When the Olympics gave out medals for art [View all]
For the first four decades of competition, the Olympics awarded official medals for painting, sculpture, architecture, literature and music, alongside those for the athletic competitions. From 1912 to 1952, juries awarded a total of 151 medals to original works in the fine arts inspired by athletic endeavors. Now, on the eve of the 100th anniversary of the first artistic competition, even Olympics fanatics are unaware that arts, along with athletics, were a part of the modern Games nearly from the start.
Everyone that Ive ever spoken to about it has been surprised, says Richard Stanton, author of The Forgotten Olympic Art Competitions. I first found out about it reading a history book, when I came across a little comment about Olympic art competitions, and I just said, what competitions? Propelled by curiosity, he wrote the firstand still the onlyEnglish-language book ever published on the subject.
To learn about the overlooked topic, Stanton had to dig through crumbling boxes of often-illegible files from the International Olympic Committee archives in Switzerlandmany of which hadnt seen the light of day since they were packed away decades ago. He discovered that the story went all the way back to the Baron Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the IOC and the modern Games, who saw art competitions as integral to his vision of the Olympics. He was raised and educated classically, and he was particularly impressed with the idea of what it meant to be a true Olympiansomeone who was not only athletic, but skilled in music and literature, Stanton says. He felt that in order to recreate the events in modern times, it would be incomplete to not include some aspect of the arts.
Read more:
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/When-the-Olympics-Gave-Out-Medals-for-Art-163705106.html#ixzz235Y0p6BS