Petro Tchaikovsky National Music Academy of Ukraine






National Music Academy of Ukraine


Petro Tchaikovsky National Music Academy of Ukraine (Ukrainian: Національна музична академія України імені Петра Чайковського) or Kiev Conservatory[1] is a Ukrainian state institution of higher music education. Its courses include postgraduate education.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Rectors


  • 3 References


  • 4 External links





History


The Kiev Conservatory was founded on 3 November 1913 at the Kiev campus of the Music College of the Russian Musical Society. The organization of the conservatory was spearheaded by Sergei Rachmaninoff and Alexander Glazunov. The first directors were V. Pukhalsky (1913) and Reinhold Glière (1914–1920). In 1925, the junior classes were separated from the conservatory to form a Music College, while the senior classes were merged into the formerly private Music and Drama Institute of Mykola Lysenko (today the Kiev National I. K. Karpenko-Kary Theatre, Cinema and Television University). Viktor Kosenko taught at both institutions.


The conservatory was revived when Kiev once again became the capital of Ukraine in 1934. The Music and Drama Institute of Mykola Lysenko was dissolved and its music department was merged back with the Music College, while the drama department served as the basis for creation of the Kiev State Theater Institute of Les Kurbas. In 1938, the conservatory received the Order of Lenin award. In 1940, the conservatory was named after Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. In 1995, the President of Ukraine elevated the conservatory's status, and renamed it the Petro Tchaikovsky National Music Academy of Ukraine.


The conservatory occupies a building built in the 1890s as the Hotel Continental (architects Eduard Bradtman and Georg Schleifer). The building was destroyed during World War II, but was rebuilt in 1955, at which point a concert hall was added (architects L. Katok and Ya. Krasny). It is located on Horodetsky street 1/3.



Rectors



  • 1913–1914 Vladimir Pukhalskiy

  • 1914–1920 Reinhold Glière

  • 1920–1922 Felix Blumenfeld

  • 1922–1926 Kostiantyn Mykhailov

  • 1926–1934 unknown

  • 1934–1948 Abram Lufer (including the evacuation period)

  • 1948–1954 Oleksandr Klymov

  • 1954–1968 Andriy Shtoharenko

  • 1968–1974 Ivan Lyashenko

  • 1974–1983 Mykola Kondratyuk

  • 1983–2004 Oleh Tymoshenko

  • 2004– Volodymyr Rozhok



References





  1. ^ Kiev Conservatory - Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine, Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies




External links


  • Official site of the conservatory





Coordinates: 50°26′56″N 30°31′30″E / 50.4490°N 30.5249°E / 50.4490; 30.5249







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