Tigran Jager's Music as a Way to Immerse Museums
- Nadia JaGer

- Oct 15, 2025
- 2 min read
Updated: Feb 12
Since 2022, Tigran Jager's music has been filling the exhibition spaces of major museums.
After specially composed tributes accompanied Russia's largest event celebrating Leonardo da Vinci's birthday at the ancient noble estate of Lyublino in Moscow in April 15, 2022, they are now featured permanently at the Leonardo da Vinci Museum "3DaVinci" in the Humanitarian University as a one-of-a-kind tribute to this scientist, inventor, and master.
In February-April 2024, it became the immersive musical component of the 45-minute audio series of the multi-format exhibition "3Da Vinci" at the Sergiev Posad State Museum-Reserve, the first such exhibition since the museum gained federal status. Since November, it has accompanied the immersive experience of the "Ink Kingdom" exhibition at the same museum, which explored the development of ink-based writing culture from Ancient Egypt to the present day.
The neo-symphony "Creatore" (Italian for "creator"), dedicated to Michelangelo Buonarroti and his relationship with Leonardo da Vinci, accompanied the first one-day exhibition "The Torments and Joys of Michelangelo Buonarroti" at the Lyublino Estate Museum in Moscow on May 18, 2024, during Museum Night. Russian Ballet dancers Valeria Vasilyeva and Maxim Fomin created a unique choreography to accompany the composition.
Tigran Jaeger's "Sozidateli," dedicated to the era of Ivan III and the Byzantine princess and reformer of Russian culture, Sophia Paleologue, was performed in the main cathedral of the Volokolamsk Kremlin near Moscow in April 2023.
In 2024 and 2025, the composer's series of neo-symphonies informed and emotionally engaged three exhibitions at the estates of Moscow's Vorontsov Park. They were dedicated to both the genius of Leonardo da Vinci and the history of writing instruments across the ages.



