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YoungArts
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YoungArts (previously National YoungArts Foundation and 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. In 1981, Ted Arison gave $5 million to launch the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts.
YoungArts is noted as the most difficult and most prestigious literary, performing, and visual arts competition for high school students. If selected, it is an incredible testament to prodigious talent in the field. Approximately 6% are selected as Winners, with the top 1% selected as Winners with Distinction. Winners with Distinction are invited to compete for the Lin Arison Excellence in Writing Award (a $50,000 writing scholarship, only for writing winners), cash prizes of up to $10,000, and more. They are invited to National YoungArts Week, an all-expenses-paid experience in Miami, Florida.[1][2]
YoungArts nominates up to 60 candidates for consideration as U.S. Presidential Scholars in the Arts following participation in YoungArts week.
YoungArts disciplines
[edit]The YoungArts application consists of the following ten disciplines across the visual, literary, design and performing arts:
- Classical Music – composition and instrumental[3]
- Dance – ballet, choreography, hip hop, jazz, modern, tap, and world dance forms[4]
- Design Arts - architecture, interior, product, graphic, fashion and theater design[5]
- Film – narrative, documentary, experimental, and animation[6]
- Jazz – composers and instrumentalists[7]
- Photography[8]
- Theater – musical, classical and contemporary spoken theater[9]
- Visual Arts - paintings, portraits, landscapes, artworks, drawings, murals, artistic inventions and art projects[10]
- Voice – classical, jazz, popular and singer/songwriter[11]
- Writing – creative non-fiction, novel, play or script, poetry, short story, spoken word[12]
Other programs and activities
[edit]Several documentaries have been produced highlighting this unique program and its 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.[13]
Notable alumni
[edit]- Jonathan Adler
- Keiko Agena
- Doug Aitken
- Daniel Arsham
- Teodross Avery
- Abigail Barlow[14]
- Hernan Bas
- Jon Batiste
- Nicole Beharie
- Terence Blanchard
- Matt Bomer
- Corrine May Botz
- Nicholas Britell
- Danielle Brooks
- Camille A. Brown
- Peter Buttigieg
- Caroline Campbell
- Antonio Campos
- Marcus Canty
- David Aaron Carpenter
- Christopher Castellani
- Timothée Chalamet
- Donna Lynne Champlin
- Claire Chase
- Jeffrey Cirio
- Lia Cirio
- Bryan Terrell Clark
- Gerald Clayton
- David Costabile
- Jessica Darrow
- Kate Davis
- Tamar Davis
- Viola Davis
- Micaela Diamond
- Brandon Victor Dixon
- Neal Dodson
- Dave Eggar
- Nicole Eisenman
- Ron Eldard
- Maya Erskine
- Raul Esparza
- Joel Fan
- Katie Finneran
- Brandon Flynn
- Santino Fontana
- Anna Fricke
- Vince Gilligan
- Kimiko Glenn
- Mandy Gonzalez
- Allegra Goodman
- Amanda Gorman[15]
- Joseph Gramley
- Denyce Graves
- Lauren Greenfield
- Adrian Grenier
- Anna Gunn
- Craig Hall
- Roy Hargrove
- Grey Henson
- Don Hertzfeldt
- Judith Hill
- Aisha Hinds
- Jazzmeia Horn
- Robert Hurst
- Adam Jacobs
- Leslie Jamison
- Jay Armstrong Johnson
- Lisa Joy
- Joaquina Kalukango
- Taran Killam
- Jenji Kohan
- Jennifer Koh
- Elizabeth Kostova
- Sarah Lamb
- Sarah Lane
- Pascal Le Boeuf
- Remy Le Boeuf
- Jennifer 8. Lee
- Thomas Lennon
- Lucas Leyva
- Erik Liberman
- David Lipsky
- Sam Lipsyte
- Patricia Lockwood
- Michael Loveland
- Laurence Mason
- Ryan McCartan
- Tarell Alvin McCraney
- Michael McElroy
- Rhiannon McGavin
- John McNamara
- Brad Mehldau
- Nicki Minaj
- Colby Minifie
- Jason Moran
- Gillian Murphy
- Philip Neal
- Rory O’Malley
- Eric Owens
- Jared Padalecki
- Steven Pasquale
- Sarah Paulson
- Wendell Pierce
- Elena Pinderhughes
- Shamel Pitts
- King Princess[16]
