본문 바로가기


unnamed.jpg

 

손열음(피아노)씨가 2025 링컨센터 페스티벌에 초청되어 8월 8일과 9일 데이빗 게펜홀에서 링컨센터 페스티벌 오케스트라(조나손 헤이워드 지휘)와 클라라 슈만 작곡 'Konzertsatz (concerto movement) in F minor'를 협연할 예정이다. 손열음씨는 12월 3일 카네기홀 와일리사이틀홀에서 리사이틀을 연다.

https://imgartists.com/yeol-eum-son-schedule

 

Lincoln Center’s Summer for the City Returns Major Dance, Theater, and Opera Presentations Anchor Season

Welcoming Vibrant Cultural Communities of NYC

 

Hundreds of Performances, All Free and Choose-What-You-Pay

June 11 – August 9, 2025

 
  • American Modern Opera Company makes Lincoln Center debut with its largest and most ambitious Run AMOC* Festival, featuring 10 New York premieres across 12 productions
  • Mahabharata, a large-scale theatrical work offering a contemporary take on the Sanskrit epic
  • The BAAND Together Dance Festival returns in its fifth anniversary, featuring five major NYC companies onstage together
  • The Festival Orchestra of Lincoln Center under Music & Artistic Director Jonathon Heyward features a world premiere commission by James Lee III and continued collaboration with the Jameel Arts & Health Lab
  • Week-long series of events marking the 60th anniversary of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
  • Nadia Sirota returns with expanded Living Music Underground series
  • Adventurous string quartet Brooklyn Rider celebrates 20th anniversary with six concerts
  • Lincoln Center’s Summer Forum: 50th Anniversary, engaging teaching artists and educators to collectively imagine the next 50 years of teaching artistry around the globe 
  • Star-studded Brazil Week brings performances by LinikerLenineOs Mutantes, and more
  • Ruidosa Fest, the first fully female-led music festival in Latin America in its second U.S. appearance
  • Waitress: The Musical in American Sign Language by Deaf Broadway; Lulada Club Big Band; Juneteenth Events curated by Carl Hancock Rux; Big Umbrella Day; Jazz Is Dead; Duck Down's 30th anniversary; I Am the Band with Bobbye Hall and more; AR Installation with Miles Regis; Social Dance Nights; and much more
     

NEW YORK, NY (April 15, 2025) – Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (LCPA) announces the fourth annual Summer for the City, welcoming all New Yorkers and visitors from around the world to a season grounded in the city’s global cultural traditions, innovative spirit, and deep sense of community—all for free or Choose-What-You-Pay. 

Now an anticipated summer tradition, the festival has served more than 1 million visitors since launching in 2022. 

The 2025 festival offers a bold lineup of multidisciplinary performances across the Lincoln Center campus, including world and New York premieres, participatory events, and more—all within transformed outdoor spaces that are destinations for a range of artistic experiences and spaces for respite for New Yorkers during the summer months.  

“The live performing arts are fundamental to who we are and to summer in New York City,” said Mariko Silver, President and CEO of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. “Nowhere do the rhythms of the world come together like here in New York. Summer for the City is such a beautiful expression of the international cultural crossroads we call home.”

Summer for the City is a celebration of Lincoln Center’s founding promise to always enliven the city with arts for all New Yorkers. We invite you to experience the inspiration and artistry of incredible performers from around the country and around the world,” said Shanta Thake, Ehrenkranz Chief Artistic Officer of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.   

Thake continued, “This year’s festival brings artists whose visions of the future inspire and bring joy. Just as the energy of New York City connects us, we hope New Yorkers of all ages will feel moved by this reminder of shared humanity in an interconnected world. We invite you to come as you are, experience global rhythms, and embrace new perspectives—all without ever leaving New York.”

Lincoln Center’s outdoor spaces once again transform through designs by Artist-in-Residence and Summer for the City Visual Director Clint Ramos—creating a quintessential NYC summer destination, welcoming New Yorkers to come together, relax, and enjoy unforgettable experiences together. 

“For this year’s Summer for the City festival, we continue our reflection on nature and what wisdom it could impart on our urban lives,” said Clint Ramos, Visual Director and Artist-in-Residence. “Birds are the main inspiration this year. We meditate on the freedom of their flight and the collective importance of the flock. Birds remind us all to look up and imagine how we, ourselves together, could take flight. This summer is an invitation to soar.”

