Ida Ivanovna oak forest

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Ida Iwanowna Eichenwald , née Papendick , ( Russian Ида Ивановна Эйхенвальд урожд. Папендик ; * 1842 with Tilsit ; † 1917 in Odintsovo ) was a Prussian - Russian harpist and university teacher .

Life

Ida Papendick, younger sister of the pianist Gustav Adolf Papendick , began learning the harp with Ludwig Konstantin Grimm (1821–1882) in Berlin at the age of 6 . At the age of eight she already appeared in concerts. At the age of 11 she gave her first concert in Berlin. She went on tour with her brother . In 1856 she performed in Weimar , where Franz Liszt made her a recommendation to St. Petersburg . In the further course of the tour with her brother she performed in Gdansk in 1856 and in Riga in 1857 .

In 1860 Ida Papendick came to St. Petersburg. She performed in concerts, married the photographer Alexander Fjodorowitsch Eichenwald and became very famous with her new name Eichenwald. She had already become a soloist in the Mariinsky Theater in 1860 . In 1864 she became a soloist in the Bolshoi Theater in Moscow (until 1901). She took part in symphony concerts of the Russian Music Society in Moscow and St. Petersburg and gave annual solo concerts . Her virtuoso pieces included in particular fantasies by Elias Parish Alvars .

From 1875 to 1906 Eichenwald was a professor at the Moscow Conservatory . Her students included Natalja A. Sokolowskaja, Klementina K. Baklanowa, MI Tarasowa, ND Anissimowa and WA Lukin.

Eichenwald had four children. Her eldest son Alexander was a physicist , while Margarita , Nadeschda and Anton devoted themselves to music .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f European instrumentalists of the 18th and 19th centuries: Eichenwald, Eichenwald-Papendiek, Papendick-Eichenwald, Ida Iwanowna Ivanovna (accessed on November 14, 2018).
  2. a b Музыкальная энциклопедия: Эйхенвальд И. И. (accessed on November 16, 2018).
  3. Александр Федорович Эйхенвальд (accessed November 17, 2018).