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American Academy of Arts and Letters

The American Academy of Arts and Letters is a 300-member honor society whose goal is to "foster, assist, and sustain excellence" in American literature, music, and art. Its fixed number membership is elected for lifetime appointments. Its headquarters is in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It shares Audubon Terrace, a Beaux Arts/American Renaissance complex on Broadway between West 155th and 156th Streets, with the Hispanic Society of America and Boricua College.

Audubon Terrace, the campus that the academy shares

The academy's galleries are open to the public on a published schedule. Exhibits include an annual exhibition of paintings, sculptures, photographs and works on paper by contemporary artists nominated by its members, and an annual exhibition of works by newly elected members and recipients of honors and awards. A permanent exhibit of the recreated studio of composer Charles Ives was opened in 2014.[1]

The auditorium is sought out by musicians and engineers wishing to record live, as the acoustics are considered among the city's finest. Hundreds of commercial recordings have been made there.[2][3]

History

Early years

The American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters was formed from three parent organizations. The first, the American Social Science Association, was founded in 1865, at Boston. The second was the National Institute of Arts and Letters, which ASSA's membership created in 1898. The qualification for membership in the NIAL was notable achievement in art, music, or literature. The NIAL's membership was at first limited to 150 (all men). The third organization was the American Academy of Arts, which NIAL's membership created in 1904, as a preeminent national arts institution, styling itself after the French Academy.

The AAA's first seven academicians were elected from ballots cast by the NIAL membership. They were William Dean Howells, Samuel L. Clemens, Edmund Clarence Stedman, and John Hay, representing literature; Augustus Saint-Gaudens and John La Farge, representing art; and Edward MacDowell, representing music.[4] The NIAL membership increased in 1904, with the introduction of a two-tiered structure: 50 academicians and 200 regular members. Academicians were gradually elected over the next several years. The elite group (academicians) were called the "Academy," and the larger group (regular members) was called the "Institute." This strict two-tiered system persisted for 72 years (1904–76).

In 1908, poet Julia Ward Howe was elected to the AAA, becoming the first female academician.[5]

In 1976, the NIAL and AAA merged, under the name American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. The combined Academy/Institute structure had a maximum of 250 living U.S. citizens as members, plus up to 75 foreign composers, artists, and writers as honorary members. It also established the annual Witter Bynner Poetry Prize in 1980 to support young poets. The election of foreign honorary members persisted until 1993, when it was abandoned.

Federally chartered corporation

The Academy holds a Congressional charter under Title 36 of the United States Code (42 USC 20301 et seq.), making it one of the country's comparatively rare "Title 36" corporations.[6] The 1916 statute of incorporation established this institution among a small number of other similarly chartered patriotic and national organizations.[7] The federal incorporation was originally construed primarily as an honor. The special recognition neither implies nor accords Congress any special control over the Academy, which functions independently.[8]

Active sponsors of Congressional action were Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts and former President Theodore Roosevelt.[9] The process that led to the creation of this federal charter was controversial[10] and the first attempt to gain the charter in 1910 failed.[11] Lodge reintroduced legislation, which passed the Senate in 1913.[12] The Academy was incorporated under the laws of the State of New York in 1914,[13] which resulted in Congressional approval in 1916.[14]

Buildings

 
The bronze entrance doors to the administration building on West 155th Street were designed by Academy member Adolph Alexander Weinman and are dedicated to the memory of Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman and to the women writers of the United States.[15]

The Academy occupies three buildings on the west end of the Audubon Terrace complex created by Archer M. Huntington, the heir to the Southern Pacific Railroad fortune and a noted philanthropist. To help convince the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the National Institute of Arts and Letters, which were separate but related organizations at the time, to move to the complex, Huntington established building funds and endowments for both.[15]

The first building, on the complex's south side, along West 155th Street, was designed by William M. Kendall of McKim, Mead & White; Kendall was also a member of the Academy. This Anglo-Italian Renaissance[16] administration building was designed in 1921 and opened in 1923.[15] On the north side, another building housing an auditorium and gallery was designed by Cass Gilbert, also an Academy member, and built in 1928-30.[15][16] These additions to the complex necessitated considerable alterations to the Audubon Terrace plaza, which were designed by McKim, Mead & White.[15]

In 2007, the American Numismatic Society, which had occupied a Charles P. Huntington-designed building immediately to the east of the Academy's original building, vacated that space to move to smaller quarters downtown. This building, which incorporates a 1929 addition designed by H. Brooks Price,[15] became the Academy's Annex and houses additional gallery space.[16] In 2009, the space between the Annex and the administration building was turned into a new entrance link, designed by Vincent Czajka with Pei Cobb Freed & Partners.[16]

Membership

Members of the Academy are chosen for life and have included some of the American art scene's leading figures. They are organized into committees that award annual prizes to up-and-coming artists.[17] Although the names of some of the organization's members may not be well-known today, each was well-known in their time. Greatness and pettiness are demonstrable among the Academy members, even during the first decade, when William James declined his nomination on the grounds that his little brother Henry had been elected first.[18] One of the giants of the academy in his time, Robert Underwood Johnson, casts a decades-long shadow in his one-man war against encroaching modernism, blackballing such writers as H. L. Mencken, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and T. S. Eliot (before his emigration to England disqualified him for full membership).[19] Former Harvard president Charles William Eliot declined election to the Academy "because he was already in so many societies that he didn't want to add to the number".[20]

