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100 Years of Talent
One day in 1923, a young man named Maurice R. Robinson was visiting a school. As he looked at walls decorated with trophies celebrating the school’s athletic victories, he noticed something was missing. Robinson wondered why creative students weren’t recognized in the same way, and he realized it was a problem he could solve.
Just three years after he founded the publishing company Scholastic, Robinson created the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. In the 100 years since, this prestigious program has recognized countless middle and high school students across the United States for their talent and creativity in art and writing. Since 1923, the Awards have grown. That first year, students submitted approximately 300 entries. This year more than 100,000 students submitted more than 300,000 works. Here’s to another century of celebrating creative teens!
Scholastic Art & Writing Award
Jurors in the 1950s (top) and 1980s make their votes for or against artworks using In/Out paddles. Today judging is digital.
Picking the Best of the Best
Scholastic Art & Writing Awards
Each year, some award-winning works are published and exhibited in New York City.
Ready for Recognition?
Scholastic Art & Writing Awards (medal); Gordon Bell/Shutterstock (Carnegie Hall)
National Award winners have the chance to attend the National Ceremony at New York City’s Carnegie Hall.
Before They Were Famous
1923:
First year of the Scholastic Awards
Viking Books for Young Readers
1934:
Ezra Jack Keats, author, illustrator
Random House
c. 1936:
Truman Capote, author
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
c. 1945:
Andy Warhol, artist
Globe Design Studio/Shutterstock
1946:
Robert Indiana, artist
1947:
Sylvia Plath, poet, author
1956:
Joyce Carol Oates, author
Doubleday
1965:
Stephen King, author
Rich Fury/Invision/AP Images
1971:
Ken Burns, director, producer
Jason Schmidt/Wikipedia Commons
1992:
Derek Fordjour, artist
James Devaney/Getty Images
1998:
Zac Posen, fashion designer
1999:
Lena Dunham, actress, director
2008:
Tschabalala Self, artist
Patrick Semansky-Pool/Getty Images
2015-16:
Amanda Gorman, poet
Article Type