Early years: 1905–1946 , founder of the Institute of Musical Art, commonly referred to as the "Damrosch School" In 1905, the Institute of Musical Art (IMA), Juilliard's predecessor institution, was founded by
Frank Damrosch, a German-American conductor and godson of
Franz Liszt, on the premise that the United States did not have a premier music school and too many students were going to Europe to study music. Chartered by the
Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York, the institute became one of first endowed music schools in the US, with significant funding provided by philanthropist and banker
James Loeb. Damrosch and Loeb's mission was to establish a musical institution with high standards of teaching and learning that would incorporate a unified pedagogy and develop a "true musical culture among all classes". Accordingly, the school would rely on its endowment to ensure the quality of instruction was independent of students' financial status. in Manhattan The Institute of Musical Art opened in the former Lenox Mansion,
Fifth Avenue and 12th Street, on October 11, 1905. When the school opened, most teachers were European; however, only Americans were allowed to study at the institute. Although orchestras were exclusively male, women made up most of the student population. The school had 467 students in the first year, but the enrollment soon doubled in size over the following years. Five years after its inception, the institute moved to 120
Claremont Avenue in the
Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan onto a property purchased from
Bloomingdale Insane Asylum near the
Columbia University campus. English professor and first president of Juilliard,
John Erskine In 1919, a wealthy textile merchant named
Augustus D. Juilliard died and left a vast sum of money for the advancement of music in his will, which set up the Juilliard Musical Foundation (JMF) a year later as one of its primary beneficiaries. Under
Eugene Noble as executive secretary, the foundation purchased the
Vanderbilt family guesthouse at 49 E.
52nd Street, and established a separate new music school, the Juilliard Graduate School (JGS), in 1924. After much discussion, the Juilliard School of Music was eventually created in 1926 through a merger of the Institute and the Graduate School. The JGS moved from E 52nd Street to 130 Claremont Avenue next to the IMA in 1931. The two schools had the same board of directors and president but maintained their distinct identities.
Columbia University Professor
John Erskine became the first president of the two institutions (1928–1937).
Frank Damrosch continued as the institute's dean, and the Australian pianist and composer
Ernest Hutcheson was appointed dean of the Graduate School. Hutcheson later served as president from 1937 to 1945.
Expansion and growth: 1946–1990 Juilliard's third president,
William Schuman, an American composer and the first
Pulitzer Prize for Music winner, led the school from 1945 to 1961 and brought about several significant changes to raise the school's academic standards. In 1946, Schuman completely consolidated the Institute of Musical Art and the Juilliard Graduate School to form a single institution and created the
Juilliard String Quartet as the school's main quartet-in-residence. During his tenure, Schuman cut down enrollment by more than half, eliminated the Juilliard Summer School and Music Education Program, and opened Juilliard's admission to non-Americans. Schuman discontinued the Theory Department and initiated a new curriculum called the
Literature and Materials of Music (L&M), which began in 1947–1948, and was based on the assumption that musical theory education "should transfer theoretical knowledge into practical performance." Designed for composers to teach, the more practical-orientated curriculum would provide an overview of the "literature of music". L&M was a reaction against more formal theory and ear training, and as a result did not have a formal structure and allowed for more flexibility. Schuman established the school's Dance Department under
Martha Hill's direction in 1951, intending that students in the program would receive an education in
dance,
choreography, and music. The Lincoln Center would cover the costs for the construction project, but the school would have to instruct exclusively advanced students, introduce a drama program and cut its Preparatory School. Juilliard's new building at Lincoln Center would be designed by
Pietro Belluschi with associates
Eduardo Catalano and Helge Westermann. as initially opened in 1969 William Schuman assumed the presidency of Lincoln Center in 1962 and composer
Peter Mennin succeeded him. Mennin made substantial changes to the L&M program—ending ear training and music history, adding performances and composition in class, and hiring the well-known pedagogue
Renée Longy to teach
solfège. Mennin organized several new programs, such as Juilliard's Master Class Program and Doctoral Music Program. Under Mennin, Juilliard's international reputation grew as several alumni won competitive international competitions. In the 1950s, the school received international attention when alumnus
Van Cliburn won the
International Tchaikovsky Competition. In 1968, Mennin hired
John Houseman to manage the new Drama Division as director and
Michel Saint-Denis as associate director and consultant. The School's name was changed to The Juilliard School to reflect its broadened mission to educate musicians, dancers, directors, and actors. The drama department first only trained actors, of which the first class graduated as Group 1 in 1972, but added playwrights and directors programs in the 1990s. Houseman founded
The Acting Company in 1972, which allowed Juilliard students to perform and tour throughout the country. Also in 1972,
Lila Acheson Wallace donated $5 million to Juilliard, which later named the Lila Acheson Wallace American Playwrights Program after her.
Modernization: 1990–2020 Juilliard's longest-serving president
Joseph W. Polisi (1984–2017), helped the school modernize by developing educational outreach, formalizing and expanding its music programs, establishing interdisciplinary programs and reforming the school's finances. In 1991, Polisi founded the Music Advancement Program (MAP) to help underrepresented students affected by
music education budget cuts throughout
public schools in New York. Between 1990 and 1993, individual departments for all instruments and voice were established, the Meredith Wilson Residence Hall was built next to the school, salaries for teachers were increased, and the school hoped to accept fewer people and eventually cut 100 students to allow for more funding. In 2001, the school established a
jazz performance training program. By the end of the 20th century, Juilliard had established itself as a prestigious performing arts school. At the time, graduates comprised approximately 20 percent of the
Big Five American Orchestras and half of the
New York Philharmonic. Juilliard's endowment nearly tripled over the 1980s, reaching a quarter billion in the mid-1990s. Despite high tuition, on average, over 90 percent of accepted students ended up attending the school. In 1999, the Juilliard School was awarded the
National Medal of Arts and became the first educational institution to receive the award. In September 2005,
Colin Davis conducted an orchestra that combined students from the Juilliard and London's
Royal Academy of Music at the BBC
Proms, and during 2008 the Juilliard Orchestra embarked on a successful tour of China, performing concerts as part of the
Cultural Olympiad in Beijing,
Suzhou, and Shanghai under the expert leadership of Maestro
Xian Zhang. The school has received various gifts and donations since the 2000s. In 2006, Juilliard obtained a trove of precious music manuscripts from board chair and philanthropist
Bruce Kovner that make up the Juilliard Manuscript Collection. Philanthropist
James S. Marcus donated $10 million to the school to establish the Ellen and James S. Marcus Institute for Vocal Arts at the school in 2010. In 2014, Kovner gave $60 million for the Kovner Fellowship Program to provide expenses for exceptionally gifted students. On September 28, 2015, the Juilliard School announced a major expansion into
Tianjin during a visit by China's first lady,
Peng Liyuan, the institution's first such full-scale foray outside the United States. The school opened in 2020 and offers a
Master of Music degree program. In May 2017, retired
New York City Ballet principal dancer
Damian Woetzel was named president, replacing Joseph W. Polisi. From March 2020 through the spring 2021 semester, the school switched to online classes and suspended live performances in response to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Post-pandemic: 2020–present In June 2021, members of the student group
The Socialist Penguins organized a protest against rising tuition costs after claiming that they "weren't being listened to" when meeting with president and provost about the tuition fees. In September, the school's Evening Division was renamed to Juilliard Extension which would broaden to offer programs in person and online. In December of the same year, a $50 million gift was given to the school's Music Advancement Program to help students of underrepresented backgrounds. ==Campus==