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​이화윤  Hwayoon​ ​Lee​

A native of Seoul, Hwayoon​ ​Lee​ was born in 1996. Exceptionally among major Korean classical musicians, her first instruction came, at age three, in the traditional Korean Pansori genre, not in Western music. ​Lee​ took up the violin at six, but discovered the viola at nine and switched to that instrument.

Lee​'s path to success was prepared by several important competition victories, beginning with a first prize in the International Johannes Brahms Competition in Pörtschach, Austria, in 2010. Several later victories included one at Moscow's International Yuri Bashmet Competition in 2013. Those victories led to festival appearances at Tenerife in the Canary Islands and at Chamber Music Connects the World, and to concerto performances with a growing list of ensembles including the ​Moscow Soloists​, the Symphony Orchestra of New Russia, the Munich Symphony Orchestra​, and the ​Baltic Philharmonic Orchestra​. She took lessons with Sang Jin Kim at Seoul's Yonsei University, Kronberg Academy in Germany, studying with ​Nobuko Imai​ and continuing her study at the UdK (Universität der Künste Berlin) with Ulrich Knörzer.

Beginning in 2011 ​Lee​ received support from the Anne-Sophie Mutter Foundation, and over the 2010s her involvement with the German violinist deepened. She toured with ​Mutter's Virtuosi​ beginning in 2012, and the following year she joined with ​Mutter​ on the viola part in ​Mozart​'s Sinfonia Concertante for violin, viola, and orchestra in E flat major, K. 364, with the ​Bamberg Symphony Orchestra​ under conductor ​Manfred Honeck​. ​Lee​'s recording debut came in 2017 on ​Mutter​'s Deutsche Grammophon recording of ​Schubert​'s "Trout" Quintet, also featuring pianist ​Daniil Trifonov​.

Hwayoon Lee plays a viola built by Gasparo da Saló in 1590, which is generously lent to her by the Samsung Foundation of Culture of Korea and the Stradivari Society®.

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