
Erika Boysen
Acclaimed flutist Erika Boysen will join University of Wyoming Department of Music
piano faculty member Jiwon Han in a recital designed to invite listeners to consider
how repertoire choices can shape connection, conversation and change.
The recital is Wednesday, Oct. 15, at 7:30 p.m. in the Buchanan Center for Performing
Arts recital hall. This performance, made possible through Department of Music guest
artist funds and designed in conjunction with this year’s Shepard Symposium on Social
Justice, is free and open to the public.
The program, titled “Your program, your platform,” centers on a crucial question for
today’s artists: What responsibilities do musicians carry when choosing which program
to perform?
Boysen’s selections, which feature composers as varied as the historically significant
J.S. Bach to contemporaries from America (Valerie Coleman, Allison Loggins-Hull, Eugénie
Rocherolle), the Netherlands (Herman Beeftink) and Slovenia (Blaž Pucihar), reflect
on traditional models of recital construction while raising questions about representation,
relevance, and the balance between honoring the past and engaging with the present.
Boysen is an internationally recognized flutist, interdisciplinary artist and educator
whose work redefines the traditional boundaries of classical performance. Blending
movement, music and storytelling, she is known not only for her virtuosic artistry,
but also for her belief in the transformative power of performance to tell stories,
build community and inspire change.
Boysen currently serves as an associate professor of flute at the University of North
Carolina at Greensboro, where her teaching and performing are grounded in a conviction
that music is a catalyst for connection. Boysen has performed and taught with this
conviction across Asia, Canada, Central America, Europe and throughout the United
States.
Han joined the UW faculty in 2022 and currently serves as a visiting assistant professor
of piano. Han holds two Doctor of Musical Arts degrees in piano performance and collaborative
piano from Michigan State University; an artist diploma from the University of Cincinnati
College-Conservatory of Music, where he was awarded the Art of the Piano Foundation
Award Scholarship; and both master’s and bachelor’s degrees from the Korea National
University of Arts.
Han has garnered widespread acclaim through numerous national and international competitions. His discography includes two solo albums, “Debut” and “Romanticism,” along with two collaborative recordings: “Bach-Schubert,” a live performance with violinist Zia Shin, and “Works by German Composers” with violinist Fangting Chen.