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Constantine Koukias (born 14 October 1965) is a Tasmanian composer and opera director of Greek ancestry based in Amsterdam, where he is known by his Greek name of Konstantin Koukias. He is the co-founder and artistic director of IHOS Music Theatre and Opera, which was established in 1990 in Tasmania's capital city, Hobart. Koukias's works range from large-scale music theatre and opera to mobile installation art events. His atmospheric compositions are characterised by mesmerising temporal, spatial and production designs, while his recent works exhibit eastern influences. His avant-garde approach to the presentation of opera has resulted in hybrid productions such as ''Days and Nights with Christ'',〔Kerry, Gordon 2009, ''New Classical Music: Composing Australia'', UNSW Press, Sydney〕〔RealTime 2000, In Repertoire: A Selected Guide to Australian Music Theatre, Australia Council〕 ''To Traverse Water'', ''Mikrovion'', ''The Divine Kiss'', ''Tesla – Lightning in His Hand'' and ''The Barbarians''. His music theatre works include ''ICON'', ''Kimisis – Falling Asleep'', ''Borders'', ''Orfeo'', ''Rapture – Sonic Taxi Performance'', ''Schwa – The Neutral Vowel'', ''Antigone'' and ''The Da Ponte Project''. Koukias was commissioned in 1993 by the Sydney Opera House Trust to compose the large-scale music theatre piece ''ICON'' to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Sydney Opera House. His ''Incantation II'' for soprano and digital delay won the International Valentino Bucchi Vocal Prize in Rome in 1997, and in 2004 he was awarded a Sir Winston Churchill Fellowship.〔 ''Prayer Bells'', in which the composer draws on traditions of Latin, Hebrew and Byzantine chant, had its US premiere in 2010 at the Chicago Cultural Center. ''The Barbarians'', which was commissioned by the Museum of Old and New Art and inspired by Constantine Cavafy's poem ''Waiting for the Barbarians'', premiered in Hobart in 2012 as part of the MONA FOMA festival. It was nominated for a Helpmann Award for Best New Opera the same year, and Tasmanian company Liminal Spaces won the Event category of Australia's Interior Design Excellence Awards for its conceptualisation of the production's design. In 2014, ''Kimisis – Falling Asleep'' had its Netherlands premiere at Splendor Amsterdam and toured to the Karavaan Festival. His work ''Three Episodes from the Diary of Signaller Peter Ellis'' was a winner of ABC radio's Gallipoli Centenary Composer Competition, receiving its national broadcast premiere in 2015. Koukias has been the recipient of numerous other international commissions and awards, and his design credits include the internationally acclaimed ''Odyssey'' and ''Medea''.〔 ==Education== Koukias studied at the Tasmanian Conservatorium of Music and the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. *1979 – 1981 Ian Cugley – Composition, University of Tasmania *1981 – 1985 Johannes Roose – Flute, University of Tasmania *1983 – 1984 Don Kay – Composition, University of Tasmania *1984 – 1985 Michael Cubbin – Flute, University of Tasmania *1984 – 1985 Peter Billiam – Composition, University of Tasmania *1985 Keith Humble – Composition, La Trobe University, Melbourne *1985 – 1988 Michael Scott – Flute, NSW Conservatorium of Music *1986 Mark Kopytman – Composition, Rubin University of Jerusalem *1986 Richard David Hames, Composers School, Adelaide *1986 – 1988 Thermos Mexis Greek Instrumentation, Sydney *1986 – 1989 Ross Edwards – Composition, Sydney 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Constantine Koukias」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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