“What began as an experiment in reinvigorating public space so quickly became an indispensable part of New York summers by creating a joyful opportunity for human interaction, artistic discovery, and creative exuberance,” said Andreas Dracopoulos, Co-President of the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF), Lead Supporter for Summer for the City Community Programming. “If Central Park is New York’s backyard, during Summer for the City, Lincoln Center becomes its front porch, welcoming one and all to come on in, and SNF is very proud to help support it.”

Events throughout the summer are inclusively designed, integrating access needs with a range of accommodations for select performances and upon request—from ASL interpretation to audio description, live captioning, haptic suits, relaxed performances and more. This season once again shines a light on Deaf and disabled artists and audiences with the return of Deaf Broadway, Big Umbrella Day, and performances centering disability artistry from guest curator Ryan J. Haddad

Summer for the City features a plethora of outdoor food offerings throughout the summer with Festival Food Trucks presented by Chase in collaboration with restaurant discovery platform, The Infatuation. The rotating food options feature international cuisines reflective of the cultural traditions within particular events, and a focus on local restaurateurs who use traditional methods, small-batch preparation, and an artisanal approach. Participating food trucks to be announced in the coming weeks. Additional support for Festival Food Trucks provided by United Airlines. Chef Kwame's Patty Palace food truck will also be featured throughout the summer, a version of his new fast-casual stand that focuses on Caribbean patties. 

“Lincoln Center’s Summer for the City is the most joyous, vibey, extraordinary way to experience a wide range of amazing cultural programming in the summer months when our city feels most alive,” said New York City Cultural Affairs Commissioner Laurie Cumbo. “I applaud Lincoln Center and their partners for connecting New Yorkers with the breadth and excellence of the performing arts through the hundreds of free performances included in the festival. Culture is at the heart of what makes our city great, and I encourage all New Yorkers to celebrate Summer for the City this year at Lincoln Center!”

Summer for the City represents the innovation and ingenuity of our renowned New York State creative sector—having brought together our community after lockdown with stellar music, dance, film and spoken word—for affordable prices or even free,” said Erika Mallin, Executive Director of the New York State Council for the Arts (NYSCA). “Gathering over a million people over the past four years to experience great art, NYSCA proudly supports Lincoln Center and another amazing summer filled with hundreds of incredible performances.”  

LCPA is dedicated to making the arts accessible to the widest possible audience. The majority of Summer for the City events are offered for free. Select indoor performances will be Choose-What-You-Pay, starting at $5.  

Choose-What-You-Pay tickets go on sale to Lincoln Center members on Thursday, May 8 at 12pm and to the general public on Thursday, May 15 at 12pm. All free events are General Admission, first-come, first-served unless otherwise noted. Fast Track reservations are available for select free events on Mondays at noon for that week’s events at LincolnCenter.org/FastTrack

Click here for full calendar of events and here for imagery. 

A link to the online event calendar can be found at SummerForTheCity.org

Select performances will be livestreamed across Lincoln Center’s social channels.
  

Highlights include: 

  •  
  • The American Modern Opera Company makes their long-awaited Lincoln Center debut with their largest and most ambitious Run AMOC* Festival, featuring 12 productions, 10 of which are New York premieres, creating an immersive landscape of art across opera, dance, and music. Highlights include:
    • The NY premiere of The Comet/Poppea fusing Claudio Monteverdi with George Lewis’s new score and starring Davóne Tines and Anthony Roth Costanzo, set design by Mimi Lien and director Yuval Sharon in his Lincoln Center debut (Jun 19-21);
       
    • The NY premiere of Harawi, starring Julia BullockConor Hanick, and Bobbi Jene Smith, directed by Zack Winokur (Jun 26);
       
    • A weekend-long celebration of Julius Eastman curated by Seth Parker Woods, featuring Davóne Tines, Conor Hanick, and more (Jun 28-29);
       
    • The NY premiere and first fully staged performance of Music for New Bodies by composer Matthew Aucoin and director Peter Sellars, inspired by the visionary poetry of Jorie Graham, and featuring Paul ApplebyTaylor RavenMeryl DominguezSandbox Percussion, and more (Jul 10-12)
       
    • The full Run AMOC* Festival can be found here.
       
