Carmel Institute 2020-2022 Events泭Archive
Carmel Institute Sends Students To the Wild Sky: Rachmaninov, Tennyson, & Poe at the National Cathedral
Cathedral Choral Society and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra presented an innovated program that links the visual medium of泭painting, music, and poetry set to musis, demonstrating the泭deep interconnectedness not only of different art forms, but the human need for art and artistic expression.
Students Explore "Destination Moon" at the National Air &泭Space Museum to Better Understand the Cold War Space Race
On Saturday, March 4, 2023, the Carmel Institute organized a trip to the National Air & Space Museum, which reopened half of its building on the National Mall in November of 2022 after a long reconstruction process. Dr. Fedyashin gave the group an hour-long in-depth tour of the Destination Moon hall and exhibit.
The new exhibit offers a unique insight into how the space race between the superpowers manifested itself through the competition to land the first human onto Earths only satellite. Visitors can explore the story of the first animals sent into spacedogs by the Soviets and chimps by the US. The original capsule in which Ham the chimp went up is on display. Dr. Fedyashin ushered the students through the overlapping stages of the US space program: Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo. At each stage, Soviet successes in spacethe launch of Sputnik, Gagarins and Tereshkovas breakthroughs, Leonov first spacewalkimpelled NASA to become more creative.
The museum contains Alan Shepards original Freedom 7 capsule and space suit. The original Gemini VII vehicle shows just how cramped the early ships were, although Frank Borman and Jim Lovell spent 14 days in it. Dr. Fedyashin then led the group through the Apollo missions, which culminated with the Apollo 11 landing on the Moon in July of 1969. The original Columbia reentry vehicle is on display and so is the original space suit in which Neil Armstrong first set foot onto the Moon. The space race was one of the rare examples of mutually enriching superpower competitionone where intellectual and technological prowess ended up benefitting all of mankind. The students then watched the half-hour long documentary Dark Matter in the newly renovated Planetarium.
泭Museum visits, concert attendance, and class-trips have been part of the Carmel Institutes programming since its inception. As Professor Fedyashin has always reminded his students, although our knowledge about the past depends primarily on reading, history must also be walked, seen, touched, smelled, and tasted. Before coming to Air & Space, the group read selections from a unique space race double-memoir by American astronaut David Scott and Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov called Two Sides of the Moon (2004).
After the museum, the students went to Carmines Restaurant for lunch. The restaurants home-style menu emphasized one of the many commonalities between astronauts and cosmonautstheir desire to return home after exhilarating but dangerous missions.
The trip was a visual component of a holistic experience that stays with students of history for much longer than classroom engagement alone. Exploring history on the page, on the screen, and through original objects helped to open young minds to the importance of international scientific cooperation.
51勛圖 Students Experience Shostakovichs Innovative Concerto for Piano, Trumpet, and Strings &泭Sibelius Symphony No. 2
The Carmel Institute provided 51勛圖 students with tickets to the National Symphony Orchestra performing Shostakovichs Concerto for Piano, Trumpet, and Strings as well as Sibelius Symphony No. 2, along with an NSO commission from Jessie Montgomery, led by guest conductor Dalia Stasevska in her NSO debut.
Shostakovichs concerto is a playful romp that sampled from Beethoven, Haydn, Mahler, and even Shostakovichs earlier works. This 1933 work was Shostakovich at his most innovative, when he was wildly popular and before Stalins government censured him for the first time. The composition had started out as a trumpet concerto. But then Shostakovich added the piano as an equal partner and played the instrument himself at the works premiere to rave reviews. The concerto plays with mood and time signatures throughout, at times sarcastic, witty, and playful, and at others passionately melodic, before rising to a crescendo with the piano, trumpet, and strings converging to give the audience a joyful C major finale.
