Background
Sandulova is the daughter of the renowned Bulgarian composer Professor. Kristina Sandulova began her piano studies with her mother, the composer Julia Tsenova, having her first public performance at the age of six, at the National Palace of Culture (НДК).
Education
She later studied at the National Academy of Music “Pancho Vladigerov” under the supervision of Professor. There Sandulova studied with Paul Komen, Geoffrey Madge and Klára Würtz at the Prince Claus Conservatoire, the Royal Conservatory of The Hague and the Conservatory of Utrecht, respectively.
Career
She emigrated to the Netherlands in 2001. She lived in Vienna, Austria between 2009 and 2015, when she moved to Hamburg. She has an international concert career.
Julia Tsenova.
Stella Dimitrova-Maistrova. In 2001 she received a grant from the “Stichting Labberté-Hoedemaker Fonds” in order to continue her studies in the Netherlands. Currently Sandulova resides in Vienna, Austria, and has an international concert career, having performed in the Netherlands, Austria, Germany, Irelend, Bulgaria, Norway, Iceland, Japan and the United Kingdom.
Sandulova participated in numerous international festivals for contemporary music, including “ppIANISSIMO” in Sofia, Bulgaria and the “Buchkunstbiennale” in Horn, Austria.
She has also delivered international piano master classes and lecture-recitals about Julia Tsenova, among others at the Koyo Conservatory in Kobe, Japan, the Reykjavík College of Music in Iceland and the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst Mannheim, Germany. Sandulova has prizes at the following national and international competitions:
“Liszt-Bartok competition”, Sofia, Bulgaria: Honorable mention (1995).
“Music and Earth competition”, Sofia, Bulgaria: Piano Duo Performance, awarded by Julia Ganeva and Konstantin Ganev (1996). “Music and Earth competition”, Sofia, Bulgaria: Award for Artistic Merit (1997).
Sandulova has performed Bulgarian, Dutch and world premiere works of the following composers:
Julia Tsenova (Bulgaria)
Atanas Kosev (Bulgaria)
Andre Hamel (Canada)
Rumen Baliozov (Bulgaria)
Dimitar Christov (Bulgaria)
Marzena Komsta (Poland)
Tsveta Dimitrova (Bulgaria)
Petar Petrov (Bulgaria)
Vykintas Baltakas (Lithuania)
James Mobberley (United States of America)
Lazar Nivolov (Bulgaria)
Dimitar Kirov (Bulgaria)
Oscar Carmona (Chile).