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June 2024

06-04-2024
Bard Conservatory Faculty Lucy Fitz Gibbon Wins a 2024 Borletti-Buitoni Trust Fellowship
Soprano Lucy Fitz Gibbon, visiting faculty in vocal arts at the Bard College Conservatory of Music, has been awarded a 2024 fellowship from the Borletti-Buitoni Trust (BBT) in support of her professional projects. The BBT Fellowship Program rewards musical excellence demonstrated by outstanding young musicians—for individuals and ensembles that have been selected from over 32 countries—with fellowships in 2024 being given to seven artists, including Fitz Gibbon. BBT winners are awarded between £20,000 and £30,000. There are no set criteria for how artists spend their budget. Winners are encouraged to be creative and to use their awards in a way that will help to establish and build their careers. Over the next three years, BBT’s fellowship funding will support Fitz Gibbon in the commissioning of new works, performances, and recordings. BBT also will provide advice, guidance, contacts, and public relations exposure. BBT artists join a supportive family that helps to advance their careers.

“I am overwhelmed with gratitude to have received one of the Borletti-Buitoni Trust’s 2024 Artist Fellowships. The nomination process asked me to dream about what I could accomplish with the kind of latitude that this funding and administrative support would represent, but I found the range of possibilities almost too tantalizing to imagine, as if I could permit myself only an oblique gaze at what might be,” wrote Fitz Gibbon upon receiving the fellowship.

Lucy Fitz Gibbon is noted for her “dazzling virtuoso singing” (Boston Globe) and believes that creating new works and recreating those lost in centuries past makes room for the diversity of voices integral to classical music’s future. Spotlighted as a Rising Star of Classical Music for 2024 in the February 20, 2024, edition of the British Broadcasting Corporation's (BBC) Music Magazine, Fitz Gibbon is one of 15 young classical musicians that the BBC has identified worldwide who are making a prominent stamp on the industry, whether with concert performances, opera roles, or dazzling new recordings.
Read about Fitz Gibbon at BBT
Photo: Lucy Fitz Gibbon, visiting faculty in vocal arts at the Bard College Conservatory of Music. Photo by Steve Riskind
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Bard Conservatory,Bard Graduate Programs,Division of the Arts | Institutes(s): Bard Conservatory of Music,Bard Undergraduate Programs |
06-04-2024
Jindong Cai conducting The Orchestra Now at the 2021 China Now Music Festival. Photo by Karl Rabe
In a profile of the US-China Music Institute of the Bard College Conservatory of Music for China Daily, Minlu Zhang spoke with Director Jindong Cai and several current Bard Conservatory students. “Our faculty comprises top experts in their fields, which naturally fosters interaction and collaboration,” Cai told China Daily. “At Bard, students studying Chinese music and Western music work closely together, becoming friends and often forming duets, trios, or learning each other’s instruments. This integration creates a vibrant musical community.” Zhang also spoke with Bard students Andrew Chan ’24 MA ’25, Kendall Griffith ’26, Beitong Liu ’24 MA ’25, and Yixing Wang ’25 about their artistic practices and love of traditional Chinese music. Griffith, who was able to study at the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing, China, last semester, said she learned more about her passion and was able to move beyond her comfort zone. “There was an interesting lecture that talked about how most Chinese music emulates things in calligraphy,” Griffith said. “There’s a lot of empty space, and I can now incorporate that feeling into a lot of the music I play.” One of the goals of the US-China Music Institute is to create opportunities for these kinds of cross-cultural exchanges. “Globally, music is the most effective way to connect people,” Cai said. “When you look at various cultures or regions, you often see conflicts. However, when you consider music, it has a way of connecting everyone.”
Read More in China Daily
Photo: Jindong Cai conducting The Orchestra Now at the 2021 China Now Music Festival. Photo by Karl Rabe
Meta: Subject(s): Bard Conservatory,Conservatory,US-China Music Institute | Institutes(s): Bard Conservatory of Music,U.S.-China Music Institute |
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All photos by Karl Rabe unless stated otherwise.