International Chopin Piano Competition

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International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition
XVIII International Chopin Piano Competition
File:Chopin Intl Piano Competition 2005.jpg
The National Philharmonic during the 2005 competition
Venue National Philharmonic, Warsaw
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Presented by Fryderyk Chopin Institute
First awarded 1927; 97 years ago (1927)
Last awarded 2021
Official website konkursy.nifc.pl/en

The International Chopin Piano Competition (Polish: Międzynarodowy Konkurs Pianistyczny im. Fryderyka Chopina), often referred to as the Chopin Competition, is a piano competition held in Warsaw, Poland. It was initiated in 1927 and has been held every five years since 1955. The competition is one of the founding members of the World Federation of International Music Competitions. It is also one of the few competitions devoted entirely to the works of a single composer,[1] in this case, Frédéric Chopin. The competition is currently organized by the Fryderyk Chopin Institute.[2]

The Chopin Competition is one of the most prestigious competitions in classical music, often launching the careers of its winners overnight through major concert dates and lucrative recording contracts. Past winners have included Maurizio Pollini (1960), Martha Argerich (1965), Krystian Zimerman (1975), Yundi Li (2000), Rafał Blechacz (2005) and Seong-Jin Cho (2015). The most recent winner has been Bruce Liu of Canada in 2021. Yundi Li is the most well known for being the youngest first prize winner[3] and the youngest juror in the competition's history.[4]

History

3rd Chopin Competition (1937). Among members of the jury (sitting on the left) Heinrich Neuhaus, Emil von Sauer, Guido Agosti, and Wilhelm Backhaus

The competition was initiated by Polish pianist and pedagogue Jerzy Żurawlew, who began seeking funds for a piano competition in 1925, influenced by Aleksander Michałowski. Żurawlew recalled later: "Young people at that time, not long after the end of the Great War, were taking a keen interest in sports. They were dyed-in-the-wool realists in their outlook on life. I would often hear that Chopin was excessively romantic, that he enervated the soul and weakened the psyche. Some went so far as to discourage the inclusion of Chopin as required repertoire in music schools. All that showed a fundamental lack of understanding, which I found very painful... As I watched young people’s enthusiasm for sporting achievement, I finally hit upon a solution: a competition! Here was a format to bring tangible advantages to young performers of Chopin in the form of monetary prizes and an international performing career."[5]

Gathering funds for the competition proved to be a difficult task. As Żurawlew remembered in later years: "I met with utter incomprehension, indifference and even aversion. The opinion among musicians was unanimous: Chopin is so great that he can defend himself. At the Ministry, it was announced that there were no funds for it [...] and that the whole idea was unfeasible". In this difficult situation, help arrived from Henryk Rewkiewicz — a businessman, music lover and board member of The Warsaw Music Society, who offered his personal financial guarantees to cover the entire deficit expected to arise from the first Competition.[6]

Many years later Jerzy Żurawlew wrote, “[…] I was greatly helped by my friend Henryk Rewkiewicz, director of the Match Monopoly, who offered 15,000 złoty - a substantial sum at the time - for the Competition”.[7] Ultimately, things picked up with the election of a new Polish president Ignacy Mościcki, who became the patron of the Chopin Competition.[8]

Subsequent editions were organized in 1932 and 1937; the post-war fourth and fifth editions were held in 1949 and 1955. In 1957 the competition became one of the founding members of the World Federation of International Music Competitions in Geneva.[9]

The pre-war editions of the competition as well as three editions after World War II (1955, 1960, 1965) were held in winter, close to the date of Chopin's birth – 22 January. However, due to repeated cases of jurors and competitors falling sick in this period, the organizers decided that the competition be held in October, the month in which Chopin died.[10]

The 1980 edition of the Chopin Piano Competition was marked by controversy over the elimination of Ivo Pogorelić, who was seen as one of the favourites, in the third round of the competition. This prompted juror Martha Argerich to resign from the jury in protest, calling Pogorelić a "genius". Her action was supported by two other jurors, who declared that it was "unthinkable that such an artist should not make it to the finals". Other judges spoke out about their disapproval of what they considered Pogorelić's eccentricities.[11][12][13]

Traditionally, during the competition on 17 October – the day of Chopin's death – a solemn mass is celebrated in the Holy Cross Church in Warsaw, during which Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Requiem is performed in accordance with the wishes of the composer.[14][15]

In 2018, the Chopin Institute organized the inaugural I International Chopin Competition on Period Instruments.

