István Várdai, the 27-year-old Hungarian cello prodigy, István Várdai, has received the 7th PRIX Montblanc 2012.
The prize of €10,000 and a Montblanc Donation Johannes Brahms fountain pen was awarded by Lutz Bethge, CEO Montblanc International, and the PRIX Montblanc jury, comprising Professor Justus Frantz, Professsor Li Biao, Professor Dr. Jürgen Christ and star cellist Mischa Maisky, during a gala concert at the ‘Konzerthaus am Gendarmenmarkt’ in Berlin, Germany.
István Várdai, comes from Hungary and has won titles in numerous international competitions such as the 63rd Geneva International Music Competition (Audience prize, Pierre Fournier prize and “Coup de Coeur Breguet” prize), the International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in 2007 (3rd prize, special prize), the Grand Prix Eduard Feuermann in Berlin in 2006 (special prize), the International Johannes Brahms Competition in Pörtschach, Austria, in 2006 (1st prize), and the David Popper International Music Competition in Budapest (three 1st prizes).
With Várdais’ competition win in Geneva came numerous musical commitments for the 2009 – 2011 period. Worth a particular mention are his concerts with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, the Geneva Chamber Orchestra and the Collegium Musicum Basel, the Camerata Schweiz, as well as chamber music recitals throughout Europe (including the Alba, Radio France/Montpellier and Montreux music festivals). István Várdai participated in Chamber Music Connects the World 2010 in Kronberg, where he had the opportunity to work and perform alongside András Schiff, Gidon Kremer and Yuri Bashmet. Since October 2010, he has been a student at the Kronberg Academy under the tuition of Frans Helmerson.
Montblanc has been awarding the PRIX Montblanc to talented up-and-coming instrumentalists every year since 2006. The first musician to be awarded the PRIX Montblanc was Tianwa Yang, named by the Detroit News as “the most important new violinist to come on the scene in many a year”. In 2007, the jury chaired by Hélène Grimaud awarded the prize to pianist Natasha Paremski. The Russian musician has since performed on all the major concert stages across America, Europe and Asia. In 2008, Joshua Bell and his jury awarded the prize to violinist Alina Ibragimova, who according to The Times was “destined to be a force in the classical music firmament for decades to come”. Pianist Nikolai Tokarev, “one of the most remarkable young artists on the big international concert platforms” (Frankfurter Rundschau), was honoured with the PRIX Montblanc in 2009, and in 2010, 13-year-old child prodigy Zhang Shengliang from China,nicknamed Niu Niu (“little ox”), was presented with the award as a future star pianist in the world of classical music. Armenian violinist Sergey Khachatryan was honoured with the award in 2011. This multi-award-winning musician had already performed with the world’s most renowned orchestras and captivated audiences worldwide.
Montblanc is donating money from the sale of each Donation Pen Johannes Brahms Edition writing instrument to promote new cultural and artistic projects.