Please join us for short presentations and performances at 5PM each day. The Zoom link is available in the Fine Artists at Five forum of the Keep Teaching Sakai site. Or send an email to rowland@ithaca.edu from an IC email address to be added to a list to which the link is sent.
Artists for the remainder of this week include:
Calvin Wiersma, Wednesday, May 20
Jack Wang, Thursday, May 21
Jorge Grossman, Friday, May 22
Fine Artists at Five is hosted by the Center for Faculty Excellence.
Calvin Wiersma, Wednesday, May 20
Calvin Wiersma appears throughout the world as a soloist and chamber musician. He is a member of the Manhattan String Quartet, was a founding member of the Meliora Quartet, winner of the Naumberg, Fischoff, Coleman, and Cleveland Quartet competitions, and the Quartet-in-Residence of the Spoleto Festivals of the U.S., Italy, and Australia, and was also a founding member of the Figaro Trio. He has performed numerous solo recitals, including appearances in Boston, New York, and Chicago, and has appeared with the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, The Concerto Company of Boston, and the Lawrence Symphony, among others. Mr. Wiersma is also a frequent performer with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, and performs regularly with chamber music ensembles around the country. He is a noted performer of contemporary music, in particular as a member of Cygnus and the Lochrian Chamber Ensemble, and has appeared with Speculum Musicae, Ensemble 21, Parnassus, Ensemble Sospeso, and the New York New Music Ensemble. He has commissioned countless works both with these ensembles and for solo violin, has toured extensively with Steve Reich and Ensemble 21, and has been featured in solo performances for the International League of Composers of Music.
Jack Wang, Thursday, May 21
JACK WANG is the author of We Two Alone, a collection of stories and a novella, forthcoming from House of Anansi Press on September 1, 2020. His fiction has appeared in PRISM international, The Malahat Review, The New Quarterly, The Humber Literary Review, and Joyland and has been shortlisted for the Commonwealth Short Story Prize and longlisted for the Journey Prize. In 2014–15, he held the David T. K. Wong Creative Writing Fellowship at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England, and in 2020, he was awarded a residency at Historic Joy Kogawa House in Vancouver. He holds an MFA from the University of Arizona and a PhD from Florida State University, and he is an associate professor in the Department of Writing at Ithaca College. Originally from Vancouver, he lives in Ithaca, New York, with his wife, novelist Angelina Mirabella, and their two daughters.
Jorge Grossman, Friday, May 22
Jorge Grossmann is a composer whose music has been performed throughout the world by ensembles such as the Norwegian Radio Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine, Sao Paulo Symphony Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra of Argentina, Peruvian National Symphony, and Orquesta Filamónica de Bogotá. He is the recipient of a fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, a Fulbright Scholar Award and awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Aspen Music Festival, Copland House and MacDowell Colony. He has received commissions from dozens of organizations including Harvard University’s Fromm Music Foundation. Grossman is currently director of the composition area of VIPA, Valencia International Performance Academy and founder director of AltaVoz, a Latin American composers collective. His music is available on Harmonia Mundi, Albany Records and New Focus Recordings. His first monographic album is scheduled for release on Austrian label KAIROS on the second quarter of 2020.
https://www.ithaca.edu/intercom/article.php/20200519215039883