Although never explicitly excluded, women were not elected to membership in the early years.[21] The admission of Julia Ward Howe in January 1908 (at age 88) as the first woman in the Academy was only one incident in the intense debate about the consideration of female members.[22] In 1926, the election of four women— Edith Wharton, Margaret Deland, Agnes Repplier and Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman—was said to have "marked the letting down of the bars to women".[23]

Below is a partial list of past members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and its successor institution, the National Institute and Academy of Arts and Letters:[24]

Current academicians

Awards

Award for Distinguished Service to the Arts

The award, a certificate and $1,000, goes to a United States resident who has "rendered notable service to the arts".

Other awards

The academy gives out numerous awards, with recipients chosen by committees of Academy members. Candidates for awards must be nominated by Academy members, except for the Richard Rodgers awards, for which an application may be submitted.

  • Arts and Letters Award (formerly, the Academy Award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters): In 1941, the Academy established awards to encourage creative work in the arts. Now $10,000 each, Academy Awards are given annually: five to artists, eight to writers, four to composers, and three to architects.[53]
  • Marc Blitzstein Award: The $5,000 award is given periodically to a composer, lyricist, or librettist, "to encourage the creation of works of merit for musical theater and opera". The award was established in 1965 by the friends of Marc Blitzstein, an Academy member.
  • Michael Braude Award for Light Verse: The $5,000 biennial award is given "for light verse written in English regardless of the country of origin of the writer".
  • Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize: The annual prize of $5,000 goes to an architect of any nationality who has "made a contribution to architecture as an art".
  • Benjamin H. Danks Award: The $20,000 award is given in rotation to a composer of ensemble works, a playwright, and a writer (fiction, nonfiction, poetry). Since 2002, the Academy has administered the prize established by Roy Lyndon Danks in honor of his father, Benjamin Hadley Danks.
  • Jimmy Ernst Award: Established by Dallas Ernst in memory of her husband, the Jimmy Ernst Award of $5,000 is given to a painter or sculptor "whose lifetime contribution to his or her vision has been both consistent and dedicated".[54] The award has been presented annually since 1990.[54]
  • E. M. Forster Award: E. M. Forster, a foreign honorary member of the Academy, bequeathed the U.S. royalties of his posthumous novel Maurice to Christopher Isherwood, who transferred them to the Academy to establish this $15,000 award. It is given to a young English writer for an extended visit to the United States.
  • American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medals: Each year the Academy awards Gold Medals for distinguished achievement in two categories in rotation. The Gold Medal is given for the entire work of the recipient.
  • Walter Hinrichsen Award: The Walter Hinrichsen Award is given for the publication of "a work by a mid-career American composer".
  • William Dean Howells Medal: This award is given every five years in recognition of the most distinguished American novel published during that period. It was established in 1925.
  • The Charles Ives Prize: Six scholarships of $7,500 and two fellowships of $15,000 are now given annually to young composers. In 1998, the Academy established the Charles Ives Living, an award of $75,000 a year for a period of three years given to an American composer. The award's purpose is to free "a promising talent from the need to devote his or her time to any employment other than music composition" during that period.
  • The Charles Ives Opera Prize: In 2008, the Academy awarded the inaugural Charles Ives Opera Prize of $50,000, to be given from time to time to a composer and a librettist for a recently produced opera. It is America’s largest vocal music award.
  • Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction: The $5,000 prize is given for the best published first novel or collection of short stories in the preceding year.
  • Wladimir and Rhoda Lakond Award: an annual award of $5,000 "given either to a composition student or an experienced composer".
  • Goddard Lieberson Fellowships: Two Goddard Lieberson Fellowships of $15,000 are given annually to young composers of extraordinary gifts. The CBS Foundation endowed the fellowships in memory of Lieberson, the late president of CBS Records.
  • Russell Loines Award for Poetry
  • American Academy of Arts and Letters Award of Merit: The Award of Merit, a medal and $10,000, is given each year, in rotation, to an outstanding person in America representing painting, the short story, sculpture, the novel, poetry, and drama.
  • Metcalf Awards: In 1986, the Academy received a bequest from Addison M. Metcalf, son of the late member Willard L. Metcalf, for two awards to honor young writers and artists of great promise. The Willard L. Metcalf Award in Art and the Addison M. Metcalf Award in Literature are biennial awards of $10,000.
  • Katherine Anne Porter Award: This biennial award of $20,000 goes to a prose writer who has demonstrated achievements and dedication to the literary profession.
  • Arthur Rense Prize: In 1998, this $20,000 award was established to honor "an exceptional poet" every third year.
  • Richard Rodgers Awards for Musical Theater: These awards subsidize full productions, studio productions, and staged readings of musicals put on by nonprofit theaters in New York City. The plays are by composers and writers who are not already established. These are the only awards for which the Academy accepts applications.[55]
  • Rome Prize in Literature: Every year the Academy selects and partly subsidizes two young writers for a one-year residence at the American Academy in Rome.
  • Richard and Hinda Rosenthal Foundation Awards: Each of these two awards are for $5,000. The first, established in 1956, is for a fiction work of "considerable literary achievement" published in the previous year. The second, created in 1959, is for a young painter "who has not yet been accorded due recognition".
  • Medal for Spoken Language: This medal, awarded from time to time, recognizes individuals who set a standard of excellence in the use of spoken language.
  • The Mildred and Harold Strauss Livings: These Livings provide an annual stipend of $50,000 a year for five years, awarded to two writers of English prose literature to enable them to devote their time exclusively to writing.
  • Harold D. Vursell Memorial Award: This $10,000 award is given each year to honor a writer of "recent prose that merits recognition for the quality of its style".
  • Morton Dauwen Zabel Award: This $10,000 biennial award is given in rotation to a poet, writer of fiction, or critic, "of progressive, original, and experimental tendencies".

