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Marilyn Shrude named Distinguished Artist Professor

BOWLING GREEN, O.--Dr. Marilyn Shrude, professor and chair of the department of musicology/composition/theory in the College of Musical Arts at Bowling Green State University, was named by the BGSU Board of Trustees as a Distinguished Artist Professor at its June 29 meeting.

The Distinguished Research/Artist Professor Award, established in 1982, recognizes professors who have earned national and international recognition through research and publication or creative and artistic achievement.

A colleague who nominated Shrude for the recognition described her as an "internationally known and award-winning composer, a recognized advocate of new music, a gifted pianist who has performed in significant international recitals and a superb teacher."

Dr. Richard Kennell, interim dean of the College of Musical Arts, supported the nomination, adding that Shrude’s "mentoring of talented students at BGSU has resulted in a generation of composers now teaching around the nation."

Shrude is the founder of the MidAmerican Center for Contemporary Music and co-directs the annual New Music and Art Festival at BGSU. Her compositions have been performed across the United States, in Europe and in Asia, and she has been a guest artist at festivals around the world. Her recorded work has been broadcast on both television and radio, including Swiss and Belgian National Radio.

Her numerous honors include a composer fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, and an Academy Award in Music from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

In 1984 she became the first woman to receive the Kennedy Center Friedheim Award for Orchestral Music, and in 1998 was the first woman to receive the Cleveland Arts Prize in music. In May 2000 she was awarded a one-month residency at the Rockefeller Foundation’s Study and Conference Center in Bellagio, Italy. The grants she has received total nearly a million dollars.

Shrude holds a bachelor’s degree from Alverno College and a master’s degree and doctorate from Northwestern University.

A frequent guest composer at universities and music institutes around the country, she also participates often in outreach activities in music and composition for younger students and has received several awards for her educational leadership. She has been on the faculty at the University since 1977, when she began as an instructor. She was named full professor in 1984.

The other BGSU faculty member who holds the title of Distinguished Artist Professor is Dr. John Sampen, who received the designation in 1996. The internationally acclaimed saxophonist is also highly regarded as a teacher and has had several students who have gone on to great success as well.