Ukrainian Art Songs: A Testament to Perseverance | Muzyka 2026


Ukrainian Art Songs: A Testament to Perseverance | Muzyka 2026

Date and time:

Tuesday 12 May, 2026
18:30 - 20:00

Location:

ONLINE


Musicologist Wasyl Sydorenko wrote that ‘in every country, the art song reflects the language, poetry, and culture of the people; It is an expression of ethnic identity and national pride.’ Although a monumental number of Ukrainian art songs were composed to serve this exact mission, they remain highly underrepresented after a history of Russian suppression; Ukrainian art songs have always stood as a tenacious form of resilience against attack on Ukraine and its culture. With Russia’s current full-scale invasion, Ukraine’s identity is again under attack, making it imperative to defy the propaganda that ‘Ukraine does not possess an individual, classical, and sophisticated culture.’ This presentation will introduce some of the chief composers of Ukrainian art song repertoire, and demonstrate how their work at the cultural frontlines is an unyielding testament to resistance and perseverance through art.

See all eight Muzyka seminars here.

Ukrainian Art Songs: A Testament to Perseverance | Muzyka 2026

£35 general

£25 student

Friends and Benefactors of the Institute are also eligible for a discount.

Lecturer

Andrew Skitko

Andrew Skitko enjoys singing and teaching a broad range of musical genres. A graduate of Westminster Choir College, he joined his colleagues in performances with the world’s leading orchestras and conductors on stages such as the Carnegie Hall and the Lincoln Center, and currently sings with the Opera Philadelphia Chorus and The Philadelphia Symphonic Choir. He is an active member of The Ukrainian Art Song Project, which promotes Ukrainian classical music with an international cast of artists, and was a founding member of The Ukrainian Art Song Summer Institute, which is held at both The Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto, Canada, and, before the war, at The L’viv National Opera Theater in Ukraine.