References

Notes
  1. ^ . American Academy of Arts and Letters. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 31, 2015.
  2. ^ John Updike, ed. A Century of Arts & Letters, Columbia University Press (1998), p. 263.
  3. ^ Barbara S. Christen and Steven Flanders, eds. Cass Gilbert, Life and Work: Architect of the Public Domain, W. W. Norton and Company (2001), p. 12.
  4. ^ "Aims of National Academy; Organization Formed to Promote Art, Music, and Literature", The New York Times. January 23, 1909.
  5. ^ First woman elected to American Academy of Arts and Letters, Jan. 28, 1908.
  6. ^ Moe, Ronald C. "Congressionally Chartered Nonprofit Organizations ("Title 36 Corporations"): What They Are and How Congress Treats Them," October 30, 2008, at the Wayback Machine Congressional Research Service, CRS Report to Congress. Order Code RL30340 (April 8, 2004).
  7. ^ "What is a congressional charter?", Knight Ridder Newspapers, December 12, 2007.
  8. ^ Kosar, Kevin R. "Congressional or Federal Charters: Overview and Current Issues." June 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Congressional Research Service, CRS Report to Congress. Order Code RS22230 (January 23, 2007).
  9. ^ "Slur on the 'Immortals'; Lodge's Proposed Institutions Shorn of Glory", The New York Times. January 19, 1909.
  10. ^ "Official Action Just Taken Contemplates American Federation.; The Movement to Advance Arts and Letters in America", The New York Times. January 24, 1909.
  11. ^ "A Charterless Academy", The New York Times. February 28, 1910.
  12. ^ "Two New Art Societies; Senator Lodge Introduces Bills Providing for Their Incorporation", The New York Times. January 19, 1913.
  13. ^ "Arts Academy Chartered; Membership Never to Exceed 50 — William Dean Howells President", The New York Times. June 11, 1914.
  14. ^ Walnerth, Charles et al. "Greetings to the American Academy of Arts and Letters", The New York Times. August 25, 1916.
  15. ^ a b c d e f New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission "Audubon Terrace Historic District Designation Report" (January 9, 1979).
  16. ^ a b c d White, Norval; Willensky, Elliot; Leadon, Fran (2010). AIA Guide to New York City (5th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 558–561. ISBN 978-0-19538-386-7.
  17. ^ "Rival to the Great French Academy Limited to 50 Members, Receives Official Recognition From the U.S. Senate; Something About Those on the Original List", The New York Times. January 26, 1913.
  18. ^ "Editorial Review" of Updike's A Century of Arts and Letters: "Editorial Reviews": Amazon.com.
  19. ^ "Editorial Review" of John Updike's A Century of Arts and Letters: Alan Weakland, writing in Booklist.
  20. ^ "Eliot not in Academy; Harvard's President Emeritus Said He Was in Too Many Societies", The New York Times. January 21, 1913.
  21. ^ "Immortals' Plan Hall of Fame Here; Women Would Be Eligible- But "Better Form a Hall of Their Own", The New York Times. November 16, 1913.
  22. ^ Google Books summary: John Updike's A Century of Arts and Letters.
  23. ^ a b "First Women Elected to Institute of Arts; Edith Wharton Among the Four Chosen — American Academy Makes Two Men Members", The New York Times. November 12, 1926.
  24. ^ The history of the National Institute of Arts & Letters and the American Academy of Arts & Letters as Told, Decade by Decade, by Eleven Members: Louis Auchincloss, Jack Beeson, Hortense Calisher, Ada Louise Huxtable, Wolf Kahn, R. W. B. Lewis, Richard Lippold, Norman Mailer, Cynthia Ozick, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.- John Updike, Editor, Columbia University Press, New York, 1998.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x "Academicians Meet Here This Week; Members of Institute Will Join Them in Sessions at the Ritz-Carlton. France to send Greeting; Concert Wherein All Works Are by American Composers Will Be Heard", The New York Times. November 12, 1916.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v "Two New Members for the Academy; Dr. Barrett Wendell and Garl Melchers, the Painter, Honored at Meeting", The New York Times. November 16, 1916.
