The Fisher Center at Bard Announces 20th Anniversary Season: Breaking Ground
Season Reflects the Fisher Center’s Role as One of the Country’s Foremost Cross-Disciplinary Producing Institutions, and Culminates with a Celebration for a New Performing Arts Studio Building Designed by Maya Lin (October 21)
Season Highlights Include:
- Nail Biter, a new commission from contemporary choreographer Beth Gill, who “applies her discerning eye to… dark, chaotic, psychologically tangled worlds” (The New York Times), March 31–April 2
- The Bard Lectures, a new five-part lecture series on writing from legendary author, Bard professor, and Fisher Center Advisory Board member Neil Gaiman, April 15 & 16, October 12–14
- The Fisher Center LAB Biennial, Common Ground, an international festival on the politics of land and food, curated by Tania El Khoury and Gideon Lester in association with the OSUN Center for Human Rights and the Arts at Bard, and featuring newly commissioned work from Tania El Khoury, Kenyon Adams and Chef Omar Tate, Tara Rodríguez Besosa, and Kite, May 4–7
- Illinois, a world premiere music-theater work based on Sufjan Stevens’ acclaimed album of the same name, directed and choreographed by Tony Award winner Justin Peck, with music and lyrics by Stevens and a story by Peck and Pulitzer Prize winner Jackie Sibblies Drury, June 23 – July 2 (Part of SummerScape 2023)
- The first major American production of Camille Saint-Saëns’ opera Henri VIII, directed by Jean-Romain Vesperini, with the American Symphony Orchestra conducted by Leon Botstein, July 21–30 (Part of SummerScape 2023)
- The 33rd Bard Music Festival: Vaughan Williams and His World, featuring concerts, panel discussions, and special events surrounding the British composer’s legacy and the contexts in which his work was formed, August 4–6, 10–13
- A free Community Celebration featuring a performance from Latin Grammy Award-winning Flor de Toloache, July 15
- World Premiere of Elevator Repair Service’s wild, fast-forwarded tour through Ulysses, directed by by John Collins, co-direction and dramaturgy by Scott Shepherd, and text by Joyce, September 21 – October 1
For complete information regarding tickets, special packages, and more, visit fishercenter.bard.edu or call 845-758-7900.
The Fisher Center at Bard, which has become one of the world’s preeminent sources of major multidisciplinary performance works, announces its 20th Anniversary Season: Breaking Ground, a celebration of the artists, audiences, students, faculty, and communities that have written the Fisher Center’s story for its first two decades and will imagine it into the future. This milestone season for the organization that incubates vanguard artists’ boldest ideas unfolds with unbounded and genre-defying visions for dance, theater, opera, and public discourse. The Fisher Center gives precedence to artistic research, development, and education—and the season will culminate in a celebration for the Fisher Center’s new 25,000-square-foot performing arts studio building, designed by Maya Lin, which will offer artists at all stages of their careers vastly expanded room to explore as they build works from the ground up.
Throughout 2023, the Fisher Center will develop and present new works from artists and companies including Bread and Puppet Theater; Elevator Repair Service; Lisa Fischer; Beth Gill; Tanya El Khoury; Neil Gaiman; Justin Peck, Sufjan Stevens, and Jackie Sibblies Drury; Jean-Romain Vesperini and Leon Botstein; and more. The vast scope of the work artists dare to imagine at the Fisher Center (whether they’re taking on epic modernist masterpieces like James Joyce’s Ulysses or the similarly sweeping view of Americana in Sufjan Stevens’ Illinois) is a testament to the abundant time, resources, and space the Fisher Center offers to those creating in its midst. (See below for programming descriptions and schedule.)
Many of these works are programmed within festivals whose diverse, lively, and rigorous offerings—and celebration of the natural beauty of the surroundings—make the Fisher Center a hub and destination for both local and widespread audiences. The Fisher Center LAB Biennial, May 4–7, this year is devoted to the politics of land and food; SummerScape, “a hotbed of intellectual and aesthetic adventure,” (The New York Times) returns in 2023, with programming in the Fisher Center and the sophistication-and-spectacle-blending Spiegeltent (June-August); and the 33rd Bard Music Festival explores British composer Vaughan Williams and his world, with programming August 4–13.
Gideon Lester, the Fisher Center’s Artistic Director and Chief Executive, says, “In 2002, the Fisher Center was a blank canvas, a story waiting to be discovered. Over the past 20 years, that story has been powerfully written by artists, facility, students, and audiences alike. Hundreds of remarkable works have premiered in the LUMA and Sosnoff Theaters, and performances have also taken place on Frank Gehry’s steel roof, in storage rooms and backstage corridors, and even in the bathrooms. The building has been animated and repurposed in countless ways, and it is still teaching us how to use it.”
