Poster of the 11th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition (1985) by Tomasz SzuleckiThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The Chopin Competition is the most important musical event in Poland and one of the most important musical events in the world.
Apart from its huge role in popularising Chopin's music, it discovers the greatest pianistic talents, providing young musicians with the most effective start in their international career. It is a source of multicultural polarisation, which the world observes in various interpretations of the music of the brilliant composer.
To take part in the competition one needs to be a profesional pianist not younger than 16 years old and not older than 31 years old who successfully passed through the preliminary round or won one of the other prestigious piano competitions listed by the organizers.
Chopin Competition: a short historyThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
Chopin Competition: a short history
The Chopin Competition is for classical music what the Olympic Games are for sport. It is a global event with a rich and colourful history, full of passion and unexpected turns of action. Stars were born here. Royalties came to applaud. Crowds waited anxiously for the results all the night long. And Chopin’s music gloriously resounded.
Jerzy Żurawlew (1886-1980) – inicjator i wielokrotny juror Konkursu (ok. 1927)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
Did Chopin need the competition?
“[After World War I] the cult of Chopin seemed to wane a bit […] I often met with the opinion that Chopin is too romantic, makes the soul sentimental and disarms the listeners mentally. Some even claimed that for these very reasons Chopin should not be included on the lists of works for music school students.
All these symptoms of a total lack of understanding of Chopin’s music were very painful to me… I decided to counteract them. As I observed the young people and their love of sport achievements, I found a solution: a competition! Later developments confirmed that I was right…”
Jerzy Żurawlew (1886-1980), initiator and many-times member of the Competition jury (c. 1927)
Poster of the 1st International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition (1926) by Ludwik GardowskiThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The 1st International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition took place at the beginning of 1927 (although it had originally been planned to commence on 15 October 1926 – the day of the unveiling of Wacław Szymanowski’s Chopin monument in the Royal Łazienki Park). Its initiator was the pianist and teacher Jerzy Żurawlew, who in 1925 – under the influence of Aleksander Michałowski, an outstanding interpreter of Chopin’s works – began to look for funding for a piano tournament.
As Żurawlew recalled: “I met with utter incomprehension, indifference and even aversion. The opinion among musicians was unanimous: ‘Chopin is so great that he can defend himself”. At the Ministry, it was announced that there were no funds for such an event […] and that the whole idea was unfeasible.” Things only picked up with the election of a new Polish president, Ignacy Mościcki, who became patron of the Chopin Competition.
Самуил Самосуд и Дмитрий Шостакович в Куйбышеве (1942)The Institute of Russian Realist Art (IRRA)
Auditions were held in the Concert Hall of the Warsaw Philharmonic. The Competition, which was conceived from the outset as an international event, hosted 26 pianists from 8 countries. The contingent from the Soviet Union included the then twenty-year-old Dmitry Shostakovich. Although not among the leading competitors, years later he became one of the most outstanding composers of the twentieth century.
Laureaci I Konkursu (1927): Lev Oborin (ZSRR), Stanisław Szpinalski (Polska), Róża Etkin-Moszkowska (Polska), Grigory Ginzburg (ZSRR), Henryk Sztompka (Polska)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The Competition proved a great success: reviewers emphasised the high standard of the participants and the huge emotions that accompanied the rivalry. The organisers were not spared criticism, however: pianists from abroad were not ensured practice rooms and had to make do with instruments in private apartments, which became the subject of jokes.
“The level of performances proved to be so high that the jury had a real dilemma […] The immense skill and competence achieved in our times by pianists who are still almost children […] provokes a reflection: What next? Technically those young people are better than the best pianists of the old generation – and yet, what will happen to this terrifying hyper-production of pianists?”
Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz
Poster of the 3rd International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition (1937) by Stanisław Ostoja-ChrostowskiThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
In 1937, the Competition adhered to the successful two-stage format. The Polish pianists, who had previously constituted the largest national group, had to pass through an additional qualifying round. Ultimately, 80 pianists from 22 countries took part in the Competition. They had at their disposal pianos by four different firms: Bechstein, Bösendorfer, Pleyel and Steinway.
