After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.
— Aldous Huxley
Background
In 2023, Augustus Juilliard Society member Elizabeth G. Kolby honored her parents by establishing the Zofia and Henryk Szymanski Scholarship for Polish and Norwegian national students attending the Juilliard School.
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Ms. Kolby’s parents were born and spent their entire lives in Poland. Their early years were shaped by the devastation of WWII and then again by the Communist regime of the Cold War period. After the collapse of Communism in 1989, like most of the older population in Poland at that time, they eagerly looked forward to the new political, cultural and economic systems, though the pace of transformation was not without difficulty and adapting proved to be a lifelong challenge. Throughout it all, Zofia and Henryk maintained a joy for life and instilled that in their children. Whether through personal practice, taking in professional performances, or simply as the backdrop of their daily lives, music was always integral.
Ms. Kolby was born in Warsaw, Poland and in her formative years, attended The Liceum of Theatre Techniques where she developed a fascination for performing arts and realized the dedication and hard work artists put into their craft.
After graduating from the Poznan University with a Major in English, Ms. Kolby moved to Norway where she subsequently met and married a Norwegian diplomat. The couple traveled extensively, living in numerous countries including several years in New York. Here, Ms. Kolby's interest in the performing arts continued and she studied music comprehension at The Juilliard School.
The lifelong journey of Ms. Kolby has taken her far and wide, both geographically and intellectually, not unlike a cultural tradition of Indigenous Australians known as "dreaming tracks" or "songlines" which combine geo-spatial navigational cues with music, poetry, memory and the honoring of ancestors and place.
The Zofia and Henryk Szymanski Scholarship is in a way a personal "songline" for Ms. Kolby, paying homage to and connecting the influential people and places of her life. At the same time, it is also a gift for student-musicians on their musical life journey. Lastly, it is a through-line for musical study and joy through the ages.
How it works
ELIGIBILITY
The ZHS Scholarship is available to Norwegian and Polish nationals admitted to the Music Division. However, if in a given academic year no students meet the criteria, the Committee may also award it to Norwegian or Polish students enrolled in the Drama or Dance divisions.
PROCESS
From juiliard.edu:
“Scholarship decisions are made by the Juilliard Scholarship Committee upon the student’s admission to Juilliard and based on a combination of financial need and artistic merit. The members of the committee include administrators for the Departments of Enrollment Management and Financial Aid as well as senior administrators and artistic directors from appropriate areas of the School. While we are unable to meet the full need of all who apply, we make every effort to assist as many students as possible to attend the School.”
The Juilliard Scholarship Committee decides the total financial aid package (and how it is constituted) that an admitted student will receive. When a student enrolls at Juilliard, the Assistant Dean of Financial Aid then matches each student to a scholarship, according to their aid package and the donor’s scholarship preferences.
INQUIRIES
All inquiries regarding scholarship applications and acceptance should be directed to The Juiliard School’s financial aid office. For general information on financial aid at Juiliard, please use this link. To log in to your student portal, go here.
The ZHS Scholarship is not equipped to field questions about the application for and awarding of scholarships. This website is provided for background details only.