Ingmar Lazar

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Ingmar Lazar (born June 22, 1993 in Saint-Cloud, is a French classical pianist.

Lazar started to play the piano when he was five. He made his debut at the age of six at the Salle Gaveau.

At the age of 10, he won the International EPTA Piano Competition in

Val d'Isère. He was awarded the Tabor Foundation Piano Award at the Verbier Festival, Switzerland in 2013, and became laureate of the Safran
Foundation for Music in 2016.

He has been invited to give concerts all over

Querceto
International Piano Festival).

He has been performing with conductors Julien Chauvin, Anna Duczmal-Mróz, Constantin Adrian Grigore, Jean-Jacques Kantorow, Nicolas Krauze, Vladimir Spivakov, Peter Vizard, and with orchestras such as the National Philharmonic of Russia, the Moscow Virtuosi, the Orchestre Lamoureux, Le Concert de la Loge, the Toruń Symphony Orchestra, the Romanian Radio Chamber Orchestra, the Academic Symphony Orchestra of the Lviv Philharmonic, the Orchestra Sinfonica del Festival di Chioggia.

As a chamber musician, he shares the stage with Pierre Amoyal, Nicolas Dautricourt, Benjamin Herzl, Stanislas Kim, Danielle Laval, Jean-Claude Pennetier, François Salque, Christoph Seybold, Ekaterina Valiulina, as well as the Hermès Quartet and the Vision String Quartet.

Ingmar Lazar's concerts were broadcast on radio (

Beethoven
(Bagatelles op. 33, Sonatas op. 81a "Les Adieux" and op. 111) recorded live at the National Theatre in Marseille "La Criée" was released in February 2019 on the same label.

A former student of

Mozarteum University of Salzburg. He is a scholarship holder of the International Academy of Music in Liechtenstein, and was also a member of the Philippe Jaroussky
Music Academy.

Since 2016, Ingmar Lazar has been the founder and artistic director of the Festival du Bruit qui Pense, which is located in Louveciennes in the Yvelines, in north-central France.

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