ 2012Jim Carroll/ 2012Abbie Hoffman/ 2012Al Jolson/ 2012George Eastman/ 2012George Bernard Shaw/ 2012Charlie Parker/ 2012Henri Rousseau/ 2012Guillaume Apollinaire/ 2012Marie Laurencin/ 2012
Biography of 'Satoshi Kinoshita'
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