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Leon Schidlowsky (Hebrew: ליאון שידלובסקי; 21 July 1931 – 10 October 2022) was a Chilean-Israeli composer and painter. He wrote music for orchestra, chamber ensemble, choir, and instruments including the piano, violin, cello, flute, mandolin, guitar, harp, organ. About 65 pieces were written in graphic notation. His compositions have been performed in numerous countries, with orchestra conductors including Aldo Ceccato, Clytus Gottwald, Erhard Karkoschka, Herbert Kegel, Lukas Foss, Zubin Mehta and Hermann Scherchen. The scores of his graphic music have been shown in exhibitions such as Staatsgalerie Stuttgart and the Wilhelm-Hack-Museum in Ludwigshafen. Schidlowsky worked as a professor of composition both in Chile and Israel, influencing many students.

Leon Schidlowsky
Born(1931-07-21)21 July 1931
Santiago de Chile
Died10 October 2022(2022-10-10) (aged 91)
Tel Aviv, Israel
Education
  • Universidad de Chile
  • Nordwestdeutsche Musikakademie
Occupation
  • Composer
  • Academic teacher
Organizations
  • Universidad de Chile
  • Tel Aviv University

Life and career


León Schidlowsky was born in Santiago de Chile on 21 July 1931.[1] He studied there at the Instituto Nacional from 1940 to 1947, and the piano with Roberto Duncker at the Conservatorio Nacional of the Universidad de Chile from 1942 to 1948, completing with a diploma.[1] He then studied composition with Juan Allende-Blin and Fré Focke [de], as well as philosophy and psychology. He completed his studies in Germany at the Nordwestdeutsche Musikakademie (later Hochschule für Musik Detmold) in Detmold.[1] He met his future wife there, Susanne they married in 1953.


Chile (1954–1968; 2014)


After his return to Chile in 1954, Schidlowsky became a member of the avant-garde ensemble Grupo Tonus in Santiago and served as its director from 1958 to 1961.[1] This ensemble wanted to spread avant-garde and contemporary music in Chile. In 1956 Schidlowsky produced Nacimiento, considered the first electroacoustic work composed in Latin America. Between 1956 and 1959 he was member of the British Council and between 1956 and 1961 a musical adviser of the pantomime ensemble Grupo Noisvander. He served as director of the music library at the Instituto de Extensión Musical in 1961 and 1962, and as secretary-general of the Asociación Nacional de Compositores from 1961 to 1963. He also served as director-general of the Instituto de Extensión Musical, of the university from 1962 to 1966.[1] In this period the Institute achieved distinction, with the performance of music that had never been played in Chile before, and with the performance of at least one work by a Chilean composer every year. Besides that, a number of orchestral conductors, soloists, and foreign orchestras visited Chile and made a substantial contribution to the musical culture of the country.

In 1964, Schidlowsky was, together with Luigi Dallapiccola and Alberto Ginastera, a member of the jury in a composers' competition in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The same year he took part in the music symposium Latin America and the music of our time (América Latina y la música de nuestros tiempos) in Lima, Peru. In 1965, Schidlowsky was appointed Professor of Composition at the Conservatorio Nacional, serving until 1968.[1] In 1966 he participated in the Inter-American Festival in Washington, D.C., U.S., as well as the Festival Interamericano de Música in Caracas, Venezuela. In 1967, he took part in the Festival of Music from Spain and Latin America, in Madrid, Spain. He participated in the Festival of the Three Worlds in Mérida, Venezuela, in 1968, with lectures and discussions with the composers Krzyztof Penderecki and Luigi Nono. The city of Mérida nominated him a Distinguished Guest of the City. In the same year he received a Fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation in order to write an opera, which he completed in Germany.


Israel


In 1969, Schidlowsky was appointed Professor for Composition and Music Theory at the Samuel Rubin Academy of Music at the Tel Aviv University.[1] In 1979 he was granted a Sabbatical Year, which he spent in Hamburg. He has given many conferences in Berlin, Hamburg, Stuttgart, Vienna, Lund, and Saragossa.[1] Schidlowsky received several fellowships from the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), and stayed in Berlin twice for an extended period, where he composed and painted. During one of these sojourns, in 1999, his wife Susanne died; she was buried in Tel Aviv. He served at the university until 2000.[2] Schidlowsky gave courses in composition in several countries; and he has helped to form and influence a whole generation of composers in Israel, including Avraham Amzallag, Chaya Arbel, Mary Even-Or, Rachel Galinne, Betty Olivero, Jan Radzynski, Ruben Seroussi, Ron Weidberg, Moshe Zorman.


Personal life


Schidlowsky's wife, Susanne Schidlowsky, died in 1999. They had five children (David, Elias, Judith, and twins Yuval and Noam).

