At 4 p.m., we will welcome Wojciech Waleczek, winner of many prizes, also at the 7th Franz Liszt “Premio Mario Zanfi” International Piano Competition in Parma (3rd Prize), Festival of Young Pianists in Gdańsk (2nd Prize), 6th Seiler International Piano Competition in Palermo (3rd Prize).

He will perform interpretations of the works by Fryderyk Chopin:
Variations in B flat major, Op. 12 on the theme “Je vends des scapulaires” (“I sell scapulars”)
Waltzes op. 34
in A flat major, No. 1
in A minor, No. 2
in F major, No. 3
and also: Six chants polonais – Ferenc Liszt’s interpretation of six Chopin’s songs for piano solo: A maiden’s wish, Spring, The Ring, Drinking song, My enchantress, The bridegroom’s return.

Finally, it will be Andante spianato and Grande Polonaise Brillante in E flat major Op. 22 by Fryderyk Chopin which will resound in the Łazienki Park.

The summer recitals by the Monument to Chopin in the Royal Łazienki will last until the end of September. They will take place each Sunday at 12:00 noon and 4:00 p.m. 40 outstanding pianists will perform - not only from Poland, but also from Japan, Russia and Ukraine.

The recitals by the Monument to Chopin were organised for the first time in 1959, soon after the monument to the remarkable Polish composer was reconstructed.

The monument itself had a turbulent history.  The idea to set up a monument was first conceived in 1889, on the fortieth anniversary of the composer’s death. However, Poland was then partitioned and the Russian authorities effectively blocked the initiative. It was not until ten years later that the artistic milieu in Warsaw managed to organize a competition to design the monument. The international jury voted the work of renowned Polish sculptor, Wacław Szymanowski, the most interesting and innovative. The result sparked numerous protests and discussions, but the monument was officially unveiled finally on 14 November 1926 a huge scale vision of an inspired Chopin seated beneath a broken willow tree.

In 1939, when Warsaw was under German occupation, Chopin’s music was banned and the monument was blown sky-high (in 1940).  The head of the Chopin statue was not found until the end of the war, in the ruins of the Wrocław Coach Factory, and Szymanowski’s work was reconstructed based on the surviving plaster cast. The Fryderyk Chopin monument was installed on its former site in 1958. A year later, the sound of his music emanated from this same place.

The Łazienki recitals have their own history and have been subject to a number of modifications over the years. There are now two classical recitals of Chopin’s music which are given at 12 noon and 4 p.m. each Sunday from May to September. The success of this format is attested to by the huge popularity of the concerts, which attract tourists and the residents of Warsaw alike.

The concerts are also popular thanks to the pianists, who consider it an honour to perform at the Łazienki, irrespective of some of the drawbacks, for example, possible inclement weather. There is one intriguing story concerning Halina Czerna-Stefańska, who managed to complete her recital despite having been stung on the palm of her hand by a wasp.

THE FRYDERYK CHOPIN MONUMENT - MORE