Kemp Stillings

Katharine Kemp Stillings (June 30, 1888 – April 30, 1967) was a violinist, composer, and music educator.

Kemp Stillings
A young white woman holding a violin.
Kemp Stillings and her violin, from a 1917 publication
Born
Katharine Kemp Stillings

(1888-06-30)June 30, 1888
Roxbury, Massachusetts
DiedApril 30, 1967(1967-04-30) (aged 78)
New York City
Occupation(s)Violinist, music educator

Early life

Katharine Kemp Stillings was born in Roxbury, Massachusetts, and began studying violin from a very early age. She went to Berlin to study with Joseph Joachim, and to Saint Petersburg for further studies with Leopold Auer.[1]

Career

Stillings performed in Russia and Finland before World War I.[2] She played with pianist Frances Nash in 1917 and 1918, in New York and several other American cities, and was a guest soloist with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.[3][4][5] She toured in South America in 1920.[6]

Stillings became suddenly blind in the 1920s, and after that focused on teaching.[7] "It has been a handicap, but also a blessing," she told an interviewer in 1940. "It has made my critical hearing ever so much more acute. Besides, something like this makes us so human."[8] She was on the faculty at the New Jersey College for Women from 1927 to 1952,[9] and taught her own master classes in New York City,[10] which were modeled on the pedagogy of Joachim and Auer.[11] Her students included conductor Walter Eisenberg.[12]

Stillings published violin exercise books for children, The Great Adventure (1928), At the Crossroads (1929), and The Giant Talks (1929),[13] and wrote compositions with titles like "Take a Little Eighth Note", "Tick Tock", and "Double Meaning".[14] She also took an interest in cookery, sharing recipes for fruit dishes with a newspaper in 1940.[15]

Personal life

Kemp Stillings died in 1967, at her home in New York City.[16]

References