He added, “In our first two decades, we have distinguished ourselves as a unique and vital creative force in the American performing arts landscape. The Fisher Center is now a preeminent producing organization that provides substantial developmental resources to innovative artists and projects; a pioneer in the rediscovery of overlooked or unjustly neglected works from the past; and a center for education and research, fully integrated into the academic life of a superlative liberal arts college. As the world premieres in this 20th anniversary season demonstrate, we are a creative home for artists like no other.”
Leon Botstein, President of Bard College, says, "From its inception, we intended The Fisher Center to serve not only future audiences, but also the artists, professional and student alike, whose works would be conceived, developed, and performed in its studios and theaters. Since its opening in 2003, The Fisher Center has far exceeded our expectations. The credit for its remarkable achievements of the past 20 years goes to the artists, the audience, and those who have supported it.”
Jeanne Donovan Fisher, Chair of the Fisher Center’s Advisory Board, adds: “The Fisher Center has been pioneering in programming across genres, both in terms of contemporary works and works from the past, and it has been the vanguard of teaching and reaching new audiences. We celebrate this notable anniversary with the conviction that the next 20 years will be even more memorable, especially after Maya Lin's magnificent new building is open."
Aaron Mattocks, who joined the Fisher Center as Chief Operating Officer in January, after serving as Director of Programming at the Joyce Theater 2019-22, said, “As we celebrate two decades of artistry, we are also looking to the future. The new studio building designed by Maya Lin will perfectly complement the Gehry building’s stages, augmenting and enriching this world-class creative home for artists and audiences for generations to come.”
The new studio building will contain five state-of-the-art studios for artist residencies, rehearsals, informal performances, and dance and theater classes connected by gathering hubs. These spaces will provide a home for Fisher Center LAB, the center’s acclaimed residency and commissioning program for professional artists, which has developed and premiered internationally celebrated productions such as Pam Tanowitz’s Four Quartets and Daniel Fish’s Tony Award–winning production of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma! The building will also house rehearsal and teaching facilities for Bard’s undergraduate programs in Dance and in Theater and Performance. Here, students and professional artists will work side by side, informing each other’s practices and sharing their discoveries and works-in-progress with audiences from the Bard community and the public.
20th Anniversary Season: Breaking Ground Performance Descriptions and Schedule
Opening Weekend Programming
Fisher Center LAB
Beth Gill: Nail Biter
New Commission/World Premiere
Friday, March 31 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, April 1 at 5 pm
Sunday, April 2 at 5 pm
LUMA Theater
The second Fisher Center LAB commission from acclaimed contemporary choreographer Beth Gill, Nail Biter, moves the viewer through portals of myth, memoir, psychodrama, and horror. Characters emerge as a collection of representations of our collective unconscious.
All tickets are $25
$5 tickets available for Bard students through the Passloff Pass
Nail Biter is co-commissioned by the Fisher Center at Bard, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and Walker Art Center. This project was supported, in part, by a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant.
The Orchestra Now
Beethoven’s Missa solemnis
Leon Botstein, conductor
James Bagwell, choral director
Saturday, April 1 at 7 pm
Sunday, April 2 at 3 pm
Sosnoff Theater
Maestro Botstein leads The Orchestra Now and Bard Festival Chorale in a performance of Missa solemnis—one of only three sacred works written by Beethoven and a favorite piece of the late Richard B. Fisher, an inimitable champion of the arts and our namesake.
Tickets start at $30; $5 tickets available for Bard students through the Passloff Pass
20th Anniversary Launch Party
Saturday, April 1, from 5:30 to 7:30 pm
Resnick Studio
Visitors can join before, after, or in between ticketed performances to kick off the Fisher Center’s 20th Anniversary Season and toast two decades of artistic innovation.
Tickets $50
The Orchestra Now
Naomi Woo Conducts Ravel
Saturday, April 8 at 7 pm
Sosnoff Theater
Canadian conductor Naomi Woo, named one of the “Top 30 Classical Musicians under 30” by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, makes her TŌN debut with a program that includes two beloved works by Maurice Ravel and a Béla Bartók violin concerto with Lincoln Center Emerging Artist Award winner Stella Chen.
