The Barenboim–Said Akademie (German: Barenboim-Said Akademie,
Arabic: أكاديمية بارنبويم-سعيد,
Hebrew: אקדמיית ברנבוים-סעיד) is an academy located in
Berlin, Germany, offering bachelor's degrees and Artist Diploma certificates in music; it opened on 8 December 2016.[1] It was co-founded by the conductor and pianist
Daniel Barenboim and the literary theorist
Edward Said.[2] The academy was financed to a capacity of 90 young musicians, with an admissions focus on the
Middle East and North Africa, in the spirit of the
West–Eastern Divan Orchestra.[3][4][5]
Background
The creation of the Barenboim–Said Akademie in 2015 was rooted in a pre-existing peace project, the
West-Eastern Divan Orchestra.[6]Edward Said and
Daniel Barenboim co-founded the West–Eastern Divan Orchestra in
Weimar, Germany in 1999, named after the West–östlicher Divan (West–Eastern Divan), an anthology of poems by
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who took his inspiration from the Persian poet
Hafez.[7] The first ensemble workshop took place in 1999, part of Weimar's program as the
European Capital of Culture.[8]
The academy, which emerged from the Orchestra, offers a program jointly in the music and in humanities, with the intent "to train excellent musicians who are also curious and well-educated."[9]
"Separation between peoples is not a solution for any of the problems that divide peoples. And certainly ignorance of the other provides no help whatever. Cooperation and coexistence of the kind that music lived as we have lived, performed, shared and loved it together, might be."[10]
The Barenboim–Said Akademie is located in the
Mitte district of Berlin, housed in the former depot for stage sets of the
Staatsoper Unter den Linden. It was rebuilt after its destruction in World War II between 1951 and 1955 by the architect
Richard Paulick. The building is landmark protected; its exterior and the main parts of its interior have been restored. A total of 6,500 m2 of floor space houses 21 rehearsal rooms, an auditorium, offices and ancillary spaces.[15][16] The main addition to the building is a 682-seat
Pierre Boulez Saal [
de] in the eastern wing of the building, based on a design by
Frank Gehry and planned by
Yasuhisa Toyota as chief acoustician.[17][18][19] The design of the concert hall reflects the ideas of French composer, director and theoretician
Pierre Boulez, who was also consulted on the project.[20]
Construction costs are estimated at €36 million, financed by private donors and a €20 million grant from the
German Federal Government.[21][22][3] The Barenboim–Said Academy moved into the space in the fall of 2016.[23] The concert hall was inaugurated on 4 March 2017.[24]
Depictions in popular culture
The Netflix miniseries Unorthodox based its fictional music academy on the Barenboim–Said Akademie.[25][26][27]
Relevant publications and performances
Barenboim, Daniel; West-Eastern Divan Orchestra (2012), Knowledge is the beginning (in no linguistic content), Berlin: EuroArts Music International,
OCLC1188354496
Barenboim, Daniel; Said, Edward W.; Guzelimian, Ara (2004). Parallels and paradoxes : explorations in music and society. New York: Vintage Books.
ISBN1-4000-7515-7.
OCLC54858478.
"Remembering Edward W. Said.
Ara Guzelimian and Daniel Barenboim in Conversation." ICLS Columbia, 1 February 2013
iTunes[1]
Yammine, Georges; Barenboim, Daniel (2014). Funkelnde Hoffnung : das West-Eastern Divan Orchestra und die Kraft der Musik (in German). Wiesbaden.
ISBN978-3-7374-0704-5.
OCLC908681045.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)
^"Welcome". Barenboim-Said Akademie Website. 22 April 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
^Iskandar, Adel; Rustom, Hakem, eds. (2010). Edward Said: A Legacy of Emancipation and Representation. University of California Press.
ISBN978-0-520-25890-7.
^
abcdefg"Faculty". barenboimsaid.de. Berlin: Barenboim-Said-Akademie. Retrieved 22 April 2020.