Sibelius was born in 1865 in the Grand Duchy of Finland in the Romanov Empire. He composed his Second Symphony in Italy and Helsinki between 1899 and 1902. The symphonys Finnish audience quickly embraced it as a patriotic statement on independence from Russia, many even calling it the Symphony of Independence, but there is no direct evidence that the composer intended that interpretation. The work evokes thoughts of Beethoven and Tchaikovsky, but still follows the pioneering trends of the time, breaking with the classical model for thematic development in favor of complex orchestrations that create extreme shifts in tone between movements. At the same time, the works famous three note motif weaves throughout so cleverly that the connections between movements are not always obvious, except in hindsight.
Students Experience泭Russian Culture at the Hillwood Museum and Gardens
On Saturday, February 18, 2023, the Carmel Institute organized a student trip to the . The group broke up in two to tour the mansion with the Hillwoods excellent docents. They explored Marjorie Merriweather Posts superb collection of Russian imperial porcelain and jewelry, which she acquired while accompanying her third husband Joseph Davies to Moscow between 1937 and 1938 after President Roosevelt asked him to serve as ambassador to the USSR.
The Hillwood not only boasts one of the famous Faberge Eggs, but many other unique creations of Faberges workshop. The students heard about Karl Briullovs Portrait of Countess Julia Samoilova (1834) and Konstantin Makovskiis A Boyar Wedding Feast (1883). Both originals are part of the museums permanent collection. The students then explored the religious art collection and talked about the Romanov dynasty, almost all of whose members are represented in the portraits that greet visitors in the mansions grand vestibule.
Museum visits, concert attendance, and class-trips have been part of the Carmel Institutes programming since its inception. As Professor Fedyashin has always reminded his students, although our knowledge about the past depends primarily on reading, history must also be walked, seen, touched, smelled, and tasted. Before coming to the Hillwood, the group read selections from Joseph Daviess diplomatic memoir Mission to Moscow (1941) and watched Michael Curtizs film based on it, also titled Mission to Moscow (1943).
At lunch at the Hillwood caf矇, the students also tried the famous Postum beverage. Ms. Posts father, Charles William (C. W.) Post invented this drink in the late nineteenth century and it gave its name to the Postum Company, which he founded in Michigan. Made from roasted wheat-bran and molasses, Postum became the nucleas around which C. W. Post build his business empire, which eventually became General Foods.
The trip was a visual component of a holistic experience that stays with students of history for much longer. Engaging with history on the page, on the screen, and in motion helped to open young minds to the importance of cultural diplomacy and the great legacy of American philanthropy.
Stravinskys Rite of Spring Thrills Audiences at the Kennedy Center
The Carmel Institute provided tickets for 51勛圖 students to hear Prokofievs Violin Concerto, No. 2 with violin soloist Francesca Dego and Stravinskys Rite of Spring with the National Symphony Orchestra performing under guest conductor Krzysztof Urbaski.
The evening began with Wojciech Kilars Krzesany, written in 1974, which takes the audience on a journey from light melodies, to foreboding themes, to dreamlike flutterings before concluding with almost chaotic crescendo. The orchestra then smoothly moved into Prokofievs Violin Concerto No. 2 in G minor, with an utterly brilliant and commanding performance from Francesca Dago on violin. Dagos instrument and the orchestra had a lyrical conversation based on a traditional Russian folk melody, evoking feelings of traveling the Russian countryside.
Stravinskys Rite of Spring was the glittering gem of the evening. Stravinsky based the work on music from traditional Russian folk tales and village celebrations of spring and planting season near his family home. He combined instruments in innovative ways and pushed the instruments to their limits in terms of range and technique. This work was part of a new era for Russian arts when it premiered in 1913 in Serge Diaghilevs famous Ballets Russes company at the new Th矇tre des Champs lys矇es in Paris.
Stravinskys pagan-sounding music and the choreography of famous dancer Vaslav Nijinsky caused such an uproar from the Parisian audience that Nijinsky had to stand on a chair and shout out the count for the dancers because they couldnt hear the orchestra. The raw vitality and unpredictability of the work is still exhilarating for audiences today and gives us a rare glimpse into traditional Russian folk culture.