Uczestnicy III Konkursu (1937) podczas spotkania z prezydentem Ignacym Mościckim na Zamku Królewskim w Warszawie. Przy fortepianie Chieko Hara (wyróżnienie, Japonia)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The female pianists from Japan caused quite a sensation. Although Miwa Kai and Chieko Hara (distinction) were not among the prize-winners, their playing was hugely appreciated by critics and the public. They were the first representatives of the Land of the Rising Sun in the history of the Competition. As in previous editions, representatives of the USSR came out on top.
Obrady Jury III Konkursu (1937)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
“The initial conviction that only Poles should sit on the Competition jury, later underwent a radical revision, when it turned out that representatives of other nationalities understand and perform Chopin with a degree of insight and sentiment that our own pianists could not afford at that time...
Another argument in favour of an international jury was the interest and renown that the tournament began to enjoy outside Poland, which foreshadowed the colossal development of the Chopin Competition in the future. After some deliberations, the Polish jury decided to invite […] the most eminent representatives of the music world from abroad.” Jerzy Żurawlew
Postcard with logotype the Chopin Year 1949 (20. Century) by Konstanty Maria SopoćkoThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The first post-war International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition was held in 1949. In connection with the centenary of Chopin’s death, that year was proclaimed Chopin Year by the Council of Ministers. The piano tournament was accompanied by composition and sculpture competitions, stationary and travelling exhibitions, and numerous concerts at home and abroad. Chopin’s Complete Works began to appear in print under chief editor Ignacy Jan Paderewski.
The Competition was financed from government funds, as were grants and training camps for the Polish pianists. The young musicians were given access to the best pianos, test recordings were made, and the Poznań Philharmonic Orchestra was even brought in to a summer course held in Łagów Lubuski, so that the course participants could practise the concertos with its accompaniment. Those were conditions that Polish pianists could only have dreamt of before.
Premier Józef Cyrankiewicz wręcza nagrody laureatkom I nagrody ex aequo w IV Konkursie (1949), Halinie Czerny-Stefańskiej i Belli DawidovichThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
“The problem [of the Chopin style] clearly fundamentally comes down to a proper sense of the Polishness of that music. This is why it should frankly be said that Poles, or more generally – Slavs – have the greatest possibilities in this area. The representatives of other nations seem to grope their way in the dark. Spiritual and mental effort is directed toward bringing out that human dimension in Chopin’s music which we could call universal.
What is emphasised, therefore, are the feelings of grief, dreaming, nostalgia, rebellion, love, etc. But this is only a half measure. Though Chopin’s music does comprise all this, we must add one modifier: it is a Polish grief, a Polish dream, and a Polish nostalgia…”
Jerzy Artemski
Adam Harasiewicz (Polska), zwycięzca V Konkursu (1955)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The 5th Competition was a grand musical and society event, playing host to Queen Elisabeth of Belgium, and seventy concerts and eighty recitals were given in Warsaw and other cities. In the pianistic tournament, victory went to a representative of the host nation: Adam Harasiewicz secured the win with an excellent performance in the final. Vladimir Ashkenazy, who had been leading up to then, performed less strongly at the final stage and ultimately came second.
Poster of the 6th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition (1960) by Manfred KruskaThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
“In all the history of the Chopin Competition, this has never happened before! None of the Soviet pianists – who had played a key role in all the previous competitions – even reached the finals. What is more, apart from two representatives of Poland, the other four finalists represented non-European countries: Argentina, Brazil, Japan, and the USA. A more unusual complement of Chopin interpreters could hardly be imagined.
How is it possible that his music – with such prominently national content, so distinctly national, or in any case European in its forms and dance rhythms – finds its best interpreters in nearly exotic countries?”
