YoungArts (Redirected from National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts)

The National YoungArts Foundation or YoungArts (previously the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts, or NFAA) is an American charity established in 1981 by Lin and Ted Arison to help nurture emerging high-school artists. The foundation is based in Miami, Florida, and alumni of the program have included Timothée Chalamet, Kerry Washington, Matthew Bomer, Billy Porter, Anna Gunn, Andrew Rannells, Kimiko Glenn, Ben Ross, Sam Lipsyte, Chris Young, Neal Dodson, Viola Davis, Nicki Minaj, Doug Aitken, and Max Schneider.[1][2][3]

Ted Arison wanted to bring the arts to the city where he built his successful company. In 1981 Arison gave $5 million, an unprecedented sum, to launch the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts.[4]

YoungArts nominates up to 60 candidates for consideration as U.S. Presidential Scholars in the Arts following participation in YoungArts week.

YoungArts disciplines

The YoungArts application consists of ten disciplines across the visual, literary, design and performing arts:

  • Classical Music – composition and instrumental[5]
  • Cinematic Arts – narrative, documentary, experimental, and animation[6]
  • Dance – ballet, choreography, hip hop, jazz, modern, tap, and world dance forms[7]
  • Design Arts - architecture, interior, product, graphic, fashion and theater design[8]
  • Jazz – composers and instrumentalists[9]
  • Photography[10]
  • Theater – musical, classical and contemporary spoken theater[11]
  • Visual Arts[12]
  • Voice – classical, jazz, popular and singer/songwriter[13]
  • Writing – creative non-fiction, novel, play or script, poetry, short story, spoken word[14]

Other programs and activities

Several documentaries have been produced highlighting this unique program and its extremely talented award recipients. Most notably, Rehearsing a Dream, produced by the Simon and Goodman Picture Company, was nominated for the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. A documentary television series entitled YoungArts MasterClass, in which program alumni are teamed with famous mentors, is in its second season on HBO. YoungArts has developed a study guide, based on the HBO series, for high school teachers with Teachers College, Columbia University.[15]

Alumni opportunities

Every YoungArts winner becomes a part of the ever-growing YoungArts alumni community, an artistic family of more than 20,000 alumni. YoungArts increasingly makes open calls to alumni to provide fair opportunities and inclusion in its programming and events.[16]

Budget

YoungArts has an endowment of $42 million. Its $6 million annual budget is expected to increase as much as 40 percent as its operating expenses grow.[15]

References

  1. ^ Heyman, Marshall (April 8, 2016). "YoungArts Steps Into the Spotlight". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved April 1, 2016.
  2. ^ Kleinman, Rebecca (January 14, 2019). "L.A. Artist Duo Haas Brothers Honored by Miami's YoungArts Foundation". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved April 1, 2016.
  3. ^ Anderson, Samuel (April 21, 2017). "Salman Rushdie, Debbie Allen, and Christian Slater Spend a Night at the Museum". Vogue. Retrieved April 1, 2016.
  4. ^ "Roots of Miami's vibrant arts scene were planted in the 1980s". Miami Herald. September 10, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
  5. ^ "Classical Music". YoungArts.
  6. ^ "Cinematic Arts". YoungArts.
  7. ^ "Dance". YoungArts.
  8. ^ "Design". YoungArts.
  9. ^ "Jazz". YoungArts.
  10. ^ "Photography". YoungArts.
  11. ^ "Theater". YoungArts.
  12. ^ "Visual Arts". YoungArts.
  13. ^ "Voice". YoungArts.
  14. ^ "Writing". YoungArts.
  15. ^ a b Robin Pogrebin (October 2, 2012), Gehry to Turn Bacardi Complex Into Arts Campus New York Times.
  16. ^ http://www.youngarts.org/alumni

External links


This page was last updated at 2019-11-14 02:54 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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