  • Brazil Week, with concerts and programs that showcase the country’s vibrant artistry and cultural traditions. Featured artists include seven-time Latin GRAMMY Award-winning singer-songwriter Lenine, Latin GRAMMY nominee Melly, psychedelic rock band Os Mutantes, art-pop diva Anelis Assumpção, MPB superstar Tulipa Ruiz, influential soul-samba singer Liniker, an interactive performance for families: B A T U from Artefactos Basco, a cross-cultural visual exhibition from the permanent collection of the Instituto Museu Itamar Assumpção (MU.ITA); collaborations with Brasil Summerfest, and more (Jul 16–20)
     
  • The Festival Orchestra of Lincoln Center celebrates its second season under Renée and Robert Belfer Music & Artistic Director Jonathon Heyward with exciting premieres and commissions paired with timeless classics for an electrifying season that spans drama, passion, and triumph (Jul 19-Aug 9). Highlights include:
    • Works by Ludwig van BeethovenLouise FarrencClara and Robert Schumann, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, alongside Michael AbelsOsvaldo Golijov, Iman HabibiGabriela Lena Frank; a New York premiere by Anna Clyne, and a world premiere commission by James Lee III. Guest conductors include Dame Jane GloverKaren Kamensek, and Joana Carneiro, with featured soloists Jess GillamGabriella ReyesJames EhnesLeonora ArmelliniYeol Eum Son, and singers from the Metropolitan Opera’s Lindemann Young Artist Development ProgramSterling Elliott, recipient of a 2021 Avery Fisher Career Grant, is the featured soloist for The Avery Fisher Legacy Concert.
       
    • The continued exploration of Robert Schumann’s symphonies through the lens of mental health via a 3-part conversation presented in collaboration with Jameel Arts & Health Lab, established with the World Health Organization (WHO), focusing on the intersection of arts and wellbeing.  
       
    • Continued collaborations with the New York Philharmonic through their Very Young Composers Program (VYC), as well as with the New York City Public Schools’ Summer Arts Institute (SAI).
       
    • The full season can be found here.
       
  • Mahabharata, Why Not Theatre’s visually stunning retelling of the well-known Sanskrit epic as a theatrical experience, exploring philosophical and spiritual ideas in two distinct parts, Karma and Dharma. Led by an international South Asian cast, the production balances East and West, traditional and contemporary (Jun 24–29)
     
  • Living Library: Celebrating 60 Yearsa week-long series of events in celebration of the 60th anniversary of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, inviting New Yorkers to experience its cultural legacy including film screenings, children’s storytimes, reading parties, dance recitals, exclusive tours of the Library's treasures, participatory workshops, play readings, pop-up shops, concerts, silent discos, and more. Presented in collaboration with The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts (Jul 23-27)
     
  • The fifth anniversary of the BAAND Together Dance Festival, as five of NYC’s most iconic dance companies—Ballet Hispánico, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, and Dance Theatre of Harlem—reunite on one stage. Made possible by CHANEL (Jul 29–Aug 2)
     
  • Brooklyn Rider: 20 Years at Play, a series of 6 concerts with the adventurous string quartet Brooklyn Rider, featuring acclaimed collaborations and new commissions to celebrate their 20th anniversary (Aug 7-Aug 9)
    • Performances include their most recent commissioning project, The Four ElementsEarth & AirFire & Water. Special guests include clarinetist Kinan Azmeh, vocalist Magos Herrera, percussionist Mathias Kunzli, Kurdish instrumentalist Kayhan Kalhor, soprano Ariadne Greif, and more.
       
  • The acclaimed violist, conductor, and Peabody Award-winning producer Nadia Sirota curates and hosts the category-defying Living Music Underground series featuring artists that push the boundaries of classical, jazz, experimental, ambient, electronic, and pop.
    • Featuring Nathalie Joachim (June 12); the PUBLIQuartet (Jun 19); Eliza Bagg aka Lisel (Jun 26); Edinburgh Rollick (Jul 3); CJ Camerieri aka CARM (Jul 10); Clarice Jensen (Jul 17); Jeremiah Chiu and Marta Sofia Honer (Jul 24); Riley Mulherkar (Jul 31); Kelly Moran (Aug 7)
       