Urbaski led the orchestra in an almost playful manner so that the performance felt much like a dance among the different sections of the orchestra and the conductor. The audience rose to their feet and cheered through the bows from the guest conductor, with renewed volume for each section of the orchestra as Urbaski directed each to rise in acknowledgement of their accomplishments. All in all, it was a cool February evening with music to help us all look forward to the warmth of approaching Spring.
PBS Keeping Score, a series from Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony, has
The Carmel Institute takes DC students to Istanbul to discover the泭Culture of Eastern Orthodoxy: Byzantine Influences on Russia and Eurasia
During 51勛圖's Winter Break, the Carmel Institute hosts a group of students from American, Georgetown, and George Washington Universities to Istanbul to see the泭legacy of Byzantium and Byzantine Orthodoxy on Russia and Eurasia first hand. The trip included readings on the region's history and tours of Byzantine art and architectural treasures.
Students Tour the Newly-Reopened Air and Space Museum
On Saturday, December 3, 2022, the Carmel Institute organized a trip to the National Air & Space Museum, which just reopened half of its building on the National Mall after a long reconstruction process. Dr. Fedyashin gave the group an hour-long in-depth tour of the Destination Moon exhibit hall, using the exhibits to illustrate and expand upon what students had learned from reading Two Sides of the Moon泭by泭astronaut Dave Scott and cosmonaut Alexei Leonov. The students then enjoyed a family-style lunch at Carmine's.泭See more...
Students Experience Cultural Diplomacy at the Hillwood Museum and Gardens November 19, 2022
On Saturday, November 19, 2022, the Carmel Institute organized a trip to the . The students broke up into two groups to tour the mansion with the Hillwoods excellent docents. They explored Marjorie Merriweather Posts superb collection of Russian imperial porcelain and jewelry, which Ms. Post acquired while she accompanied her husband Joseph Davies to Moscow between 1937 and 1939 after President Roosevelt asked him to serve as ambassador to the USSR.
The Hillwood not only boasts one of the famous Faberge Eggs, but many other unique creations of Faberges workshop. The students heard about the creation of Karl Briullovs Portrait of Countess Julia Samoilova (1834) and Konstantin Makovskiis A Boyar Wedding Feast (1883). Both originals are part of the museums permanent collection. The students then explored the religious art collection and talked about the Romanov dynasty, almost all of whose members are represented in the portraits that greet visitors in the mansions grand vestibule.
Museum visits, concert attendance, and class-trips have been part of the Carmel Institutes programming since its inception. As Professor Fedyashin has always reminded his students, although our knowledge about the past depends primarily on reading, history must also be walked, seen, touched, smelled, and tasted. Before coming to the Hillwood, the group read selections from Joseph Daviess diplomatic memoir Mission to Moscow (1941) and watched Michael Curtizs film based on it, also titled Mission to Moscow (1943).
After having lunch at the Hillwood caf矇, the students then broke up into two groups again for docent-led tours of the famous Hillwood gardens, which are works of art all on their own.
The trip was a visual component in泭a holistic experience that stays with students of history for much longer. Engaging with history on the page, on the screen, and in motion helped to open young minds to the importance of cultural diplomacy and the great legacy of American philanthropy.
泭
Mark Edele, Stalinism at War:
The Soviet Union in World War II Book Talk, November 18, 2022
The Carmel Institute, in cooperation泭with Georgetown's Russian History Seminar Series, invited泭Mark Edele to talk about his 2021 book泭Stalinism at War: The Soviet Union in World War II泭on November 18, 2022. Professor Edele is the inaugural Hansen Professor in History and泭serves as Deputy Dean in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Melbourne, Australia. In this work, he takes a fresh look at the Soviet Union's experience in World War II, widening his examination to both the European and Asian aspects of the conflict.
Read泭more about the book and Dr. Edele's impressive body of work here.
