Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Verdina Shlonsky

Israeli composer and painter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Verdina Shlonsky
Remove ads

Verdina Shlonsky (Hebrew: וורדינה (רוזה) שלונסקי; January 22, 1905 – February 20, 1990) was an Israeli composer, pianist, publicist and painter.

Thumb
Verdina Shlonsky, Tel Aviv, 1936

Biography

Summarize
Perspective

Verdina (Rosa) Shlonsky was born to a Hasidic Jewish family in Kremenchuk in the Russian Empire, the youngest of six children. (The Hebrew root of the name Verdina is וורד "vered" or "rose".)

The family immigrated to Palestine in 1923,[1] but she remained in Vienna to continue her music education. From there, she moved to Berlin, where she studied with pianists Egon Petri and Artur Schnabel. In Paris, she studied composition with Nadia Boulanger, Edgard Varèse and Max Deutsch.[2] In 1925, she and her sister a successful opera singer Judith Shlonsky (Nina Valery), who had returned to Europe, married two brothers: Sigmund and Alexander Sternik. Both couples soon divorced.[3]

Thumb
Press card, Al Hamishmar

Her own date of immigration to Palestine is not clear; evidence suggests that she visited Palestine several times since 1929, before finally settling in 1944 or 1945.[4] Upon settling in Palestine, she joined the faculty of the Tel Aviv Academy of Music. Among her noted compositions were "Hebrew Poem" (1931) and "Quartet for Strings", which won an award at the 1948 Béla Bartók Competition in Budapest.

She was the younger sister of poet Avraham Shlonsky, and older sister of the mezzo-soprano Nina Valery.

Remove ads

Selected recordings

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads