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The MacDowell Colony,
the nation’s leading
artist residency program, will present its Edward
MacDowell Medal this year to acclaimed writer Alice
Munro. She will be the 47th recipient of the
MacDowell Medal. The Medal is awarded annually
to an individual who has made an outstanding contribution
to the arts. Ms. Munro joins an impressive
list of past recipients, including Joan Didion, Georgia
O’Keeffe, I.M. Pei, and Merce Cunningham.
The award will be presented to Ms. Munro in
a public ceremony during the annual Medal Day celebration
on Sunday, August 13, 2006, beginning at 12:15 p.m.
on The MacDowell Colony grounds in Peterborough,
New Hampshire. Robert
MacNeil, chairman of The MacDowell Colony, will present
the Medal, along with Carter Wiseman, president of
the board, and Cheryl Young, executive director. Munro’s
literary agent and friend, Virginia Barber, will offer
remarks. Ms. Barber began her own agency in 1974;
in addition to Ms. Munro, she has represented such
respected authors as Peter Mayle and Diane Ackerman.
Named one of Time’s “100 most influential
people” in 2005, Alice Munro has published 10
collections of short stories, including The Beggar
Maid; Open Secrets; Hateship, Friendship, Courtship,
Loveship, Marriage; and Runaway. Her distinguished
work has earned numerous prizes, including three of
Canada’s Governor General’s Literary Awards
and the United States’ National Book Critics
Circle Award. New Yorker writer Joan Acocella,
who chaired this year’s Medal Selection Committee,
says, “The committee awarded the MacDowell Medal
to Alice Munro in recognition of the emotional largeness
and the dry-eyed precision of her beautiful stories,
which she has been publishing for almost 40 years now. Reviewers
have often compared Munro to Chekhov, and this is no
overstatement. When you close a book of hers,
you know a lot more about what it means to be human.” Other
members of the committee included writers Nicholas
Dawidoff, Jeffrey Eugenides, and Vivian Gornick.
Ms.
Munro was born in Wingham, Ontario in Canada in 1931. She
began writing in her teens and published her first
story in 1950 while a student at the University of
Western Ontario. Her first collection of stories,
Dance of the Happy Shades, was not published until
1968, but it was highly lauded and won that year’s
Governor General’s Award, Canada’s highest
literary prize.
“I never intended to be a short-story writer,” she
said to The New York Times. “I started
writing them because I didn’t have time to write
anything else — I had three children. And then
I got used to writing stories, so I saw my material
that way, and now I don’t think I’ll ever
write a novel.” Indeed Ms. Munro is credited
with breathing new life into the form of short fiction
and unearthing the unspoken lives of her characters,
especially women.
Since the Medal began in 1960, MacDowell has awarded
it to 14 writers, though none has been such an innovator
in the short story. In the 99 years the Colony
has existed, it has awarded Fellowships to more than
1,600 women writers. Ms. Munro follows past literature
Medalists Marianne Moore, Norman Mailer, John Updike,
Mary McCarthy, and Joan Didion.
After the award ceremony, Colony guests will enjoy
picnic lunches, and current MacDowell artists-in-residence
will open their studios to the public from 2 p.m. until
4 p.m. There is no charge to attend the ceremony
or the open studios.
Since 1907, The MacDowell Colony has provided more
than 5,800 artists of all disciplines with the time
and private space for creative work. Situated
on 450 acres of woodland in Peterborough, New Hampshire,
the Colony welcomes more than 250 composers, writers,
visual artists, architects, filmmakers, and interdisciplinary
artists from the United States and abroad each year. The
sole criterion for acceptance is talent; a panel in
each discipline selects Fellows. In 1997, The
MacDowell Colony was awarded the National Medal of
Arts for “nurturing and inspiring many of this
century’s finest artists.”