ARTS FIRST is an annual arts festival held at Harvard University over four days at the end of the spring semester. It includes live performances (music, dance, theater, poetry readings, comedy, fashion, and more) as well as art exhibitions and art-making activities. It was founded by alum John Lithgow and Office for the Arts Director Myra Mayman in 1994 to honor the artistic community at Harvard, and is run by Harvard's Office for the Arts (OFA). [1] The festival is a public event and many of the events are free.
All Harvard affiliates (undergraduates, graduate students, faculty, staff, and alumni/ae) may apply to perform and exhibit artwork during ARTS FIRST. Performing ensembles may include non-Harvard affiliates, as long as at least one performer is a Harvard affiliate. [2]
The festival involves up to 2,000 artists, giving over 100 performances and exhibitions. [3]
Volunteers are recruited to assist in running the festival. They are not required to be affiliated with Harvard University. [2]
Some funding is provided for selected Public Art projects in Harvard Yard. ARTS FIRST Performance Fair performances are directly given a free venue, publicity, and production support, instead of funding. [2]
The Performance Fair includes opera, [4] dance, [5] music of many genres, [6] stand-up and improv comedy, theater, poetry and experimental performances.
The festival includes exhibitions of public art in Harvard Yard and other locations around the campus. Works include sculpture, installations, or installations with performance/video components and film/video. [7]
Student projects that are selected for exhibition in Harvard Yard receive supporting guidance from a professional visual artist. [2]
The Harvard Arts Medal is an annual award established in 1995 to recognize "excellence and demonstrated achievement in the arts by a Harvard or Radcliffe alumnus/a or faculty member." [8] The medal is given to an individual who has achieved distinction in the arts and who has made a special contribution to the good of the arts, to the public good in relation to the arts, or to education. [9] It is awarded on the recommendation of a committee of (Harvard) faculty, alumni and administrators, by the Office of Governing Boards and the president of Harvard.
During a 2012 interview discussing his part in initiating the Harvard ARTS FIRST annual festival, John Lithgow said, "In 1995, I proposed the Harvard Arts Medal. The idea was to celebrate the fact that, although it’s rare, Harvard men and women do go into the creative arts." [10]
The recipient of the annual Harvard Arts Medal is announced during the course of the festival. [11]
Arts Medal year | Recipient |
---|---|
1995 | Jack Lemmon ‘47 |
1996 | Pete Seeger ‘40 |
1997 | Bonnie Raitt ‘72 |
1998 | John Updike ‘54 |
1999 | David Hays ‘52 |
2000 | John Harbison ‘60 |
2001 | Peter Sellars ‘80 |
2002 | William Christie ‘66 |
2003 | Mira Nair ‘79 |
2004 | Yo-Yo Ma ‘76 |
2005 | Maxine Kumin ‘46 |
2006 | Christopher Durang ‘71 |
2007 | John Adams ’69 MA ‘72 |
2008 | Joshua Redman '91 |
2009 | Fred Ho '79 and John Ashbery '49 |
2010 | Catherine Lord '70 |
2011 | Susan Meiselas Ed.M. ’71 |
2012 | Tommy Lee Jones '69 |
2013 | Matt Damon '92 |
2014 | Margaret Atwood AM '62, Litt.D. '04 |
2015 | Damian Woetzel MPA '07 [12] |
2016 | Frank Gehry GSD '57 ArD '00 |
2017 | John Lithgow '67 & '07 [13] |
2018 | Colson Whitehead '91 [14] |
2019 | Tracy K. Smith '94 [9] [15] |
2022 | Rubén Blades LL.M. '85 [16] |
2023 | Adrian Margaret Smith Piper AM ’77, PhD ’81 [17] |
2024 | Kevin Young '92 [18] |
Yo-Yo Ma is an American cellist. Born to and partially raised by Chinese parents in Paris and educated in New York City, he was a child prodigy, performing from the age of four and a half. Ma graduated from the Juilliard School and Harvard University, attended Columbia University, and has performed as a soloist with orchestras worldwide. He has recorded more than 92 albums and received 19 Grammy Awards.
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