Turkish Music Concerts
"Composers Raised by the Republic - I"

Concert

October 27, 2019 / 15:30

Pera Museum's Turkish Music Concerts series continues with a program called "Composers Raised by the Republic". Programmed by consultant Prof. Dr. Alâeddin Yavaşca and coordinated by Sinan Sipahi, the Turkish Music Concerts highlight great composers and their works, underlining the different periods of Turkish music from the historical, cultural, traditional, sociological, anthropological, philosophical, and literary aspects.

Guest Solist 
Elif Güreşçi

Guest Young Solist 
Ahmet Yağmur Kucur

Guest Child Solist 
Zehra Sultan Çakıroğlu

Musicians   
Osman Nuri Özpekel - Lute    
Aziz Şükrü Özoğuz- Violin
Taner Sayacıoğlu - Kanun (Zihter)    
Lütfiye Özer - Kemençe   
Volkan Yılmaz - Ney   
Volkan Ertem - Cello

Admission 40 TL. Sales at the Museum will begin on the day of the concert. Friends of Pera Museum have a 50% discount. Places are limited.

Memory Building Memories / Memory Room / Memento Mori

Memory Building Memories / Memory Room / Memento Mori

Each memory tells an intimate story; each collection presents us with the reality of containing an intimate story as well. The collection is akin to a whole in which many memories and stories of the artist, the viewer, and the collector are brought together. At the heart of a collection is memory, nurtured from the past and projecting into the future.

The Golden Horn

The Golden Horn

When regarding the paintings of Istanbul by western painters, Golden Horn has a distinctive place and value. This body of water that separates the Topkapı Palace and the Historical Peninsula, in which monumental edifices are located, from Galata, where westerners and foreign embassies dwell, is as though an interpenetrating boundary.

Midnight Stories: COGITO <br> Tevfik Uyar

Midnight Stories: COGITO
Tevfik Uyar

He had imagined the court room as a big place. It wasn’t. It was about the size of his living room, with an elevation at one end, with a dais on it. The judges and the attorneys sat there. Below it was an old wooden rail, worn out in some places. That was his place. There was another seat for his lawyer. At the back, about 20 or 30 chairs were stowed out for the non-existent crowd.