Villa Aurora Events Archive
February 2024
Marta – An Installation by Sonya Schönberger
Villa Aurora (520 Paseo Miramar, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272)

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Do our possessions reflect the essence of who we are as people and bear the memories of our life experiences? What is the result when an artist “inhabits” someone else’s world or looks for the traces of who they were in their personal belongings?
In 2022, Berlin-based visual artist Sonya Schönberger was a fellow at Villa Aurora, and spent three months sleeping in the former bedroom of Marta Feuchtwanger (1891–1987). Marta was the wife of German-Jewish exile writer Lion Feuchtwanger, whose antifascist writing was so influential he was declared “Public Enemy #1” by Joseph Goebbels in the run-up to World War II.
With the rise of the Nazi party in Germany, the couple fled Europe. They settled in Pacific Palisades in 1943, where they rebuilt their collection of rare books. Their house, named Villa Aurora, became a haven for fellow exile writers. The Feuchtwanger Memorial Library, part of USC’s Special Collections, contains their books, papers, and memorabilia.
In her artistic work, Schönberger primarily focuses on autobiographical challenges caused by political change, mainly through the lens of German history. While being and feeling close to Marta, she tried to understand who this woman was, and what her life was like—both with Lion by her side and in the thirty years alone at the Villa after he passed away. Marta is an installation composed of contemporary photographs paired with rare archival materials from the Feuchtwanger collections donated by Marta to the USC Libraries upon her death.
This exhibition, cosponsored by Villa Aurora and Thomas Mann House, seeks to recover the voice of Marta, whose contributions have long been overshadowed by academic investigation of her husband’s life and work.
RSVP here
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East-German Artistic Networks of the 1980s: Lecture & Conversation with Stephanie Barron, Constanze Fritzsch, and Isotta Poggi
Thomas Mann House

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In the last decade of the East German regime, artists wove dynamic networks to exchange art and ideas. They built alternative communication channels through artists’ books and magazines that together are a remarkable memory of the spirit of the time. Most of these publications (called samizdat for “self-published” in Russian) are collaborative projects of artists’ groups or collectives who produced small editions to circumvent censorship, while also to celebrate mutual friendship and solidarity in a playful atmosphere of experimentation.
On the fifth anniversary of Edition Augenweide, Jörg Kowalski wrote that it was not so much political ambitions that inspired the making of the first book, but rather the longing for that atmosphere of openness and trust that is necessary for art to flourish. This group’s aim was to draw on book art traditions of the twenties while finding an innovative synthesis between literary content and art design. These artistic and literary projects provided a forum outside of the official discourse of the GDR and developed a new literary and visual language that would defy artistic dogmas.
These rare editions, combining a variety of original graphic media on paper and vintage photographs with poetry and prose, offer an opportunity for interdisciplinary dialogue on a period of transformation and reform that ended with a peaceful revolution and the fall of the Berlin wall in November 1989.
As part of the Thomas Mann House annual topic "Democracy & Vulnerability," it is crucial to revisit and reconsider these artists. The independent artistic and cultural networks resonate with the debates of writers and artists in the Thomas Mann House who sought creative spaces while in exile and means of creating art outside of censorship. Los Angeles hosted the innovative exhibition “Art of Two Germanys ” organized by LACMA in 2009 and is home to the Wende Museum, which focuses on Cold War history. These resources provide an opportunity for dialogue on the past and the present about the artistic and existential debates that contributed to and shaped a period of historical reform and transformation. They can shed new light on East Germany’s forgotten (or ignored) history.
Join acclaimed curators and art historians Stephanie Barron, Constanze Fritzsch, and Isotta Poggi for a conversation on how these materials are vibrant witnesses of a generation who made art to find a voice.
Participants

Stephanie Barron is Senior Curator and Modern Art Department Head at LACMA. Among her exhibitions and publications over the past 40 years are The Russian Avant- Garde: 1910-1930: New Perspectives; German Expressionist Sculpture; ’Degenerate Art’: The Fate of the Avant-Garde in Nazi Germany; Exiles + Émigrés- The Flight of European Artists from Hitler; Art of Two Germanys/Cold War Cultures, New Objectivity: Modern German Art in the Weimar Republic, 1919-1933, and exhibitions of Alexander Calder, Marc Chagall, Frank Gehry, David Hockney, Ed Kienholz, Sharon Lockhart, John McLaughlin, Rene Magritte, and Ken Price. She has received the Order of Merit, First Class and the Commander’s Cross from the German government in recognition of her work in the field of modern German art. Her exhibitions and publications have five times been voted the best in the United States by the International Art Critics Association, three times by the Art Museum Curators Association, and she has twice received the College Art Association’s Alfred H. Barr Jr. Award for best museum catalog. A long standing member of the Art Advisory Panel of the IRS, she is a fellow of the Academy of Arts and Sciences, and trustee of the John Baldessari Foundation, past chair of the Mike Kelley Foundation, and serves on the board of The Industry Los Angeles.

