Grand Austrian State Prize
The Grand Austrian State Prize (German: Großer Österreichischer Staatspreis) is a decoration given annually by Austria to an artist for exceptional work.[1] The recipient must be an Austrian citizen with a permanent residence in Austria.
It was originally created in 1950 by then education minister Felix Hurdes. The prize is given according to the recommendation by the Austrian Art Senate without a set rotation schedule for literature, music, visual art, or architecture. Since 2003 it has been endowed with a 30,000 euro prize. In the areas of film and artistic photography, the prize is awarded according to a jury and not the Art Senate.
Since 1971, the prize has been given to only one person a year, instead of sometimes given to multiple people in different categories.
Recipients
Literature
| 1950 Josef Leitgeb | 1951 Felix Braun | 1952 Martina Wied |
| 1953 Rudolf Henz, Rudolf Kassner |
1954 Max Mell | 1955 Franz Theodor Csokor |
| 1956 Franz Nabl | 1957 Heimito von Doderer, Franz Karl Ginzkey |
1958 Imma von Bodmershof |
| 1959 Carl Zuckmayer | 1961 Albert Paris Gütersloh, Alexander Lernet-Holenia |
1962 George Saiko |
| 1963 Kurt Frieberger | 1964 Johannes Urzidil | 1966 Fritz Hochwälder |
| 1967 Elias Canetti | 1968 Ingeborg Bachmann | 1969 Christine Busta |
| 1970 Christine Lavant | 1972 Friedrich Heer | 1974 H. C. Artmann |
| 1977 Manès Sperber | 1979 Friedrich Torberg | 1982 Christin Karl |
| 1984 Ernst Jandl | 1987 Peter Handke | 1989 Oswald Wiener |
| 1991 Gerhard Rühm | 1994 Wolfgang Bauer | 1995 Ilse Aichinger |
| 1998 Andreas Okopenko | 2001 Gert Jonke | 2007 Josef Winkler |
| 2012 Peter Waterhouse | 2018 Florjan Lipuš | 2022 Anna Baar |
Music
| 1950 Joseph Marx | 1951 Egon Kornauth | 1953 Paul Angerer, Johann Nepomuk David |
| 1955 Josef Matthias Hauer | 1956 Hans Erich Apostel, Otto Siegl |
1957 Hans Gál |
| 1959 Theodor Berger, Alfred Uhl |
1961 Egon Wellesz | 1963 Ernst Krenek |
| 1965 Gottfried von Einem | 1966 Hanns Jelinek | 1967 Karl Schiske |
| 1968 Erich Marckhl | 1969 Anton Heiller | 1970 Marcel Rubin |
| 1976 Cesar Bresgen | 1981 Roman Haubenstock-Ramati | 1986 Friedrich Cerha |
| 1990 György Ligeti | 1992 Kurt Schwertsik | 2002 Heinz Karl Gruber[2] |
| 2006 Georg Friedrich Haas | 2010 Olga Neuwirth | 2014 Beat Furrer |
| 2019 Thomas Larcher | 2023 Gerd Kühr |
Visual Art
| 1951 Alfred Kubin | 1952 Albert Paris Gütersloh | 1954 Herbert Boeckl |
| 1955 Oskar Kokoschka, Fritz Wotruba |
1956 Alfred Wickenburg | 1957 Karl Sterrer |
| 1958 Toni Schneider-Manzell | 1960 Max Weiler, Ferdinand Kitt |
1962 Josef Dobrowsky |
| 1963 Arnold Jakob Clementschitsch | 1965 Sergius Pauser | 1966 Hans Fronius |
| 1968 Kurt Moldovan | 1969 Rudolf Hoflehner | 1973 Joannis Avramidis |
| 1978 Arnulf Rainer | 1980 Friedensreich Hundertwasser | 1985 Walter Pichler |
| 1988 Maria Lassnig | 1993 Bruno Gironcoli | 1996 Günter Brus |
| 1997 Christian Ludwig Attersee | 2003 Siegfried Anzinger | 2005 Hermann Nitsch[3] |
| 2008 Karl Prantl | 2009 Brigitte Kowanz | 2013 Erwin Wurm |
| 2017 Renate Bertlmann | 2021 Martha Jungwirth |
Architecture
| 1950 Josef Hoffmann | 1953 Clemens Holzmeister | 1954 Max Fellerer |
| 1958 Erich Boltenstern | 1962 Roland Rainer | 1965 Josef Frank |
| 1967 Franz Schuster | 1971 Gustav Peichl | 1975 Karl Schwanzer |
| 1983 Hans Hollein | 1999 Coop Himmelb(l)au - Wolf D. Prix, Helmut Swiczinsky |
2000 Wilhelm Holzbauer |
| 2004 Günther Domenig | 2011 Heinz Tesar | 2015 Elke Delugan-Meissl and Roman Delugan |
| 2020 Laurids Ortner and Manfred Ortner | 2024 Hermann Czech |
Artistic Photography
| 1991 Inge Morath-Miller[4] | 1994 Franz Hubmann[5] | 1997 Erich Lessing[6] |
| 2001 Harry Weber[7] | 2005 Friedl Kubelka-Bondy[8] | 2009 Manfred Willmann[9] |
| 2013 Peter Dressler[10] | 2016 Margherita Spiluttini[11] | 2023 Aglaia Konrad[12] |
References
- ^ "Großer Österreichischer Staatspreis". Bundesministerium für Kunst, Kultur, öffentlichen Dienst und Sport – Startseite (in German). Archived from the original on 23 November 2021. Retrieved 12 November 2020.
- ^ ""Heinz Karl Gruber humorvoller, eigenwilliger, mitteleuropäischer Weltbürger und Eklektiker mit Bodenhaftung und Tiefgang"". OTS.at (in German). 5 March 2003. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
- ^ "Großer Österreichischer Staatspreis 2005 an Hermann Nitsch". OTS.at (in German). 5 October 2005. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
- ^ "Inge Morath: Portraits". LFI. 2021-03-15. Retrieved 2026-01-07.
- ^ "Franz Hubmann Würdigungspreis 1998 Medienkunst Künstlerische Fotografie". State of Niederösterreich (in German). Retrieved 2026-01-07.
- ^ "Honors and Awards". Erich Lessing GmbH. Retrieved 2026-01-07.
- ^ "Austrian Foreign Policy Yearbook 2002" (PDF). Federal Ministry for Foreign Affairs. p. 153. Retrieved 2026-01-07.
- ^ "Friedl Kubelka vom Gröller". Generali Foundation. Retrieved 2026-01-07.
- ^ Elisabeth Köberl (2019). ""Manfred Willmann – Lightning Flash & Gentian Blue" / Fotohof, Salzburg". Creative Austria. Retrieved 2026-01-07.
- ^ "SEEING WITH YOUR EYES: THE PHOTOGRAPHS OF PETER DRESSLER 1972 – 2003". belfastexposed.org.
- ^ "Margherita Spiluttini Photo Archive". Architekturzentrum Wien. 2019. Retrieved 2026-01-07.
- ^ Tom Seymour. "Feminist Actionism – Friedl Kubelka and Valie Export". British Journal of Photography. Retrieved 2026-01-07.