Adriana Linares
Artistic Director, Viola Faculty and Orchestra ConductorArCoNet and Dali QuartetBiographical Info
Venezuelan violist Adriana Linares is one of today’s most talented young Latin American artists, she is the founder of the ArCoNet and the Dali Quartet. Her playing has been called “meltingly beautiful” by Naxos label reviewers. Ms. Linares was the first prize winner in the Latin American Music Competition at Indiana University, the Kuttner Quartet Competition and the Solo Viola Competition at Indiana University, which earned her the honor of soloing with the Indiana University Symphony Orchestra.
Ms. Linares is described by Grammy Award-winning violist Roger Tapping as “a violist of extraordinary merit and ability who is not only excellent but also distinctive, characterful and individual.” Highlights of solo engagements include her 2006 debut at Carnegie Hall with the US première of Venezuelan composer Modesta Bor’s Sonata, as well as solos with Arcos Juveniles de Caracas Orchestra, Virtuosi de Caracas, Middletown Symphony, the Illinois Philharmonic and the Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra, with whom she performed the world première of Howard Hanson’s Summer Sea Side #2, recorded under the Naxos label.
An active chamber musician and recitalist, she has collaborated with artists such as Anthony Marwood (Florestan Trio), Gabriela Montero (distinguished Venezuelan pianist), Natasha Brodsky (Peabody Trio), Paul Desenne (distinguished Venezuelan composer), Alexis Cardenas (Tchaikovsky Violin Competition finalist), Bonnie Hampton (Juilliard School of Music faculty), and Marka Gustavasson (Colorado String Quartet violist).
Ms. Linares is the founding violist of the Dalí String Quartet, with whom she has embarked on recording and performing projects around the US and educational outreach collaborations with the City of Philadelphia and surrounding counties. She serves as the Co-Principal Violist of the Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra and is a member of the SATORI Chamber Players, the Linaria Ensemble and the Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra. Ms. Linares holds a master’s degree from Temple University, where she studied with violist and Curtis Institute of Music President Roberto Diaz, and a bachelor’s degree from Indiana University where she studied with distinguished violist Atar Arad.