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Around the District

Dining in the Cultural District

With more than 50 restaurants in walking distance to theaters, the Cultural District offers a wide variety of dining options to satisfy your personal tastes and budget. Enjoying a relaxing meal before a show or capping off the evening with cocktails and dessert add to a pleasurable experience in the Cultural District.

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The Perfect Gift

A Pittsburgh Cultural District-wide gift card can be used to purchase tickets for Pittsburgh Cultural Trust events as well as any event taking place in the Cultural District. With so many exciting shows, concerts, and exhibitions, there is truly something for everyone!

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Get to the Show!

The Cultural District is accessible by public transportation, including Port Authority buses, "T" light-rail service and Pittsburgh's famous inclines. Driving to the show? There is also ample parking in and around the District -- for real-time garage parking information, try ParkPGH.

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Mikhail Istomin

Cello

Susan Candace Hunt Chair

 

Born and educated in Russia, Mikhail Istomin holds a Master of Music degree from the St. Petersburg Conservatory. While still in school, he became principal cellist of the State Hermitage Orchestra under the direction of Saulus Sondetskis and later joined the orchestra of the Kirov Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre under Valery Gergiev. 

In 1987, Istomin became the cellist of the Leningrad Conservatory String Quartet, and in 1989 the group won the grand prize in the National Soviet Union Competition of String Quartets. Later that same year, Istomin defected during the quartet’s U.S. tour, and was granted political asylum in the United States. 

Immediately following these events, Istomin joined the Richmond Symphony and became a faculty member of both Virginia State University and the Governor's School for the Performing Arts at the University of Richmond. 

Istomin was appointed principal cellist of the Pittsburgh Opera and Pittsburgh Ballet Theater orchestras in 1991, and the following year he joined the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra under Maestro Lorin Maazel. 

Istomin is a winner of both the Passamaneck Award of the Y Music Society and the Pittsburgh Concert Society Major Auditions. He has appeared as a soloist with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, the Williamsburg Symphonia, the Asheville Symphony, the Knoxville Symphony and others. 

In July of 1998, Mikhail Istomin returned to St. Petersburg to perform in the Second World Cello Congress under the direction of Mstislav Rostropovich. 

Istomin is a founding member of the Pittsburgh Piano Trio. The trio has released three CDs on the Minstrel Label to resounding critical acclaim. “Three Graces” features the chamber music of British composer Armstrong Gibbs; “Phantasie” is dedicated to the chamber music of Frank Bridge; the “CD of Russian” music includes the Piano Trio by Georgy Sviridov and Seven Romances inspired by the poems of Alexander Blok. “Encore!...Encore!” is a collection of short works for a piano trio, including compositions by Piazzolla, Schostakovich, Albeniz, Glinka and many others. 

A free copy of “Encore!...Encore!” can be obtained at www.FreeTrioCd.com. 

Frequent guests at major summer music festivals in the U.S., Canada and Europe, the Pittsburgh Piano Trio recently premiered a triple concerto by post-romantic Russian composer Paul Juon with the Tchaikovsky State Symphony Orchestra under Vladimir Fedoseev at the Moscow Conservatory Grand Hall. 

Active in music education, Mikhail Istomin is a faculty member at Duquesne University and the City Music Center. In addition to that, Istomin is an originator and the artistic director of the Music Business and Advanced Chamber Music Seminar, a unique summer event where young musicians are taught how to be true entrepreneurs and leaders. For more information about the Seminar visit www.ChamberMusicPro.com.