  27. ^ American Academy of Arts and Letters: Deceased Members July 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  28. ^ "W. R. Thayer Wins Medal; J.G. Huneker and Others Elected to Arts and Letters Institute.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Academy Honors John Burroughs; Naturalist Praised by Bliss Perry and Hamlin Garland at Memorial Meeting", The New York Times, November 19, 1921.
  30. ^ "Hortense Calisher | Jewish Women's Archive". Jwa.org. Retrieved November 16, 2016.
  31. ^ Associated, The (December 10, 1987). "Arts Academy Elects Dickey and Styron". The New York Times. Retrieved November 16, 2016.
  32. ^ "Academy Members – American Academy of Arts and Letters".
  33. ^ "Bob Dylan not coming to Stockholm to accept Nobel Prize for literature". The Plain Dealer. November 16, 2016. Retrieved November 16, 2016.
  34. ^ The Los Angeles Times, May 30, 1943, p. 49.
  35. ^ "William Gaddis". Albany.edu. Retrieved November 16, 2016.
  36. ^ "Elected to Academy; Brand Whitlock and Hamlin Garland in Arts and Letters", The New York Times. January 12, 1918.
  37. ^ "Dr. Griffis, Friend of Japan, Dies; Educator Who Helped Japanese Adapt Themselves to Western Civilization", The New York Times. February 6, 1928.
  38. ^ "Hitchcock, Ripley", in Stanley Wertheim, A Stephen Crane Encyclopedia, Greenwood Press, 1997, p. 155.
  39. ^ "Huntington Gives Site for Academy; Men of Arts and Letters to Erect Building Near Riverside Drive and 155th St. Next to Hispanic Museum; National Institute and American Academy Accept Offer of Eight City Lots for Site", The New York Times. January 25, 1915.
  40. ^ Pg. 19
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on July 26, 2011. Retrieved July 30, 2011.
  42. ^ Caemmerer, H. Paul. "Charles Moore and the Plan of Washington." Records of the Columbia Historical Society. Vol. 46/47 (1944/1945): 237–258, 254.
  43. ^ Joseph Pennell, Noted Artist, Dead; Won High Honors as Etcher and Illustrator — Later Taught Art and Wrote Books", The New York Times. April 24, 1926.
  44. ^ "Academy Elects Gay and Lippman; Artist and Journalist Named to Vacancies Left by Deaths of Platt and Shorey", The New York Times. November 9, 1934.
  45. ^ Schoenberg, Arnold (1987). Stern, Erwin (ed.). Arnold Schoenberg Letters. University of California Press. p. 244. ISBN 9780520060098.
  46. ^ "Would Encourage Study of Classics; Academy of Arts and Letters Suggests Courses for Schools and Colleges; Sees Aid to Civilization; Resolution Says Opposite Policy Would Lower the Culture of the American People", The New York Times. December 16, 1918.
  47. ^ "Streep would like to thank the (arts) academy" "DesMoines Register." April 12, 2010.
  48. ^ "Mr. Lorado Taft Dies; Leading Sculptor; Creator of Some of Country's Outstanding Monuments is Stricken at 76; Was Teacher in Chicago; Fountain of Time and Columbus Memorial in Washington Among Chief Works", The New York Times. October 31, 1936.
  49. ^ . Artsandletters.org. Archived from the original on July 26, 2011. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
  50. ^ . Artsandletters.org. Archived from the original on July 26, 2011. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
  51. ^ van Gelder, Lawrence. "Arts Briefing: American Academy Honors", The New York Times. May 19, 2003.
  52. ^ van Gelder, Lawrence. "Arts, Briefly: American Academy Picks Caro and Trillin", The New York Times. April 17, 2008.
  53. ^ "Awards – American Academy of Arts and Letters". artsandletters.org. Retrieved March 10, 2023.
  54. ^ a b . American Academy of Arts and Letters. Archived from the original on September 14, 2010. Retrieved October 7, 2010.
  55. ^ Hetrick, Adam (March 12, 2009). "Richard Rodgers Awards Honor Cheer Wars and Rosa Parks Musicals". Playbill. Retrieved August 3, 2022.
Sources