Lucjan Kydryński
Warsaw - Krakowskie Przedmieście Street by UnknownThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
During the seventies, it became a tradition to perform Mozart’s Requiem on the anniversary of Fryderyk Chopin’s death: 17 October. That work was heard during the composer’s solemn funeral at St Mary Magdalene’s in Paris in 1849; in Warsaw, the annual concert is held at the Church of the Holy Cross, where Chopin’s heart is enshrined.
Medal of the Chopin Competition Medal of the Chopin Competition (21st Century) by Ewa Olszewska-BorysThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
Another innovation was to present the winners of the first three places with medals: gold, silver and bronze. The medals, designed by Józef Markiewicz, were produced by the State Mint.
Krystian Zimerman (Polska), I nagroda w IX Konkursie (1975)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The youngest winner – Krystian Zimerman
“This year’s Competition will go down in the history of our music life as particularly memorable. For the first time in 20 years, a Polish pianist won not only the main prize, but also the prestigious special awards: the Fryderyk Chopin Society Prize for the best performance of a polonaise and the Polish Radio Prize – for mazurkas."
Caricature of Krystian Zimerman (20. Century) by Edmund MańczakThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
"The 18-year-old Pole is […]the youngest 1st-prize winner in the nearly half-a-century-long history of the Competition.”
From the daily “Dziennik Ludowy”
Caricature of Dang Thai Son (20. Century) by Edmund MańczakThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The first Asian winner – Dang Thai Son
Regarding the Competition – I think the overall level was really high, but true artists were not so numerous. This is a kind of trap: more and more talented young people from various parts of the world play the piano very well; the problem is that in many cases very little comes out of it.
Nikita Magaloff, deputy director of the 10th Competition (1980)
Caricature of Ivo Pogorelić (20. Century) by Edmund MańczakThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
Although the 10th Chopin Competition in 1980 was won by the outstanding Vietnamese pianist Dang Thai Son, it is remembered also because of the controversies around another participant, Ivo Pogorelić. Pogorelić did not got into the final round. A charismatic pianist Martha Argerich resigned from her role as a juror to show that she disagrees with that decision.
Caricature of Stanisław Bunin (20. Century) by Edmund MańczakThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
“The winner of 11th Competition is youth. It should be noted that all the three main prize winners are pianists aged just 19 or 20, while the next three places were taken by the rather more mature generation of 26-27-year-olds. So also the Chopin that the protagonists of this Competition have presented is cheerful in a youthful manner, not very problematic, a bit stormy, and most of all – full of virtuosic panache (and so is the 1st-prize winner, Stanislav Bunin – a virtuoso and a piano talent of exceptional sort).”
Józef Kański
Poster of the 12th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition (1990) by Lech MajewskiThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
Without the winner
The biggest surprise of the 12th Chopin Competition (1990) was the lack of a winner. Probably no one had foreseen such a turn of events prior to the inauguration. Second Prize was awarded to Kevin Kenner, who was participating in the Competition for the second time (distinction in 1980).
Kenner was also rewarded for the best performance of a polonaise (joint with Wojciech Świtała). For the first time in history, however, no one was given the prize for the best performance of mazurkas. The pianists were clearly not even helped in forging convincing interpretations by the unprecedented choice of as many as seven pianos.
“[…] the 1st prize has not been granted. This is the worst that could happen. It will be hard to convince anyone that it was quite impossible to select the best out of the more than 130 candidates and give the 1st prize to that person. […] The jurors, with their eyes fixed on an abstract ideal of Chopin performance that they idolise and that has been burdened with their lifelong habits – have caused this ideal to become ossified.
They have failed to notice that a new era is making itself felt at the turn of this century. It is high time that the old habits are shaken off and the new shape of piano art is given welcome. Every generation has remained faithful to Chopin’s text, but good results have only been achieved when the interpretation followed the spirit of the age.”
Witold Rudziński
Valdemosa. Mountainous landscape with the Carthusian Monastery by Bartolomé SuredaThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The Competition was honoured by the presence of two crowned heads: Queen Fabiola of Belgium and Queen Sofia of Spain, who opened the exhibition “Fryderyk Chopin and George Sand’s Romantic Journey to Majorca”.
