About Our Ensemble

BACK ROW: Cameron Jamieson, Brock Imison, Meg Cohen, Josephine Vains MIDDLE ROW: Hannah Lane, Adam Masters, Katie Yap, Miranda Hill, Tim Willis FRONT ROW: Donald Nicolson, Meredith Beardmore, Anna Webb, Jennifer Kirsner, Edwina Cordingley, Samantha Cohen, Laura Vaughan

Founded in 2017, Genesis Baroque brings together some of Australia’s preeminent historically-informed musicians, presenting intimate, dynamic performances across Melbourne and regional Victoria.

The ensemble performs variably as a chamber orchestra at full forces, through to small chamber ensemble, focusing on the repertoire of the 17th and 18th Centuries, but also exploring Classical, Romantic, and early 20th Century repertoire on period instruments. As early music specialists with a rich and varied range of experience in in music of the Renaissance and Baroque, Classical and Romantic, folk and commissioned new music, the musicians bring together their unique creative skills into an imaginative, magnetic performance style.

Genesis Baroque has a particular focus on providing a platform for local and expatriate Australian guest musicians and soloists. The ensemble released its first studio album of Arcangelo Corelli’s Concerti Grossi Opus 6 in August 2020 with principal guest director, Sophie Gent, and founding music director, Lucinda Moon. The recording debuted as the highest selling Australian album on the ARIA classical album charts and received critical acclaim.

Artistic Director –
Jennifer Kirsner

Genesis Baroque founder Jennifer is a Melbourne-based period and modern violinist who has a passion for chamber music and has worked in diverse genres from Renaissance and garage bands in Melbourne to Ceilidh bands in Northern England.

Principal Guest Director –
Sophie Gent

Australian-born violinist Sophie Gent studied at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague with Ryo Terakado. She has since become one of Europe’s most highly regarded baroque violinists, and is extremely active as a soloist, orchestral leader, chamber musician and teacher.

Patron – Julian Burnside AO KC

Genesis Baroque is honoured to have Julian Burnside as its patron.

Julian is a prominent and accomplished barrister and human rights lawyer. He has been a strong advocate for the rights of asylum seekers, refugees, and the stolen generation, and he is known for significant pro bono work in a range of human rights areas.

Julian is also a committed and passionate patron of the arts, being actively involved a multitude of arts organisations and being a strong advocate for the role of arts patronage to support individual artists; a model of support that has enabled the arts to flourish for centuries.

In 2009, Julian was made an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) “for service as a human rights advocate, particularly for refugees and asylum seekers, to the arts as a patron and fund-raiser, and to the law”. Julian has been the recipient of the Human Rights Law Award, the Australian Peace Prize, the Sydney Peace Prize, and he was elected as a National Living Treasure in 2004.

Our Board of Management

Chair: Jennifer Kirsner
Secretary: Alice Bennett
Treasurer: Evan Lowenstein
Education & Outreach: Miranda Hill
Meg Cohen
David Cramond
Nicholas Dinopoulos

Sustainability

Genesis Baroque has a strong commitment to environmentally sustainable practice, and we believe that the arts can play an important role in developing a compassionate and thoughtful relationship with our world. We believe that we have an opportunity not only to minimise our carbon footprint, but to give back actively and be part of constructive and meaningful change.

To this end, Genesis Baroque has a number of sustainable practice approaches including:

ABOUT TRUST FOR NATURE

Trust for Nature is one of Australia’s oldest conservation organisations whose goal is to protect and restore places in Victoria where wildlife and native plants can thrive. They do this for the benefit of future generations by working now with private landholders, volunteers, government agencies and others with similar vision. Over the last 45 years, Trust for Nature has secured 100,000 hectares of habitat on private land forever – places that are home to some of our rarest species such as the Helmeted Honeyeater, Victoria’s critically endangered bird emblem.

Trust for Nature was established in 1972 through the Victorian Conservation Trust Act. This enabled people to contribute permanently to nature conservation by donating land or money to a not-for-profit organisation with a specific focus on private land. Since then, the Trust has negotiated more than 1,400 covenants and so protected more than 62,000 hectares. In addition, government funding and public donations have enabled Trust for Nature to purchase more than 40 properties which have been converted to conservation reserves covering more than 35,000 hectares.

You can read more about Trust for Nature and their vital conservation work here.