Israeli Chamber Project Explores
Early 20th-Century Musical ShiftsNovember 6, 2022
The Carmel Institute gave 23 tickets to 51勛圖 students to hear the Israeli Chamber Project in the beautiful Terrace Theater on the upper floor of the Kennedy Center. The ICP aims to bring together unique ensembles of Israeli musicians to play and offer educational outreach programs to the public. This concert focused on the early 20th-century musical shift away from Romanticism into the experimental avant-garde music of Stravinsky and Schoenburg. This shift became the inspiration for the artists whom the Carmel Institute explored in detail in our 2017 symposium,泭The Russian Experiment泭with the PostClassical Ensemble and renowned pianist Vladimir Feltsman.泭
The concert celebrated the death anniversaries of two greats: Saint-Sa禱ns (100th)泭and Stravinsky (50th), demonstrating the innovation of Stravinskys post-war泭LHistoire du soldat泭(The Soldiers Tale, 1918) in direct contrast to Sains-Sa禱ns Romantic-era泭Fantasy for Harp and Violin, Op. 124,泭from 1907. The ensemble emphasized the difference in their careful selection of excerpts from Stravinskys libretto based on the Russian folk tale泭The Runaway Soldier and the Devil. A universal story of a man who makes a deal with the devil for riches, the composition is often performed with a conductor due to its many time signature changes, but the performers showed their talent and sophistication in playing the complex composition without one, opting to use nonverbal communication and body cues instead.泭
The ensembles choices walked the audience through the shift from Romanticism to the more atonal and unpredictable avant-garde music of the early 20th泭century in reaction to the impacts of the Industrial Revolution and increasingly泭mechanized泭Western world. The program first took the audience from Saint-Sa禱ns to Stravinsky and Ravel contrasted Schoenburgs controversial atonality with its unexpected chord changes and resolutions. The group gave the audience grace at the end, returning to Ravels泭Le Tombeau de Couperin, which he dedicated to friends who died in the Great War. Despite its aim to memorialize the dead, the work is more reflective and hopeful than sad, which lifted the audience's spirits at the end of the concert. Ravel himself supposedly responded to criticism that his work was not somber enough with: The dead are sad enough in their eternal silence.
Carmel Institute Takes Students to the National Gallery of Art
On Saturday, October 29, 2022, The Carmel Institute organized a trip to the National Gallery of Art. Professor Fedyashin gave the students a 60-minute tour of the paintings acquired by Andrew Mellon from the Hermitage Museum in 1930-31. The class examined泭six that are currently on display: Jan van Eycks The Annunciation (c. 1434/1436), Sandro Botticellis The Adoration of the Magi (c. 1478/1482), Raphaels Alba Madonna (c. 1510), Titians Venus with a Mirror (c. 1555), Paolo Veroneses The Finding of Moses (c. 1570/1575), and Jean Sim矇on Chardins The House of Cards (c. 1737). Professor Fedyashin helped the students see how Renaissance art changed as the period泭progressed, reflecting the historical changes that drove the new European worldview and humanism's growing influence.
Carmel Institute Provides泭Tickets to Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto & Other Works at the Kennedy Center
The Carmel Institute purchased tickets for 45 51勛圖 community members to hear Tchaikovsky's泭Violin Concerto in D Major, featuring world-class violinist and conductor Julian Rachlin, and other works at the Kennedy Center on Friday, October 28, at 8 pm.泭
The evening began with Italian Ottorino Respighis short but lively泭Burlesca, then Rachlin began his outstanding solo in Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovskys泭Concerto in D Major, Op. 35. Over the next 34 minutes, Rachlin and the National Symphony Orchestra conversed back and forth in music. The concert concluded with a 20th-century work by another Italian: Alfredo Casellas泭Symphony No. 3.泭
Tchaikovsky traveled to Switzerland following the collapse of his marriage and wrote his only violin concerto there, with assistance from his composition pupil -- violinist Iosif Kotek. The concerto had a difficult time reaching the concert stage, though, as both Kotek and Tchaikovskys second choice for the premieres soloist Leopold Auer refused the honor in 1879.泭泭It finally premiered in December 1881 in Vienna, to mixed reviews including that the last movement was too Russian in character. Perhaps the difficulty in getting the work to the stage, along with the fact that Tchaikovsky himself did not play the violin, is why this was his only concerto for violin, but it is certainly one of the best-known violin concertos today.泭
