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Two American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medals are awarded each year by the academy for distinguished achievement. The two awards are taken in rotation from these categories:

  • Belles Lettres and Criticism, and Painting;
  • Biography and Music;
  • Fiction and Sculpture;
  • History and Architecture, including Landscape Architecture;
  • Poetry and Music;
  • Drama and Graphic Art.

The Academy voted in 1915 to establish an additional Gold Medal for "special distinction" to be given for the entire work of the recipient who is not a member of the academy.[1] The first of these occasional lifetime achievement gold medals was awarded in the next year to former Harvard President, Charles Eliot.[2]

Awards in individual categories are listed below (in alphabetical order) followed by a list of all prizes in reverse chronological order:

Special distinction[]

  • 1916Charles William Eliot[2]

Architecture[]

  • 2008Richard Meier[3]
  • 2002Frank O. Gehry
  • 1996Philip Johnson
  • 1999Kevin Roche
  • 1984Gordon Bunshaft
  • 1979I. M. Pei
  • 1973Louis I. Kahn
  • 1968R. Buckminster Fuller
  • 1963Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
  • 1958Henry R. Shepley
  • 1953Frank Lloyd Wright
  • 1949Frederick Law Olmsted
  • 1940William Adams Delano
  • 1930Charles Adams Platt
  • 1921Cass Gilbert
  • 1912William Rutherford Mead[4]

Belles lettres, criticism, essays[]

Biography[]

Drama[]

Fiction, novel, short story[]

Graphic art[]

  • 1998Frank Stella
  • 1992David Levine
  • 1986Jasper Johns
  • 1980Peggy Bacon
  • 1974Saul Steinberg
  • 1969Leonard Baskin
  • 1964Ben Shahn
  • 1959George Grosz
  • 1954Reginald Marsh
  • 1948Bruce Rogers

History[]

Music[]

  • 2006Stephen Sondheim
  • 2003Ned Rorem[10]
  • 2000Lukas Foss
  • 1997Gunther Schuller
  • 1994Hugo Weisgall
  • 1991David Diamond
  • 1988Milton Babbitt
  • 1985Leonard Bernstein
  • 1982William Schuman
  • 1976Samuel Barber
  • 1971Elliott Carter
  • 1966Virgil Thomson
  • 1961Rogers H. Sessions
  • 1956Aaron Copland
  • 1951Igor Stravinsky
  • 1947John Alden Carpenter
  • 1942Ernest Bloch
  • 1938Walter Damrosch
  • 1928George W. Chadwick
  • 1919Charles Martin Loeffler

Painting[]

  • 2005Jane Freilicher
  • 1999Robert Rauschenberg
  • 1993Richard Diebenkorn
  • 1987Isabel Bishop
  • 1981Raphael Soyer
  • 1975Willem De Kooning
  • 1970Georgia O'Keeffe
  • 1965Wyeth
  • 1960Charles E. Burchfield
  • 1955Edward Hopper
  • 1950John Sloan
  • 1942Cecilia Beaux
  • 1932Gari Melchers
  • 1925Cecilia Beaux
  • 1923Edwin Howland Blashfield
  • 1914John Singer Sargent

Poetry[]

Sculpture[]

  • 2007Martin Puryear[7]
  • 2001Richard Serra
  • 1995George Rickey
  • 1989Louise Bourgeois
  • 1983Louise Nevelson
  • 1977Isamu Noguchi
  • 1971Alexander Calder
  • 1966Jacques Lipchitz
  • 1961William Zorach
  • 1956Ivan Mestrovic
  • 1951James Earle Fraser
  • 1945Paul Manship
  • 1936George Grey Barnard
  • 1930Anna Hyatt Huntington
  • 1926Herbert Adams
  • 1917Daniel Chester French
  • 1909Augustus Saint-Gaudens[11]

All winners[]