External links

american, academy, arts, letters, member, honor, society, whose, goal, foster, assist, sustain, excellence, american, literature, music, fixed, number, membership, elected, lifetime, appointments, headquarters, washington, heights, neighborhood, manhattan, yor. The American Academy of Arts and Letters is a 300 member honor society whose goal is to foster assist and sustain excellence in American literature music and art Its fixed number membership is elected for lifetime appointments Its headquarters is in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City It shares Audubon Terrace a Beaux Arts American Renaissance complex on Broadway between West 155th and 156th Streets with the Hispanic Society of America and Boricua College Audubon Terrace the campus that the academy shares The academy s galleries are open to the public on a published schedule Exhibits include an annual exhibition of paintings sculptures photographs and works on paper by contemporary artists nominated by its members and an annual exhibition of works by newly elected members and recipients of honors and awards A permanent exhibit of the recreated studio of composer Charles Ives was opened in 2014 1 The auditorium is sought out by musicians and engineers wishing to record live as the acoustics are considered among the city s finest Hundreds of commercial recordings have been made there 2 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Federally chartered corporation 2 Buildings 3 Membership 3 1 Current academicians 4 Awards 4 1 Award for Distinguished Service to the Arts 4 2 Other awards 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditEarly years Edit The American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters was formed from three parent organizations The first the American Social Science Association was founded in 1865 at Boston The second was the National Institute of Arts and Letters which ASSA s membership created in 1898 The qualification for membership in the NIAL was notable achievement in art music or literature The NIAL s membership was at first limited to 150 all men The third organization was the American Academy of Arts which NIAL s membership created in 1904 as a preeminent national arts institution styling itself after the French Academy The AAA s first seven academicians were elected from ballots cast by the NIAL membership They were William Dean Howells Samuel L Clemens Edmund Clarence Stedman and John Hay representing literature Augustus Saint Gaudens and John La Farge representing art and Edward MacDowell representing music 4 The NIAL membership increased in 1904 with the introduction of a two tiered structure 50 academicians and 200 regular members Academicians were gradually elected over the next several years The elite group academicians were called the Academy and the larger group regular members was called the Institute This strict two tiered system persisted for 72 years 1904 76 In 1908 poet Julia Ward Howe was elected to the AAA becoming the first female academician 5 In 1976 the NIAL and AAA merged under the name American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters The combined Academy Institute structure had a maximum of 250 living U S citizens as members plus up to 75 foreign composers artists and writers as honorary members It also established the annual Witter Bynner Poetry Prize in 1980 to support young poets The election of foreign honorary members persisted until 1993 when it was abandoned Federally chartered corporation Edit The Academy holds a Congressional charter under Title 36 of the United States Code 42 USC 20301 et seq making it one of the country s comparatively rare Title 36 corporations 6 The 1916 statute of incorporation established this institution among a small number of other similarly chartered patriotic and national organizations 7 The federal incorporation was originally construed primarily as an honor The special recognition neither implies nor accords Congress any special control over the Academy which functions independently 8 Active sponsors of Congressional action were Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts and former President Theodore Roosevelt 9 The process that led to the creation of this federal charter was controversial 10 and the first attempt to gain the charter in 1910 failed 11 Lodge reintroduced legislation which passed the Senate in 1913 12 The Academy was incorporated under the laws of the State of New York in 1914 13 which resulted in Congressional approval in 1916 14 Buildings Edit The bronze entrance doors to the administration building on West 155th Street were designed by Academy member Adolph Alexander Weinman and are dedicated to the memory of Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman and to the women writers of the United States 15 The Academy occupies three buildings on the west end of the Audubon Terrace complex created by Archer M Huntington the heir to the Southern Pacific Railroad fortune and a noted philanthropist To help convince the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the National Institute of Arts and Letters which were separate but related organizations at the time to move to the complex Huntington established building funds and endowments for both 15 The first building on the complex s south side along West 155th Street was designed by William M Kendall of McKim Mead amp White Kendall was also a member of the Academy This Anglo Italian Renaissance 16 administration building was designed in 1921 and opened in 1923 15 On the north side another building housing an auditorium and gallery was designed by Cass Gilbert also an Academy member and built in 1928 30 15 16 These additions to the complex necessitated considerable alterations to the Audubon Terrace plaza which were designed by McKim Mead amp White 15 In 2007 the American Numismatic Society which had occupied a Charles P Huntington designed building immediately to the east of the Academy s original building vacated that space to move to smaller quarters downtown This building which incorporates a 1929 addition designed by H Brooks Price 15 became the Academy s Annex and houses additional gallery space 16 In 2009 the space between the Annex and the administration building was turned into a new entrance link designed by Vincent Czajka with Pei Cobb Freed amp Partners 16 Membership