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Berliner Kunstpreis

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The awards ceremony of the Berliner Kunstpreis in 1963, from left to right: Klaus Kammer, Fritz Kortner, Rolf Hochhuth

The Berliner Kunstpreis (Berlin Art Prize), officially Großer Berliner Kunstpreis, is a prize for the arts by the City of Berlin. It was first awarded in 1948 in several fields of art. Since 1971, it has been awarded by the Academy of Arts (Akademie der Künste) on behalf of the Senate of Berlin. Annually one of its six sections, fine arts, architecture, music, literature, performing arts and film and media arts, gives the great prize, endowed with €15,000, whereas the other five sections annually award prizes endowed with €5,000.

History

The Berlin Art Prize has been awarded since 1948 in commemoration of the March Revolution of 1848. The official name then, Berliner Kunstpreis – Jubiläumsstiftung 1848/1948 (Berlin Art Prize - 1848/1948 Jubilee Foundation), was used until 1969, the ceremony was held by the Mayor in the Charlottenburg Palace.

The prize was planned to be awarded first on 18 March 1948 by the City Berlinale, to commemorate the March Revolution and the revolutionaries who fell for a new state (für einen neuen Staat gefallenen Revolutionäre). The first prize winners of 1948, shortly before the currency reform, who received awards of 10,000 Mark, were the sculptor Renée Sintenis and the composers Ernst Pepping and Wolfgang Fortner. The then-Senator of Education awarded the prize without consulting a jury.

In 1949 a constitution was drafted. The prize (per section DM 3,000.00) should be awarded annually for achievements in literature, music, painting, graphic and performing arts. As a result, changes were made regarding the divisions, the division between several winners and the award criteria. From the mid-1950s, the ceremony was always accompanied by criticism.

Since 1971, the prize is awarded by the Academy of Arts. The Academy awards the prize annually in alternating intervals of its six sections in the order of fine arts, architecture, music, literature, performing arts and film and media arts. The Arts Award for "Film and Media Arts" award since 1984 and from 1956 to 1983, there were instead the Arts Award for "Radio-Television-Film." The prize, awarded every six years by the literature section was named in 2010 the Fontane Prize.

Selected Great Prize recipients

Selected prize recipients

Recipients are typically listed in the sequence "Bildende Kunst" (art), "Baukunst" (architecture), "Musik" (music), "Darstellende Kunst" (performing art), "Film-Hörfunk-Fernsehen" (media)

References

  1. ^ "Großer Kunstpreis Berlin an Claire Denis". Der Standard. Vienna. APA/dpa. 26 January 2011. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  2. ^ "Großer Kunstpreis Berlin geht an südkoreanische Komponistin Younghi Pagh-Paan". neue musikzeitung. Regensburg. dpa. 10 January 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  3. ^ "Berliner Kunstpreis für Anett Gröschner". Süddeutsche.de (in German). 22 January 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Annett Gröschner erhält den Großen Kunstpreis Berlin 2021". www.adk.de (in German). Retrieved 26 January 2021.

Official website