  • 2008Richard Meier, architecture.[3]
  • 2008Edmund S. Morgan, history.[3]
  • 2007Martin Puryear, Sculpture.[7]
  • 2006Robert Caro, Biography.
  • 2006Stephen Sondheim, Music.
  • 2005Joan Didion, Belles Lettres and Criticism.[5]
  • 2005Jane Freilicher, Painting.
  • 2004John Guare, Drama.
  • 2004Chuck Close, Graphic Art.
  • 2003Ned Rorem, Music.[10]
  • 2002Frank O. Gehry, Architecture
  • 2002John Hope Franklin, History
  • 2001Philip Roth, Fiction
  • 2001Richard Serra, Sculpture
  • 2000R. W. B. Lewis, Biography
  • 2000Lukas Foss, Music
  • 1999Robert Rauschenberg, Painting
  • 1998Horton Foote, Drama
  • 1998Frank Stella, Graphic Art
  • 1997Gunther Schuller, Music
  • 1996Peter Gay, History
  • 1996Philip Johnson, Architecture
  • 1995William Maxwell, Fiction
  • 1995George Rickey, Sculpture
  • 1994Walter Jackson Bate, Biography
  • 1994Hugo Weisgall, Music
  • 1993Richard Diebenkorn, Painting
  • 1993Elizabeth Hardwick, Belles Lettres/Criticism
  • 1992David Levine, Graphic Art
  • 1992Sam Shepard, Drama
  • 1991David Diamond, Music
  • 1999Kevin Roche, Architecture
  • 1990C. Vann Woodward, History
  • 1989Louise Bourgeois, Sculpture
  • 1988Milton Babbitt, Music
  • 1988James Thomas Flexner, Biography
  • 1987Jacques Barzun, Belles Lettres
  • 1987Isabel Bishop, Painting
  • 1986Jasper Johns, Graphic Art
  • 1986Sidney Kingsley, Drama
  • 1985Leonard Bernstein, Music
  • 1984Gordon Bunshaft, Architecture
  • 1984George F. Kennan, History
  • 1983Louise Nevelson, Sculpture
  • 1982William Schuman, Music
  • 1982Francis Steegmuller, Biography
  • 1982Bernard Malamud, Fiction
  • 1981Raphael Soyer, Painting
  • 1980Edward Albee, Drama
  • 1980Peggy Bacon, Graphic Art
  • 1979I. M. Pei, Architecture
  • 1978Peter Taylor, Short Story
  • 1978Barbara W. Tuchman, History
  • 1977Saul Bellow, Novel
  • 1977Isamu Noguchi, Sculpture
  • 1976Samuel Barber, Music
  • 1975Willem De Kooning, Painting
  • 1974Saul Steinberg, Graphic Art
  • 1973Louis I. Kahn, Architecture
  • 1972Henry Steele Commager, History
  • 1972Eudora Welty, Novel
  • 1971Alexander Calder, Sculpture
  • 1971Elliott Carter, Music
  • 1970Lewis Mumford, Belles Lettres
  • 1970Georgia O'Keeffe, Painting
  • 1969Leonard Baskin, Graphic Art
  • 1968R. Buckminster Fuller, Architecture
  • 1967Katherine Anne Porter, Fiction
  • 1967Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., History
  • 1966Jacques Lipchitz, Sculpture
  • 1966Virgil Thomson, Music
  • 1965Walter Lippmann, Essays
  • 1965Wyeth, Painting
  • 1964Lillian Hellman, Drama
  • 1964Ben Shahn, Graphic Art
  • 1963Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Architecture
  • 1962Samuel Eliot Morison, History
  • 1961Rogers H. Sessions, Music
  • 1961William Zorach, Sculpture
  • 1960Charles E. Burchfield, Painting
  • 1960E. B. White, Essays
  • 1959George Grosz, Graphic Art
  • 1959Arthur Miller, Drama
  • 1958Henry R. Shepley, Architecture
  • 1957Allan Nevins, History
  • 1956Aaron Copland, Music
  • 1956Ivan Mestrovic, Sculpture
  • 1955Edward Hopper, Painting
  • 1954Maxwell Anderson, Drama
  • 1954Reginald Marsh, Graphic Art
  • 1953Frank Lloyd Wright, Architecture
  • 1952Thornton Wilder, Fiction
  • 1951James Earle Fraser, Sculpture
  • 1951Igor Stravinsky, Music
  • 1950H. L. Mencken, Essays
  • 1950John Sloan, Painting
  • 1949Frederick Law Olmsted, Architecture
  • 1948Charles Austin Beard, History
  • 1948Bruce Rogers, Graphic Arts
  • 1947John Alden Carpenter, Music
  • 1945Paul Manship, Sculpture
  • 1942Cecilia Beaux, Painting
  • 1942Ernest Bloch, Music
  • 1941Robert E. Sherwood, Drama
  • 1940William Adams Delano, Architecture
  • 1938Walter Damrosch, Music
  • 1937Charles M. Andrews, History
  • 1936George Grey Barnard, Sculpture
  • 1935Agnes Repplier, Belles Lettres
  • 1933Booth Tarkington, Fiction
  • 1932Gari Melchers, Painting
  • 1931William Gillette, Drama
  • 1930Charles Adams Platt, Architecture
  • 1930Anna Hyatt Huntington, Sculpture
  • 1928George W. Chadwick, Music
  • 1927William M. Sloane, History
  • 1926Herbert Adams, Sculpture
  • 1925Cecilia Beaux, Painting
  • 1925William Crary Brownell, Belles Lettres
  • 1923Edwin Howland Blashfield, Painting
  • 1923Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Fiction.[8]
  • 1921Cass Gilbert, Architecture
  • 1919Charles Martin Loeffler, Music
  • 1917Daniel Chester French, Sculpture
  • 1916Charles William Eliot, Special distinction.[2]
  • 1914John Singer Sargent, Painting
  • 1913Augustus Thomas, Drama.[6]
  • 1912William Rutherford Mead, Architecture.[4]
  • 1910James Ford Rhodes, History
  • 1909Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Sculpture.[11]

