"Les Arts Florissants" Ensemble celebrate
their 30th anniversary
Performing
in an historically informed manner, the ensemble was founded in
1979 by the Franco-American harpsichordist and conductor William
Christie, and takes its name from a short opera by Marc-Antoine
Charpentier.
Les Arts Florissants were largely responsible
for the resurgence of interest in France in 17th and 18th century
French repertoire, and in European music of this period more generally.
This was repertoire which had, for the most part, been neglected,
(much of it unearthed from collections in the Bibliothéque
Nationale de France), but which is now widely performed and admired.

Since the acclaimed production of Atysby Lully at the Opéra
Comique in Paris, it is in the field of opera where
Les
Arts Florissants have found most success. Notable productions
include works by Rameau (Les Indes galantes in 1990 and 1999,
Hippolyte et Aricie in 1996), Charpentier (Médée
in 1993 and 1994), Handel (Orlando in 1993, Acis and Galatea in
1996, Semele in 1996, Alcina in 1999), Purcell (King Arthur in
1995), Mozart (The Magic Flute in 1994, Die Entführung aus
dem Serail at the Opéra du Rhin in 1995) and Monteverdi
(the much praised Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria at Aix-en Provence
in July 2000 which will tour to Lausanne, Paris, Caen, Bordeaux,
New York and Vienna in 2002).
The ensemble has collaborated on projects with renowned stage
directors such as Jean-Marie Villégier, Robert Carsen, Alfredo
Arias, Pier Luigi Pizzi, Jorge Lavelli, Adrian Noble, Andrei Serban
and Graham Vick, as well as with choreographers Francine Lancelot,
Béatrice Massin, Ana Yepes, Shirley Wynne, Maguy Marin, François
Raffinot and Jiri Kylian, to name but a few.
Les Arts Florissants have an equally high profile
in the concert hall and on disc, as their many acclaimed performances
illustrate. Their repertoire includes concert performances of
operas (Zoroastre, les fêtes d'Hébé by Rameau,
Idomenée by Campra, Jephté by Montéclair,
Il Sant'Alessio by Landi, Orfeo by Rossi), secular chamber works
(Actéon, Les plaisirs de Versailles, Orphée aux
Enfers by Charpentier and Dido and Aeneas by Purcell), and sacred
music (the Grands Motets by Rameau, Mondonville and Desmarest,
Handel oratorios such as The Messiah, Israel in Egypt and Theodora),
not to mention a large number of choral works.
Les Arts Florissants have also touched on the
contemporary repertoire with the creation of Motets III - Hunc
igitur terrorem by Betsy Jolas on the occasion of their XXth anniversary.The
ensemble has an impressive discography. After making more than
forty recordings for Harmonia Mundi, Les Arts Florissants signed
an exclusive contract with Warner (Erato) in 1994 and have since
recorded over twenty discs, many of which have won awards, including
the Gramophone Award which they have received four times. Their
most recent recording is Les Divertissements de Versailles, great
operatic scenes by Lully.
For more than ten years
Les Arts Florissants
have had a residency at the Théâtre de Caen, and
each season they present a concert series in the Basse-Normandie
region. The ensemble also tours widely, both within France and
internationally, and is a frequent ambassador for French culture
(it is regularly invited to the Brooklyn Academy and the Lincoln
Center in New York, and to the Barbican Centre in London, for
example).
Forthcoming international projects include a collaboration with
The Philharmonie in Berlin in 2002 and a tour of Japan and South-East
Asia in 2003.
Les Arts Florissants is funded by the French
Ministry of Culture, the town of Caen and the Conseil Régional
de Basse-Normandie. Its associate sponsor is Imerys.