Villa Massimo
Villa Massimo, short for Deutsche Akademie Rom Villa Massimo (Italian: Accademia Tedesca Roma Villa Massimo), is a German art institute in Rome, established in 1910 and located in the Villa Massimo.
The fellowship at the German Academy Rome Villa Massimo represents one of the most important awards offered to German artists for study abroad. The award offers residency for one year at the Villa Massimo to ten artists in the middle of their careers, who have excelled in Germany and abroad, including architects, composers, writers and figurative artists.
The founder of this institution was the patron and entrepreneur Eduard Arnhold, who in 1910 acquired the beautiful and extensive property of 36,000 m², previously the suburban villa of the aristocratic Massimo family. Arnhold commissioned the building of the main structure, a large villa which would be appropriate for official events, and ten modern studios with adjacent private residential spaces. He later donated the villa, and its luxurious furnishings, to the Prussian state. Today, the Villa Massimo is under the jurisdiction of the Federal Ministry for Cultural Affairs and Media, of the Chancellery of the Federal Republic of Germany. Following an extensive three-year restoration, the Academy started in 2003 a renewed commitment to nurture culture in Rome and in Italy.
Selected recipients
Artists
Architects
Composers
- 1957 and 1964 Bernd Alois Zimmermann
- 1958 Wilhelm Killmayer
- 1959 Hans Otte
- 1959 and 1963 Giselher Klebe
- 1960 Jürg Baur, Alfred Koerppen
- 1962 Heinrich Konietzny
- 1964 Hans Zender, Aribert Reimann
- 1965 and 1977 Friedrich Voss
- 1965/66 Heinz Werner Zimmermann, Wilhelm Killmayer
- 1966/67 and 1977 Erhard Grosskopf
- 1967/68 Friedhelm Döhl
- 1968 Wolfgang Rihm, Jürg Baur
- 1968/69 Hans Zender
- 1972/73 Hans-Joachim Hespos
- 1976 Anton Plate
- 1976/77 George Dreyfus
- 1977 and 1978/79 Manfred Trojahn
- 1978, 1981/82 and 1984 Wilfried Hiller
- 1978/79 Ulrich Leyendecker, Wolfgang von Schweinitz
- 1979 Theo Brandmüller
- 1979/80 and 1982 Detlef Müller-Siemens
- 1979/80 Wolfgang Rihm, Peter Michael Hamel
- 1981/82 and 1983 Hans-Jürgen von Bose
- 1982/83 Renate Birnstein
- 1983 Peter Kiesewetter
- 1983/84 Reinhard Febel
- 1984/85 York Höller
- 1985/86 Harald Weiss
- 1986/87 Michael Denhoff, Walter Zimmermann
- 1987/88 Max Beckschäfer, Susanne Erding-Swiridoff
- 1991 Claus Kühnl
- 1992/93 Detlev Glanert, Jan Müller-Wieland
- 1993 Adriana Hölszky
- 1994 Steffen Schleiermacher
- 1995 Helmut Oehring
- 1995/96 André Werner, Fredrik Zeller
- 1996/97 Moritz Eggert
- 1997/98 Carola Bauckholt
- 1998/99 Claus-Steffen Mahnkopf
- 1999 Annette Schlünz
- 2003 Johannes Kalitzke
- 2004 Carsten Hennig
- 2005 Rudi Spring
- 2006 Oliver Schneller
- 2007 Dieter Dolezel
- 2008 Arnulf Herrmann, Stephan Winkler
- 2009 Charlotte Seither, Márton Illés
- 2010 Philipp Maintz, Anno Schreier
- 2011 Sven-Ingo Koch, Marc Sabat
Writers
References