EditMembers of the Academy are chosen for life and have included some of the American art scene s leading figures They are organized into committees that award annual prizes to up and coming artists 17 Although the names of some of the organization s members may not be well known today each was well known in their time Greatness and pettiness are demonstrable among the Academy members even during the first decade when William James declined his nomination on the grounds that his little brother Henry had been elected first 18 One of the giants of the academy in his time Robert Underwood Johnson casts a decades long shadow in his one man war against encroaching modernism blackballing such writers as H L Mencken F Scott Fitzgerald and T S Eliot before his emigration to England disqualified him for full membership 19 Former Harvard president Charles William Eliot declined election to the Academy because he was already in so many societies that he didn t want to add to the number 20 Although never explicitly excluded women were not elected to membership in the early years 21 The admission of Julia Ward Howe in January 1908 at age 88 as the first woman in the Academy was only one incident in the intense debate about the consideration of female members 22 In 1926 the election of four women Edith Wharton Margaret Deland Agnes Repplier and Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman was said to have marked the letting down of the bars to women 23 Below is a partial list of past members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and its successor institution the National Institute and Academy of Arts and Letters 24 Henry Brooks Adams 25 Herbert Adams 26 Henry Mills Alden 25 Nelson Algren Hannah Arendt Newton Arvin 27 Wystan Hugh Auden Paul Wayland Bartlett 26 Chester Beach 28 Stephen Vincent Benet William Rose Benet Edwin Howland Blashfield 26 William Brownell 26 George de Forest Brush 25 John Burroughs 29 William S Burroughs Nicholas Murray Butler 26 George Washington Cable 26 Hortense Calisher 30 Joseph Campbell 31 George Whitefield Chadwick 26 William Merritt Chase 26 Chou Wen chung Timothy Cole 25 Billy Collins 32 Kenyon Cox 25 John Dos Passos Bob Dylan 33 Thomas Harlan Ellett 34 Stanley Elkin Duke Ellington Ralph Ellison Daniel Chester French 26 William Gaddis 35 Hamlin Garland 36 Charles Dana Gibson 29 Cass Gilbert 25 Richard Watson Gilder Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve 25 Brendan Gill William Gillette 26 Daniel Coit Gilman Allen Ginsberg Bertram G Goodhue Robert Grant 25 William Elliot Griffis 37 Arthur Twining Hadley 26 Childe Hassam 29 Thomas Hastings 26 Anthony Hecht David Jayne Hill 29 Ripley Hitchcock 38 Cecil de Blaquiere Howard Julia Ward Howe William Henry Howe William Dean Howells 26 Archer Milton Huntington 39 Charles Ives Henry James 26 Robert Underwood Johnson Louis I Kahn Kenneth Koch Maxine Kumin Sinclair Lewis Roy Lichtenstein Henry Cabot Lodge 25 Abbott Lawrence Lowell 25 Mary McCarthy Hamilton Wright Mabie 25 Archibald MacLeish Frederick William MacMonnies 25 J D McClatchy Brander Matthews 25 William Keepers Maxwell Jr 40 William Rutherford Mead 26 Gari Melchers 26 Willard Metcalf 41 Edna St Vincent Millay Charles Moore 42 Douglas Moore Paul Elmer More 25 Robert Motherwell Georgia O Keeffe Thomas N Page 25 Horatio Parker 25 Joseph Pennell 43 Bliss Perry 25 William Lyon Phelps Charles Adams Platt 44 Ezra Pound James Ford Rhodes 26 James Whitcomb Riley 26 George Lockhart Rives 25 Elihu Root 29 Theodore Roosevelt 25 Mark Rothko Eero Saarinen Carl Sandburg John Singer Sargent 25 Meyer Schapiro Arnold Schoenberg 45 Harry Rowe Shelley Stuart Sherman 23 Robert E Sherwood Paul Shorey 46 William Milligan Sloane 26 Wallace Stevens Meryl Streep 47 Lorado Taft 48 Josef Tal 49 Booth Tarkington 29 Abbott Handerson Thayer 29 William Roscoe Thayer 26 Augustus Thomas 26 Virgil Thomson Lionel Trilling Henry van Dyke 25 John Charles Van Dyke Elihu Vedder 29 Kurt Vonnegut 50 Julian Alden Weir 26 Barrett Wendell 29 Edith Wharton Andrew Dickson White 25 Thornton Wilder Brand Whitlock 29 William Carlos Williams Woodrow Wilson 29 Owen Wister 25 George Edward Woodberry 25 Frank Lloyd Wright James A Wright Current academicians Edit Main articles List of members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters Department of Literature List of members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters Department of Art and List of members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters Department of MusicAwards EditAward for Distinguished Service to the Arts Edit The award a certificate and 1 000 goes to a United States resident who has rendered notable service to the arts This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources 2003 Leon Botstein 51 2008 Judith Jamison 52 Other awards Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The academy gives out numerous awards with recipients chosen by committees of Academy members Candidates for awards must be nominated by Academy members except for the Richard Rodgers awards for which an application may be submitted Arts and Letters Award formerly the Academy Award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters In 1941 the Academy established awards to encourage creative work in the arts Now 10 000 each Academy Awards are given annually five to artists eight to writers four to composers and three to architects 53 Marc Blitzstein Award The 5 000 award is given periodically to a composer lyricist or librettist to encourage the creation of works of merit for musical theater and opera The award was established in 1965 by the friends of Marc Blitzstein an Academy member Michael Braude Award for Light Verse The 5 000 biennial award is given for light verse written in English regardless of the country of origin of the writer Arnold W Brunner Memorial Prize The annual prize of 5 000 goes to an architect of any nationality who has made a contribution to architecture as an art Benjamin H Danks Award The 20 000 award is given in rotation to a composer of ensemble works a playwright and a writer fiction nonfiction poetry Since 2002 the Academy has administered the prize established by Roy Lyndon Danks in honor of his father Benjamin Hadley Danks Jimmy Ernst Award Established by Dallas Ernst in memory of her husband the Jimmy Ernst Award of 5 000 is given to a painter or sculptor