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Composer Harriet Steinke Wins 2025 Hermitage Prize in Composition at Aspen Music Festival & School
Composer Harriet Steinke Wins 2025 Hermitage Prize in Composition at Aspen Music Festival & School
Harriet Steinke, a composition student at the Aspen Music Festival and School, will receive a residency and Fellowship at the Hermitage Artist Retreat in Sarasota County, Florida.

Photo credit: Diego Redel
August 18, 2025 (Sarasota County, Florida) — The Hermitage Artist Retreat and the Aspen Music Festival and School (Aspen, Colorado) are pleased to announce Harriet Steinke, a composition student at AMFS, has been selected as the recipient of the 2025 Hermitage Prize in Composition. Steinke is the twelfth recipient of this annual award, which includes a residency at the Hermitage, made possible with generous support from Friends of the Hermitage in Aspen.
Steinke was selected by a jury that includes multiple Grammy Award winner Robert Spano, Music Director of the AMFS, Artistic Director Laureate of the Atlanta Symphony, and a past member of the Hermitage Curatorial Council; award-winning composer and celebrated arts administrator Alan Fletcher, AMFS President and CEO; and the composition faculty of the AMFS, including Grammy Award-winning Hermitage Fellow Christopher Theofanidis.
Hermitage Artistic Director and CEO Andy Sandberg presented the award to Steinke at the Aspen Music Festival’s Klein Tent, alongside Spano, Fletcher, and Theofanidis. This unique initiative, launched in 2013, reflects an invaluable partnership between AMFS and the Hermitage, designed to champion new and original works and to recognize exceptional talent in the field of contemporary classical music. To celebrate the tenth anniversary of this award in 2023, the Hermitage and AMFS produced a retrospective video featuring exclusive interviews with past winners, distinguished AMFS faculty members, and renowned thought leaders in music, which can be seen here (full URL link below). With established composers like Spano, Fletcher, Theofanidis, Nico Muhly, and more having experienced memorable Hermitage Fellowships, the Hermitage Prize in Composition was created to offer the same experience to young, talented composers just beginning their professional careers.
“We are thrilled to recognize Harriet Steinke as the winner of the twelfth annual Hermitage Prize,” noted Sandberg. “Harriet is a brilliant young composer whose work has been heard across the United States, and we know she will a welcome addition to the Hermitage community. We were delighted that the weekend’s festivities could be celebrated alongside fellow Hermitage alumni including Robert Spano, Alan Fletcher, and Christopher Theofanidis. We are grateful for our continuing collaboration with the Aspen Music Festival, which just presented the world premiere of Siddhartha, She – an original opera conceived and developed at the Hermitage by five Hermitage Fellows.”
The Hermitage Prize at AMFS is the only student residency awarded each year; all other Hermitage Fellows are accomplished working professionals and leaders in their fields, selected by the Hermitage’s National Curatorial Council. This provides the recipient of the annual Hermitage Prize in Composition the opportunity to share this unmatched Hermitage experience with leading artists from all around the world.
This year’s season of the world-renowned Aspen Music Festival featured works and performances from Hermitage alumni including AMFS Music Director Robert Spano, AMFS President Alan Fletcher, Patrick Harlin, Jessie Montgomery, Anne Patterson, Melissa Studdard, Christopher Theofanidis, and Conrad Tao.
Hermitage Fellows have included 18 Pulitzer Prize winners, multiple Grammy, Oscar, Emmy, and Tony winners, Poets Laureate, MacArthur and Guggenheim Fellows, and more. Hermitage Fellows regularly describe their time at the Hermitage as "magical," "transformative," and "life-changing."
2025 Hermitage Prize in Composition winner Harriet Steinke is a concert-music composer from Michigan. She has worked with chamber ensembles, orchestras, and soloists across the United States, and has premiered multiple works in her hometown city of Detroit. Her music has been recognized with a Charles Ives Scholarship Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as well as composition fellowships from summer festivals at Aspen, Tanglewood, and Norfolk. She holds degrees in music and English from Butler University and two graduate degrees in music composition from the Yale School of Music.
“I am extremely grateful to be awarded this year’s Hermitage Prize in Composition,” said Steinke. “For a composer, the most valuable resource is the time and space to be creative and explore our ideas, without distraction from the outside world. It is an incredible privilege to have this opportunity to create new work at the Hermitage. I cannot wait to join the amazing community of artists that have also spent time at this beautiful and inspiring place, and I look forward to the new musical work I’ll create during my residency.”
Following the award presentation on the stage of the Klein Tent, Steinke was recognized at a reception hosted by Marsha and David Dowler in celebration of the Hermitage Prize and the AMFS composition program. At this event, Steinke’s original work “Processional” was debuted by the Aspen Contemporary Ensemble (ACE), conducted by Timothy Weiss.
