Year
|
Artist
|
Image
|
Work
|
Collection
|
Notes
|
Annual Exhibition at the Museum of Art, Carnegie Institute[4]
|
$1,500 cash award accompanied the gold medal
|
1896 1st
|
John Lavery Ireland
|
|
Lady in Brown[4]
|
|
|
1897 2nd
|
James Jebusa Shannon United States
|
|
Miss Kitty[5][6]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
The artist's daughter and two dogs
|
1898 3rd
|
Dwight William Tryon United States
|
|
Early Spring in New England[7]
|
Freer Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
|
|
1899 4th
|
Cecilia Beaux United States
|
|
Mother and Daughter (Mrs. Clement Acton Griscom & Frances Canby Griscom)
|
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
|
Gold Medal: 1900 Paris Exposition 1900 Temple Gold Medal (PAFA)
First woman awarded a Carnegie Prize. (The next was not until 1988.)
|
1900 5th
|
André Dauchez France
|
|
The Kelp Gatherers
|
|
|
1901 6th
|
Alfred H. Maurer United States
|
|
An Arrangement
|
Whitney Museum of American Art, Manhattan, New York City
|
|
1902 7th
|
Exhibition of loaned works.[4] No prizes awarded.
|
|
|
|
|
1903 8th
|
Frank Weston Benson United States
|
|
A Woman Reading[8]
|
Beverly Arts Association, Chicago, Illinois
|
|
1904 9th
|
Walter Elmer Schofield United States
|
|
Across the River[9][10]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1905 10th
|
Lucien Simon France
|
|
Evening in a Studio
|
Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts, Stanford University, Stanford, California
|
|
1906
|
No annual exhibition (due to museum expansion)[4]
|
|
|
|
|
1907 11th
|
Gaston La Touche France
|
|
The Bath[4]
|
|
Ex collection: William S. Stimmel[11] Ex collection: University Club of Pittsburgh Sold at Dargate Auction Galleries, Pittsburgh, 7 October 2017.[12]
|
1908 12th
|
Thomas W. Dewing United States
|
|
The Necklace[4]
|
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.
|
|
1909 13th
|
Edmund C. Tarbell United States
|
|
A Girl Crocheting[13]
|
Arkell Museum, Canajoharie, New York
|
|
1910 14th
|
William Orpen Ireland
|
|
Portrait of the Artist (Venus and Myself)[14]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1911 15th
|
John White Alexander United States
|
|
A Ray of Sunlight (The Cellist)
|
private collection
|
|
1912 16th
|
Charles Sims England
|
|
Pastorella[15]
|
|
Ex collection: William S. Stimmel[11]
|
1913 17th
|
Glyn Warren Philpot England
|
|
The Marble Worker[16]
|
Muskegon Museum of Art, Muskegon, Michigan
|
|
1914 18th
|
Edward Redfield United States
|
|
The Village in Winter[17][18]
|
Payne Gallery, Moravian College, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
|
Ex collection: William S. Stimmel[11]
|
1915–1919
|
No annual exhibitions (due to World War I)[4]
|
|
|
|
|
International Exhibition of Paintings, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh[19]
|
Name change
|
1920 19th
|
Abbot Henderson Thayer United States
|
|
Young Woman in Olive Plush (Woman in Green Velvet)[20]
|
Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts
|
|
1921 20th
|
Ernest Lawson United States
|
|
Vanishing Mist[21][22]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1922 21st
|
George W. Bellows United States
|
|
Elinor, Jean and Anna[23]
|
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York
|
The artist's aunt, daughter and mother 1921 Beck Gold Medal (PAFA)
|
1923 22nd
|
Arthur Bowen Davies United States
|
|
Afterthoughts of Earth[24]
|
|
|
1924 23rd
|
Augustus John Wales
|
|
Madame Suggia[25]
|
Tate Britain, London, UK
|
|
1925 24th
|
Henri Le Sidaner France (born Mauritius)
|
|
Window on the Bay of Villefranche[26]
|
Huntington Museum of Art, Huntington, West Virginia
|
|
1926 25th
|
Ker-Xavier Roussel France
|
|
The Garden (The Garden Window)[27]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1927 26th
|
Henri Matisse France
|
|
Still Life: Bouquet and Compotier[28]
|
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia
|
|
1928 27th
|
André Derain France
|
|
Still Life[29]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1929 28th
|
Felice Carena Italy
|
|
La Scuola[30]
|
Banca Monte dei Paschi Collection, Siena, Italy
|
|
1930 29th
|
Pablo Picasso Spain
|
|
Portrait of Mme Picasso[4]
|
private collection
|
|
1931 30th
|
Franklin C. Watkins United States
|
|
Suicide in Costume[31]
|
Philadelphia Museum of Art
|
Depicts a dead man in clown costume holding a smoking gun.
|
1932
|
No annual exhibition (due to severity of the Great Depression)
|
|
|
|
Cash award reduced to $1,000
|
1933 31st
|
André Dunoyer de Segonzac France
|
|
Saint-Tropez
|
|
|
1934 32nd
|
Peter Blume United States (born Russia)
|
|
South of Scranton[32]
|
Metropolitan Museum of Art
|
|
1935 33rd
|
Hipólito Hidalgo de Caviedes y Gómez Spain
|
|
Elvira and Tiberio[33]
|
|
Ex collection: Fine Arts Society of San Diego[33] Auctioned at Sotheby's NY, 18–19 November 1987[33]
|
1936 34th
|
Leon Kroll United States
|
|
The Road from the Cove[34]
|
private collection
|
|
1937 35th
|
Georges Braque France
|
|
The Yellow Cloth (The Yellow Tablecloth)[4]
|
private collection
|
|
1938 36th
|
Karl Hofer Germany
|
|
The Wind[35]
|
Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, Michigan
|
|
1939 37th
|
Alexander Brook United States
|
|
Georgia Jungle[36][37]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1940–1949
|
No annual exhibitions (due to World War II). Instead, 9 exhibitions of American paintings.[4]
|
|
|
|
|
Pittsburgh International Exhibition of Contemporary Painting
|
Exhibition reorganized as a biennial Cash award increased to $2,000
|
1950 38th
|
Jacques Villon France
|
|
The Thresher
|
|
Villon was a Cubist painter, and the brother of Marcel Duchamp.
