Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts: Difference between revisions
Content deleted Content added
Added 2020 recipient Gustavo Dudamel |
|||
Line 33: | Line 33: | ||
*[[Anne-Sophie Mutter]] (musician), 2016 |
*[[Anne-Sophie Mutter]] (musician), 2016 |
||
*[[Mauricio Wiesenthal]] (writer), 2016 |
*[[Mauricio Wiesenthal]] (writer), 2016 |
||
*[[Gustavo Dudamel]] (conductor), 2020 |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 15:57, 29 December 2020
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2019) |
The Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts (Spanish: Medalla de Oro al mérito en las Bellas Artes) is awarded by the Ministry of Culture of Spain to individuals or institutions excelling in artistic or cultural creation or to those that have provided valuable services to promotion of art and culture or to conservation of artistic heritage.
Award recipients
Some famous award recipients
- Salvador Dalí (painter, sculptor), 1971
- Rafael Manzano (architect), 1972
- Joan Miró (painter), 1980
- Luis Buñuel (cinema director), 1981
- Plácido Domingo (Singer), 1983
- Rufino Tamayo (painter), 1985
- Eleanor Sayre, (international expert on Goya), 1991
- Joan Brossa (poet, playwright and experimental artist), 1995
- Pedro Almodóvar (cinema director), 1998
- Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, 1998
- Carmen Laffón (painter), 1999[1]
- Oscar de la Renta (fashion designer), 1999
- Joaquín Sabina (singer, composer), 2005
- Carmen Linares (singer), 2005
- Enrique Morente (singer), 2005
- Alberto Schommer, (photographer), 2008
- Antonio Banderas (actor), 2008
- Miguel Bosé (singer, composer), 2009
- El Hortelano (painter), 2009
- Eloísa García de Wattenberg (historian), 2010
- Alejandro Sanz (singer, composer), 2011
- Ángel Peralta Pineda (rejoneador), 2013
- Mansilla+Tuñón (architects), 2014
- Alaska (singer), 2015
- María La Ribot (dancer), 2015[2]
- Anne-Sophie Mutter (musician), 2016
- Mauricio Wiesenthal (writer), 2016
- Gustavo Dudamel (conductor), 2020
References
- ^ "Relación de premiados del año 1999" [1999 List of Winners] (PDF) (in Spanish). Ministry of Culture. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 November 2011. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
- ^ "Gregorio Marañón y Cristina Iglesias, Medalla de Oro de las Bellas Artes". La Tribuna de Toledo (in Spanish). Toledo. 30 December 2015. Retrieved 31 August 2019.