June 13th 2018
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
A message from
The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts
Mr & Mrs Reinaldo Herrera
Chairs
Board of Advisors
Chairman
Ali Cordero Casal
and the
Board of Directors
Commemorating VAEA’s foundation anniversary and the 228th birth anniversary of Venezuelan independence hero José Antonio Páez, on this 13th of June 2018 we have good news to share, we are honored to announce that The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts (VAEA) will present its highest award, The Páez Medal of Art 2018, to:
GUSTAVO DUDAMEL
For his significant contribution to the arts and his unwavering commitment in bringing classical music to all, building international bridges and making powerful social transformation through his craft.
About Gustavo Dudamel
Driven by an unwavering belief in the power of music to heal, unite and inspire, Gustavo Dudamel is one of the most distinguished conductors of our day. From the great concert halls to classrooms, video screens and cinemas, Dudamel’s remarkable career of musical achievements and championing of access to the arts for young people around the world is a living example of music’s extraordinary capacity to transform lives.
Dudamel’s 2018/19 season will center around the centennial celebration of the Los Angeles Philharmonic and his tenth year as their Music & Artistic Director. Other highlights of the season include his debut at the Metropolitan Opera conducting Verdi’s Otello, tours with the Berlin Philharmonic, Munich Philharmonic, and Mahler Chamber Orchestra, and his first extended academic residency at Princeton University.
Under Dudamel’s direction, the LA Phil has become one of the leading orchestras in the world, admired for its unmatched commitment to new music, diversity and inclusion, and the development of ground-breaking digital initiatives. The celebration of the LA Phil’s 100th season showcases the extraordinary versatility and vision of both the orchestra and Dudamel himself, featuring more than 50 commissions from luminaries such as John Adams, Philip Glass, and Steve Reich, as well as leading young composers such as Julia Adolphe, Ashley Fure, Andrew Norman, Tyshawn Sorey, Kamasi Washington, and Du Yun. Dudamel will lead cross-genre collaborations with Herbie Hancock, MOBY, and Andrew Bird, Beethoven’s five piano concertos with Lang Lang as soloist, a performance at the Academy Awards, a tour of Asia, and more. The LA Phil will also plan to distribute 10,000 free tickets to underserved audiences around Los Angeles as a centennial gift to the community.
A lifelong advocate for music education and social development through art, Dudamel’s own childhood was shaped by his experience with El Sistema, the extraordinary program of immersive musical training initiated in 1975 by José Antonio Abreu. Entering his nineteenth year as Music Director of the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra, Dudamel carries on the work of his late mentor with his ongoing commitment to El Sistema in Venezuela, and by supporting numerous Sistema-inspired projects around the world, including Big Noise in Scotland, Vienna’s Superar program, SerHacer in Boston, and El Sistema Sweden. His 2018 ‘Americas’ tour with the Vienna Philharmonic was highlighted by an Art and Citizenship workshop in Mexico City bringing together 300 young people from across North and South America in an expression of cultural solidarity. He has worked to raise awareness for the importance of music education by appearing at the United Nations and the White House, and delivered an address on the unity of the Arts and Sciences at the 2017 Nobel Prize Concert.
Dudamel also continues to expand the reach of his Youth Orchestra Los Angeles (YOLA) initiative. Founded in 2007, the program has provided access to quality music education to tens of thousands of children from underserved communities around Los Angeles. 2019 will see the construction of a new Frank Gehry designed facility for YOLA in Inglewood, California.
One of the few classical musicians to truly reach mainstream audiences, while also maintaining utmost musical integrity, Gustavo Dudamel has been featured three times on CBS’s 60 Minutes and was the subject of a PBS special, Dudamel: Conducting a Life. He has been interviewed by Christiane Amanpour on CNN, Conan O’Brian on Conan, Stephen Colbert on The Late Show, and Elmo on Sesame Street. He had a cameo role in Amazon Studio’s award-winning series Mozart in the Jungle, and, together with members of YOLA, became the first classical musician to participate in the Super Bowl 50 Half Time Show, appearing alongside pop stars Coldplay, Beyoncé and Bruno Mars. In 2017, he was the youngest-ever conductor to lead the Vienna Philharmonic’s famous New Year’s Day Concert, watched annually by over 60 million people in 90 countries. At John Williams’ personal request, Dudamel guest-conducted on the soundtrack for Star Wars: The Force Awakens; he also recorded James Newton Howard’s soundtrack to Disney’s holiday blockbuster, The Nutcracker, in which he makes an on-screen cameo.
Dudamel’s cinema, TV, radio, and online broadcasts have reached hundreds of millions of people around the world. Dudamel’s Grammy Award-winning discography also includes landmark recordings of John Adams’ Gospel According to the Other Mary (commissioned and performed by the Los Angeles Philharmonic); the sound track to the motion picture Libertador, for which Dudamel composed the score; a Richard Strauss disc with the Berlin Philharmonic; Mahler Symphonies 5 and 7 with the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra; and Mahler 9 with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. A special charity LP release of Mendelssohn’s “Scottish” Symphony with the Vienna Philharmonic raised funds for music education projects in Latin America, and children from Vienna’s El Sistema-inspired Superar program participated in his most recent Deutsche Gramophone release of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition. Dudamel has independently produced an all-Wagner recording available exclusively for download and streaming, a set of the complete Beethoven symphonies from Barcelona’s Palau de la Musica, and a broadcast of two Stravinsky ballets in cooperation with the Berlin Philharmonic’s Digital Concert Hall.