The泭泭details more about each work and the artists.泭
Violinist Julia Fischer and the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France under conductor Vasily Petrenko perform泭泭in 2013. 泭
Carmel Institute Offers泭Free Tickets to Hear Prokofievs Rarely Performed 6th泭Symphony泭
The Carmel Institute provided 55 tickets to 51勛圖 students and staff to hear Sergei Prokofievs Sixth Symphony, following Benjamin Brittens Cello Symphony featuring NSO principal cello David Hardy on October 23, 2022.泭
Prokofiev wrote his Sixth Symphony in the wake of the Great Patriotic War (World War II). It fully reflects the roil of emotions that the war elicited: shock, determination, sadness, and hope for a new future. The work premiered in October 1947 with the Leningrad Philharmonic directed by Yevgeny Mravinsky. According to Mira Mendelson-Prokofieva, it was lauded as a glimpse into the private world of modern man against the terrifying machinery of terrifying destruction. The work and its composer ultimately fell prey to the political tides of Soviet-era music, with the same critics who lauded his 6th泭later attacking it as formalist. But the symphony was reevaluated during the Khrushchev years when it was once more praised as patriotic and a true war symphony, according to Daniel Tookes recent work. Most agree that Prokofievs 6th is musically challenging and rarely staged, making this opportunity at the Kennedy Center even more valuable for students.
Look over the泭泭for more on the concert.
Hear泭泭by The Scottish National Orchestra, Neeme J瓣rvi conducting.
For more information on the history of Prokofievs Sixth Symphony:
Mira Mendelson-Prokofieva,泭 苤迮迣迮迮 苤迮迣迮迮赲邽迮 郋郕郋迮赲迮. 郋郈郋邾邽郇訄郇邽. 郇迮赲郇邽郕邽 (19381967)泭(in Russian). 郋郕赲訄: 郋邾郈郋郱邽郋, 2012, 327.泭
Daniel Tooke, "Prokofiev and the Soviet Symphony." In McAllister, Rita; Guillaumer, Christina (eds.).泭Rethinking Prokofiev. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021. 55.
Carmel Institute Takes Students to Dumbarton Oaks
On Saturday, September 10, 2022, the Carmel Institute organized a trip to one of Washingtons most unique museums, Dumbarton Oaks, for the students in 51勛圖's泭History Majors Seminar this semester. The trip enabled the class泭to take advantage of the museum's泭Byzantine and Muscovite documents and objects to gain a deeper understanding of the course readings.泭They also enjoyed a delicious泭lunch at Caf矇 Divan nearby.
Peters Calendar Reforms and the Plurality of Time.
The Institute celebrates the 350th anniversary of Peter the Great's birth with Dr. Andreas Schoenle.
Dostoevsky at 200: The Novel in Modernity
Our Dostoevsky book talks continue with Dr. Kate Holland.
Mimetic Lives with Dr. Chloe Kitzinger
The Carmel Institute continues its series of book talks celebrating the 200th aniversary of Dostoevsky's birth.
Dostoevsky's Literary Partnership with Editor Mikhail Katkov
Our book talk series continues with Susanne Fusso.
The Image of Christ in Dostoevsky's Russia
Our book talk series continues with Dr. John Givens on泭Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Bulgakov, Pasternak.
"Dostoevsky Life and Letters" Book Talk with Dr. Thomas Marullo
The Carmel Institute begins泭its year-long series
Students See the American Premiere of Russian Documentary Shtetlers
In January 2021, the Carmel Institute purchased a bloc of student tickets for the virtual American premier of Katya Ustinovas documentary film Shtetlers (虼迮郅, 2020), which was part of Russian Film Week in New York City.
Shtetlers explores life of small Jewish towns in the former Russian Empire and the Soviet Union. Called shtetls, these towns were once home to the largest Jewish population in the world. Only a few survived the Holocaust, and those that did were all located in the territory of modern Ukraine and Moldova. Hidden from the world outside behind the Iron Curtain, traditional Jewish life continued for decades after it disappeared everywhere else. The tight-knit communities supported themselves by providing goods and services to their non-Jewish neighbors. Judaism, the Yiddish language and folklore, ritualized cooking and elaborate craftsmanship were practiced, treasured, and passed through the generations until very recently.