whose lifetime contribution to his or her vision has been both consistent and dedicated 54 The award has been presented annually since 1990 54 E M Forster Award E M Forster a foreign honorary member of the Academy bequeathed the U S royalties of his posthumous novel Maurice to Christopher Isherwood who transferred them to the Academy to establish this 15 000 award It is given to a young English writer for an extended visit to the United States American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medals Each year the Academy awards Gold Medals for distinguished achievement in two categories in rotation The Gold Medal is given for the entire work of the recipient Belles Lettres Criticism Essays and Painting Biography and Music Fiction and Sculpture History and Architecture including landscape architecture Poetry and Music Drama and Graphic Art Walter Hinrichsen Award The Walter Hinrichsen Award is given for the publication of a work by a mid career American composer William Dean Howells Medal This award is given every five years in recognition of the most distinguished American novel published during that period It was established in 1925 The Charles Ives Prize Six scholarships of 7 500 and two fellowships of 15 000 are now given annually to young composers In 1998 the Academy established the Charles Ives Living an award of 75 000 a year for a period of three years given to an American composer The award s purpose is to free a promising talent from the need to devote his or her time to any employment other than music composition during that period The Charles Ives Opera Prize In 2008 the Academy awarded the inaugural Charles Ives Opera Prize of 50 000 to be given from time to time to a composer and a librettist for a recently produced opera It is America s largest vocal music award Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction The 5 000 prize is given for the best published first novel or collection of short stories in the preceding year Wladimir and Rhoda Lakond Award an annual award of 5 000 given either to a composition student or an experienced composer Goddard Lieberson Fellowships Two Goddard Lieberson Fellowships of 15 000 are given annually to young composers of extraordinary gifts The CBS Foundation endowed the fellowships in memory of Lieberson the late president of CBS Records Russell Loines Award for Poetry American Academy of Arts and Letters Award of Merit The Award of Merit a medal and 10 000 is given each year in rotation to an outstanding person in America representing painting the short story sculpture the novel poetry and drama Metcalf Awards In 1986 the Academy received a bequest from Addison M Metcalf son of the late member Willard L Metcalf for two awards to honor young writers and artists of great promise The Willard L Metcalf Award in Art and the Addison M Metcalf Award in Literature are biennial awards of 10 000 Katherine Anne Porter Award This biennial award of 20 000 goes to a prose writer who has demonstrated achievements and dedication to the literary profession Arthur Rense Prize In 1998 this 20 000 award was established to honor an exceptional poet every third year Richard Rodgers Awards for Musical Theater These awards subsidize full productions studio productions and staged readings of musicals put on by nonprofit theaters in New York City The plays are by composers and writers who are not already established These are the only awards for which the Academy accepts applications 55 Rome Prize in Literature Every year the Academy selects and partly subsidizes two young writers for a one year residence at the American Academy in Rome Richard and Hinda Rosenthal Foundation Awards Each of these two awards are for 5 000 The first established in 1956 is for a fiction work of considerable literary achievement published in the previous year The second created in 1959 is for a young painter who has not yet been accorded due recognition Medal for Spoken Language This medal awarded from time to time recognizes individuals who set a standard of excellence in the use of spoken language The Mildred and Harold Strauss Livings These Livings provide an annual stipend of 50 000 a year for five years awarded to two writers of English prose literature to enable them to devote their time exclusively to writing Harold D Vursell Memorial Award This 10 000 award is given each year to honor a writer of recent prose that merits recognition for the quality of its style Morton Dauwen Zabel Award This 10 000 biennial award is given in rotation to a poet writer of fiction or critic of progressive original and experimental tendencies References EditNotes The American Academy Of Arts And Letters Announces The Opening Of The Charles Ives Studio American Academy of Arts and Letters Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 31 2015 John Updike ed A Century of Arts amp Letters Columbia University Press 1998 p 263 Barbara S Christen and Steven Flanders eds Cass Gilbert Life and Work Architect of the Public Domain W W Norton and Company 2001 p 12 Aims of National Academy Organization Formed to Promote Art Music and Literature The New York Times January 23 1909 First woman elected to American Academy of Arts and Letters Jan 28 1908 Moe Ronald C Congressionally Chartered Nonprofit Organizations Title 36 Corporations What They Are and How Congress Treats Them Archived October 30 2008 at the Wayback Machine Congressional Research Service CRS Report to Congress Order Code RL30340 April 8 2004 What is a congressional charter Knight Ridder Newspapers December 12 2007 Kosar Kevin R Congressional or Federal Charters Overview and Current Issues Archived June 27 2012 at the Wayback Machine Congressional Research Service CRS Report to Congress Order Code RS22230 January 23 2007 Slur on the Immortals Lodge s Proposed Institutions Shorn of Glory The New York Times January 19 1909 Official Action Just Taken Contemplates American Federation The Movement to Advance Arts and Letters in America The New York Times January 24 1909 A Charterless Academy The New York Times February 28 1910 Two New Art Societies Senator Lodge Introduces Bills Providing for Their Incorporation The New York Times January 19 1913 Arts Academy Chartered Membership Never to Exceed 50 William Dean Howells President The New York Times June 11 1914 Walnerth Charles et al Greetings to the American Academy of Arts