FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Press Contact:
Audrey Ross
212.877.3399
audreyrosspub@aol.com
This year, ballet dancers around the world will not have the same extraordinary opportunities their forebears have had in the past three decades as New York International Ballet Competition (NYIBC) announces the cancellation of its 11th competition, slated on the organization’s 30th Anniversary this June 1-23, 2013 at Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Frederick P. Rose Hall, Time Warner Center, New York City.
NYIBC is first and foremost a world-class training and educational opportunity focused on the art of the pas de deux and the contemporary duet. Moreover, NYIBC is a meaningful multi-cultural exchange for international dancers to showcase their talent. Many of the nearly 500 alumni of the classes of 1984, 1987, 1990, 1993, 1996, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2009, consider the three-week immersion an unforgettable experience that made a lasting impression on their careers as professional dancers. Through an intensive learning and coaching environment, many NYIBC alumni regard each other as extended family members.
Harald Uwe Kern, originally from Austria, credits NYIBC as being instrumental to networking and bridging the gap between opportunities available to him in Europe and those in America. Following his participation in 1987 Kern said, “It was a privilege to work with such wonderful legends of the ballet world, and I will never forget the camaraderie between all those fantastic dancers!”
From inception, NYIBC has offered full scholarships, amounting to approximately $10,000 per participating couple. Once in New York, the class of 48 dancers receives coaching, mentoring, housing, food, medical attention when necessary, exposure to cultural activities and other amenities.
During the past few years NYIBC’s private donor base has shrunk, creating sizable decreases in individual contributions. Ilona Copen, NYIBC’s founder, long-time leader and face of the organization, passed in early 2010 after a long battle with cancer. Since, NYIBC has made ongoing restructuring efforts, but the philanthropic climate from the time of the most recent competition in 2009, has proven to be a serious challenge.
Despite record high submissions from 18 countries generated by the call for applications in the Fall of 2012, critical shortfalls in fundraising, setbacks in public funding, downturns in global giving1, and the upheaval surrounding Ms. Copen’s passing, the Board of Directors regretfully cancels NYIBC 2013.
Marcia De La Garza, Executive Director, remarks “It is my sincerest wish that Ilona Copen and Igor Youskevitch’s dream of advancing ballet as an art form, providing young dancers with unparalleled learning experiences and contributing to their growth as artists can be carried to the next generation.”
Options are being evaluated with regard to sustaining the organization’s future.
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1 Charities Aid Foundation “World Giving Index 2012” and Grantmaking in the Arts “Public Funding for the Arts: 2012 Update”