Notes[]

  1. "Mr. Howells and Dr. Eliot," New York Times. November 21, 1915.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Gold Medal for Dr. Eliot; President Emeritus of Harvard Honored by American Academy of Arts," New York Times. November 21, 1915; "Gold Medal for Dr. Eliot; American Academy Honors Educator's Work for Literature," New York Times. January 28, 1916.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 van Gelder, Lawrence. "Arts, Briefly: American Academy Picks Caro and Trillin," New York Times. April 17, 2008.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "National Institute Honors W.R. Mead; Its Gold Medal Awarded to Noted Architect at the Annual Dinner," New York Times. December 13, 1912.
  5. 5.0 5.1 van Gelder, Lawrence. "Arts, Briefly: American Academy Honors," New York Times. May 19, 2005.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Thomas Visits Mother; Playwright Shows Her the Medal Presented to Him by Academy," New York Times. November 17, 1913.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 van Gelder, Lawrence. "Arts, Briefly: American Academy Honors," New York Times. May 17, 2007.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Note that "Mrs. Van Rensselaer" is the one used by the academy in its official listing because it was most often used by the writer herself; however, the Wikipedia article's title does reflect more modern feminist sensibilities.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "National Institute Honors Howells; His Letter, Thanking It for Gold Medal, Says Fashion in Novels Has Changed," New York Times. November 20, 1915.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 van Gelder, Lawrence. "Arts Briefing: American Academy Honors," New York Times. May 19, 2003.
  11. 11.0 11.1 "Men of Letters Honor St. Gaudens; First Gold Medal of Their Institute Is a Tribute to Memory of the Dead Sculptor. Given to Mrs. St. Gaudens; Notable Men at Ceremonial Where Dr. Van Dyke Makes Principal Address -- Letter from President," New York Times. November 21, 1909.

See also[]

External links[]


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