- Billy Porter
- Chris Potter
- Rachael Price
- Marco Ramirez
- Andrew Rannells
- Desmond Richardson
- John Ridley
- Lorely Rodriguez
- MJ Rodriguez
- Frank Rosenwein
- Ben Levi Ross
- Lamman Rucker
- Max Schneider
- Hunter Schaefer[17]
- Amanda Seales
- Joe Serafini
- Jean Shin
- Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum
- Jaz Sinclair
- Justice Smith
- Corey Stoll
- Rebecca Sugar
- Quinn Sullivan
- Talia Suskauer[18]
- Zuzanna Szadkowski
- Conrad Tao
- Isaiah J. Thompson
- Cassandra Trenary
- Michael Urie
- Jason Vieaux[19]
- Hynden Walch[19]
- Kerry Washington[20]
- Michael Benjamin Washington[19]
- Grace Weber[21]
- Kehinde Wiley[22]
- Vanessa Williams[19]
- Anthony Wilson[23]
- Finn Wittrock[19]
- Tony Yazbeck[24]
- Chris Young[25][26][27]
- Mario Alberto Zambrano[28]
Alumni opportunities
[edit]Every YoungArts winner becomes a part of the YoungArts alumni community, an artistic family of more than 20,000 alumni. YoungArts makes open calls to alumni to provide opportunities and inclusion in its programming and events.[29]
Budget
[edit]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.[13]
References
[edit]- ^ "Higher paying Jobs in Australia". Archived from the original on 31 March 2023. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
- ^ "Roots of Miami's vibrant arts scene were planted in the 1980s". Miami Herald. September 10, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
- ^ "Classical Music". YoungArts.
- ^ "Dance". YoungArts.
- ^ "Design". YoungArts.
- ^ "Cinematic Arts". YoungArts. Archived from the original on 2016-11-21. Retrieved 2016-11-18.
- ^ "Jazz". YoungArts.
- ^ "Photography". YoungArts.
- ^ "Theater". YoungArts.
- ^ "Visual Arts". YoungArts.
- ^ "Voice". YoungArts.
- ^ "Writing". YoungArts.
- ^ a b Robin Pogrebin (October 2, 2012), Gehry to Turn Bacardi Complex Into Arts Campus New York Times.
- ^ YoungArts (2016-01-21). Abigail Barlow | Popular Voice | 2016 National YoungArts Week. Retrieved 2024-09-04 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Youngarts Winners 2016" (PDF).
- ^ YoungArts (2015-05-06). Mikaela Straus | Mikaela Rock Song | 2015 YoungArts New York. Retrieved 2024-09-04 – via YouTube.
- ^ YoungArts (2022-10-04). Hunter Schafer Design Arts Showcase | 2017 National YoungArts Week. Retrieved 2024-09-04 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Behind the green | Segerstrom Center for the Arts". www.scfta.org. Archived from the original on 2023-06-08. Retrieved 2026-02-17.
- ^ a b c d e "Our History | 40 years for artists". YoungArts. Retrieved 2026-02-17.
- ^ Vazquez, Ashley (2015-09-26). "YoungArts' Second Annual Awareness Day Is a Drag (in a Good Way)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2026-02-17.
- ^ "Chance the Rapper Collaborator Grace Weber Began Her Career in Miami's YoungArts' Program". Miami New Times. 2018-01-08. Retrieved 2026-02-17.
- ^ "YoungArts Information Session | Oct. 15 and 19 | TU Dance". Retrieved 2026-02-17.
- ^ "The Metropolitan Museum of Art Announces Fall 2020 Performance Season - The Metropolitan Museum of Art". www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2026-02-17.
- ^ "Tony Yazbeck, from YoungArts Alum to Broadway Powerhouse". www.dance-enthusiast.com. Retrieved 2026-02-17.
- ^ Heyman, Marshall (April 8, 2016). "YoungArts Steps Into the Spotlight". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved April 1, 2016.
- ^ Kleinman, Rebecca (January 14, 2019). "L.A. Artist Duo Haas Brothers Honored by Miami's YoungArts Foundation". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved April 1, 2016.
- ^ Anderson, Samuel (April 21, 2017). "Salman Rushdie, Debbie Allen, and Christian Slater Spend a Night at the Museum". Vogue. Retrieved April 1, 2016.
- ^ "Instagram". www.instagram.com. Retrieved 2026-02-17.
- ^ "Our Community of Literary, Visual + Performing Artists".
