

Founding
Founded in 1905 as the Institute of Musical Art
Name
The School was named for Augustus Juilliard, a wealthy
textile merchant whose bequest was used to establish the Juilliard Graduate
School in 1924. In 1926, it merged with the Institute for Musical Art to become
the Juilliard School of Music. With the additions of a Dance Division in 1951
and Drama Division in 1968, the name was shortened to The Juilliard School.
Faculty
309 College Division faculty members (2011-12)
Undergraduate Applicants to the College Division
2,466 (fall 2010)
Percentage Admitted
7.4%
Students in the College Division
846 students from 42 countries (2010), with an undergraduate enrollment of 510.
Graduation Rate
81.1%
Tuition (2012-13)
$35,140
Alumni
Juilliard alumni have collectively won more than 105 Grammy
Awards, 62 Tony Awards, 47 Emmy Awards, 26 Bessie Awards, 24 Academy Awards, 16
Pulitzer Prizes, and 12 National Medals for the Arts.
Mascot
Penguin (unofficial)
Performance Spaces
Peter Jay Sharp Theater (907 seats)
Paul Recital Hall (275
seats)
Morse Recital Hall (125
seats)
Stephanie P. McClelland Drama Theater (195
seats)
Rosemary and Meredith Willson Theater (98
seats)
Harold and Mimi Steinberg Drama Studio (70 seats)
Library and Juilliard Manuscript Collection
Juilliard’s Lila Acheson Wallace Library contains more than
75,000 scores; 23,000 books; and 25,000 sound recordings.
The Juilliard Manuscript Collection, comprised of 140 composer autographs, sketches, and annotated first editions, is one of the most important collections of musical source materials in the world.
Stringed Instrument Collection
Juilliard has a collection of more than 200 high-quality stringed
instruments available for students to borrow, including four violins by
Guarneri del Gesù, two violins by Antonio Stradivari, and a Stradivari
cello.
Pianos
Juilliard maintains an inventory of 253 Steinway pianos, the
largest collection of any institution in the world.
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