Mikolajus
Konstantinas Čiurlionis (1875-1911)
Piano
Works Vol. 1
A
distinguished figure in thearts in Lithuania, Mikolajus Konstantinas Čiurlionis was born on 22nd September 1875 in the small southern
Lithuanian town of Varena. Two years later his
family moved to Druskininkai, where he spent his childhood and adolescence. A
few years later another artist, the sculptor Jacques Lipchitz, to be strongly
influenced by Čiurlionis, was born in the same city. The latter studied piano
and composition at the Warsaw Music Institute, followed by a period of tuition
in composition at the Leipzig Conservatory. On his return to Warsaw in 1902 he entered
first the Warsaw School of Drawing, moving, on its opening in 1904, to the
Warsaw School of Fine Arts. There followed exhibitions of his paintings in Warsaw, Vilnius and St. Petersburg. At the same time he
continued his parallel career in music, directing a Lithuanian choir in Warsaw and a choir in Vilnius, where he settled in
1907. He was the founder and director of the Union of Lithuanian Painters and
international recognition of his work as a painter was assured by his
membership of the Russian Mir Iskusstva, World of Art Society in St. Petersburg. His manifold
activities were brought to an end by his untimely death in 1911 at the age of
35.
The
work of Čiurlionis was based on the view that all arts stem essentially from
the same source, however different they may seem. Several of his paintings were
based on musical structures, classified as cycles of fugues, sonatas, and so
on. A poem by Čiurlionis has the form of a sonata, while much of his music is
pictorial. His compositions include two symphonic poems, In the Forest and The
Sea, a string quartet and a variety of pieces for piano or organ and choral
works. His piano pieces are mostly short and lead from the romanticism of the
19th century to a more modern idiom, influenced by expressionism, serialism or
neo-classicism, all of which may be found.
The
first collection of piano pieces by Čiurlionis includes earlier compositions,
representing a more romantic approach. These were written between 1898 and 1902
and give a clear indication of his development as a composer. The influence of
the Warsaw Conservatory is apparent in the Sonata, VL 155, and of Leipzig in the Chansonette, Dainele,
VL 199. There is also a constant influence from Lithuania itself, especially in the numerous
pieces written in Druskininkai during the happy summer of 1901, when Čiurlionis
was moved to daily composition by the natural beauty of the region and by
traditions of Lithuanian folk-music.
Mûza
Rubackyté
Mûza
Rubackyté established her reputation as an infant prodigy in her native Lithuania, making her début as a
pianist at the age of seven. After study at home, she moved in 1976 to the famous
Tchaikovsky Conservatory in Moscow for further study, winning first prize there and
subsequently named laureate in the international piano competitions of Vilnius, Tallinn, the All Union
Competition of St. Petersburg and the Budapest Liszt-Bartók Competition. She
was prevented from performing abroad until 1989, when she was able to move to Paris, winning first prize
there in 1990 in the International Grands Maîtres Français Competition. Since
then she has continued her career as a performer and teacher, at home and
abroad, and as a member of the jury in international piano competitions.