|
From:
National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts
Miami, Florida
Contact:
Christopher Schram, Vice President, Programs
TOP
ARTS STUDENT TO BE SURPRISED WITH $10,000 CHECK
Kyle Robinson, Duxbury High School, has no idea he won prize
Miami,
FL (3/7/05): Move over Ed McMahon! Publisher’s Clearing House has nothing on
the surprise of a lifetime the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts (NFAA)
has in store for eight (8) high school students from around the United States
who will be given $10,000 checks to put toward pursuing their dreams.
ARTS
$10,000 Gold Award in Dance to Kyle Robinson, Duxbury, MA
Chosen from over 600 dancers nation-wide
Tuesday, March 8 @ 2:00 p.m.
State Senate Room A-1, State House, Boston
State Senator Cynthia Creem to present awards
Twenty-one additional awards to be given to Massachusetts students
Click
here to view the Massachusetts ARTS Winners
The
students received a letter in late January informing them of their award levels.
Every student who participates in ARTS Week receives a cash award ranging from
$500 - $10,000. The Gold winners believe they are gathering with their fellow
state honorees to receive a basic award with no idea they won the $10,000 prize.
Please keep this information embargoed until after the event.
The awards are cash grant scholarships that the students may use to further
their education. The eight Gold Award winners for 2005 were chosen from among
the 130 finalists who participated in an all-expense paid trip to ARTS Week 2005
in Miami, FL earlier this month. These students, selected from nearly 6,500
other applicants from the United States are at the very pinnacle of their young
careers and were chosen to participate in ARTS Week because they are quite
simply – the best
NFAA
is set to distribute the 2005 Gold Awards being given in eight (8) of the nine
(9) ARTS disciplines: Dance, Jazz, Music, Photography, Theater, Visual Arts,
Voice and Writing. The Film & Video panel decided not to award a Gold in
2005.
Each
year, the prestigious ARTS (Arts Recognition and Talent Search®) program
selects up to nine young, American artists for the $10,000 ARTS Gold Awards.
Chosen from among the 130 ARTS Week national finalists, up to one student in
each of the nine ARTS disciplines is selected as an ARTS Gold Award Recipient.
The Gold Award winners are selected for possessing extraordinary talent and
promising professional potential.
The
judges in each of the art forms are allowed to determine whether or not they
have an exceptionally talented artist for this award each year. No award levels
are announced during ARTS Week.
Since
1982, nearly 10,000 talented American student artists representing every state,
the U.S. territories as well as American students living abroad have shared over
$5 million in cash awards from NFAA and have been given access to $70 million in
scholarships for their continued education by college, university and
conservatory partners affiliated with NFAA. Of these students, 458 have also
been named Presidential Scholars in the Arts. It is only through NFAA’s Arts
Recognition and Talent Search® (ARTS) program that dynamic young artists are
eligible for the Presidential Scholar designation
The
2006 ARTS program is open to students who will be graduating high school seniors
in the 2005-2006 school year.
ARTS
2006 offers:
·
$400,000 in cash awards
· (including individual awards ranging up to $10,000)
· $3 million in scholarship opportunities
· All-expenses-paid ARTS Week national finals in Miami, Florida for 130
National Finalists
· Presidential Scholars in the Arts awards for 20 ARTS Week Finalists.
Arts Recognition
and Talent Search® (ARTS) is a program of the National Foundation for
Advancement in the Arts (NFAA). NFAA's mission is to identify emerging artists
and assist them at critical junctures in their educational and professional
development, and to raise the appreciation for, and support of, the arts in
American Society. The ARTS program is sponsored, in part, by: Carnival Cruise
Lines, The Coca-Cola Company, Gibson Musical Instruments, Baldwin Piano and The
Gibson Foundation, International Association for Jazz Education, The Jacques and
Natasha Gelman Trust, Music for Youth Foundation, Northern Trust,
PricewaterhouseCoopers and SunTrust. ARTS Week 2005 was made possible, in part,
with support from American Airlines, The State of Florida, Department of State,
Division of Cultural Affairs and the Florida Arts Council, the National
Endowment for the Arts and the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs,
the Cultural Affairs Council, the Tourist Development Council, the Mayor and the
Miami-Dade County Board of Commissioners. For more information about NFAA, visit
the website ww.ARTSawards.org.
|
|
Congratulations
to Student Kyle Robinson, he was among 125 top winners of the National
Foundation for Advancement in the Arts in the 2005
Arts Recognition and Talent Search competition.
Robinson
rose to the top of more than six thousand talented students
across the nation to participate as a finalist in NFAA's Arts
Week program, taking place January 5-11 in Miami, and
consisting of live performances, exhibitions and workshops.
"These
young artists are the best of the best", said Dr. William
H. Banchs, President of NFAA. "They are our country's
artistic future. Many of these young ARTS winners will go on
to successful professional artistic careers," he said.
During
Arts Week Kyle also had the honor to meet Mikhail Baryshnikov who took a
personal interest in helping to guide him in his future plans as a
professional dance artist.
Since
returning home Kyle was among 50 students honored
to be nominated as 2005 Presidential Scholar in
the Arts by the NFAA.
It
is now up to the Presidential Scholars Program, a national recognition program
administered by the U.S. Department of Education, to select 20 students of the
50 to be Presidential Scholars in the Arts.
If chosen, Kyle, would travel to Washington, D.C. in the last week of June, to
meet President George W. Bush at a White House ceremony. In addition, Mr.
Robinson would have the chance to dance at the Kennedy Center for the
Performing Arts.
click
for Presidential Scholars
click
for NFAA
|