By Cecelia Porter
A Yugoslavia-born public
relations specialist, Jelena Vladikovic took first place in the fifth annual
Washington International Piano Arts Council Competition at the French Embassy
Sunday. She was the first woman to come
in at the top since this contest was founded in 2001. (In fact, four of the
five semi-finalists were women.)
Unlike typical “professional”
music competitions--where the ante can be high in both financial awards and
future performance opportunities—an infectious strain of congeniality reigns
above combativeness in WIPAC’s events. Yet these
“amateur” pianists have taken music seriously since childhood, studying music
intensely even through the conservatory level, but choosing their ultimate
profession outside the musical world.
For Sunday’s finale, Vladikovic
played a brief suite from “Platform” by Vojislav Vuckovic
and Beethoven’s “Appassionata” Sonata, Op. 57, No.
23, showing a strong sense of command, control and focus. She uncovered the
Andante’s breathtaking profundity, giving focus to Beethoven’s interrelated
themes, which evolve irrevocably out of the harmony. Mockovcakova’s
sensitive approach was evident in both Fryderyk
Chopin’s Etude in C-sharp Minor, Op. 25, No. 7, and Sergei Prokofiev’s “Ten
Pieces from ‘Romeo and Juliet,’” Op. 75.
She probed delicately into Chopin’s thematic interrelationships, sharply
defining Prokofiev’s sometimes playful or tender and sometimes wildly ferocious
romps, recalling characters and emotions from Shakepeare’s
drama with fervid, penetrating insight.
Gurinovich chose etudes and
preludes by Alexander Scriabin and Franz Liszt’s arrangements of Chopin’s
“Polish Melodies,” treating them with controlled passion and a keen feeling of
involvement. For the Chopin/Liszt pieces, Gurinovich underlined the music’s
tonal luster and it’s sentimental melancholy. Finley’s
version of Franz Liszt’s Sonata in B Minor grasped some of its intensity and
triumphal lyricism, though falling short of expressing its episodes of frenzied
insanity. Kim took on Rachmaninoff’s taxing Variations on a theme of Chopin,
Op. 22, with a incisive grip on its technical hurdles, although she might have
dug deeper into its Sturm-und-Drang surface to
discover its more delicate subtleties underneath.
“If they can do it in Paris and
Texas, why can’t we do it here in D.C., where so many countries are
represented?” was the spark that ignited the annual competition for amateur
pianists sponsored by the Washington International Piano Arts Council. John and
Chateau Gardecki, husband-and-wife co-founders of the event, plunged into
creating the competition in 2001 after John had played in several competitions
for amateur pianists in
A surprise announcement made at
the competition’s close by
The Polish Embassy awarded prizes to
contestants