PSA: Two More Milwaukee Opportunities To See/Hear The Fine Arts Quartet (Free)

I heard the Fine Arts Quartet this past Sunday and they were truly amazing. An article is in the works. But there are two more opportunities so see and hear them here in Milwaukee for free. Details below:

The Quartet will perform at 7:00 pm Saturday, July 16 at the UW-Milwaukee Zelazo Center. The Zelazo concerts are FREE with no ticketing or reservations required. The Zelazo Center is across from the main University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee campus on East Kenwood Ave, just a block east of Downer. It’s a very lovely and responsive concert space.

Saturday, July 16, 7:00 pm – Zelazo

– All Enescu program consisting mostly of his rare, unknown early works with guest pianists Fabio & Gisele Witkowski and Lizzie Burns, double bass

George Enescu – Prelude and Gavotte for 2 pianos, violin, and cello (1898)

George Enescu – Piano Quintet No. 1 in D major (1896)

—  Intermission —

George Enescu – “Aubade” String Trio (1899)

George Enescu – Pastorale, Menuet triste & Nocturne

– for violin and piano four-hands (1900)

George Enescu – Romanian Rhapsodie, Op. 11 (1901)

– arranged for piano quintet and bass by Jacques Enoch

The Quartet will perform at 7:00 pm, Monday, July 18 at the Jewish Community Center. This concert is FREE but reservations are required. Harry & Rose Samson Family Jewish Community Center | 6255 N Santa Monica Blvd., Whitefish Bay, WI 53217 Follow this link to register: https://www.jccmilwaukee.org/arts-ideas/fine-arts-quartet-festival-concert/

Monday, July 18, 7:00 pm – Jewish Community Center

– All Mozart program with Alon Goldstein, piano and Lizzie Burns, double bass

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – Piano Concerto No. 19 in F Major, K. 459

– arranged for string quintet and piano by Ignaz Lachner

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – Piano Concerto No. 25 in C Major, K. 503

– arranged for string quintet and piano by Ignaz Lachner

The Fine Arts Quartet – Ralph Evans, Efim Boico, Gil Sharon, and Niklas Schmidt will be joined by seven guest artists during the Festival.

PSA: Fine Arts Quartet To Perform A Free Concert at UW-Milwaukee

I heard about this on WUWM yesterday and these details are from the UWM website:

Sunday July 10 @ 3:00 pm – 6:00 pm CDT

photo courtesy of the FOFAQ and UWM

The prestigious Fine Arts Quartet, Ralph Evans and Efim Boico, violins, Gil Sharon, viola, and Niklas Schmidt, cello will offer a FREE concert featuring Mozart and Brahms.

Performances begin at 3:00 pm with a Pre-talk starting at 2:00 pm.

PROGRAM DETAILS

Mozart and Brahms with two guest artists from the Milwaukee Symphony, Madeleine Kabat, cello and Alejandro Duque, viola.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – Viola Quintet in G minor, K. 516

Johannes Brahms – String Sextet No. 2 in G major, Op. 36

Visit FOFAQ.org for more Festival information.

This event is sponsored by the Friends of the Fine Arts Quartet & over 140 community donors in collaboration with Create Wisconsin and UW-Milwaukee Peck School of the Arts. 

One of my favorite memories as a traditional student at UWM back in the 1970s we hearing the FAQ in concert and taking their course on string quartets in performance in the recital hall. !!

University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee Disrespects Campus Architectural Art!

Back in the day when I attended the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee (fall of 1970 through December 1973), Bolton Hall was a free standing class room and office building. It was relatively new having been completed in 1964. It faced the grassy quad area north of Kenwood Boulevard and was north east of the original Student Union. Although not quite a brutalist building, it was certainly a design product of the period.

Today it is connected to the expanded Student Union. And instead of leaving one building to access the other, today you can access Bolton Hall from the Union via a glass enclosed walkway and there’s the rub. The walkway is visible in this contemporary photo of the building taken from the Spaights Plaza, a concrete expanse that replaced the green space during the Union expansion when a two level underground parking structure was built as part of the expansion.

screen capture from the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee website

The approach area to Bolton Hall from the south (the Union and Kenwood Boulevard) include a series of what apparently are cast concrete panels with an organic pattern incised into them. These panels appear on the south side at ground level facing the addition to the Student Union (which was completed in 1973 I think but I haven’t documented that at this time) and on the southeast entrance to the building. I have been on campus a bit over the past few years but haven’t walked around the building so I don’t know if this decorative motif adorns other entrance areas.

But here are few views of the southern exposure facing the Student Union. Quite a nice motif at ground level for an otherwise rather faceless building.

© 2022 Ed Heinzelman
© 2022 Ed Heinzelman
© 2022 Ed Heinzelman

These are still outdoors along a little used walkway but clearly visible from the food court seating area in the Student Union. So they are still being seen as they were meant to be seen for the most part. Although of course the space is confined compared to when there would have been open space south of the building back in 1964.

Now there are similar decorative panels at the south east entrance to the building that are enclosed in the glass atrium walkway. So you’d expect them to fair better being out of the elements and maybe they would…if not for the callous intervention of mankind. Here, take a look and you will see what I mean.

© 2022 Ed Heinzelman
© 2022 Ed Heinzelman

These poster frames are simply screwed into the concrete panels, totally disrespecting the integrity of the art work and the architecture. And they don’t really need these posters here. The university posts similar media on the the glass windows of the walkway and the Student Union on a continuing basis and being a high traffic area no one stops to read these anyway. I know, I had to work quickly to avoid including students in my photos…and the quality and focus suffered as a result. The following photo is the northern portion of the series without any disfigurement. I didn’t check to see if the was any sign of previous posters or frames.

© 2022 Ed Heinzelman

I don’t quite get the cavalier attitude that the university has taken in regard to this art work. They have carefully maintained any number of old…including very old buildings on the old Downer campus and of course the venerable Mitchell Hall. So they still work as comfortable classroom buildings. Why the careless disregard for this one…well…particularly the artwork meant to enhance the building and the student experience?

I majored in the visual arts and was urged to attend UWM because of their outstanding fine arts program. I loved my experience there so I don’t understand how this could happen. Was there or was there not any complaints from the art department or art faculty. And UWM also has a world class architecture school. Didn’t they notice the disrespect shown for a key building on their own campus?

I urge UWM to remove the frames and perform any restoration necessary…let these concrete murals speak for themselves…unblemished!…unhindered!

And one more photo from another vantage point. This one is from the north east portion of Spaights Plaza.

screen shot from https://www.emporis.com/buildings/281345/bolton-hall-milwaukee-wi-usa