Constanze Fritzsch is a Fulbright Fellow at the GRI. She holds a doctorate from the Catholic University in Eichstätt-Ingolstadt after getting her MA in art history from the University Paris Nanterre and her BA in art history from University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. She got a fellowship of the ENS de Paris as a foreign exchange student. She is a former member of the “Á chacun son reel” research project run by the German Forum for Art History in Paris and worked as an assistant curator at the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden. She has been on the academic staff at the Bauhaus University in Weimar, the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden and the University of Leipzig and Dresden, and worked as a student assistant at the Institut National d’Histoire de l’Art in Paris.

Isotta Poggi is associate curator of photographs at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles. Her collecting interests focus on the cultural history of photography from the nineteenth century through contemporary, as a medium for documentary and artistic practice, and as a narrative tool in albums, photobooks, and artists’ books. In 2018 she co-curated the exhibition Promote, Tolerate, Ban: Art and Culture in Cold War Hungary at the Wende Museum, and co-edited the accompanying volume. Drawing on the extensive archival holdings and special collections of the Getty Research Institute, she is currently directing the research project “On the Eve of Revolution: The East German Artist in the 1980s.”
Partner
This event is a collaboration between the Getty Research Institute and Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House.


Zemlinsky & Exile Composers
Villa Aurora (520 Paseo Miramar, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272)

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Zemlinsky & Exile Composers – Recovered Voices at LA Opera & the Colburn School and the Musica Non Grata program of Prague Operas
Villa Aurora is the former home of writer Lion Feuchtwanger and his wife Marta who regularly hosted one of the most influential salons of “Weimar by the Sea”. With the series “Remembering the Exiles”, Villa Aurora commemorates the Feuchtwangers and other artists and intellectuals displaced and often silenced by the Nazi regime.
Following a performance of works by Alexander Zemlinsky and other exiled composers, we will present a panel discussion led by James Conlon on the fate of exiled composers and the quest to make their voices heard again, a mission the LA Opera and Colburn School Recovered Voices initiatives share with the Musica Non Grata program initiated by the National Theatre Opera and the State Opera in Prague.
Program
Erwin Schulhoff: Suite No. 3 for Piano (left hand alone), WV 80, 1st movement: Preludio 5’
Domenic Cheli
Welcome and Intro
Dr. Markus Klimmer, Michelle Müntefering MdB, Amb. Jaroslav Olša, Jr.
Vítězslava Kaprálová 10’
Sbohem a Šáteček, op. 14; From Vteřiny, op. 18; #3 Nº 2 Písen Milostná;
Nº 4 Velikonoce
Kathleen O’Hara, Blair Salter
Talk
Joy H. Calico, Per Boye Hansen, Prof. Jan Burian
Vítězslava Kaprálová: Elegie for Violin and Piano 4’
Adam Milstein, Domenic Cheli
Talk
Joy H. Calico, Maestro James Conlon
Zemlinsky Maeterlinck Lieder 20’
Madeleine Lyon, Chi-Jo Lee
Break
Final Discussion
Joy H. Calico, Per Boye Hansen, Maestro James Conlon
Bohuslav Martinů: Violin Sonata No. 2, H. 208 20’
Adam Millstein, Domenic Cheli
Reception
Recovered Voices
LA Opera’s Recovered Voices initiative, launched in 2007, is one of the company's most important and celebrated artistic achievements. Made possible thanks to generous support from Marilyn Ziering and the Ziering Family Foundation, Recovered Voices has not only been a welcome journey into the supercharged emotions and lush imagery of late Romantic music, but it has also been a critical step in bringing some of the great lost masters of opera to light. With the launch of Recovered Voices, LA Opera became the only major American opera company to regularly program the works of composers affected by the rise of the Third Reich.
Led by Founder and Director James Conlon and inspired by LA Opera’s Recovered Voices project, the Ziering-Conlon Initiative for Recovered Voices at The Colburn School was established in 2013 with the support of Marilyn Ziering. Through performances in Southern California and around the world, writings, original video series, a Ted Talk titled “Resurrecting Forbidden Music”, classes, competitions, symposia, recordings, and more, the Ziering-Conlon Initiative for Recovered Voices brings well-deserved attention to composers whose names and works were very nearly eliminated from history. It is designed also to inspire young musicians to learn about the artists and return to their music throughout their career.
Musica Non Grata
The Musica Non Grata project, initiated by Prague Operas and presented with financial support from the Federal Republic of Germany, revives the legacy of composers who played a vital role in the musical life of interwar Czechoslovakia and who were persecuted by the Nazis due to their ethnicity, gender, religion or political opinions.
Participants

