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Performance: NEA Jazz Master Marilyn Crispell on Cy Twombly

Thurs, Jun 11 | 6:30–7:30

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Marilyn Crispell


Photo by Claire Stefani

In the second half of a two-part event, pianist and NEA Jazz Master Marilyn Crispell and fellow musicians perform in dialogue with American artist Cy Twombly’s work.

Prior to the performance, Crispell joins curatorial assistant in Modern and Contemporary Art Sam Lincoln for a gallery conversation to discuss Twombly’s artwork and its connections to music. 

About the Performers

The quartet of 2026 Jazz Foundation of America Jazz Legacy Fellow and master pianist Marilyn Crispell, bass clarinetist Jason Stein, double bassist Damon Smith, and drummer Adam Shead is an intergenerational ensemble devoted to long-form collective improvisation, extended formal development, and deeply relational listening. Emerging from the long-standing trio of Stein, Smith, and Shead, the group formed in 2023 at Smith’s invitation to Crispell, establishing a collaborative framework grounded in continuity and sustained ensemble inquiry, rather than project-based production. Their work is documented on spi-raling horn (Irritable Mystic Records, 2024) and Live at the Hungry Brain (Trost Records, 2025), recordings that highlight dynamic density shifts, emergent structure, and a fluid negotiation of intensity and restraint. Crispell’s pianistic language—shaped through her historic association with Anthony Braxton and her foundational role in post-1960s creative music—interacts with the trio’s established improvisational ecology to create a distributed, non-hierarchical ensemble sound. 

A central conceptual dimension of the quartet’s aesthetic is its sustained dialogue with the visual art of Cy Twombly, whose gestural abstraction informs the group’s thinking about physicality, inscription, and non-linear form. Twombly’s paintings appear on the covers of both releases, functioning as parallel models of embodied mark-making and accumulation rather than programmatic sources. Through extended-duration performance, the quartet develops large-scale formal coherence from micro-level interaction, treating time, density, and texture as primary structural materials. Situated within lineages of free improvisation and experimental jazz, the ensemble articulates a distinct identity rooted in collective authorship, processual form, and interdisciplinary exchange. 

What to Expect

This program will take place in the museum’s Modern Wing, which can be entered from Monroe Street. This is the second part of a two-part program and takes place from 6:30 to 7:30 in Griffin Court. Some stools will be provided for this portion, and ample space will be available to attend. 

The first part of the program, a gallery talk, will be 5:30–6:00 in Gallery 297 which is accessible by stairs and elevator. Space is limited, and stools will not be provided for the gallery portion of the program. 

ASL interpretation and/or assisted listening devices are available for the gallery talk portion upon request at [email protected]. Assisted listening devices are limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis. Requests must be made at least two weeks in advance.

Sponsors

This event is made possible through the generous support of WDCB 90.9 FM and Rembrandt Chamber Musicians and in partnership with Chicago Humanities. 

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