Tickets start at $25
Carnegie Hall Preview: Before and After Soviet Communism
Leon Botstein, conductor
Saturday, April 29 at 7 pm
Sunday, April 30 at 2 pm
Sosnoff Theater
Leon Botstein unearths more rarely heard masterpieces in this concert, examining Eastern European music through the rise and fall of Soviet communism. Hear this program at the Fisher Center just days before TŌN performs it at Carnegie Hall.
Tickets start at $25
Fisher Center Presents
Neil Gaiman
The Bard Lectures
Lecture 1 • Why Be a Bard?
Saturday, April 15 at 7 pm
Lecture 2 • A String of Pearls: How We Come to Be Us
Sunday, April 16 at 5 pm
Lecture 3 • Pulling Back the Curtain: How Fiction Works and Why It Still Matters
Thursday, October 12 at 7 pm
Lecture 4 • To Pay the Pied Piper: The Cost of Stories
Friday, October 13 at 7 pm
Lecture 5 • On Endings, Epilogues, and Afters
Saturday, October 14 at 7 pm
Sosnoff Theater
Award-winning author, professor in the arts at Bard, and Fisher Center Advisory Board member, Neil Gaiman has an astonishingly broad career: from journalism to graphic novels; fiction for adults and children; and writing for film, television, and theater. Over evenings in both spring and fall, Gaiman will debut a series of five lectures on writing in which he will explore his creative strategies, sharing stories and offering advice—live and in-person at the Fisher Center.
Tickets start at $25 for each lecture
$5 tickets available for Bard students, faculty, and staff
Livestream available for all lectures, $20 per lecture or $75 for all five
Signed books from the author will be available for purchase.
Premium Package, $1,000
Includes access to premium seating for all five lectures, and a special reception, conversation, and book signing with Neil Gaiman following the first lecture on April 15.
Fisher Center LAB
Common Ground
An International Festival on the Politics of Land and Food
Curated by Tania El Khoury and Gideon Lester
In association with the OSUN Center for Human Rights and the Arts at Bard (CHRA)
May 4-7
Kenyon Adams
COMMUNION: a ritual of nourishment and commemoration
Tara Rodríguez Besosa
Somos OtraCosa
Tania El Khoury
Memory of Birds
Kite MFA ’18
Aǧúyabskuyela
Since 2012, Fisher Center LAB—the Fisher Center’s residency and commissioning program—has provided bespoke and meaningful support for innovative artists across disciplines.
The Fisher Center LAB Biennial is a thematic festival that invites and commissions artists to create new works that grapple with some of the most pressing questions of our time.
The fourth edition, Common Ground, a year-long international program focusing on the politics of land and food, began last fall and continues in the growing season.
Audiences can experience four newly commissioned works from artists whose practices engage with food sovereignty, climate change, and land rights—and join them in imagining a more equitable, sustainable, and healthful future.
Tickets on sale March 29. For the full schedule of events, tickets, and project details, please visit fishercenter.bard.edu/common-ground/.
The Fisher Center LAB Biennial has received grants from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, the Educational Foundation of America in support of Communion, and the Julia Child Foundation for Gastronomy and the Culinary Arts.
SummerScape 2023
June–August
Justin Peck and Sufjan Stevens
Illinois
Music and Lyrics by Sufjan Stevens
(based on the album Illinois)
Story by Justin Peck and Jackie Sibblies Drury
Directed and Choreographed by Justin Peck
Friday, June 23 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, June 24 at 7:30 pm
Sunday, June 25 at 2 pm
Friday, June 30 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, July 1 at 7:30 pm
Sunday, July 2 at 2 pm
Three brilliantly imaginative artists, Justin Peck, Sufjan Stevens, and Jackie Sibblies Drury, unite to create an ecstatic pageant of storytelling, theater, dance, and live music. Stevens’ 2005 concept album Illinois enjoys cult status for its lush orchestrations and wildly inventive portrayal of the state’s people, landscapes, and history, complete with UFOs, zombies, and predatory wasps.
Tony Award-winner Justin Peck (Carousel on Broadway, Steven Spielberg’s West Side Story, New York City Ballet) transforms the album into a full-length theatrical performance with a cast of virtuosic dancers, singers, and musicians in a narrative crafted by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Jackie Sibblies Drury (Fairview, Marys Seacole).
Featuring new arrangements of the entire album for a live band and three voices, ranging in style from DIY folk and indie rock to marching band and ambient electronics, Illinois will lead us on a mighty journey through the American heartland, from campfire storytelling to the edges of the cosmos.
Illinois will have its world premiere at the Fisher Center June 23 - July 2, with the press opening taking place at a Chicago theater to be announced soon.
Sosnoff Theater
Tickets start at $25
Illinois has been made possible with a commissioning grant from The O’Donnell-Green Music and Dance Foundation and residency support from Project Springboard: Developing Dance Musicals. The production is generously supported by Emily Blavatnik and the Blavatnik Family Foundation.
Pre-Performance Toast for Members
Friday, June 23 at 6:30 pm
Opening Night Cast Party
Friday, June 23
Blithewood Mansion
Ticket price $150
Meet the artists and creative team at an exclusive after-party hosted at one of Bard’s historic estates.
Pre-Performance Talk
Sunday, June 25 at 1 pm
Post-Performance Conversation with the Artists
Friday, June 30
SummerScape Coach from New York City
Sunday, June 25 and Sunday, July 2
Camille Saint-Saëns
HENRI VIII
By Camille Saint-Saëns
Libretto by Léonce Détroyat and Paul-Armand Silvestre
Directed by Jean-Romain Vespirini
American Symphony Orchestra conducted by Leon Botstein
Friday, July 21 at 6:30 pm
Sunday, July 23 at 2 pm
Wednesday, July 26 at 2 pm
Friday, July 28 at 4 pm
Sunday, July 30 at 2 pm
Sosnoff Theater
Henri VIII is French grand opera at its most magnificent. In this love triangle for the ages, an infamous Tudor king is determined to divorce Catherine of Aragon in favor of the ambitious, beautiful Anne Boleyn. Saint-Saëns’s exquisite vocal passages and rich orchestration bring this rarely performed masterpiece to vivid life in this captivating new production.
Sung in French with English supertitles
Tickets start at $25
Premiere Party
Friday, July 21 at 5 pm
Spiegeltent
Ticket price $85
Raise a glass and enjoy savories and sweets with fellow audience members before curtain time.
Opening Night Intermission Toast
Friday, July 21
Pre-Performance Opera Talk with Leon Botstein
Sunday, July 23 at 12 pm
SummerScape Coach from New York City
Sunday, July 23 and Sunday, July 30
Pre-Performance Toast for Members
Sunday, July 30 at 1 pm
The Spiegeltent
June 23–August 12
The spectacular Spiegeltent, with sumptuous summer weekends of dazzling performances, drinks, and dancing, returns to SummerScape. Longtime favorites and first-time faces (including a new Bluegrass on Hudson series) inhabit a summer-long party with a program that offers something for everyone. Spiegeltent artists to be announced.
Spiegeltent tickets go on sale in May.
20th Anniversary Community Day Celebration
Featuring a special performance from
Flor de Toloache
Saturday, July 15
Interactive Building Tours from 11 am – 1 pm
Spiegeltent Garden open for food and drinks from 1 pm
Spiegeltent Kinder Disco with DJ Ali from 2–4 pm
Performance on the Lawn: Flor de Toloache at 7 pm
Spiegeltent After Hours with DJ MK Ultra from 8:30 pm – 12:30 am*
A day for the community to discover the Fisher Center like never before, with interactive, behind the scenes tours full of surprises. Kingston’s own DJ Ali brings her Kinder Disco to the Spiegeltent for movers and shakers of all ages. The Latin Grammy Award-winning, all female mariachi sensations Flor de Toloache fill the lawn with their enlightened interpretations of traditional mariachi music. End the evening dancing the night away with DJ MK Ultra (of WKZE radio) in the Spiegeltent.
All events free and open to the public, reservations required.
Tickets go on sale in May.
*Spiegeltent After Hours open to patrons 21+ only
The 33rd Bard Music Festival
Vaughan Williams and His World
Weekend One: Victorians, Edwardians, and Moderns
August 4–6
Weekend Two: A New Elizabethan Age?
August 10–13
Few figures have had such a formative and protean influence on their musical environment as British composer Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872–1958), who was hailed as one of the greatest symphonists of the 20th century. With an oeuvre that ranges from songs and hymns to opera, film music, and full-scale orchestral and choral works, Vaughan Williams’s voice defined an era. His catalog includes popular works such as Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis and The Lark Ascending, as well as scores of uncompromising modernity. Through concerts, panel discussions, and special events, the festival will explore the full scope of his work and set it in the context of his politics and the culture of the time.
Tickets start at $25
Opening Night Social
Friday, August 4 at 5 pm
The Spiegeltent
Celebrate the Festival with friends, old and new, and enjoy craft cocktails and local fare in a magical setting.
Ticket price $85
SummerScape Coach from New York City for Program Eleven
Sunday, August 13
Fisher Center Presents
Elevator Repair Service
Ulysses
Created by Elevator Repair Service
Directed by John Collins
Codirection and Dramaturgy by Scott Shepherd
Text by James Joyce
World Premiere/Fisher Center Commission
Thursday, September 21 at 8 pm
Friday, September 22 at 8 pm
Saturday, September 23 at 8 pm
Sunday, September 24 at 2 pm
Thursday, September 28 at 8 pm
Friday, September 29 at 8 pm
Saturday, September 30 at 2 pm and 8 pm
Sunday, October 1 at 2 pm
LUMA Theater
James Joyce’s Ulysses has fascinated, perplexed, scandalized, and/or defeated readers for over a century. Building on a rich history of staging modernist works—Gatz, The Sound and the Fury, The Select (The Sun Also Rises)—Elevator Repair Service (ERS) takes on this Mount Everest of twentieth-century literature in their Fisher Center debut. Seven performers sit down for a sober reading but soon find themselves careening on a fast-forward tour through Joyce’s funhouse of styles, guzzling pints, getting in brawls, philosophizing, and committing debaucheries. With madcap antics and a densely layered sound design, ERS presents an eclectic sampling from Joyce’s life-affirming masterpiece.
Tickets start at $25
$5 available for Bard students through the Passloff Pass
Ulysses is co-commissioned by and was developed, in part, at Symphony Space.
Fall 2023 Events
Bread and Puppet Theater
Saturday, September 9
The Orchestra Now
with Maestro Leon Botstein
September 16, 17
Bard Conservatory of Music
Film with Live Orchestra
Singin’ in the Rain
September 23, 24
The Orchestra Now
with special guest conductor
September 30, October 1
Fall events will be on sale this summer.
Performing Arts Studio Building Celebration
featuring a special concert event with Ms. Lisa Fischer and The Orchestra Now
Saturday, October 21
Audiences are invited for a special celebration of the Fisher Center and their new Maya Lin-designed performing arts studio building. Once completed, the building will expand the Fisher Center’s footprint beyond the walls of Gehry’s stunning landmark to become a cultural campus that comprises both the Gehry and Lin buildings.
Tickets go on sale this summer.
Funding Credits
The Fisher Center’s 20th-Anniversary Season is dedicated to the founders of the Fisher Center who have cultivated extraordinary artistic experiences—past, present, and future. We honor the memory of Richard B. Fisher, a true champion of the arts and Bard College, and his visionary leadership.
The Fisher Center is generously supported by Jeanne Donovan Fisher, the Martin and Toni Sosnoff Foundation, the Advisory Boards of the Fisher Center at Bard and Bard Music Festival, Fisher Center and Bard Music Festival members, the Ettinger Foundation, the Thendara Foundation, and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature. Fisher Center LAB has received funding from members of the Live Arts Bard Creative Council, the Lucille Lortel Foundation, and the Fisher Center’s Artistic Innovation Fund, with lead support from Rebecca Gold and S. Asher Gelman ’06 through the March Forth Foundation.
A special thank you to all who have made this special season possible. Thank you for your contribution to our artistic home.
About the Fisher Center at Bard
The Fisher Center develops, produces, and presents performing arts across disciplines through new productions and context-rich programs that challenge and inspire. As a premier professional performing arts center and a hub for research and education, the Fisher Center supports artists, students, and audiences in the development and examination of artistic ideas, offering perspectives from the past and present as well as visions of the future. The Fisher Center demonstrates Bard’s commitment to the performing arts as a cultural and educational necessity. Home is the Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, designed by Frank Gehry and located on the campus of Bard College in New York’s Hudson Valley. The Fisher Center offers outstanding programs to many communities, including the students and faculty of Bard College, and audiences in the Hudson Valley, New York City, across the country, and around the world. Building on a 163-year history as a competitive and innovative undergraduate institution, Bard is committed to enriching culture, public life, and democratic discourse by training tomorrow’s thought leaders.
The Center presents more than 200 world-class events and welcomes 50,000 visitors each year. The Fisher Center supports artists at all stages of their careers and employs more than 300 professional artists annually. The Fisher Center is a powerful catalyst for art-making regionally, nationally, and worldwide. Every year it produces 8 to 10 major new works in various disciplines. Over the past five years, its commissioned productions have been seen in more than 100 communities around the world. During the 2018–2019 season, six Fisher Center productions toured nationally and internationally. In 2019, the Fisher Center won the Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical for Daniel Fish’s production of Oklahoma!, which began its life in 2007 as an undergraduate production at Bard and was produced professionally in the Fisher Center’s SummerScape Festival in 2015 before transferring to New York City.
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