Queen Elisabeth Competition
The Queen Elisabeth Competition is an international competition for career-starting musicians held in Brussels. The competition is named after Queen Elisabeth of Belgium. It is a competition for classical violinists, pianists, singers and cellists. It also used to hold international competitions for composers from 1953 to 2012.
Since its foundation it is considered one of the most challenging and prestigious competitions for instrumentalists. In 1957 the Queen Elisabeth Competition was one of the founding members of the World Federation of International Music Competitions.
History
, Belgian concert-violinist, wanted to set up an international music competition for young virtuosi showcasing their all-round skill, but died before he could do so. Queen Elisabeth, patroness of the arts and good friend of Ysaÿe, set up the competition in his memory in 1937. The prestige of Ysaÿe and Belgium's Royal Court assured that the first competition would draw great entrants.1937–1950
The first two editions of the competition, in 1937 for violin and in 1938 for piano, were named after Ysaÿe. World War II and other impediments prevented the competition from taking place from 1940 to 1950.1937 | 1938 | |
Violin | X | |
Piano | X |
1951–1986
In 1951, the competition was renamed for its patroness, Queen Elisabeth, and has taken place under that name since then. Entrants are expected to learn a compulsory work written especially for the competition. Usually there is also a section where contestants are expected to perform a work by a Belgian composer. From 1963 to 1980, Marcel Poot of the Brussels Conservatory chaired the jury of the competition and wrote several commissioned works to mark the occasion, that were used as competition-required pieces.The competition restarted with four-year cycles, starting with two consecutive years for violin and piano respectively, followed by a year for international composition competitions. The fourth year of each cycle had no competition. The years 1973 to 1974 were a transition to cycles with instrument competitions in even years, and the internationional composition competition in the year between the violin and the piano competitions, until the early 1980s when the cycles were re-arranged again.
1987–2006
With the competition for voice introduced in 1988 the four-year cycles were piano → voice → violin → year without performer competition. Before 2002 there were no composition competitions in even years.1987 | 1988 | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | |
Piano | X | X | X | |||||||
Voice/singing | X | X | X | |||||||
Violin | X | X | ||||||||
Composition | X | X | X | |||||||
Composition for Belgian composers | X | X | X | X | X |
1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | |
Piano | X | X | ||||||||
Voice/singing | X | X | ||||||||
Violin | X | X | X | |||||||
Composition | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||||
Composition for Belgian composers | X | X | X | X | X |
2007–2014
From 2007 there were no longer years without competition for performers: with three disciplines, each of these returned in a three-year cycle.There were competitions for composition in 2008, 2009, 2011 and 2012, each of these for the performance piece of the instrumentalist finale of the next year.
2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | |
Piano | X | X | X | |||||
Voice | X | X | X | |||||
Violin | X | X | ||||||
Composition | X | X | X | X |
2015 and beyond
From 2015 there are again four-year cycles, with, for the first time in 2017, a cello competition added after the year with the piano competition. The public composition competitions stopped. The 2020 competition was postponed to 2021.2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
Violin | X | X | |||||
Piano | X | X | |||||
Cello | X | ||||||
Voice | X |
Patronage and prizes
The Queen Elisabeth Competition generates income from its own activities, from private patronage and from sponsoring. Resources are varied: part of the funding for the prizes laureates receive is provided by public authorities and patrons, corporate sponsors, donors contributions, ticket and programme sales, advertising in the programmes and the sale of recordings. The Competition also benefits from the volunteer assistance of families who open their homes to candidates for the duration of the competition.Prizes for the laureates of the competition :
- First prize, International Queen Elisabeth Grand Prize – Prize of the patron Queen : 25,000 euro, numerous concerts, recording on CD; for the violin competition also: loan of the 'Huggins' Stradivarius violin from the Nippon Music Foundation until the next violin competition.
