嘿嘿视频

Mondavi Center enhances offerings with Mellon grant

News
four men in tuxes making music on flower pots
The So Percussion ensemble will be visiting 嘿嘿视频, thanks to the Mellon grant.

The Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts at 嘿嘿视频 has received a $400,000 award from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation that will support innovative performances in classical music, residencies by major American orchestras and festivals connected to academic programs.

鈥淭his generous grant supports our belief in the power and beauty of classical music to enrich lives,鈥 said Don Roth, executive director of the Mondavi Center. 鈥淚t will give us the opportunity to deepen our work to engage audience members with classical music by supporting nontraditional and less formal concert formats, by collaborating with 嘿嘿视频 artists and faculty to create exciting multifaceted music festivals, and by creating major artist residencies that bring community members and artists in closer contact.鈥

With the award the Mondavi Center this fall will expand its 鈥淰isions鈥 series of cross-disciplinary and affordably priced programs spanning classical, contemporary and world music with multimedia elements. Building on the informal setting of the Vanderhoef Studio Theatre, the Mondavi Center will construct digital sets displaying content unique to these performances and created in collaboration with the artists. The four groups, each giving two performances, will include the acclaimed So Percussion ensemble, Inuit throat singer Tanya Tagaq, Phillipe Sly and John-Charles Britton performing Schubert lieder arranged for bass-baritone and guitar, and an exploration of 20th century American music from cellist Zuill Bailey and pianist Lara Downes.

Grant funds programs through 2017 

The grant, which covers the period from July 2014 through June 2017, will allow the center to undertake at least two residencies with major American orchestras, similar to one held in 2013 with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, http://www.news.ucdavis.edu/search/news_detail.lasso?id=10537.

The residencies will include workshops and performances with local schools and in the community as well as at the university.

The award will also help fund several festivals with 嘿嘿视频 academic units, including 2014鈥2015鈥檚 Music and Words Festival with the Department of Music and a partnership with Native American studies, both early next year. Words and Music will include a residency by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Melinda Wagner, performances of works by composer fellowship winners and Bob Ostertag, 嘿嘿视频 professor of cinema and technocultural studies. The Mondavi Center and the 嘿嘿视频 music department usually stage a festival in alternating years.  As a result of the support of the Mellon Foundation, these partners plan a major expansion of the festival concept in early 2017.

鈥淭he reports of classical music鈥檚 death have been greatly exaggerated,鈥 Roth said 鈥渁nd the activities which the Mellon Foundation has supported and will continue to support at the Mondavi Center are proof that this wonderful art form is alive and well.鈥

This is the second time the Mondavi Center has received a Mellon Foundation performing arts grant. In 2011 the center was awarded $580,000 for similar initiatives.

Other Mellon Foundation grants

Earlier this year 嘿嘿视频 was awarded $1.725 million from the Mellon Foundation to support research in the humanities during the next seven years. The grant is dedicated to supporting the humanities and the arts and will allow for creation of four new research initiatives in the humanities and arts. Additionally, a year-long partnership between the Cinema and Technocultural Studies Program and the 嘿嘿视频 School of Law examining surveillance in modern democracies also received a grant this year of $175,000 through the Mellon Sawyer Seminars on the Comparative Study of Cultures.

Media Resources

Jeffrey Day, Arts, humanities and social sciences, 530-219-8258, jaaday@ucdavis.edu

Rob Tocalino, Mondavi Center, 530-754-5422, rtocalino@ucdavis.edu

Secondary Categories

University Society, Arts & Culture