Yulianna Avdeeva rose to fame when she won First Prize in the Chopin Competition in 2010. She has since embarked on a world-class career and her artistic integrity is rapidly ensuring her a place among the most distinctive artists of her generation.
After performing the Macao Orchestra season opening concert, Yulianna Avdeeva ventured on a dynamic 2016/17 season which included reinvitations from the Academy of St Martin in the Fields on tour in Europe and the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra on tour in the UK. Further highlights included recitals at London’s International Piano Series, the Wigmore Hall and the Moscow International House of Music, and new orchestra collaborations with the Sarasota, Slovak Philharmonic and Gulbenkian orchestras. Yulianna Avdeeva is also a regular performer throughout Asia: the autumn of 2016 saw her working with the New Japan Philharmonic and performing solo recitals throughout Japan.
Recent orchestral highlights have included engagements with the NHK Symphony Orchestra, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin (tour of Japan), Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Finnish Radio Symphony, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, Orquestra Sinfônica do Estado de São Paulo and Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra of Moscow Radio, and international debuts with the Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal and Kent Nagano, Orchestre National de Lyon and Chamber Orchestra of Europe.
An active and committed chamber musician, she has worked with Kremerata Baltica and members of the Berliner Philharmoniker. In 2016, Yulianna Avdeeva toured Germany with violinist Julia Fischer and the Academy of St Martin-in-the- Fields, appearing at the Kölner Philharmonie, Konzerthaus Berlin and Laeiszhalle Hamburg, among others. In recital, she has performed at the Rheingau Musik Festival, the Palau de la Música Catalana in Barcelona, the Liederhalle Stuttgart, the Philharmonie Essen, the Schwetzinger Festspiele and the Festival de La Roque d’Anthéron.
Yulianna Avdeeva’s Chopin performances have drawn particular praise, marking her out as one of the composer’s foremost interpreters. Her long association with the Fryderyk Chopin Institute has won her a huge following in Poland. Avdeeva’s second solo recording on Mirare, featuring works by Chopin, Mozart and Liszt, was released in 2016. She released a recording of the Chopin concertos with the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century and Frans Brüggen. In 2015, Deutsche Grammophon featured Yulianna Avdeeva in a solo recording as part of a milestone collection dedicated to the brightest winners of the Chopin Competition between 1927 and 2010. Yulianna Avdeeva began her piano studies at the age of five with Elena Ivanova at the Gnessin Special School of Music in Moscow and later studied with Konstantin Scherbakov and with Vladimir Tropp. At the International Piano Academy Lake Como, she was taught by William Grant Naboré, Dmitri Bashkirov and Fou Ts’ong among others. In addition to her Chopin Prize, she has won several other prizes including the Bremen Piano Contest in 2003, the Concours de Genève 2006 and the ‘Arthur Rubinstein in Memoriam’ Competition in Poland.”