Anna Lee | |
Birth Place: | Seoul, South Korea |
Occupation: | Violinist |
Anna Ji-eun Lee (Korean: 이지은; born July 11, 1995), known professionally as Anna Lee, is an American concert violinist of Korean descent. She made her professional orchestral debut at the age of 6 with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra.[1]
Anna Lee was born in Seoul, South Korea. She began violin lessons at the age of 4 with her father in Seoul, and soon after began formal training with Alexander Souptel after her family moved to Singapore. A year and a half later, she performed a sold-out concert at age 6 in Victoria Concert Hall, performing the first movement of the Paganini Violin Concerto No. 1 on invitation from maestro Lan Shui, music director of the Singapore Symphony Orchestra. A few months later, she and her family moved to New York City after she was accepted to the Pre-College Division of the Juilliard School to study with Masao Kawasaki.[2] Lee finished her studies with Masao Kawasaki and Cho-Liang Lin and graduated from the Juilliard School Pre-College Division and the Dalton School in 2013. She then matriculated at Harvard College, majoring in Comparative Literature, and took several leaves of absences to accommodate her performing career, eventually graduating in May 2020.[3] She also completed a formal study abroad program in Paris, where she took courses in Critical Theory, Media Studies, and Comparative Literature at the Sorbonne University and the New Sorbonne University.
While living in Boston, Lee studied privately with Miriam Fried and Donald Weilerstein; between 2014 and 2017, she studied with Ana Chumachenco at the Kronberg Academy.[4]
As a soloist, Lee made her New York Philharmonic debut with maestro Daniel Boico in 2011, as well as her Frankfurt debut in 2016 with maestro Christoph Eschenbach and the Hessische Rundfunk Radio Orchestra.[5] She has also appeared with other notable orchestras, such as the Singapore Symphony Orchestra, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, and the Montreal Symphony Orchestra.
She has been featured in music festivals around the world such as the Gstaad Menuhin Festival, as well as on radio shows such as From the Top with host Christopher O’Riley[6] and NPR Performance Today with host Fred Child.[7] She was also one of the youngest performers at the EG Conference, presenting alongside other notable figures such as Mark Bittman, Esther Wojcicki, Dick Cavett, Cady Coleman, and Cameron Carpenter.[8] [9]
Lee has collaborated with artists such as Mitsuko Uchida, Gidon Kremer, Yuri Bashmet, and Steven Isserlis at internationally renowned chamber music festivals, most notably the Marlboro Music Festival and Kronberg Academy's "Chamber Music Connects the World".[10] She has also been invited on "Musicians from Marlboro" Tours across the United States and Canada.[11] [12]
Lee has taught chamber music at international summer festivals, most notably at the Kronberg Academy's Mit Musik - Miteinander festival[13] in Germany and Festival MusicAlp in France.
Lee has been featured in publications such as the Wall Street Journal Magazine,[14] the Harvard Gazette,[15] Asian Fortune.[16] She has also been a guest blogger for the Office for the Arts at Harvard[17] as well as for the Sungjoo Foundation.[18]
At age 9, she was interviewed by Fred Child on NPR's Performance Today, performing the first movement of the Wieniawski Violin Concerto No. 1. A few years later, she appeared in two more shows of NPR's From the Top, and was invited to feature as a soloist and chamber musician on From the Top's limited PBS series, From the Top at Carnegie Hall.[19]
She was also featured on "Pause for Art: Creative Moments from Harvard", a series produced by the Office for the Arts at Harvard, collaborating with composer Sam Wu and dancer Ileana Riveron to close out the series as well as the portion dedicated to Harvard Seniors.[20]
In May 2020, the Office for the Arts at Harvard co-awarded Anna Lee and visual artist George Liu the Louis Sudler Prize in the Arts,[21] which "recognizes outstanding artistic talent and achievement in the composition of performance of music, drama, dance, or the visual arts . . . [and] honors the sum of a student's artistic activities at Harvard".[22] Other awards include the Bernhard and Mania Hahnloser Prize from the Verbier Festival Academy,[23] From the Top's Jack Kent Cooke Young Artist Award,[24] the Prinz von Hessen prize from the Kronberg Academy Violin Masterclasses,[25] and the Artist Development Fellowship from the Office for the Arts at Harvard.
She has claimed numerous top and special prizes at competitions, such as in the 2019 Montréal International Violin Competition,[26] the 2018 International Violin Competition of Indianapolis,[27] the 2011 Sion-Valais International Violin Competition[28] (renamed the Tibor Varga International Violin Competition), the 2010 and 2012 Yehudi Menuhin International Competition (Junior and Senior Divisions, respectively), the Aspen Music Festival's 2009 American Academy of Conducting Competition,[29] and the 2008 Blount-Slawson Young Artist Competition.[30]
Previously, she was one of the youngest recipients of the Stradivari Society for several years, which generously loaned her a Nicolò Amati (c.1635-40) violin.[31] Currently, she plays a Giovanni Tononi violin, dated ca. 1690, on a loan from the Ravinia’s Steans Music Institute.