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(c) 2017 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Louis Svecenski
(c) 2017 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
(c) 2017 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston

Louis Svecenski

Osijek, Austrian Empire, 1862 - 1926, New York
BiographyLouis Sve?enski
Born Ljudevit Kohn
November 7, 1862[1]
Osijek, Austrian Empire, (now Croatia)
Died June 18, 1926 (aged 63)[2]
New York City, New York, United States
Nationality Croat
Alma mater Croatian Music Institute, University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna
Occupation Violist, violinists
Louis Sve?enski (Croatian: Ljudevit "Lujo" Sve?enski, born Ljudevit Kohn; November 7, 1862 – June 18, 1926) was notable Croatian - American violist - violinist and rector of the Boston Academy of Music.[1][3][4][5]

Sve?enski was born in Osijek, Donji grad district on November 7, 1862 to a Jewish family.[3][5] His father Adolf Abraham Kohn was from Bonyhád in Hungary, and his mother Terezija (née Fried) was from Darda just north of Osijek.[3] Sve?enski finished elementary and high school in Osijek. In 1877, with only 15 years of age, Sve?enski was recognized by Osijek cultural public as the potential future musician. He graduated from the Croatian Music Institute in Zagreb on August 26, 1882 with compliments from Ivan Zajc.[3] In September 1882, Sve?enski enrolled at University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna with the scholarship from the Croatian government in the amount of 500 krones.[3] He studied violin. On July 15, 1885 he graduated from the Vienna University as a violinist with excellent grade. After graduation Sve?enski returned to Zagreb where he asked Croatian authorities to let him croaticize his surname from Kohn to Sve?enski. His surname Kohn is variation of surname Kohen which means priest in Hebrew, while Sve?enski is derived from Croatian word sve?enik which also means priest. How much he cared about his new surname is witnessed through the records from the time of his great popularity in the United States, where he requested that his last name is written with the right Croatian spelling, a letter "?".[3]

On July 10, 1885 Sve?enski moved to Boston, Massachusetts. He was a founding member of the famous Kneisel Quartet and besides Franz Kneisel was the only original member to play with the quartet during its entire history from 1885–1917.[6] He also played in the Boston Symphony Orchestra for 18 years (1885–1903), serving variously as a violist and violinist. He taught for several years at the Juilliard School and was one of the original faculty members at the Curtis Institute of Music (1924–1926). Some of his notable pupils include conductor and violinist Robert Talbot,[7] and violist and composer Carlton Cooley.[8]

Sve?enski is credited with the erection of Osijek memorial plaque in 1895, for his friend Franjo Kre?ma.[3] He stayed in touch with his hometown and family until the day he died on June 18, 1926.[3]

Pedagogical works
25 Technical Exercises for Viola (1917)
Preparatory Exercises on the Violin for the Trill, the Vibrato and the Staccato, Preceded by Corrective Studies for the First and Fourth Fingers (1922)
Specialized Exercises for Violin in Shifting and in Crossing the Strings (1923)
References
"Osje?ki spomendan 7. studenoga - Luis Sve?enski". www.osijek.hr (in Croatian). Osijek.
"Osje?ki spomendan 18. lipnja - Luis Sve?enski". www.osijek.hr (in Croatian). Osijek.
"Biografija: Lujo Sve?enski". essekeri.hr (in Croatian). Essekeri.
"Povijest HPD "Lipa"". www.hpd-lipa.hr (in Croatian). Hrvatsko pjeva?ko dru?tvo "Lipa".
Ognjen Kraus (1998, p. 239)
*A. Eaglefield-Hull, A Dictionary of Modern Music and Musicians (Dent, London 1924)
Denise Ménard. "Robert Talbot". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 2010-02-13.
Riley, Maurice W. (1980), "Brief Biographies of Violists", The History of the Viola, Volume I, Ann Arbor, Michigan: Braun-Brumfield, p. 324
Bibliography
Kraus, Ognjen (1998). Dva stolje?a povijesti i kulture ?idova u Zagrebu i Hrvatskoj. Zagreb: ?idovska op?ina Zagreb. ISBN 953-96836-2-9.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Sve%C4%87enski I.S. 11/1/2018
Person TypeIndividual
Last Updated8/7/24