Previous residencies of AMFS Hermitage Prize recipients have led to exciting collaborations, lifelong friendships, and extraordinary new compositions. The first winner of this award in 2013 was Patrick Harlin. While in residence at the Hermitage, Harlin met acclaimed designer and visual artist Anne Patterson. The two sparked a decade-long collaboration that led to the world premiere exhibition, “The Truth of the Night Sky,” at the Sarasota Art Museum in the fall of 2024. Harlin and Patterson also spent time at the Hermitage with AMFS composer Christopher Theofanidis and celebrated poet Melissa Studdard; as a result, these four Hermitage alumni began a multi-year collaboration which led to the recent world premiere of Siddhartha, She at the Aspen Music Festival. Adapted from Hermann Hesse’s Siddhartha, this original opera developed at the Hermitage featured music by Christopher Theofanidis, a libretto by Melissa Studdard, design and direction by Anne Patterson, soundscape design by Patrick Harlin, and music direction by Robert Spano – all five Hermitage alumni. This newly created work received a robust standing ovation and critical acclaim at the Aspen Music Festival on August 2, 2025.
“I cannot adequately describe how grateful I feel to be at the Hermitage Artist Retreat this summer,” said last year’s Hermitage Prize winner Hannah Rice of her resulting residency, still ongoing. “Life is so fast-paced for young artists, so to be awarded the time to wake up and watch the sunrise and ground myself is truly a gift. I am so unbelievably inspired by the ocean, the sounds of the birds squawking, and the beauty of mother earth, and I feel so thankful for this invaluable time to get back to child-like play in my music studio. I have also had the opportunity to connect with some incredible, seasoned artists here, and I have learned so much from their insights and experiences. As I approach the end of my time on Manasota Key, I am trying to soak in everything that this gorgeous place and these wonderful people have to offer and to splatter as many sounds against the canvas as I can. It is truly a privilege to be here at the Hermitage, and I keep reminding myself I’m not in a dream!”
Past winner David Clay Mettens (2021) said of winning the Hermitage Prize: "My time at the Hermitage was such a gift – I found the natural beauty of the Hermitage to be rejuvenating and my interactions with artists from other disciplines so artistically fulfilling. I can't imagine a better opportunity for a young composer than to be in the presence of creative luminaries in their respective fields.” Previous Hermitage Prize recipients include Patrick Harlin (2013), Thomas Kotcheff (2014), Phillip Sink (2015), Andrew Hsu (2016), Joel Thompson (2017), Sid Richardson (2018), Chelsea Komschlies (2019), David Clay Mettens (2021), Sofía Rocha (2022), Matīss Čudars (2023), and Hannah Rice (2024).
A leading national arts incubator, the Hermitage is the only major arts organization in Florida exclusively committed to supporting the development and creation of new work across all artistic disciplines. The Hermitage hosts artists on its Gulf Coast Manasota Key campus for multi-week residencies, where diverse and accomplished artists from around the world and across multiple disciplines create and develop new works of music, theater, visual art, literature, dance, film, and more. As part of their residencies, Hermitage Fellows participate in free year-round community programs, offering audiences in the region a unique opportunity to engage with some of the world’s leading artists and to get an authentic “sneak peek” into extraordinary projects and artistic minds before their works go on to major galleries, concert halls, theaters, and museums around the world. These innovative programs include musical performances, conversations, play readings, interactive experiences, open studios, school programs, teacher workshops, and more, serving thousands in our regional community each year.
To learn more about the Aspen Music Festival and School, visit AspenMusicFestival.com. To learn more about the Hermitage and its upcoming programs, or to support this organization in its mission to champion artists and the creative process, visit HermitageArtistRetreat.org.
Hermitage Prize Video Link and Landing Page: https://HermitageArtistRetreat.org/HermitagePrizeAspen/
For more information about the Hermitage and upcoming programs, visit: HermitageArtistRetreat.org.
About Harriet Steinke
Harriet Steinke is a composer of concert music from Michigan. She has worked with chamber ensembles, orchestras, and soloists across the U.S and some of her favorite premieres have been in her hometown city of Detroit. In 2022, the Detroit-based new music quartet Virago released their debut album of Steinke’s concert-length work Listening for Bells, which A Closer Listen called “a bright, exuberant release, a rush of spring air in the midst of winter.” Her music also appeared on the debut release of CRUX duo of pianist Lisa Moore and clarinetist Lloyd Van’t Hoff “My Place” released in January 2025 by ABC Classic. Most recently, her full-length instrumental Mass for reed quintet was premiered by the Grammy award-winning Akropolis Reed Quintet in June 2025. Upcoming this year, Beth Morrison Projects will present her one act opera Monna Innominata at National Sawdust in May 2025, commissioned as a part of the BMP’s NextGen opera development program. She will also serve as composer-in-residence for the chamber ensemble Sputter Box for the 2025-2027 seasons. Her work has been recognized by a Charles Ives Scholarship award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters as well as composition fellowships from the Tanglewood, Aspen, and Norfolk summer festivals. She holds degrees in music and English from Butler University and two graduate degrees in music composition from the Yale School of Music. She is the winner of the 2025 Hermitage Prize in Composition at the Aspen Music Festival and School.
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