  • Lincoln Center’s Summer Forum: 50th Anniversary, bringing together teaching artists, educators, and practicing artists from around the world to engage and celebrate 50 years of teaching artistry at Lincoln Center. Includes workshops with The Juilliard School, choreographer Hilary Easton, The Necessary Space's Simon Sharkey, and theatre artist Francine Kliemann among others; performances by Music from the SoleKid Koala; expert panels, roundtables, and more (Jul 9-12)
     
  • An opening night extravaganza featuring Robert Glasper and Alain Pérez & La Orquesta, contemporary superstars in the fields of jazz, Latin pop, Hip-Hop, Cuban traditional, and R&B; followed by silent disco with DJ CherishTheLuv (Jun 11)
     
  • A day-long Caribbean Day takeover curated in collaboration with special guest Etienne Charles showcasing steel pan performance, Caribbean Masquerade mask making, a pop-up market, and more, culminating in a concert party at Damrosch Park featuring Charles and an array of Road March winning calypso & soca artists from around the Caribbean (Jun 14)
     
  • Shanghai Day, a one-day, family-friendly celebration presented with the Shanghai International Arts Festival that features the Shanghai Chinese Orchestra, jazz by Li Xiao Chuan, a live Arknights game music concert in Damrosch, and a garden party showcasing Shanghai’s cultural heritage and creative spirit (Jul 26)
     
  • I Am The Band celebrates the women whose often-unheralded creativity has been key to the evolution of popular music, through the bands of the ’80s and ’90s and onwards. Featured performers include Bobbye HallBridget EverettLisa FischerWendy & LisaVanessa CarltonScarlet RiveraYasmin Williams, and more (Jun 22)
     
  • A free augmented reality installation outdoors on Josie Robertson Plaza designed by EyeJack, featuring art by Trinidad-born artist Miles Regis, that fuses his signature colorful style in this unique celebration of the city's vibrant cultural backgrounds (Jun 14 – Aug 9)

 

This summer also sees the return of: 

  • Our popular social dance series on The Dance Floor under the disco ball, with dozens of genres all summer long—including Lindy Hop, tango, bachata, salsa, country line dancing, a disco dance revival, and more—each beginning with a DJ set and dance tutorials across a variety of dance styles.
    • Featured artists include Vince Giordano and The Nighthawks (Jun 12); Lulada Club Big Band (Jun 13); Joe McGinty & The Loser’s Lounge (Jun 20); Stud Country (Jun 26); Las Guaracheras (Jul 3); Catherine Russell with The Danny Jonokuchi Big Band (Jul 11); Caleb Teicher curating K-Swing Wave! (Jul 12); Leonardo Suarez Paz (Jul 24); Nelly Swing (Aug 1); Judy Santos and DJ Santana (Aug 6); and more 
       
  • Silent discos on The Dance Floor multiple nights per week with a diverse range of dance styles from R&B, Hip-Hop, salsa, disco, cumbia, deep house, pop, Afro-Caribbean hits, and more.
     
  • The Underground at Jaffe Drive, a speakeasy-inspired space, hosting
    • Comedy Underground, weekly stand-up comedy nights with curation by Suzette Simon of NYLaughsMarcus Russell Price, and Abby Govindan and Mohanad Elshieky of Jungle Cat Comedy;
       
    • and Jazz Underground jazz nights with Jazz at Lincoln Center, featuring Arcoiris Sandoval (Jun 22); NALEDI (Jun 29); Savannah Harris (Jul 6); Annette Aguilar & StringBeans (July 20); and more
       
  • A takeover with the Ruidosa Fest, the first fully female-led music festival in Latin America, featuring a full day of live music with a starry lineup including headliner Snow Tha ProductJ NoaEmpress OfYendryTayhanaMC MillarayPAMÉSofía Rei, and more; a music industry panel; and a late-night Silent Disco (Aug 9)
     
  • A series of events with Lincoln Center’s inaugural poet-in-residence, Mahogany L. Browne, including her successful multidisciplinary series, Seen, Sound, Scribe and the meditative spoken word series Our Echoes Be Bloom (Jun 15; Jul 11, 25; Aug 8)
     
  • Deaf Broadway returns, performing Waitress: The Musical entirely by Deaf actors in American Sign Language, directed by Sandra Mae Frank (Jul 31)
     