The film follows nine people, most now scattered around the world, who once belonged to the Jewish and non-Jewish shtetl communities. Their memories are a farewell to the vanished world of the shtetl, a melting pot of cultures that many nations once called their home.
Katia Ustinova, a with a degree in Social Documentary from the School of Visual Arts in NYC, grew up in Moscow in what she calls a literary family. While her playwright grandfather was Jewish, her family did not engage with their Jewish identity much until her father, Sergei Ustinov, a businessman and art collector, founded the Museum of Jewish History in 2012. Ms. Ustinova participated in a live Q&A with our guests after the screening.
The Hermitage Dwellers Screening and Panel Discussion
On October 29, 2020, the Carmel Institute made available the documentary film The Hermitage Dwellers (2004) for online guests and then hosted a webinar with the Director of the Hermitage Museum, Mikhail Borisovich Petriovsky, as well as the films writer and director Aliona Van Der Horst. The film tells the story of the people who protected and preserved one of the worlds premiere museum collections. Attendees learned how the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia, preserved its collection during World War II by sending it to Sverdlovsk (now Ekaterinburg). The narrative is based on original footage and the personal accounts of the staff members who lived through the siege of Leningrad. The staff泭also spoke about how they and others continue to take great care of the second-largest museum collection in the world and what the art they care for means to them. After viewing the film, Mr. Petriovsky and Ms. Van Der Horst shared behind-the-scenes stories and discussed how museums are centers of scholarship and cultural understanding.
Roy R. Behrens reviewed both the film and the five-episode miniseries upon which the film is based in the Winter 2005-2006 edition of the Ballast Quarterly Review (v. 21, no. 2). He described the film as "如owerful" and lauded both the filmmakers and the Hermitage staff featured in the film, writing: Somehow, by whatever miracle, this place and its treasures have always survived and continue to do so now through the generous work of the museum staff.
For more, see the泭.
Read of The Hermitage Dwellers documentary film (2004) and Hermitage-niks: A Passion for the Hermitage, the 2003 five-episode original series the film excerpt (excerpt publicly available; Project Muse access required to read the full review).
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The Desert of Forbidden Art Screening and Panel Discussion
On October 1, 2020, the Carmel Institute held its first virtual event, making the documentary film The Desert of Forbidden Art available online for guests. 泭The film tells the remarkable story of how failed artist Igor Savitsky created one of the world's great collections of Russian avant garde art in the Karakalpak desert. The New York Times described the film as "A gorgeous documentary. The filmmakers let the art do the talking, with loving, lingering shots of the brightly colored works." The Institute brought together the documentary filmmakers and a historian of the museum at the center of the film in a Zoom webinar for a post-viewing question-and-answer session discussing the filmmaking process, the museums unique history, and the museums ongoing work today.
Read more about the Desert of Forbidden Art event.
Watch the full .
A World War II movie that's not truly about war...泭
On March 2, 2020, the Carmel Institute screened director Grigori Chukhrai's泭Ballad of a Soldier泭(1959) in Russian with English subtitles. The film follows a young Soviet Army private on a pilgrimage home from the front lines of the Great Patriotic War / World War II. Along the way, he encounters various symbols of love: a young couple, a married couple, a mother and child, and then falls in love himself. Winner of the BAFTA Award for Best Film and nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay, Chukhrai's timeless Everyman tale, brimming with poetic visual imagery, has been hailed as a milestone in Russian Cinema.泭
After a delicious pre-film buffet reception for our nearly 300 guests, Professor Eric Lohr, Director, Carmel Institute of Russian Culture & History introduced the film and moderated a stimulating post-film Q&A with泭Professor泭Stephen Norris, Director, Havighurst Center for Russian and Post-Soviet Studies at Miami University of Ohio. After the Q & A, guests enjoyed their choice among desserts with coffee and tea options while they discussed the film and its symbolic message.
Looking for older events? Check out our 2018 to 2019 events.