|
1951
|
No exhibition
|
|
|
|
|
1952 39th
|
Ben Nicholson England[4]
|
|
Azure[38]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1953 & 1954
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
Exhibition reorganized as a triennial.[4]
|
1955 40th
|
Alfred Manessier France
|
|
Crown of Thorns[39]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1956 & 1957
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
Pittsburgh International Exhibition of Contemporary Painting and Sculpture[2]
|
Gold Medal for Sculpture added
|
1958 41st Painting
|
Antoni TÃ pies Spain
|
|
Painting[40]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1958 41st Sculpture
|
Alexander Calder United States
|
|
Mobile: Pittsburgh[41]
|
Pittsburgh International Airport
|
|
1959 & 1960
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
1961 42nd Painting
|
Mark Tobey United States
|
|
Untitled[42]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1961 42nd Sculpture
|
Alberto Giacometti Switzerland
|
|
Walking Man 1[43]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1962 & 1963
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
Pittsburgh International Exhibition of Contemporary Art
|
"The traditional award structure of numbered prizes has been eliminated in favor of equal awards, four for painting and two for sculpture, each in the amount of $2,000."[44]
|
1964 43rd Painting
|
Ellsworth Kelly United States
|
|
Blue, Black and Red
|
|
|
Victor Pasmore England
|
|
Red Abstract No. 5[45]
|
Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, Bristol, England.
|
|
Antonio Saura Spain
|
|
Imaginary Portrait of Goya[46]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
Pierre Soulages France
|
|
24 November '63[47]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
Meditation on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy
|
1964 43rd Sculpture
|
Jean Arp Germany
|
|
Sculpture Classique[48]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
Eduardo Chillida[49] Spain
|
|
Modulation d'espace II[50]
|
Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
|
|
1965 & 1966
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
1967 44th Painting
|
Francis Bacon Ireland
|
|
|
|
Bacon refused the prize.[3]
|
Josef Albers United States (born Germany)
|
|
Homage to the Square: Vernal[51]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
Joan Miró Spain
|
|
Queen Louise of Prussia[52]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1967 44th Sculpture
|
Victor Vasarely France (born Hungary)
|
|
Alom[53]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1968 & 1969
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
1970 45th
|
No prizes awarded
|
|
|
|
|
1971–1976
|
No exhibitions (due to construction of the Sarah Mellon Scaife Gallery).[4]
|
|
|
|
|
Pittsburgh International Series
|
Exhibition reorganized as a biennial retrospective of a single artist's body of work. $50,000 Andrew W. Mellon Prize awarded to honoree.[54]
|
1977 46th
|
Pierre Alechinsky Belgium
|
|
|
|
|
1978
|
No exhibition
|
|
|
|
|
1979 47th
|
Willem de Kooning United States (born Netherlands)
|
|
|
|
$50,000 Andrew W. Mellon Prize split among 3 honorees
|
Eduardo Chillida[49] Spain
|
|
|
|
|
Documenta II (1959), IV (1968) and VI (1977) Germany
|
|
|
|
International contemporary art exhibition held in Germany
|
1980 & 1981
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
Carnegie International Exhibition
|
Exhibition re-established as a triennial $10,000 Carnegie International Prize
|
1982 48th
|
No prizes awarded
|
|
|
|
|
1983 & 1984
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
1985 49th Painting
|
Anselm Kiefer Germany
|
|
Midgard[55]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1985 49th Sculpture
|
Richard Serra United States
|
|
Carnegie[56]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1986 & 1987
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
1988 50th
|
Rebecca Horn Germany
|
|
The Hydra Forest: Performing Oscar Wilde[57]
|
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
|
Assemblage of electrical devices, glass, coal and other objects
Second woman awarded a Carnegie Prize.
|
1989 & 1990
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
1991 51st
|
On Kawara Japan
|
|
Date Paintings[58]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1992–1994
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
1995 52nd Painting
|
Sigmar Polke Germany
|
|
Hermes Trismegistos I-IV[59]
|
De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art, Tilburg, North Brabant, Netherlands
|
|
1995 52nd Sculpture
|
Richard Artschwager United States
|
|
Table Prepared in the Presence of Enemies[60]
|
Carnegie Art Museum, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
|
1996–1998
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
1999/2000 53rd
|
William Kentridge South Africa
|
|
Film: Stereoscope
|
|
First filmmaker awarded a Carnegie Prize.
|
2001–2003
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
2004/2005 54th
|
Kutlug Ataman Turkey
|
|
40-channel video installation: Kuba[61]
|
|
Interviews with residents of Kuba, a shanty town in Istanbul.
|
2006 & 2007
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
2008 55th "Life on Mars"
|
Vija Celmins United States (born Latvia)
|
|
Night Sky #12[62]
|
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
|
Third woman awarded a Carnegie Prize.
|
2009–2012
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
2013 56th
|
Nicole Eisenman[63] France
|
|
Figure paintings and sculpture
|
|
Fourth woman awarded a Carnegie Prize.
|
2014–2017
|
No exhibitions
|
|
|
|
|
2018 57th
|
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye England
|
|
Figure paintings and portraits
|
|
Fifth woman awarded a Carnegie Prize. First woman of color awarded a Carnegie Prize.
|