In 1984, Jan Burian completed his studies of stage direction at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. In his final year, he worked as a director at the Evening Brno Theatre of Satire. His first engagement was at the Oldřich Stibor Theatre in Olomouc. In 1986, he served as a guest stage director in Plzeň, where in the next year he was engaged. Until 1989, when he assumed the post of Artistic Director of the Plzeň drama company, he staged a number of remarkable productions, including of Mikhail Bulgakov’s play Adam and Eve, Karel Steigerwald’s The Tartar Fair and, in Czechoslovak premiere, Alexander Kazantsev’s Eve’s Dreams. In 1990, he staged the Czechoslovak premiere of Václav Havel’s play Temptation. From 1991 to 1995, he worked at the Vinohrady Theatre in Prague.

As Music Director of LA Opera, James Conlon has led more operas than any other conductor in company history—over 500 performances of more than 60 works. Highlights of his LA Opera tenure include the company’s first Ring cycle; initiating the groundbreaking Recovered Voices series, an ongoing commitment to staging masterpieces of 20th-century European opera suppressed by the Third Reich; spearheading Britten 100/LA, a city-wide celebration honoring the composer’s centennial; and conducting the west coast premiere of The Anonymous Lover by Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, a prominent Black composer in 18th-century France.

Joy H. Calico is Professor of Musicology and Director of Graduate Studies in the Musicology Department. Her scholarship focuses on interdisciplinary Cold War cultural politics, opera since 1900, and Arnold Schoenberg. She is the author of two monographs published by University of California Press: Brecht at the Opera (2008; paperback 2019) and Arnold Schoenberg’sA Survivor from Warsawin Postwar Europe (2014; expanded Italian edition published in 2023; Russian translation forthcoming in 2024). Her current book project, also under contract with California, is a theory of twentieth- and twenty-first-century opera according to scene type built on Kaija Saariaho’s L’amourde loin. She is also co-editor with Justin Vickers of a collection for OUP entitled Childhood and the Operatic Imaginary since 1900.

Per Boye Hansen is an experienced opera, music and theatre manager. Born in Oslo in 1957, from 2012 to 2017 he held the post of Artistic Director of Den Norske Opera (Norwegian National Opera), which during his tenure rose to become a prominent opera company and enjoyed great international acclaim. Between 2005 and 2012, he served as General and Artistic Director of the Bergen International Festival. The largest of its kind in Northern Europe, it annually presents a number of world premieres in the field of dance, theatre, classical music and opera
Performers

Kathleen O’Mara is a Young Artist in the LA Opera’s Domingo-Colburn-Stein Young Artist Program. She graduated from the Juilliard School with a M.M. in 2020 and Westminster Choir College with her B.M. in 2018. Kathleen made her LA Opera debut as Berta in Rossini’s Il barbiere di Siviglia this past fall. She will also be singing the First Maid in Zemlinksy’s Der Zwerg with LA Opera. In the summer of 2024, she will be a Gaddes Festival Artist with Opera Theatre of Saint Louis, where she will appear as Duchess Christina in Galileo Galilei by Philip Glass. In the summer of 2023, she covered the role of Fiordiligi in Così fan tutte for both Opera Theatre of St. Louis and Palm Beach Opera, after previously performing Fiordiligi at the Juilliard School in 2019. She has covered various roles including the First Lady in The Magic Flute with the CoOPERAtive Program, Barbarina in The Marriage of Figaro with Music Academy of the West, the Governess in The Turn of the Screw, Donna Anna in Don Giovanni and Susan B. Anthony in Virgil Thomson’s The Mother of Us All at Juilliard. She has participated in programs including the Gerdine Young Artist Program at Opera Theatre of Saint Louis, Palm Beach Opera’s Apprentice Program, Sewanee Summer Music Festival, Houston Grand Opera’s Young Artist Vocal Academy, and Music Academy of the West.

