The 1989 Kyoto Prize Workshops

John Cage in Kyoto

John Cage

/  Composer

Arts and Philosophy

Music

1989

11 /12 Sun

10:30 - 17:15

Place: Kyoto International Conference Center

Address:Takaragaike, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-0001 Japan

Finished

Program

10:30
Greetings Kazuo Inamori
President, The Inamri Foundation
10:35
Opening Remarks Toru Yano
Chairman, Kyoto Prize Screening Committee in Creative Arts and Moral Sciences;
Professor, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University
10:45
Lecture John Cage
Laureate in Creative Arts and Moral Sciences
“Composition in Retrospect”
11:30
Commemorative Performance “Ryoan-ji” percussion: Yasunori Yamaguchi
hichiriki: Kanehiko Toji, Yumiko Mizoiri, Satoru Yaotani
12:00
Intermission
13:15
Lecture Akimichi Takeda
Associate Professor, Musashino University of Music, Musicology
“John Cage, who uncaged music”
Symposium “The Significance of Cage – from various perspectives”
Chairperson Koji Sano, Professor, Tohogakuen School of Music, Musicology
Masashi Miura, Literary Critic
Panelists Kuniharu Akiyama, Professor, Tama Art University, Music critic
Arata Isozaki Member, Kyoto Prize Committee in Creative Arts and Moral Sciences; Professor, The University of the Air, Composer
Shin Nakagawa, Member, Kyoto Prize Screening Committee in Creative Arts and Moral Sciences; Assistant Professor, Kyoto City University of Arts, Musicology
15:45
Intermission
16:00
Tributes Toshiro Mayuzumi, Composer
Aki Takahashi, Pianist
16:20
Performance 1. Music for six fl.: Yukihiko Nishizaka
pno.: Aki Takahashi, Toshi Ichiyanagi
perc.: Atsushi Sugawara, Takafumi Fujimoto, Maki Suzuki
2. “Two” for fl. and pno. fl.: Yukihiko Nishizawa
Pno.: Aki Takahashi
17:00
Tributes Toshi Ichiyanagi, Composer
17:15
Closing Remarks

Laureates

John Cage

Composer

A great composer representing modern America. He made a strong impact on traditional Western music with his concept of “chance music,” a non-Western form of musical philosophy and expression, which he established as one of the main styles of contemporary music. He has been a strong motive force in the most progressive group of modern composers as a pioneer of such revolutionary movements and has widely influenced not only musicians but also artists in other fields, such as dancers, poets, painters, sculptors, and photographers.

*This category then was Category of Creative Arts and Moral Sciences.

Details

Related information

date
November 12, 1989
place
Kyoto International Conference Center 
Chairperson
Bin Ebisawa Member, Kyoto Prize Screening Committee in Creative Arts and Moral Sciences; President, Kunitachi College of Music, Musicology