Hina & Fiona, Rohan De Silva
Biography Hina & Fiona, Rohan De Silva
Fiona Khuong-Huu
Born in New York City, violinist Fiona Khuong-Huu currently studies with Professor Ilya Kaler at the Cleveland Institute of Music, previously a student of Professors Itzhak Perlman in the Juilliard Pre-College Division. Fiona made her debut with the New York Philharmonic at 16 in David Geffen Hall, performing the Mendelssohn Concerto under the baton of Maestro Thomas Wilkins for the Centennial Season of the NY Phil Young People’s Concerts, and she frequently performs as a soloist and chamber musician in the United States, Italy, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, London, and more.
She has had the honor of performing for King Charles at the Lancaster House with the Oxford Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Maestro Marios Papadopoulos, with whom she has also performed as soloist in Carnegie Hall’s Stern Auditorium, the Windsor Castle, and the Buckingham Palace along with Maxim Vengerov. Most recently, she performed Vivaldi’s Four Seasons at the Kulturpalast Dresden with the Moritzburg Festival Orchestra under the baton of Maestro Josep Domenech. Other notable performances as soloist include the Juilliard Orchestra in Alice Tully Hall in Lincoln Center, the Flanders Symphony Orchestra at the Bozar Concert Hall in Brussels, and with the ProMusica Chamber Orchestra. Fiona was awarded the prestigious Career Grant Award from Salon de Virtuosi in 2021 and performed in several of their concert series, as well as at Festival Napa Valley as one of their Bouchaine Young Artists.
She has performed as guest artist with Andrea Lucchesini and Robert McDuffie at the Rome Chamber Music Festival, with Jan Vogler at the Moritzburg Festival, with Vadim Gluzman at the North Shore Chamber Music Festival, and with Paul Neubauer in the Jupiter Symphony Chamber Players concert series. She is fortunate to have received inspiration from world renowned mentors such as Menahem Pressler and Sheryl Staples.
Hina Khuong-Huu
First-Prize winner of the 2023 Elmar Oliveira International Violin Competition, violinist Hina Khuong-Huu has performed around the globe, appearing as a soloist and collaborator with many of today’s leading ensembles and musicians. Her star continues to rise following acclaimed appearances at the Kennedy Center, recital debuts across the United States and Europe, and performances with various orchestras and chamber ensembles.
In the 2025–26 season, Hina makes a series of significant debuts. She makes her first appearance with the Binghamton Philharmonic performing Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 3, with the Atlantic Classical Orchestra in Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No. 2, and in Boston with the Bach, Beethoven & Brahms Society in Beethoven’s Violin Concerto. She returns to the Classical Chamber Music Series at the Sidney & Berne Davis Art Center for a recital of works by Paganini, Beethoven, Prokofiev with the esteemed pianist, Rohan De Silva. Additionally, she continues her close association with the Jupiter Symphony Chamber Players in New York, performing multiple chamber programs alongside distinguished collaborators.
Named a “VC Artist” by the Violin Channel, Hina has previously appeared as a soloist with the Savannah Philharmonic, Symphony of the Americas, Greensboro Symphony, Brevard Symphony, Oxford Philharmonic Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra of Geneva, Flanders Symphony Orchestra, ProMusica Columbus, Mittel Europa Orchestra, Northbrook Symphony, and the Boca Symphonia. She has collaborated with artists such as Jennifer Koh in her Alone Together series, shared the stage with Maxim Vengerov at Carnegie Hall and Buckingham Palace, and performed alongside Andrés Cárdenes at the Josef Gingold Chamber Music Festival. She has also appeared at the Music in the Mountains Festival under Guillermo Figueroa and recently made her stunning Ljubljana Festival debut in recital with Kai-Min Chang. Hina was a recipient of the Salon de Virtuosi Career Grant, and in 2018 she was a prizewinner of the Junior Division of the Menuhin Competition.
As a chamber music advocate, Hina appears regularly with the Jupiter Symphony Chamber Players and performed at the Moritzburg Festival this past summer.
She has studied with several leading musicians including Shlomo Mintz, Vadim Gluzman, and Menahem Pressler, and currently studies at Columbia University and the Juilliard School with Midori Goto and Itzhak Perlman.
Hina performs on a violin by Antonio Stradivari, Cremona c1722 ‘Lord Wandsworth’, which is on loan from Ryuji Ueno Foundation and Rare Violins In Consortium, Artists and Benefactors Collaborative.