- Second Prize, Belgian Federal Government Prize: 20,000 euro, concerts, recording on CD
- Third Prize, Count de Launoit Prize: 17,000 euro, concerts
- Fourth Prize, Prize awarded alternately by each of the communities of Belgium : 12,500 euro, concerts
- Fifth Prize, Brussels Capital Region Prize: 10,000 euro, concerts
- Sixth Prize, City of Brussels Prize: 8,000 euro, concerts
- For the other six laureates, sums donated by the Belgian National Lottery: 4,000 euro each
Laureates
Year | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th |
1937 | David Oistrakh | Ricardo Odnoposoff | Elizabeth Gilels | Boris Goldstein | Marina Kozolupova |
1951 | Leonid Kogan | Mikhail Vayman | Elise Cserfalvi | Theo Olof | Alexei Gorokhov |
1955 | Berl Senofsky | Julian Sitkovetsky | Pierre Doukan | Francine Dorfeuille-Boussinot | Victor Picaizen |
1959 | Jaime Laredo | Albert Markov | Joseph Silverstein | Vladimir Malinin | Boris Kouniev |
1963 | Aleksey Mikhlin | Semyon Snitkovsky | Arnold Steinhardt | Zarius Shikhmurzayeva | Charles Castleman |
1967 | Philippe Hirschhorn | Stoïka Milanova | Gidon Kremer | Roman Nodel | Hidetaro Suzuki |
1971 | Miriam Fried | Andrey Korsakov | Hamao Fujiwara | Ana Chumachenco | Edith Volckaert |
1976 | Mikhaïl Bezverkhny | Irina Medvedeva | Kang Dong-suk | Grigori Zhislin | Shizuka Ishikawa |
1980 | Peter Zazofsky | Takashi Shimizu | Ruriko Tsukahara | Mihaela Martin | |
1985 | Hu Nai-yuan | Ik-hwan Bae | Henry Raudales | Hu Kun | Mi Kyung Lee |
1989 | Vadim Repin | Akiko Suwanai | Evgeny Bushkov | Erez Ofer | Ulrike-Anima Mathé |
1993 | Yayoi Toda | Liviu Prunaru | Martin Beaver | Natalia Prischepenko | |
1997 | Nikolaj Znaider | Albrecht Breuninger | Kristóf Baráti | Andrew Haveron | Natsumi Tamai |
2001 | Baiba Skride | Kam Ning | Barnabás Kelemen | Alina Pogostkin | Feng Ning |
2005 | Sergey Khachatryan | Sophia Jaffé | Saeka Matsuyama | Mikhail Ovrutsky | |
2009 | Ray Chen | Lorenzo Gatto | Ilian Garnet | Suyoen Kim | Nikita Borisoglebsky |
2012 | Andrey Baranov | Tatsuki Narita | Hyun Su Shin | Esther Yoo | Tseng Yu-Chien |
2015 | Lim Ji-young | Oleksii Semenenko | William Hagen | Tobias Feldmann | Stephen Waarts |
2019 | Stella Chen | Timothy Chooi | Stephen Kim | Shannon Lee | Júlia Pusker |
Year | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th |
1938 | Emil Gilels | Mary Johnstone | Jakov Flier | Lance Dossor | :es:Nybia Mariño|Nibya Mariño Bellini |
1952 | Leon Fleisher | Karl Engel | Maria Tipo | Frans Brouw | Laurence Davis |
1956 | Vladimir Ashkenazy | John Browning | Andrzej Czajkowski | Cécile Ousset | Lazar Berman |
1960 | Malcolm Frager | Ronald Turini | Lee Luvisi | Alice Mitchenko | Gábor Gabos |
1964 | Evgeny Mogilevsky | Nikolai Petrov | Jean-Claude Vanden Eynden | Anton Kuerti | Richard Syracuse |
1968 | Valère Kamychov | Jeffrey Siegel | Semion Kroutchine | ||
1972 | Valery Afanassiev | Jeffrey Swann | Joseph Alfidi | David Lively | Svetlana Navasardyan |
1975 | Mikhaïl Faerman | Stanislav Igolinsky | Youri Egorov | Larry Michael Graham | Sergueï Iuchkevitch |
1978 | Abdel Rahman El Bacha | Gregory Allen | Brigitte Engerer | Alan Weiss | Douglas Finch |
1983 | Wolfgang Manz | Boyan Vodenitcharov | Daniel Blumenthal | ||
1987 | Andrei Nikolsky | Akira Wakabayashi | Rolf Plagge | Johan Schmidt | Ikuyo Nakamichi |
1991 | Frank Braley | Stephen Prutsman | Brian Ganz | Hae-sun Paik | Alexander Melnikov |
1995 | Laura Mikkola | Giovanni Bellucci | Yuliya Gorenman | Jong Hwa Park | |