Madeleine Lyon, mezzo-soprano, is a proud native of San Marcos, Texas. In 2022, Ms. Lyon joined the Los Angeles Opera as a Domingo-Colburn-Stein Young Artist. She made her LA Opera main stage debut as Alisa in Lucia di Lammermoor, a new production co-produced with the Metropolitan Opera. She was also seen as Bianca in LA Opera’s production of The Rape of Lucretia, Genevieve/Yniold in Impressions of Pelleas, and Bithia in Moses by Henry Mollicone. In 2022, Ms. Lyon finished her graduate studies at Rice University where she previously obtained her Bachelor of Music degree in 2019. There she was seen as Zerlina in Don Giovanni, the title role in Ravel’s L’enfant et les sortilèges, and Taller Zegner in Missy Mazzoli’s Proving Up. She is also passionate about oratorio and concert work, and has been the mezzo soloist in the Mozart Requiem, Handel’s Messiah, Bach’s St. Matthew Passion, and selections from the Verdi Requiem. This summer, Madeleine will join Opera Theatre St. Louis as a Gerdine Young Artist, where she will sing the role of Nirena in Giulio Cesare. Ms. Lyon is also an avid painter and loves to spend time with her grey tabby cat, Pickle.

Canadian collaborative pianist Blair Salter is a versatile performer and music director who has worked at prestigious opera companies throughout North America. Blair is currently Head Coach for the LA Opera Young Artist Program, and has been a member of the music staff at Santa Fe Opera since 2019. She has previously worked as music staff at San Francisco Opera, Houston Grand Opera, Opera Colorado, Michigan Opera Theatre, and New Orleans Opera, and was Music Director for Opera Theatre at Penn State University from 2021-23. Blair was a conductor with The Dallas Opera's Hart Institute in 2023, and she is the creator of the contemporary aria database Voce Moderna. She is a graduate of the Houston Grand Opera Studio, San Francisco Opera’s Merola Program, Wolf Trap Opera, and the Glimmerglass Festival; Blair completed her DMA at the University of Michigan, where she studied with Martin Katz.

Adam Millstein is a violinist who is developing a multifaceted career as a performer, lecturer, and music curator. He is currently pursuing his Artist Diploma at the Colburn School in Los Angeles under the renowned pedagogue, Robert Lipsett. He holds his Masters Degree from Colburn and his Bachelor of Musical Arts Degree from the University of Michigan, where he studied with Danielle Belen. Millstein is also the Program Manager of the Ziering-Conlon Initiative for Recovered Voices at the Colburn School.

Dominic Cheli embraces the role of an artist-citizen in his multifaceted career as performer, educator, composer, and director. He is described as an “inspired keyboardist” (artsfuse) whose playing is “spontaneous yet perfect, the best of how a young person can play.” (Symphony Magazine). His rapidly advancing career included his Walt Disney Concert Hall Debut with the Colburn Orchestra where Dominic was “mesmerizing, (he) transfixed the audience.” (LA Times). He gave his Carnegie Hall Recital Debut in 2019 and has had a busy performing and recording career ever since. He recorded his 2nd CD on the Naxos label of the music of Liszt/Schubert, and was a performer/ producer/editor on a 3rd CD of the music of Erwin Schulhoff for the Delos Label featuring his collaboration on Piano Concerto no.2 with Maestro James Conlon. He also recently completed work as a composer, audio editor and performer on the documentary Defying Gravity (2021).

Chi-Jo Lee, currently pursuing her Artist Diploma in piano performance at the Colburn Conservatory of Music, where she previously received her master’s degree, studying with Fabio Bidini. She made her recital debut in 2015 and has won prizes in competitions in Asia and the United States, including Wideman International Piano competition, The Odyssiad Festival and Competition, the Eslite chamber music audition in Taiwan, and the concerto competitions at Indiana University and The Colbuen School. Ms. Lee is an alumna at Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where she studied with pianist André Watts, and was the recipient of three scholarships. Her performances have recently been reviewed positively by the San Diego Union-Tribune and The Santa Barbara Independent.
More Information
Street Parking is available on Los Liones Drive. Shuttle service starts at 2:00 pm from Los Liones Drive, off Sunset Boulevard two blocks North East of Pacific Coast Highway. Please do not park in the Topanga State Park Lot!
Partners
In cooperation with the Los Angeles Opera and the Colburn School