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Musical arts school in Ponce, Puerto Rico From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Instituto de Música Juan Morel Campos (English: Juan Morel Campos Music Institute), formerly known as Escuela Libre de Música de Ponce (English: Ponce Free School of Music), is a musical arts institution in Ponce, Puerto Rico. It is an institution of the Ponce Municipal Government.[4][5] Its first director was Librado Net Pérez.[6] The building had been the former location of the Ponce regional headquarters of Bomberos de Puerto Rico (Puerto Rico Firefighters).
Instituto de Música Juan Morel Campos | |
---|---|
Address | |
00731 | |
Information | |
School type | Specialized musical arts school |
Established | 1947 |
Principal | Wilfredo Colon Maldonado (Academic Director)[2] |
Faculty | 29[3] |
Grades | 4–12 |
Enrollment | 300+[2] (2017) |
Language | Spanish |
Area | Ponce Historic Zone |
Website | Instituto de Música Juan Morel Campos |
The school was founded in 1947 under the municipal administration of Mayor Andrés Grillasca Salas as the Escuela Libre de Música de Ponce (Ponce Free School of Music).[7]
The school's first location was at the structure previously occupied by the Liceo de Ponce (Liceo Ponceño), an early 20th-century girls-only school on the northwest corner of Salud and Cristina streets.[8][9]
In 1977 the name Escuela Libre de Música de Ponce was changed to Escuela Libre de Música Juan Morel Campos, after the Ponce composer and conductor.[10][11] In 1980, the Institute was officially reorganized under mayor Jose Guillermo Tormos Vega as an entity of the Municipal Government.[2] Enrollment growth and increased school offerings resulted in the school expanding its headquarters. In 2008, the school expanded again by acquiring a new site on the corner of Calle Cristina and Calle Mayor streets, opposite to Teatro La Perla.[2] The new site included additional classrooms, new administrative offices and an amphitheater.[10] Ponce Municipal decree #40 (2012-2013) renamed the institution to Instituto de Música Juan Morel Campos.[12]
The Institute's first structure, on the northwest corner of Cristina and Salud streets, was built in the Art Deco style. The new building on the southwest corner of Cristina and Mayor streets is a former fire station, which was built in recto-linear fashion following modern architectural style. The front yard of the Institute at Calle Cristina contains the only olive tree planted in Puerto Rico.[13] The building as originally built was not only a fire station but also the former location of the Ponce regional headquarters of the Bomberos de Puerto Rico.
A mosaic mural titled "La Abnegacion" (Selflessness) by Rafael Ríos Rey (now [2023] in ruins] commemorates the building's former use as a fire station.[14] The mural was built in 1960.[15]
The Institute has several musical organizations. Among them are Coro de Niños (Children's Choir) and Coro Juvenil (Youth Choir), both directed by music professor María Asunción Ondarra Fombellida.[16] It also has a Conjunto de Tiples (Treble Ensemble), led by professor Héctor Hernández.[17][unreliable source?] There is also a Conjunto de Cuerdas Punteadas (Plucked Strings Ensemble).[18] In addition there are an Orquesta Sinfonica Juvenil (Youth Symphony Orchestra), Banda Juvenil (Youth Band), Conjunto de Metales (Metal Ensemble), Conjunto de Cañas (Reeds Ensemble), