Ms. Adamyan is represented by Opus 3 Artists.



Program

Composer Work Year
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Violin Sonata No. 26 in B-flat major, K. 378 1779
Jean Sibelius Five Pieces for violin and piano, Op. 81 1916
Edvard Baghdasaryan Rhapsody for violin and orchestra (piano reduction) 1958
Intermission
Jean Sibelius Humoresque in E-flat major, Op. 89 No. 3 1918
Camille Saint-Saëns Violin Sonata No. 1 in D minor, Op. 75 1885

About the Ensemble

Diana Adamyan is quickly gaining an international reputation as one of her generation’s most outstanding violinists. After winning the First Prize at the 2018 Yehudi Menuhin International Competition, the world’s most prestigious prize for young violinists, she went on to receive First Prize in the 2020 Khachaturian Violin Competition.

In Summer 2022, Ms. Adamyan made her debut at the Aspen Festival performing Dvorak with Lionel Bringuier, and with the Boston Pops Orchestra performing Mendelssohn at Boston Symphony Hall. Recent and upcoming engagements include recitals in Tokyo and France, and her debut with the Deutsche Symphonie Orchester at the Philharmonie in Berlin.

Born in 2000 in Yerevan, Armenia, into a family of musicians, Ms. Adamyan currently studies at the Munich University of Performing Arts with Ana Chumachenco, whose distinguished students have included Lisa Batiashvili, Julia Fischer, and Veronika Eberle. Previously, she studied at the Tchaikovsky School of Music (Yerevan) with Petros Haykazyan and at Yerevan Komitas State Conservatory with Eduard Tadevosyan.

Ms. Adamyan is the recipient of a scholarship from the Deutsche Stiftung Musikleben and under the patronage of the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) and “YerazArt” organization in Boston. She performed on a violin crafted by Urs Mächler for the Menuhin Competition, and now performs on an instrument made by Nicolò Gagliano in 1760, generously on loan from the Henri Moerel Foundation.