and Letters The New York Times August 25 1916 a b c d e f New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission Audubon Terrace Historic District Designation Report January 9 1979 a b c d White Norval Willensky Elliot Leadon Fran 2010 AIA Guide to New York City 5th ed New York Oxford University Press pp 558 561 ISBN 978 0 19538 386 7 Rival to the Great French Academy Limited to 50 Members Receives Official Recognition From the U S Senate Something About Those on the Original List The New York Times January 26 1913 Editorial Review of Updike s A Century of Arts and Letters Editorial Reviews Amazon com Editorial Review of John Updike s A Century of Arts and Letters Alan Weakland writing in Booklist Eliot not in Academy Harvard s President Emeritus Said He Was in Too Many Societies The New York Times January 21 1913 Immortals Plan Hall of Fame Here Women Would Be Eligible But Better Form a Hall of Their Own The New York Times November 16 1913 Google Books summary John Updike s A Century of Arts and Letters a b First Women Elected to Institute of Arts Edith Wharton Among the Four Chosen American Academy Makes Two Men Members The New York Times November 12 1926 The history of the National Institute of Arts amp Letters and the American Academy of Arts amp Letters as Told Decade by Decade by Eleven Members Louis Auchincloss Jack Beeson Hortense Calisher Ada Louise Huxtable Wolf Kahn R W B Lewis Richard Lippold Norman Mailer Cynthia Ozick Arthur Schlesinger Jr John Updike Editor Columbia University Press New York 1998 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Academicians Meet Here This Week Members of Institute Will Join Them in Sessions at the Ritz Carlton France to send Greeting Concert Wherein All Works Are by American Composers Will Be Heard The New York Times November 12 1916 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Two New Members for the Academy Dr Barrett Wendell and Garl Melchers the Painter Honored at Meeting The New York Times November 16 1916 American Academy of Arts and Letters Deceased Members Archived July 26 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 5 2010 W R Thayer Wins Medal J G Huneker and Others Elected to Arts and Letters Institute a b c d e f g h i j k Academy Honors John Burroughs Naturalist Praised by Bliss Perry and Hamlin Garland at Memorial Meeting The New York Times November 19 1921 Hortense Calisher Jewish Women s Archive Jwa org Retrieved November 16 2016 Associated The December 10 1987 Arts Academy Elects Dickey and Styron The New York Times Retrieved November 16 2016 Academy Members American Academy of Arts and Letters Bob Dylan not coming to Stockholm to accept Nobel Prize for literature The Plain Dealer November 16 2016 Retrieved November 16 2016 The Los Angeles Times May 30 1943 p 49 William Gaddis Albany edu Retrieved November 16 2016 Elected to Academy Brand Whitlock and Hamlin Garland in Arts and Letters The New York Times January 12 1918 Dr Griffis Friend of Japan Dies Educator Who Helped Japanese Adapt Themselves to Western Civilization The New York Times February 6 1928 Hitchcock Ripley in Stanley Wertheim A Stephen Crane Encyclopedia Greenwood Press 1997 p 155 Huntington Gives Site for Academy Men of Arts and Letters to Erect Building Near Riverside Drive and 155th St Next to Hispanic Museum National Institute and American Academy Accept Offer of Eight City Lots for Site The New York Times January 25 1915 Pg 19 American Academy of Arts and Letters Deceased Members Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved July 30 2011 Caemmerer H Paul Charles Moore and the Plan of Washington Records of the Columbia Historical Society Vol 46 47 1944 1945 237 258 254 Joseph Pennell Noted Artist Dead Won High Honors as Etcher and Illustrator Later Taught Art and Wrote Books The New York Times April 24 1926 Academy Elects Gay and Lippman Artist and Journalist Named to Vacancies Left by Deaths of Platt and Shorey The New York Times November 9 1934 Schoenberg Arnold 1987 Stern Erwin ed Arnold Schoenberg Letters University of California Press p 244 ISBN 9780520060098 Would Encourage Study of Classics Academy of Arts and Letters Suggests Courses for Schools and Colleges Sees Aid to Civilization Resolution Says Opposite Policy Would Lower the Culture of the American People The New York Times December 16 1918 Streep would like to thank the arts academy DesMoines Register April 12 2010 Mr Lorado Taft Dies Leading Sculptor Creator of Some of Country s Outstanding Monuments is Stricken at 76 Was Teacher in Chicago Fountain of Time and Columbus Memorial in Washington Among Chief Works The New York Times October 31 1936 American Academy of Arts and Letters Deceased Members Artsandletters org Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved August 13 2012 American Academy of Arts and Letters Deceased Members Artsandletters org Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved August 13 2012 van Gelder Lawrence Arts Briefing American Academy Honors The New York Times May 19 2003 van Gelder Lawrence Arts Briefly American Academy Picks Caro and Trillin The New York Times April 17 2008 Awards American Academy of Arts and Letters artsandletters org Retrieved March 10 2023 a b Jimmy Ernst Award American Academy of Arts and Letters Archived from the original on September 14 2010 Retrieved October 7 2010 Hetrick Adam March 12 2009 Richard Rodgers Awards Honor Cheer Wars and Rosa Parks Musicals Playbill Retrieved August 3 2022 SourcesLewis Richard W B 1998 1898 1907 The Founder s Story in A Century of Arts amp Letters John Updike ed New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 10248 3 cloth External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to American Academy of Arts and Letters American Academy of Arts amp Letters official website Cornell Legal Institute Title 36 gt Subtitle II gt Part B gt Chapter 203 gt 20301 et seq easiest to read United States House of Representatives 36 USC Chapter 203 United States Government Publishing Office GPO US Code Title 36 Chapter 203 revised 4701 et seq 1916 1998 American Academy of Arts and Letters records 1864 1942 from the Smithsonian Archives of American Art Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Academy of Arts and Letters amp oldid 1144613449, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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