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Thursday January 18
This 7th edition will take place from January 18 to 19, 2024, and this year Neimënster has once again invited composer and vibraphonist Pascal Schumacher to take on the role of musical curator, to devise a program that is as cutting-edge and ambitious as ever. |
Friday January 19
what | Exhibition | Vernissage Turn On Tales and mechanical animations |
where | Rotondes 3, Place des Rotondes L‑2448 Luxembourg-Bonnevoie |
when | 18:00 |
how | Free entry |
Website |
Record players will be of the essence during Turn On, Fabula Rasa’s exhibition. Just like in “the good old days”, you’ll be able to listen to lovely stories with headphones on, nestled in a pile of cushions. And in their diverted version the record players will display phonotropic animations. |
Saturday January 20
what | Organ Concert |
where | Cathedral Luxembourg |
when | 11:00 – 11:30 |
how | free entrance but donations are welcome |
Website |
Under the direction of Martin Elmquist, the orchestra’s repertoire is expanded to include Richard Wagner with the first performance of the Overture to “Die Meistersinger’. |
Sunday January 21
what | Art at the Cinema : Napoleon. In the Name of Art |
where | Ciné Utopia 16, Avenue de la Faiencerie L-1510 Luxembourg |
when | 17:00 |
how | Tickets |
Website |
After Jesus Christ, Napoleon is the most famous man in history. To mark the 200th anniversary of Napoleon’s death, this documentary explores the complex relationship between Napoleon, culture and art. |
Monday January 22
what | Exposure | Kirchberg – Photographs by Christian Aschman (guided tour 24.01 on registration) |
where | 1, rue de la Tour Jacob L-1831 Luxembourg |
when | 12:00 – 18:00 |
Info | office.luca.lu |
Website |
For more than fifteen years, the Kirchberg Fund has entrusted the mission of the mission of the Kirchberg Fund to document the urban and architectural development of this constantly transformed territory. For the 2022–2023 edition, it was the turn of Christian Aschman (born in 1966) to look as a photographer on this place where the historical strata juxtaposed and new constructions appeared while others disappeared. |
Tuesday January 23
One might call him the new shooting star at the organ, so quickly has Sebastian Heindl gone from being an insider’s tip from the Central German organ scene to one of the most renowned, yet also unusual virtuosos on his instrument. |
Wednesday January 24
Ritual, a recital for solo viola by Spanish violist Isabel Villanueva, is a daring and risky project that brings together J. S. Bach’s Partita n. 2 and Kurtàg, framed by a piece by Hildegard von Bingen and Biber’s Passacaglia, in a stylistically impeccable interpretation that doesn’t give in to historicist impositions. |