Schidlowsky died in Tel Aviv on 10 October 2022, at the age of 91.[3]


Awards


Schidlowsky received various awards for his music, such as at the Festivales de Música Chilena, with works of his being awarded the Chilean Prize CRAV. In 1996 he received the First Prize for his work Absalom in the 60th anniversary competition of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra.[1]

In 2000 he was awarded the ACUM Prize for his entire oeuvre by the Israel Composers Association.[1] The following year, during a visit to Chile, the Chilean Chamber Orchestra declared him an Honorary Member, the Universidad de Chile appointed him an Honorary Professor in its Arts Faculty, and the Chilean Ministry of Education conferred on him the "Orden al Mérito Docente y Cultural Gabriela Mistral" with the rank of "Caballero". He received the Engel Prize for his original work and his research into Jewish music, awarded by the city of Tel Aviv in June 2007. On 21 August 2014, Schidlowsky was awarded the Chilean National Prize for Musical Arts, accompanied by several homages, press articles and interviews in the local press.[4]


Works


Many of Schidlowsky's works make reference to his Jewish-Israeli identity and to the history of the Jewish people, as well as to his interest in history and the political and social situation in Chile and Latin America. There is also in his works a musical response to his personal life and experience, such as the death of his wife Susanne (1999) and his son Elias (2004), or the destiny of many personal and professional friends, or personalities of his time. As an admirer of Arnold Schoenberg´s music, Schidlowsky began his career as a composer in the tradition of the Second Viennese School. His music is also highly influenced by Edgard Varèse, specially on his concern with timbre and freedom of form.

Later he began to use serial techniques, and to experiment with various tonal concepts (atonal, aleatoric, graphic notation), but always on the understanding that music has a deeper significance which transcends absolute art, which can open up a path for a human being to find a way to himself (Schidlowsky: "Art itself has not only one meaning. It includes and encompasses all senses, questions and all answers. I think that art is a way to us.").

His compositions have been performed in numerous countries with orchestra conductors including Aldo Ceccato, Errico Fresis [de], Clytus Gottwald, Juan Pablo Izquierdo [es], Erhard Karkoschka, Herbert Kegel, Lukas Foss, Zubin Mehta, Hermann Scherchen, and Ingo Schulz [de]. The scores of his graphic music have been shown in various exhibitions linked to concerts, such as in the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, Kunsthaus Hamburg, the Wilhelm-Hack-Museum, Ludwigshafen, and the Stadtgalerie Saarbrücken.

Schidlowsky's works include:[5]

Examples from his graphic notation music include:

Among his numerous works, Schidlowsky also wrote three operas:


References


  1. "Schidlowsky Leon". Israel Music Institute. Retrieved 12 October 2022.
  2. "Leon Schidlowsky". The Living Composers Project. 21 August 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2022.
  3. Álvaro Gallegos (21 August 2014). "Adiós a León Schidlowsky, forjador del modernismo musical en Chile" (in Spanish). Radio ADN Radio Chile. Retrieved 10 October 2022.
  4. J. L. F. (21 August 2014). "León Schidlowsky obtiene el Premio Nacional de Artes Musicales" [León Schidlowsky Gets the National Prize for Musical Arts]. La Tercera (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 December 2017.
  5. A full list of his works can be found at www.schidlowsky.com

Bibliography



Recordings





На других языках


[de] Leon Schidlowsky

Leon Schidlowsky (geboren 21. Juli 1931 in Santiago de Chile; gestorben am 10. Oktober 2022 in Tel Aviv)[1] war ein chilenisch-israelischer Komponist und Maler. Er schrieb Werke für Orchester, Kammerensemble, Chor und für einzelne Instrumente. Außerdem komponierte er ca. 65 musikalische Werke mit graphischer Notation. Seine musikalischen Werke wurden in verschiedenen Ländern aufgeführt. Durch verschiedene musikalische Gruppierungen, Solisten und Orchester sowie Dirigenten wurden seine Werke bekannt. Seine graphisch-musikalischen Arbeiten wurden in verschiedenen Ausstellungen, die mit Konzerten verbunden waren, präsentiert.
- [en] Leon Schidlowsky

[es] Leon Schidlowsky

Jorge León Schidlowsky Gaete (Santiago de Chile, 21 de julio de 1931) es un conocido compositor y pintor chileno-israelí. Ha compuesto obras para orquesta, conjuntos de cámara, para coro, para instrumentos solos como el piano, el violín, el chelo, la flauta, la mandolina, la guitarra, el arpa, el órgano y cerca de 65 obras musicales con notación gráfica. Sus obras musicales han sido ejecutadas en diversos países como Alemania, Argentina, Chile, Estados Unidos, Francia, Holanda, Inglaterra, Israel, Italia, Venezuela y por diversas orquestas, grupos musicales y solistas, con directores como Aldo Ceccatto, Errico Fresis, Juan Pablo Izquierdo, Erhard Karkoschka, Herbert Kegel, Lukas Foss, Zubin Mehta, Hermann Scherchen, Ingo Schulz y Klaus Vetter. Sus obras musicales gráficas, como también sus pictóricas, han sido expuestas en diversas exposiciones, sobre todo Alemania, como en la Stadtgalerie Stuttgart, la Kunsthaus Hamburg, el Wilhelm-Hack-Museum, Ludwigshafen, y la Stadtgalerie Saarbrücken.



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