1999 | Vitaly Samoshko | Alexander Ghindin | Ning An | Shai Wosner | |
2003 | Severin von Eckardstein | Wen-Yu Shen | Unawarded after Dong-Hyek Lim refused it | Roberto Giordano | Kazumasa Matsumoto |
2007 | Anna Vinnitskaya | Plamena Mangova | Francesco Piemontesi | Ilya Rashkovsky | Lim Hyo-Sun |
2010 | Denis Kozhukhin | Evgeni Bozhanov | Hannes Minnaar | Yury Favorin | Kim Tae-Hyung |
2013 | Boris Giltburg | Rémi Geniet | Mateusz Borowiak | Stanislav Khristenko | Zhang Zuo |
2016 | Henry Kramer | Alexander Beyer | Chi Ho Han | Aljosa Jurinic |
Year | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th |
1988 | Aga Winska | Jeanette Thompson | Huub Claessens | Jacob Will | Yvonne Schiffelers |
1992 | Thierry Félix | Reginaldo Pinheiro | Wendy Hoffman | Regina Nathan | Cristina Gallardo-Domâs |
1996 | Stephen Salters | Ana Camelia Ştefănescu | Eleni Matos | Mariana Zvetkova | Ray Wade |
2000 | Marie-Nicole Lemieux | Marius Brenciu | Olga Pasichnyk | Pierre-Yves Pruvot | Lubana Al Quntar |
2004 | Iwona Sobotka | Hélène Guilmette | Teodora Gheorghiu | ||
2008 | Szabolcs Brickner | Isabelle Druet | Bernadetta Grabias | Anna Kasyan | Yury Haradzetski |
2011 | Haeran Hong | Elena Galitskaya | Anaïk Morel | Konstantin Shushakov | |
2014 | Sumi Hwang | Jodie Devos | Sarah Laulan | Yu Shao | Hera Hyesang Park |
2018 | Eva Zaïcik | Ao Li | Rocío Pérez | Héloïse Mas |
Year | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th |
2017 | Victor Julien-Laferrière | Yuya Okamoto | Aurélien Pascal | Ivan Karizna |
Composers
The first international Queen Elisabeth Competition for composition was held in 1953. Composition competitions had less laureates or finalists, with usually only the winners who see their winning piece performed in the final of the competitions for instrumentalists receiving broad media attention.Year | Category | 1st | Work |
1953 | Composition for symphony orchestra | Serenade | |
1957 | Composition for symphony orchestra | Concerto per orchestra | |
1957 | Composition for chamber orchestra | Michał Spisak | Concerto giocoso |
1961 | Composition for symphony orchestra | Sinfonia burlesca | |
1961 | Composition for chamber orchestra | Concerto per ochestra da camera n. 3 | |
1965 | Composition for symphony orchestra | Rudolf Brucci | Synfonia lesta |
1965 | Composition for violin and orchestra | Wilhelm Georg Berger | Concert |
1969 | Composition for symphony orchestra | Symphonie en deux mouvements | |
1969 | Composition for piano and orchestra | Concerto for piano | |
1977 | Composition for symphony orchestra | Hiro Fujikake | Rope Crest |
1977 | Composition for string quartet | Akira Nishimura | Heterophony |
1982 | Composition for symphony orchestra | Five Litanies for Orchestra | |
1991 | Composition | Tristan-Patrice Challulau | Ne la città dolente |
1993 | Composition | Zodiac | |
1995 | Composition | John Weeks | Requiescat |
1997 | Composition | Hendrik Hofmeyr | Raptus |
1999 | Composition | Tears of Ludovico | |
2001 | Composition | Søren Nils Eichberg | Qilaatersorneq |
2002 | Composition | Ian Munro | Piano Concerto Dreams |
2004 | Composition | Javier Torres Maldonado | Obscuro Etiamtum Lumine |
2006 | Composition | Miguel Gálvez-Taroncher | La luna y la muerte |
2008 | Composition | Agens | |
2009 | Composition | Target | |
2011 | Composition | Concerto pour violon et orchestre | |
2012 | Composition | Michel Petrossian | In the wake of Ea pour piano et orchestre |