Gustavo Dudamel is one of the most decorated conductors of his generation. He received the Páez Medal of Art in 2018, the Americas Society Cultural Achievement Award in 2016, and the 2014 Leonard Bernstein Lifetime Achievement Award for the Elevation of Music in Society from the Longy School of Music. He was named Musical America’s 2013 Musician of the Year, one of the highest honors in the classical music industry, and was voted into the Gramophone Hall of Fame. In October of 2011, he was named Gramophone Artist of the Year, and in May of the same year, was inducted into the Royal Swedish Academy of Music in consideration of his “eminent merits in the musical art.” The previous year, he received the Eugene McDermott Award in the Arts at MIT. Dudamel was inducted into l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres as a Chevalier in Paris in 2009, and received an honorary doctorate from the Universidad Centroccidental Lisandro Alvarado in his hometown of Barquisimeto. He also received an honorary doctorate from the University of Gothenburg in 2012. In 2008, the Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra was awarded Spain’s prestigious annual Prince of Asturias Award for the Arts and, along with his mentor José Antonio Abreu, Dudamel was given the “Q Prize” from Harvard University for extraordinary service to children. He was named one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in 2009.
Gustavo Dudamel was born in 1981 in Barquisimeto, Venezuela. He began violin lessons as a child with José Luis Jiménez and Francisco Díaz at the Jacinto Lara Conservatory. He continued his violin studies with Rubén Cova and José Francisco del Castillo at the Latin American Academy of Violin. His conducting studies began in 1993 when he was hired as an Assistant Conductor with the Amadeus Chamber Orchestra. In 1996, he studied with Rodolfo Saglimbeni and was named Music Director of the Amadeus Chamber Orchestra. In 1999, he was appointed Music Director of the Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra and began conducting studies with the orchestra’s founder, Dr. Abreu. Dudamel achieved international attention by winning the inaugural Bamberger Symphoniker Gustav Mahler Competition in 2004. He then went on to become Music Director of the Gothenburg Symphony (2007-2012), where he currently holds the title Honorary Conductor. Inspired by Dudamel’s early musical and mentoring experiences, the Gustavo Dudamel Foundation, a registered charity, was created in 2012 with the goal of promoting access to music as a human right and a catalyst for learning, integration, and social change.
The Páez Medal will be bestowed to Gustavo Dudamel at the VAEA’s Annual Benefit Gala, on December 18th 2018, in the David Rubenstein Atrium of Lincoln Center in New York City. The VAEA’s Annual Benefit Gala is a night to present the Páez Medal of Art and to support VAEA’s bi-national mission in the arts celebrating the best of Venezuelan and US cultures.
The VAEA is honored to celebrate the work of Gustavo Dudamel, a Venezuelan music director whose passion and talent have earned him a place in the history of art as one of the greatest conductors of his generation. The December evening will gather an international crowd to honor Gustavo Dudamel, the first musician to receive the medal, as the 2018 recipient This will be VAEA’s 7th Benefit Gala in New York City.
About the Páez Medal
The Páez Medal of Art is awarded to individuals or groups that have had an impact and contributed to the excellence, growth, support and dissemination of the arts in Venezuela and the United States. Previous recipients include: American writer Bob Colacello 2017 (to be bestowed Dec. 18th, 2018), Venezuelan artist Marisol in 2016, American artist Annie Leibovitz in 2015, Venezuelan Art Advocate Sofía Imber in 2014, American artist Robert Wilson in 2013 and Venezuelan visual artist Carlos Cruz-Diez in 2012.
About VAEA
The VAEA is a NY based 501(c)3 public charity, founded on June 13, 1990 with the mission of promoting the best of Venezuelan and US cultures through bi-national cultural, educational and social programs.
For additional information visit VAEArts.org
For sponsor opportunities and early table reservations contact:
Ali Cordero Casal, Chairman, alicorderocasal@vaearts.org
+1 3053228899
The Paez Medal of Art 2022 to Joshua Bell
The Paez Medal of Art 2022 to Joshua Bell VAEA 33rd anniversary announcement Oct 25th, 2023 Immediate Release A message from our: Chairman, Ali Cordero Casal and The [...]
Fundación Empresas Polar The Páez Medal of Arts 2021
July 29th, 2022 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE A message from The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts Reinaldo & Carolina Herrera Advisory Board Chairs Ali Cordero Casal Chairman The Board of Directors [...]
JAMES ALCOCK is one of the two recipient of VAEA’s Páez Medal of Art 2020
June 13th 2020 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE A message from The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts Ali Cordero Casal Chairman The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts & the Board of Directors Today we [...]
FRANK GEHRY is one of the two recipient of VAEA’s Paez Medal of Art 2020
June 13th 2020 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE A message from The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts Ali Cordero Casal Chairman The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts & the Board of Directors Today we [...]
JULIAN SCHNABEL is one of the two recipient of VAEA’s Paez Medal of Art 2019
June 13th 2019 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE A message from The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts Ali Cordero Casal Chairman The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts & the Board of Directors Today we [...]