Kathrine G. McGovern College of the Arts Box Office
Contact Info
Call Us:
713-743-3388
Open remotely by phone or email, Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. or on-site one hour prior to event start times.
Exhibition Info
Intimate confession is a project
curated by Jennifer Teets
October 27, 2023—March 10, 2024
Intimate confession is a project is a group exhibition that considers transmission, intergenerational life, and cultural inheritance through the prism of intimacy and infrastructure. Through the work of eleven artists spanning generations and geographies, the exhibition thinks through infrastructure as an intimate holding cell, capable of affective and affirmative power.
The Moores School of Music welcomes internationally acclaimed operatic soprano, Nicole Heaston, who will present a voice masterclass in Dudley Recital Hall. All are welcome.
Praised by the Houston Chronicle for her “warm supple soprano” and by the New York Times for her “radiant” and “handsomely resonant voice,” soprano Nicole Heaston has appeared with opera companies throughout the world, including the Metropolitan Opera, Houston Grand Opera, San Francisco Opera, Dallas Opera, Washington National Opera, Los Angeles Opera, Semperoper Dresden, Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Düsseldorf, and the Glyndebourne Festival in England.
Ms. Heaston began the 2022-23 season with the long-awaited world premiere of Mazzoli/Vavrek’s The Listeners at Den Norkse Opera, in which she sang the central role of Claire Devon. She sang Amore in a new production of Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice with San Francisco Opera, later returning to the city for her role debut as Melissa in Handel’s Amadigidi Gaula with Philharmonia Baroque, and also sang performances of Countess Almaviva in Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro with Houston Grand Opera.
To
learn
more
about
Ms.
Heaston
and
her
accomplishments,
please
visit:
www.nicoleheaston.com/bio.
The
A.I.
Lack
Master
Series
at
the
University
of
Houston’s
Moores
School
of
Music
hosts
annual
masterclasses
and
recitals
by
renowned
classical
performers
and
educators.
Established
in
memory
of
Abram
I.
Lack
in
1989,
the
endowment
supports
this
educational
initiative.
The
series,
named
after
Lack’s
daughter,
violinist
Fredell
Lack
Eichhorn,
who
held
the
C.
W.
Moores
Professor
of
Violin
position
at
the
university
for
50
years,
offers
enriching
experiences
for
students
and
the
Houston
community.
Past
guests
include
violinists
like
Pinchas
Zukerman
and
Midori,
vocalists
like
Marilyn
Horne,
pianists
like
Christoph
Eschenbach,
and
composers
like
Philip
Glass.