Poster of the 14th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition (2000) by Rosław SzayboThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
During the 14th Chopin Competition, which fell at the turn of the millennium, many talented pianists from the Far East appeared on the concert platform of the Warsaw Philharmonic. One could hardly say that the chronological watershed brought the anticipated artistic breakthrough to the Competition. Once again, there was no pianist who succeeded in interpreting the Polish idiom contained in the mazurkas or who captivated listeners with the brillant style of the concerto which he or she performed.
The prize for the best performance of a polonaise went to two Chinese pianists: the winner of Fourth Prize, Sa Chen, and the overall winner, Yundi Li. The jury was inclined to withhold the First Prize yet again, but there were fears about possible accusations that the Competition’s standing had been lowered.
Once more, a second-time entrant gained success. The Argentinian pianist Ingrid Fliter, winner of Second Prize, had not even qualified for the third round five years earlier. The audience’s affections were won by the Romanian pianist Mihaela Ursuleasa.
Rafał Blechacz (Polska), zwycięzca XV Konkursu (2005)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
Rafał Blechacz – the unforgettable emotions of the 15th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition are associated with that name. The Polish artist became the most decorated pianist in the history of the Competition, winning not only First Prize, but also all the special prizes (for the best performance of mazurkas, polonaise and concerto), as well as the prize funded by Krystian Zimerman for the best performance of a sonata and the audience prize.
Poster of the 15thInternational Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition (2005) by Wiesław GrzegorczykThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
In the final, while the last chords of the Piano Concerto in E Minor performed by Rafał Blechacz were still resounding, an eruption of genuine euphoria broke out among the audience. The orchestra, bringing the work to a close, could not be heard! The verdict was easy to predict.
Rafał Blechacz – Nocturne in B major, Op. 62 No. 1 (2005)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
For the first time, the Competition was broadcast in its entirety on the radio, Polish television and the Internet.
Poster of the 16th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition (2010) by Rafał OlbińskiThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
2010 was the jubilee year of the bicentenary of the birth of Fryderyk Chopin. In connection with the grand anniversary celebrations, Chopin began appearing everywhere and in every possible form: from the most authentic (Chopin on period instruments) to those adhering to popular culture (Chopin in tracksuit top with earphones).
In 2010, the Competition was organised for the first time by the Fryderyk Chopin Institute. The four-stage format was reinstated, and the Sonata in C minor, Op. 4 appeared on the list of works for the third round (giving three solo sonatas to choose from). Among the pianos, an Italian Fazioli was available for the first time. The jurors’ votes were no longer secret, which constituted a major novelty.
Behind the Scenes "And the Winner Is..." – 20/10/2015 (2015)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
Announcement of the winners of the 17th Chopin Piano Competition, 2015.
Seong-Jin Cho – Sonata B flat minor Op. 35 (2015)The Fryderyk Chopin Institute
“I guess no verdict could be expected to satisfy all observers without exception. But it seems that even in the wildest dreams no-one predicted the temperature of the debate that flared up once the name of the winner had been announced.”
Marcin Majchrowski, “Dwutygodnik”
Yulianna AvdeevaThe Fryderyk Chopin Institute
The claim in the title has repeatedly proved true for the Chopin Competition, whose popularity, growing from one edition to another, has encouraged ever greater numbers of pianists to participate. The 18th Chopin Competition proved record-breaking already at the stage of registering the applications, as its organiser, the Chopin Institute, has recorded over 500 of them.
This time, further breakthroughs in the history of this musical tournament have come in the first three days of the Preliminary already: live streams from the auditions have attracted audiences from all over the world. Chopin lovers have played the recitals of the Preliminary phase on Chopin Institute’s YouTube channel no fewer than 336,000 times.
Most of the viewers – over 30% of the total – are in Japan, and every tenth follower comes from South Korea. Other nationalities eagerly watching the young contending pianists are Poles and Americans. Interestingly, a large share (nearly 25%) of the audience are aged from 18 to 24, and 21% are aged 25–34.