Curtis Intitute of Music – Cool. Classic Curtis. Sings!
Auction Ends: Mar 3, 2012 08:00 AM EST

Online Auction Open! Live Auction Event Coming Soon!

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The online portion of Cool. Classic Curtis. Sings! is now open. The auction will run from February 21, 2012 to March 2, 2012, with the live event taking place on March 3, 2012. Proceeds go to Curtis Intitute of Music in order to support the Student Assistance fund. Auction items range from exotic vacation getaways to donated items guaranteed to delight and surprise. So, tell your friends, family, community. Let the bidding begin!

Why Support the Curtis Institute of Music?

The Curtis Institute of Music educates and trains exceptionally gifted young musicians for careers as performing artists on the highest professional level.

One of the world's leading conservatories, Curtis is highly selective, with an enrollment of about 165. In this intimate environment, students receive personalized attention from a celebrated faculty.A busy schedule of performances is at the heart of Curtis's distinctive "learn by doing" approach, which has produced an impressive number of notable artists since the school's founding in Philadelphia in 1924.

Grounded in this rich heritage, Curtis is looking to the future in a flexible and forward-thinking way, evolving strategically to serve its time-honored mission.

Check back every day until March 2nd!

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Our Rich History

The Curtis Institute of Music opened on October 13, 1924. It fulfilled the fondest dream of Mary Louise Curtis Bok, the only child of Philadelphia-based Louisa Knapp and Cyrus H. K. Curtis, whose Curtis Publishing Company produced two of the most popular magazines in America - The Saturday Evening Post and The Ladies’ Home Journal.

 

Mrs. Bok’s work at the Settlement Music School in South Philadelphia with culturally and financially deprived children, many of whom were gifted enough for professional careers, convinced her of the need to organize a music conservatory with rigorous standards of teaching and performance to train the next generation of musical artists. With artistic guidance from conductor Leopold Stokowski and the renowned pianist Josef Hofmann, Mrs. Bok assembled a faculty that would attract the most promising students and developed a philosophy insuring that these exceptionally gifted young musicians would receive the kind of training to prepare them for careers as performing artists on the highest professional level.

Curtis’s rare tuition-free policy was established in 1928 and to this day provides merit-based full-tuition scholarships for all Curtis students, undergraduate and graduate alike. Students continue to be accepted for study at Curtis solely on the basis of their artistic talent and promise.

In the school’s early years, Leopold Stokowski predicted that Curtis “will become the most important musical institution of our country, perhaps of the world.” That sentiment was echoed nearly seventy years later by cellist Mstislav Rostropovich when he said, “Curtis is unique, not only in the United States, but in the whole world.”

Since then, Curtis alumni have gone on to make history as soloists, composers, conductors, and chamber musicians. Curtis graduates have received Pulitzer Prizes, Guggenheim Fellowships, and Avery Fisher Awards and are in the front rank of soloists and conductors. They are members of the world’s leading orchestras, including principals in every major American orchestra. They have sung with La Scala, Covent Garden, the Vienna Staatsoper, and the San Francisco Opera, among others, and more than sixty have sung at the Metropolitan Opera.