Julius Hallgarten
The prizes were established through a $12,000 endowment created in 1883 by stockbroker Julius Hallgarten (1840–1884)."Julius Hallgarten,"The late Mr. JULIUS HALLGARTEN, of New York, endowed prizes of three hundred, two hundred and one hundred dollars, to be awarded respectively to the painters of the best three pictures in oil colors exhibited at each Annual Exhibition, under the following conditions:
"All works will be considered to be in competition which have been painted in the United States by an American citizen under thirty-five years of age, and which have not before been publicly exhibited in the City or vicinity of New York. No competitor may take two prizes, or a prize of the same class a second time.
"The awards will be made by vote by ballot of all the Exhibitors of the season … Each artist will be entitled to one vote at each ballot, specifying his choice for each one of the three prizes, and each prize will be awarded to the painting receiving the highest number of votes for that prize, but no work will be entitled to the prize unless at least fifty of the exhibitors vote at the ballot, and the work receive one-third of all the votes cast."''National Academy Notes, including the Complete Catalogue of the Spring Exhibition'', No. 5, (National Academy of Design, 1885), pp. 8-9.
Other Hallgarten Prizes
Julius Hallgarten also created an endowment of $5,000 for the National Academy of Design School of Art. Student winners of the Julius Hallgarten School Prize and Alfred N. Hallgarten Traveling Scholarship do not belong on this list.Painters and works
1884–1929
1930–1969
1970–2008
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hallgarten Prize National Academy of Design American visual arts awards Lists of American artists Awards established in 1883 Awards disestablished in 2009 1883 establishments in New York (state) 2009 disestablishments in New York (state)