Legacy of Piano
Since 1924, the Curtis Institute of Music’s piano department has been recognized as one of the best in the world, eminently positioned to fulfill the school’s foundational mission: “to hand down through contemporary masters the great traditions of the past.”
Three early faculty members—Josef Hofmann, Mieczysław Horszowski, and Isabelle Vengerova—belonged to a tradition of piano pedagogy directly traceable to luminaries of the instrument. Hofmann, for example, was the only private pupil of Anton Rubinstein, who studied with Carl Czerny, one of Ludwig van Beethoven’s students. Two other early faculty members with important ties of their own to European pedagogy and performance traditions were Rudolf Serkin and David Saperton. In a Curtis tradition that continues to the present, both Hofmann and Serkin also served as directors of the school while remaining active as performers and teachers.
Extending this legacy were several prominent alumni who went on to join the faculty, including Eleanor Sokoloff, Vladimir Sokoloff, Jorge Bolet, Gary Graffman, Seymour Lipkin, and Peter Serkin, Rudolf Serkin’s son. Lipkin and Graffman—who also served as Curtis’s director for two decades—both remained on the faculty for 40 years or more, but they were still far behind Eleanor Sokoloff, who taught at Curtis for more than eight decades.
Today, Curtis’s primary piano faculty comprises five esteemed performers and pedagogues, all of whom are Curtis alumni: Yefim Bronfman, Robert McDonald, Meng-Chieh Liu, Ignat Solzhenitsyn, and Michelle Cann. Cann, who studied with McDonald—himself a student of Lipkin, Horszowski, and R. Serkin—was appointed in 2020 as the inaugural Eleanor Sokoloff Chair. This passionate, vibrant pedagogical legacy runs deep beneath Curtis’s overall philosophy of music-making and learning.
In addition to the exceptional musicians who have served on Curtis’s piano faculty, the department’s 550 alumni include an impressive roster of internationally recognized soloists, chamber musicians, and collaborative pianists; leading music pedagogues; founders and administrators of schools and festivals; and others who have carved out unique careers as concert curators, crossover artists, and other professional roles. All belong to an unparalleled legacy of learning that Curtis was singularly able to provide.
Eleanor Sokoloff
No record of the legacy of Curtis’s piano department would be complete without celebrating the influence of Eleanor Sokoloff. For 84 years, Mrs. Sokoloff was a vital artistic leader and bastion at the school, taking over as matriarch after Mary Louise Curtis Bok died in 1970.
“I don’t know how I got in. They tested my ear, and I was way off. I only had three years of training. I had no theory. Technically, I had nothing.” Obviously, David Saperton disagreed upon hearing her. But, if Mrs. Sokoloff came to Curtis with nothing, she gave her students everything.
She grew up at Curtis and had a hand in educating generations of influential pianists and musicians. More than 75 of her students have performed as soloists with the Philadelphia Orchestra, and many more from across the school drank the “strong tea” she poured out of Efrem Zimbalist’s Russian samovar every Wednesday at afternoon tea.
Mrs. Sokoloff was born in Cleveland and started studying at Curtis when she was seventeen years old. She moved to Philadelphia during the Great Depression, where her parents found her a room for $8 a week. She would make Rittenhouse Square her home for the next 90 years. She met her husband, pianist Vladimir “Billy” Sokoloff, during her time in school, and they formed a distinguished duo both on and off the stage.
She started her career at Curtis teaching piano to non-majors, and from 1936 to 1949 educated notable musicians like Aaron Rosand, Jaime Laredo, and Michael Tree.
When piano prodigy Susan Starr was admitted to Curtis at the age of seven, Mrs. Sokoloff was appointed to the major piano faculty, a post she held for the next 71 years. The first of her more than 120 students graduated in 1961, and the last in 2019. Her notable students include Lambert Orkis, Mei-Mei Meng, and Kit Armstrong.
It’s clear that Eleanor Sokoloff found her family at Curtis and then continued to grow it through a lifetime of teaching. When asked about her life at the school she responded, “It’s just luck. My life has been one lucky episode after another.” What Mrs. Sokoloff called luck, her students, colleagues, friends, and family might call fortune.
Hats off to an incredible life, and an indelible legacy.
Faculty Timeline
-
Bertha Bert
Piano — 1925-25 -
Austin Conradi
Piano — 1924-25 -
Isadore Freed
Piano — 1924-25 -
George Boyle
Piano — 1924-26 -
Josef Hofmann
Piano — 1924-38 -
David Saperton
Piano — 1924-41 -
Harry Kaufman*
Piano — 1924-41 -
Isabelle Vengerova
Piano — 1924-56 -
Wilhelm Backhaus
Piano — 1925-26 -
Benno Moiselwitsch
Piano — 1926-27 -
Moriz Rosenthal
Piano — 1926-28 -
Alexander Lambert
Piano — 1928-30 -
Mieczysław Munz
Piano — 1930-32, 1941-42 -
Eleanor Sokoloff
Piano — 1936-20 -
Vladimir Sokoloff*†
Piano — 1938-94 -
Vera Brodsky Lawrence†
Piano — 1937-38 -
Harold Triggs†
Piano — 1937-38 -
Rudolf Serkin
Piano — 1939-76 -
Jorge Bolet
Piano — 1939-42, 1977-86 -
Mieczysław Horszowski
Piano — 1942-93 -
Lee Luvisi
Piano — 1956-62 -
Seymour Lipkin
Piano — 1969-15 -
Gary Graffman
Piano — 1980-21 -
Leon Fleisher
Piano — 1986-11 -
Claude Frank
Piano — 1988-14 -
Peter Serkin
Piano — 1992-02 -
Meng-Chieh Liu†
Piano — 1993-Present -
Ignat Solzhenitsyn†
Piano — 2004-Present -
Robert McDonald†
Piano — 2007-Present -
Jonathan Bailey Biss
Piano — 2011-21 -
Yefim Bronfman
Piano — 2020-Present -
Michelle Cann
Piano — 2020-Present
- 1924
- First Piano Alum
Marjorie R. Maurer
- 510
- Total Piano Alumni
How many names do you recognize on this list of Curtis piano alumni? View list
- 12
- Piano Studio
There are up to 12 piano students studying at Curtis in any given year.
Noted Piano Alumni
Legacy of Curtis
Leading to its centennial year, Curtis began a multi-year project celebrating each of the school’s major areas of study.