Join award-winning musicians accordionist Milos Milivojević and violinist Anja Milivojević in an evening of tango, Serbian folk music, Bach, Vlasov, Vivaldi, Rachmaninov, and Pablo de Sarasate’s Carmen Fantasy. Learn how music has been a form of resistance, a tool to empower the working man, and a vehicle through which we might transcend our way of looking at the world and invite new horizons of possibility in our thinking and acting.
Come and be part of world-class concerts and performance programmes from our resident artists, as part of the International Festival for the Arts and Social Change, under the lantern light on the field of Clos de Gaye overlooking the mountains. Our performance programme seeks to draw connections between the arts and their role in society, asking the big questions, challenging societal norms, or finding ways to elevate and inspire in a troubled world. Often integrating performance with narrative and historical context, these concerts seek to at once entertain, inspire, and inform.
Bring a rug, chair, or whatever you like to sit on. Feel free to also bring your own picnic to eat on the field and enjoy our magnificent views before the performance, gates open at 7.30pm.
Learn more about the International Festival for the Arts and Social Change here.
Join award-winning musicians accordionist Milos Milivojević and violinist Anja Milivojević in an evening of tango, Serbian folk music, Bach, Vlasov, Vivaldi, Rachmaninov, and Pablo de Sarasate’s Carmen Fantasy. Learn how music has been a form of resistance, a tool to empower the working man, and a vehicle through which we might transcend our way of looking at the world and invite new horizons of possibility in our thinking and acting.
Come and be part of world-class concerts and performance programmes from our resident artists, as part of the International Festival for the Arts and Social Change, under the lantern light on the field of Clos de Gaye overlooking the mountains. Our performance programme seeks to draw connections between the arts and their role in society, asking the big questions, challenging societal norms, or finding ways to elevate and inspire in a troubled world. Often integrating performance with narrative and historical context, these concerts seek to at once entertain, inspire, and inform.
Bring a rug, chair, or whatever you like to sit on. Feel free to also bring your own picnic to eat on the field and enjoy our magnificent views before the performance, gates open at 7.30pm.
Learn more about the International Festival for the Arts and Social Change here.