Daily Archives: 4 June 2016

2016 CAUL and ASA Fellowships – Call For Applications

The Council of Australian University Librarians (CAUL) and the Australian Society of Authors (ASA) are pleased to announce that applications are now open for 2016 CAUL and ASA Fellowships.

$10,000 fellowships for creators to access special collections in university libraries.

The Fellowships have been made possible through the Copyright Agency Cultural Fund.

CAUL and the ASA expect to award two fellowships, each with a value of $10,000 in 2016. The fellowships are designed to showcase university libraries’ special collections by providing artists, authors, scholars and researchers with an opportunity to work on creative projects that will benefit from concentrated access to these collections.

Applicants are advised to read the information for applicants before completing the application form.

Applications open May 16 and close 14 June, 2016.

For full details and to apply, please visit: http://www.caul.edu.au/caul-programs/research/special-collections/caul-asa-fellowships/asa-caul-fellowships2016

Encounters: The Music of Europe and Asia – Free Concert @ St Joseph’s Church, Subiaco, WA

Encounters: The Music of Europe and Asia

Date: Sunday 19 June, 2016
Time: 7.30pm
Venue: St Joseph’s Church, 3 Salvado Road, Subiaco, Western Australia
Parking: There are approximately 80 spots available in the underground lot of the church (entrance off of Salvado Road). Local parking is also available around the church and across the road.
Tickets: This is a free event. Reserve your ticket HERE.
Enquiries: Please contact Makoto Harris Takao
Full details: http://www.historyofemotions.org.au/events/encounters-the-music-of-europe-and-asia

This concert explores Europe’s first contact with Japan and China from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries. These encounters are re-imagined through the sights and sounds of music performed and composed in these lands to the Far East. Tracing Gregorian chant through to chamber music, this unique soundscape of cultural exchange is brought to life by a vibrant group of young early music specialists. This concert features a number of Australian premieres, including the musical drama, Mulier Fortis (Strong Woman), composed in Austria in 1698 about the trials and tribulations of a Japanese Christian convert. These rare pieces tell us a tale about music as a way of communicating across cultures, and how both European merchants and missionaries alike were confronted with a new world continually unfolding before them.

Musicians:

  • Shaun Lee-Chen, violin (Shaun appears courtesy of the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra)
  • Ben Dollman, violin (Ben appears courtesy of the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra)
  • Alix Hamilton, viola
  • Makoto Harris Takao, viola da gamba
  • Aidan Deasy, theorbo
  • James Huntingford, harpsichord
  • Brent Grapes, trumpet (Brent appears courtesy of the West Australian Symphony Orchestra)
  • Carly Power, soprano
  • Chelsea Burns, mezzo-soprano
  • Jonathan Brain, tenor
  • Lachlann Lawton, baritone
  • Paull-Anthony Keightley, bass

This event is presented by the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions (Europe 1100-1800) and the University of Western Australia School of Music.