Folkwang University of the Arts
The Folkwang University of the Arts is a university for music, theater, dance, design, and academic studies, located in four German cities of North Rhine-Westphalia. Since 1927, its traditional main location has been in the former Werden Abbey in Essen in the Ruhr area, with additional facilities in Duisburg, Bochum, and Dortmund, and, since 2010, at the Zeche Zollverein, a World Heritage Site also in Essen. The Folkwang University is home to the international dance company Folkwang Tanz Studio. Founded as Folkwangschule, its name was Folkwang Hochschule from 1963 until 2009.
History
The university shares its unusual name with the Museum Folkwang founded in 1902 by arts patron Karl Ernst Osthaus. The term Folkwang derives from Fólkvangr, the Old Norse name of a mythical meadow where the dead gather who are chosen by Freyja, the Norse goddess of love and beauty, to spend the afterlife with her. The school's founders, opera director, stage designer Hein Heckroth and choreographer Kurt Jooss, regarded this Folkwang as a symbol for the arts as a unified whole, rather than divided into separate classes. The Folkwangschule für Musik, Tanz und Sprechen opened in 1927 in Essen, and in 1928 a previously established school of design merged with the institution.In 1963 the Folkwang school was renamed Folkwang-Hochschule. In 2010 the institution began offering graduate studies and was renamed Folkwang University of the Arts. This coincided with Ruhr.2010, the festival in which the Ruhr district was designated the European Capital of Culture for the year 2010.
Activities
The Folkwang University unites training in music, theatre, dance, design, and scholarship, in order to encourage collaboration among the arts. Public events take place at the Folkwang University on its six in-house stages and in collaboration with cultural institutions of the region, such as the, the Schauspiel Bochum, Musiktheater im Revier, the Duisburg Philharmonic, the Wuppertaler Bühnen and the Ruhrfestspiele.Folkwang University of the Arts is structured into four distinct faculties, each specializing in various artistic and academic disciplines:
- Faculty 1: Focuses on practical artistic and musical courses, including instrumental training, jazz, composition, professional performance, orchestral playing, and popular music.
- Faculty 2: Offers artistic, artistic-academic, artistic-pedagogical, and academic courses such as music teaching, music pedagogy, musicology, integrative music theory, vocal ensemble direction, and music of the Middle Ages.
- Faculty 3: Dedicated to performing arts, this faculty encompasses programs in voice and music theatre, musical, physical theatre, acting, directing, dance, dance composition, and dance pedagogy.
- Faculty 4: Centres on design disciplines, providing courses in photography, industrial design, communication design, and art and design science.
- Instrumental training for different musical instruments
- Jazz / Performing Artist
- Integrative composition
- Church music
- Voice
- School Music
- Music pedagogy
- Musicology in combination with an artistic subject
- Musicals
- Acting
- Physical Theatre
- Directing
- Dance
- Industrial Design
- Communication Design
- Photography
- Orchestral playing
- Conducting
- Vocal Ensemble Direction
- Musicology in combination with an artistic discipline
- Chamber music
- Composition
- Concert Performance
- Solo Dance
- Choreography
- Labanotation
- Dance Pedagogy
Faculty
- Hermann Baumann, hornist
- Young-Chang Cho, cellist
- Anna Erler-Schnaudt, contralto
- Catherine Gayer, coloratura soprano
- Wilfried Gruhn
- Hansgünther Heyme, theatre director
- Chris Houlding
- Nicolaus A. Huber
- Ifor James
- Peter Janssens
- Maria Jonas, mezzo-soprano
- Kurt Jooss
- Nicola Jürgensen, clarinet
- Uwe Köller
- Scott Lawton, conductor
- Fritz Lehmann, conductor
- Frank Lloyd, hornist
- Lore Lorentz
- Lauren Newton
- Walter Nicks
- Ralf Otto, choral conducting
- Krzysztof Penderecki, composer
- Reinhard Peters, conductor
- Gudrun Schröfel choral conducting
- Gerhard Stäbler
- Rita Streich, operatic soprano
- Paul Tortelier
- Adolf Wamper, sculptor
Alumni
- Pina Bausch, choreographer
- Anne Bierwirth, contralto
- Max Burchartz
- Andreas Deja
- Vladimir Djambazov, composer, French horn, sound designer
- Stefan Dohr, principal horn player of the Berlin Philharmonic
- Tommy Finke
- Thomas Gabriel
- Agnes Giebel, soprano
- Ulrike Grossarth, dancer and visual artist
- Anna Handler, pianist and conductor
- Klara Höfels, actress and producer
- Hilmar Hoffmann, founder of Oberhausen film festival, cultural politician in Frankfurt, director of Goethe-Institut
- Reinhild Hoffmann, choreographer
- Siegfried Jerusalem, tenor
- Salome Kammer, cellist, vocalist
- David Kamp
- Heinz Kiwitz
- Helmut Koch , conductor, choir leader, broadcasting manager, composer
- Susanne Linke
- Christof Loy, opera director
- Gerd Ludwig
- Ann Mandrella
- John McGuire
- Adéọlá Ọlágúnjú
- Carlos Orta
- Jürgen Prochnow, actor
- Andreas Pruys, bass
- Karl Ridderbusch, bass
- Armin Rohde, actor
- Thomas Ruff
- Magdalene Schauss-Flake, composer and organist
- Stefanie Schneider
- Peter Schwickerath, sculptor
- Harald Siepermann, animator and character designer
- Ruth Siewert, contralto
- Anton Stankowski
- Günther Strupp
- Raphael Thoene
- Graham Waterhouse, composer and cellist
- Dirk Weiler
- Greta Wrage von Pustau, dancer and dance teacher