Rohan de Silva
Born in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Steinway Artist Rohan De Silva has lead a formidable career as a highly sought after collaborative pianist and chamber musician. His partnerships with violin virtuosos Itzhak Perlman, Pinchas Zukerman, Cho-Liang Lin, Midori, Joshua Bell, Benny Kim, Kyoko Takezawa, Vadim Repin, Gil Shaham, Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, Julian Rachlin, James Ehnes and Rodney Friend have led to highly acclaimed performances at recital venues all over the world. With these and other artists he has performed on the stages of Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall and Alice Tully Hall, the Kennedy Center, Library of Congress, Philadelphia Academy of Music, Ambassador Theater in Los Angeles, Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, Wigmore Hall in London, Suntory Hall in Tokyo, the Mozarteum in Salzburg, La Scala in Milan and in Tel-Aviv, Israel. Mr. De Silva’s festival appearances include Aspen, Ravinia, Interlochen, Seattle Chamber Music, Manchester, Schleswig-Holstein, Pacific Music Festival and the Wellington Arts Festival in New Zealand. He has performed chamber music in Beijing with the American String Quartet and has appeared in recital worldwide with Itzhak Perlman.
Mr. De Silva has performed multiple times at the White House, most recently in 2012 at the invitation of President Barack Obama and Mrs. Obama for Israeli President and Presidential Medal of Freedom honoree Shimon Peres; and at a State Dinner in 2007, hosted by President George W. Bush and Mrs. Bush for Her Majesty The Queen and His Royal Highness The Duke of Edinburgh. Mr. De Silva was invited in 2015 by the Prime Minister of his country to perform at a luncheon for U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on his historic visit to Sri Lanka.
In recent seasons, Mr. De Silva has toured with Mr. Perlman in sold-out concerts throughout Asia and to Europe in their first appearances as a duo in London (Barbican Centre), Paris (Philharmonie de Paris) and Munich (Gasteig). In North America, he has performed with Mr. Perlman at notable venues including Los Angeles’ Disney Hall, San Francisco’s Davies Symphony Hall, Chicago’s Lyric Opera, West Palm Beach’s Kravis Center and Nashville’s Schermerhorn Symphony Center, to name a few. Over the summer, at the invitation of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Mr. De Silva performed for an exclusive guest list at the Supreme Court with Mr. Perlman in Washington D.C. Mr. De Silva also performed at Center Stage for Strings in Michigan, Innsbrook Institute in Missouri and Maui Music Festival in Hawaii.
Mr. De Silva began his piano studies with his mother, the late Primrose De Silva, and with the late Mary Billimoria. He spent six years at the Royal Academy of Music in London as a student of Hamish Milne, Sydney Griller and Wilfred Parry. While in London, he received many awards including the Grover Bennett Scholarship, the Christian Carpenter Prize, the Martin Music Scholarship, the Harold Craxton Award for advanced study in England, and, upon his graduation, the Chappell Gold Medal for best overall performance at the Royal Academy. Mr. De Silva was the first recipient of a special Scholarship in the arts from the President’s Fund of Sri Lanka. This enabled him to enter the Juilliard School, where he received both his Bachelor and Master of Music degrees, studying piano with Martin Canin, chamber music with Felix Galimir, and working closely with violin pedagogue Dorothy DeLay. He was awarded a special prize as Best Accompanist at the 1990 Ninth International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow, and received the Samuel Sanders Collaborative Artist Award as presented to him by Itzhak Perlman at the 2005 Classical Recording Foundation Awards Ceremony at Carnegie Hall.
Mr. De Silva joined the collaborative arts and chamber music faculty of the Juilliard School in 1991, and in 1992 was awarded honorary Associate of the Royal Academy of Music. In 2015, he was awarded the Fellowship of the Royal Academy of Music. In 2001, he joined the faculty at the Ishikawa Music Academy in Japan, where he gives masterclasses in collaborative piano. Mr. De Silva additionally has served as a faculty member at the Great Wall International Music Academy in Beijing, China, and at the International String Academy in Cambridge, U.K. since 2011. He was on the faculty of the Perlman Music Program from 2000 to 2007. Radio and television credits include PBS’s Live from Lincoln Center and the Colbert Report with Itzhak Perlman, The Tonight Show with Midori, CNN’s “Showbiz Today”, NHK Television in Japan, National Public Radio, WQXR and WNYC in New York, Berlin Radio, and the 2000 Millennium Grammy Awards. Mr. De Silva has recorded for Deutsche Grammophon, Universal, CBS/SONY Classical, Collins Classics in London and RCA Victor.