The XVIII International Chopin Piano Competition, originally scheduled for 2020, was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and took place in 2021 instead.[16]

Jury

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The jury has been chaired by:

Prize winners

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The laureates of the Chopin International Piano Competition:[25][26]

Top 3 prize-winners at each Edition
Edition 1st 2nd 3rd
I (1927) Lev Oborin
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Stanisław Szpinalski
 Poland (Poland)
Róża Etkin
 Poland (Poland)
II (1932) Alexander Uninsky (c)
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Imre Ungár (c)
 Hungary (Hungary)
Bolesław Kon
 Poland (Poland)
III (1937) Yakov Zak
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Rosa Tamarkina
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Witold Małcużyński
 Poland (Poland)
IV (1949) Bella Davidovich
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Barbara Hesse-Bukowska
 Poland (Poland)
Waldemar Maciszewski
 Poland (Poland)
Halina Czerny-Stefańska
 Poland (Poland) (tie)
V (1955) Adam Harasiewicz
 Poland (Poland)
Vladimir Ashkenazy
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Fou Ts'ong
 China (China)
VI (1960) Maurizio Pollini
 Italy (Italy)
Irina Zaritskaya
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Tania Achot-Haroutounian
 Iran (Iran)
VII (1965) Martha Argerich
 Argentina (Argentina)
Arthur Moreira Lima
23x15px Brazil (Brazil)
Marta Sosińska
 Poland (Poland)
VIII (1970) Garrick Ohlsson
 United States (USA)
Mitsuko Uchida
 Japan (Japan)
Piotr Paleczny
 Poland (Poland)
IX (1975) Krystian Zimerman
 Poland (Poland)
Dina Joffe
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Tatyana Fedkina
 Soviet Union (USSR)
X (1980) Dang Thai Son
 Vietnam (Vietnam)
Tatyana Shebanova
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Arutyun Papazyan
 Soviet Union (USSR)
XI (1985) Stanislav Bunin
 Soviet Union (USSR)
Marc Laforet
 France (France)
Krzysztof Jabłoński
 Poland (Poland)
XII (1990) Not awarded Kevin Kenner
 United States (USA)
Yukio Yokoyama
 Japan (Japan)
XIII (1995) Not awarded Philippe Giusiano
 France (France)
Gabriela Montero
 Venezuela (Venezuela)
Alexei Sultanov
 Uzbekistan (Uzbekistan) (tie)
XIV (2000) Yundi Li
 China (China)
Ingrid Fliter
 Argentina (Argentina)
Alexander Kobrin
 Russia (Russia)
XV (2005) Rafał Blechacz
 Poland (Poland)
Not awarded Dong-Hyek Lim
 South Korea (South Korea)
Dong-Min Lim
 South Korea (South Korea) (tie)
XVI (2010) Yulianna Avdeeva
 Russia (Russia)
Lukas Geniušas
 Russia (Russia)  Lithuania
Daniil Trifonov
 Russia (Russia)
Ingolf Wunder
 Austria (Austria) (tie)
XVII (2015) Seong-Jin Cho
 South Korea (South Korea)
Charles Richard-Hamelin
 Canada (Canada)
Kate Liu
 United States (USA)
XVIII (2021) Bruce Liu
 Canada (Canada)
Kyohei Sorita
 Japan (Japan)
Martín García García
 Spain (Spain)
Alexander Gadjiev
 Italy (Italy)  Slovenia (tie)
XIX (2025) to be determined

Traditional special awards at the competition include the Polish Radio prize for the best mazurka performance (since 1927), the Fryderyk Chopin Society in Warsaw prize for the best polonaise (since 1960), and the National Philharmonic prize for the best performance of a piano concerto (since 1980).

Medal table

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In popular culture

The Chopin Competition is a major plot device in the Japanese manga series Forest of Piano, serialized from 1998 to 2015 and adapted as an anime from 2018 to 2019. It follows the story of pianist Kai Ichinose, who ultimately wins the Chopin Competition.[27] Creator Makoto Isshiki was inspired to write the series when she watched a documentary showing Stanislav Bunin winning the XI International Chopin Piano Competition.[28] In 2023, a documentary film Pianoforte directed by Jakub Piątek shows the realities of the Chopin Piano Competition through exclusive behind-the-scenes footage and is set to premiere at the Sundance Film Festival.[29]

See also

References

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  2. Website Archived 3 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine of the International Chopin Competition, accessed 7 August 2014.
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Further reading

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External links

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