  • The Art of Wellbeing, a pop-up wellness studio that harnesses the power of art to engage the mind, body, and spirit. Events include guided meditations, movement-based lessons, and dance classes accompanied by live music. Presented in collaboration with health and wellness experts at NewYork-Presbyterian, the Official Hospital of Lincoln Center of the Performing Arts (Jun 18 – Jul 19)
     
  • The Wedding: New York’s Biggest Day, inviting hundreds of couples to celebrate love in a multicultural ceremony with music, poetry, social dance and more, for a wedding that could only happen at Lincoln Center (Jun 21)
     
  • Big Umbrella Day, a one-day iteration of Lincoln Center’s Big Umbrella Festival, creates relaxed spaces which specifically welcome neurodivergent audiences through multi-sensory experiences, performances, installations and workshops (Jul 5) 
     
  • A campus-wide celebration of Juneteenth curated by Carl Hancock Rux with Oh Sankofa! showcasing the rich traditions of African and African-American folklore, and a transcendent performance with Black Theatre United, commemorating the rich history of Black American culture and music, across genres and eras. Featuring movement pieces created by Ayodele Casel and Darrell Grand Moultrie, spoken word by Mel Chanté, and musical performances featuring Matthew WhitakerNorm LewisCapathia JenkinsDarius de HaasLillias WhiteBrian Stokes MitchellJ. Harrison Ghee, and Broadway Inspirational Voices under the direction of Allen Rene Louis (Jun 19)
     
  • Stamptown, an unforgettable comedy kaleidoscope of circus, dance, improv, and vaudeville (Jun 28)
     
  • Featured performances in Damrosch Park including Jazz Is Dead’s Adrian Younge With His 35-Piece Orchestra (Jun 18); Antone's 50th Anniversary Celebration (Jun 29); Duck Down 30th Anniversary Show (Jul 5); Los Mirlos (Jul 10); J.PERIOD Live Mixtape (Jul 27); and more
     
  • Double Dutch Fusion Freestyle performances from world-class championship Double Dutch teams with the National Double Dutch League (Aug 7)
     
  • The San Juan Procession, a unique celebration of the Afro-Venezuelan tradition through a "walking procession" with dance and percussion led by Brooklyn-based band Tambor y Caña (Jun 21)
     
  • A series of workshops and performances, and Silent Disco with David Dorfman Dance (Jun 25-27)
     
  • The celebrated globalFEST returns with their mega-festival featuring performers from around the globe including Gaye Su AkyolNatu CamaraBCUC (Bantu Continua Uhuru Consciousness), and El Laberinto del CocoMartha Redbone curates the Hearst Plaza stage with Thea HopkinsTaina Asili, and Claudia Acuña, and the evening culminates in a Silent Disco from the HAZA DJ collective (Aug 2)
     
  • La Casita, an annual festival of traditional and contemporary music and spoken word performance, presents an all-star lineup of international artists (Jun 27)
     
  • Expanded offerings for families including Storytimes curated by The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts with artists such as Ali StrokerJennifer JonesLaFrae Sci, and Careitha Davis; interactive dance workshops and showcases; and family performances with artists including Maimouna Youssef aka Mumu Fresh, Missy DLala Tamar & Ofer Ronen, and more.

For accommodations for specific performances and venues, visit event pages online or contact access@lincolncenter.org or 212-875-5375. Lincoln Center also offers an Access Concierge Service, with trained representatives to support guests with disabilities, and providing one-on-one support for individual guests and their parties. To request this service, contact guestexperience@lincolncenter.org or 212-875-5456 at least one week before attending an event. Guests are welcome to request additional accommodations for specific events.

Accommodations for Summer for the City events include accessible seating; accessible entrances; all gender and gendered restrooms with accessible stalls; FM Assistive Listening Devices; alternatives to standing in line for entry; noise-reducing headphones, earplugs, and fidgets to borrow; and Chill Out Spaces offering reduced noise and visual stimulation, for guests to take a break and reenter when they’re ready. In addition, many venues have higher weight capacity chairs, and David Geffen Hall features tactile maps and a hearing loop installed in the Wu Tsai Theater and box office. Visual directions, describing arrival instructions for neurodiverse communities, will be available online.

?