Rolf Schock Prizes

The Rolf Schock Prizes were established and endowed by bequest of philosopher and artist Rolf Schock (1933–1986). The prizes were first awarded in Stockholm, Sweden, in 1993 and, since 2005, are awarded every three years. Each recipient currently receives SEK 400,000 (approximately US$60,000). A similar prize is the Kyoto Prize in Arts and Philosophy, established by the Inamori Foundation. It is considered the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in Philosophy.

The Prizes are awarded in four categories and decided by committees of three of the Swedish Royal Academies:

Laureates in Logic and Philosophy

Year Name(s) Country
1993 Willard V. Quine  United States
1995 Michael Dummett  United Kingdom
1997 Dana S. Scott  United States
1999 John Rawls  United States
2001 Saul A. Kripke  United States
2003 Solomon Feferman  United States
2005 Jaakko Hintikka  Finland
2008 Thomas Nagel  Yugoslavia /
 United States
2011 Hilary Putnam  United States
2014 Derek Parfit  United Kingdom
2017 Ruth Millikan  United States
2018 Saharon Shelah  Israel
2020 Dag Prawitz and
Per Martin-Löf
 Sweden
 Sweden
2022 David Kaplan  United States

Laureates in Mathematics

Year Name(s) Country
1993 Elias M. Stein  United States
1995 Andrew Wiles  United Kingdom
1997 Mikio Sato  Japan
1999 Yurij Manin  Russia
2001 Elliott H. Lieb  United States
2003 Richard P. Stanley  United States
2005 Luis Caffarelli  Argentina
2008 Endre Szemerédi  Hungary /
 United States
2011 Michael Aschbacher  United States
2014 Yitang Zhang  United States
2017 Richard Schoen  United States
2018 Ronald Coifman  United States
2020 Nikolai G. Makarov  Russia /
 United States
2022 Jonathan S. Pila  Australia

Laureates in Visual Arts

Year Name(s) Country
1993 Rafael Moneo  Spain
1995 Claes Oldenburg  Sweden /
 United States
1997 Torsten Andersson  Sweden
1999 Jacques Herzog and
Pierre de Meuron
  Switzerland
2001 Giuseppe Penone  Italy
2003 Susan Rothenberg  United States
2005 Kazuyo Sejima and
Ryue Nishizawa
 Japan
2008 Mona Hatoum  Lebanon /
 United Kingdom
2011 Marlene Dumas  South Africa /
 Netherlands
2014 Anne Lacaton and
Jean-Philippe Vassal
 France
2017 Doris Salcedo  Colombia
2018 Andrea Branzi  Italy
2020 Francis Alÿs  Belgium
2022 Rem Koolhaas  Netherlands

Laureates in Musical Arts

Year Name(s) Country
1993 Ingvar Lidholm  Sweden
1995 György Ligeti  Hungary /
 Austria
1997 Jorma Panula  Finland
1999 Kronos Quartet  United States
2001 Kaija Saariaho  Finland
2003 Anne Sofie von Otter  Sweden
2005 Mauricio Kagel  Argentina
2008 Gidon Kremer  Latvia
2011 Andrew Manze  United Kingdom
2014 Herbert Blomstedt  Sweden /
 United States
2017 Wayne Shorter  United States
2018 Barbara Hannigan  Canada
2020 György Kurtág  Hungary
2022 Víkingur Heiðar Ólafsson  Iceland

See also


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