Anna Goldsworthy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anna Goldsworthy
NationalityAustralian
EducationB. Mus. (Hons) Adelaide,
M.Mus. TCU,
D.Mus Arts, Melbourne
Alma materUniversity of Melbourne
Notable worksPiano Lessons
Notable awardsNewcomer of the Year 2010 ABIA, David Paul Landa Memorial Scholarship for Piano, ArtsSA Emerging Artist Award
Website
annagoldsworthy.com

Anna Goldsworthy (born 9 June 1974) is an Australian writer, teacher and classical pianist.

Life[]

Goldsworthy was born in Adelaide as the eldest daughter of the writer Peter Goldsworthy and Helen Goldsworthy. She began studying the piano at the age of six. At the age of eleven she was accepted into the Elder Conservatorium, studying with the distinguished pedagogue , to whom she attributes the fact that she is now a pianist. Goldsworthy completed her Bachelor of Music degree with honours at the Elder Conservatorium before acquiring a Master of Music degree at Texas Christian University, where she held the F. Howard and Mary D. Walsh Graduate Piano Scholarship and studied with Tamás Ungár. In 2004, she graduated from the University of Melbourne with a Doctor of Musical Arts degree under the supervision of Ronald Farren-Price, who has been an important mentor. Her thesis topic was "Fanny Hensel and Virtuosity". Additionally, Goldsworthy has studied in Moscow with Lev Naumov – a pupil of Heinrich Neuhaus, who had been a pupil of Leopold Godowsky – with the support of an Arts SA Emerging Artist Award, and in the Advanced Performance Program at the Australian National Academy of Music.

Musical career[]

Goldsworthy is an accomplished classical pianist. In 2009 she was a juror for Chamber Music Australia's Asia Pacific Chamber Music Competition.

In 2004, Goldsworthy completed a world tour performing in festivals and concert halls in Australia, Asia, Europe and North and South America. Highlights included appearances at the Teatro Colón for the Buenos Aires International Music Festival, at the Prince Yong Theatre in Beijing, for the Orchestra of Colours in Athens, and for the Festival Musicale delli Nazioni in Rome. In 2005, she performed the Clara Schumann concerto in the Masters Series of the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, and undertook a three-month residency at the Australia Council Studio at the Cité internationale des arts in Paris. She currently teaches piano at the University of Melbourne, and the University of Adelaide – alongside Stefan Ammer and Lucinda Collins – and is artist-in-residence at Janet Clarke Hall.

Artistic director of the Port Fairy Spring Music Festival[]

Goldsworthy was appointed in May 2009 as artistic director of the Port Fairy Spring Music Festival from 2010, succeeding Stephen McIntyre who retired at the conclusion of the festival in October 2009. In announcing the appointment, festival chairman Paul Clarkson said "Anna Goldsworthy is already well known to the festival's audiences as a highly regarded performer and presenter. The festival this year celebrates its 20th anniversary and I am sure Anna will bring exciting new perspectives to the programming as it enters its third decade."[citation needed]

Coriole music festival[]

Anna Goldsworthy is the artistic director of he Coriole music festival, appointed in 2019.

Recordings and broadcasts[]

Goldsworthy's debut solo CD, Come With Us, was released by ABC Classics in January 2008. In March 2010 with her trio, Seraphim Trio, she recorded Schubert's Trout Quintet for ABC Classics. In July 2010 she recorded for ABC Classics the music that features in her book Piano Lessons.

Her two-part radio documentary on the Mendelssohn siblings Fanny and Felix, Art is not for women: only for girls, was broadcast on ABC Classic FM in 2004.

Chamber music[]

Alongside Goldsworthy's solo performances, she has received acclaim as a chamber musician. She is a founding member of the Seraphim Trio, which has performed throughout Asia and Europe, and appears regularly in Australia for Musica Viva. The trio studied chamber music with Hatto Beyerle at the Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien Hannover, and was awarded the prize for the Leading Piano Trio in the 2001 National Chamber Music Competition. In 2007, the trio launched a national concert series.

Writing[]

Goldsworthy has published numerous essays on music and cultural issues, and writes regularly for The Monthly.

Memoirs[]

Her memoir Piano Lessons was released by Black Inc in September 2009. It was shortlisted in the 2010 New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards for Best Non Fiction and in the 2010 Australian Book Industry Awards in the categories of Best Non-Fiction and the Newcomer of the Year, which she won. The book was sold to St. Martin's Press in the US and the movie rights have been sold to Australian director Ana Kokkinos.

Welcome to Your New Life, also a memoir, was released by Black Inc in March 2013.[1]

Plays[]

Goldsworthy is credited alongside her father, Peter Goldsworthy, as writing the stage adaptation of Maestro which the State Theatre Company of South Australia performed in early 2009. Piano Lessons was adapted by Goldsworthy as a stage presentation for the Queensland Music Festival in August 2011.

Fiction[]

Anna Goldsworthy published her third book, Melting Moments, her first work of fiction,[2] and released it on 3 March 2020.[3] It is a domestic book set in South Australia beginning in 1941, with the main character, Ruby, who travels to Adelaide.[4] It was officially released on Adelaide 2020 writers' week, with an interview of Anna Goldsworthy and other Black Inc. author Anna Krien, who discussed how it felt going from "fact to fiction".[5]

Bibliography[]

Books[]

  • Goldsworthy, Anna (2011). Piano Lessons. Collingwood, Vic.: Black Inc. ISBN 9781863955355.
  • — (2014). Welcome to Your New Life. Collingwood, Vic.: Black Inc. ISBN 9781863956451.
  • —, ed. (2017). The Best Australian Essays 2017. Black Inc. ISBN 9781863959605.
  • — (2020). Melting Moments. Collingwood, Vic.: Black Inc. ISBN 9781743820858.

Essays and reporting[]

  • "Unfinished Business: Sex, Freedom and Misogyny" in Quarterly Essay No. 50, June 2013 ISBN 9781863956024

Articles and essays published in The Monthly:

Critical studies and reviews[]

  • Robertson, Rachel (April 2013). "Other strangers". Australian Book Review. 350: 50. Review of Welcome to your new life.

Awards[]

Piano

  • Arts SA Emerging Artist Award
  • David Paul Landa Memorial Scholarship for Pianists
  • Finalist 2010 Melbourne Prize

Writing

  • Winner, 2010 Australian Book Industry Awards for Newcomer of the Year
  • Shortlisted 2011 National Biography Award
  • Shortlisted 2010 Australian Book Industry Awards for Best Non-Fiction
  • Shortlisted 2010 NSW Premier's Literary Awards Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-Fiction
  • Shortlisted 2010 Colin Roderick Award[6]
  • Shortlisted 2021 Colin Roderick Award[7]

References[]

  1. ^ "Review Welcome to Your New Life" (ISBN 9781863955935) by Daniel Herborn, The Age, 18 May 2013
  2. ^ "Melting Moments by Anna Goldsworthy". www.readings.com.au. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  3. ^ Melting Moments by Anna Goldsworthy. 2 September 2019.
  4. ^ Goldsworthy, Anna (2020). Melting moments. Adelaide: Black inc. ISBN 9781863959988.
  5. ^ "From Fact to Fiction - Adelaide Festival". www.adelaidefestival.com.au. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  6. ^ "The Colin Roderick Award shortlist". Text Publishing. 23 September 2010. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  7. ^ "Woman and fiction dominate the 2021 Colin Roderick Literary Award Shortlist". James Cook University. 2 August 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""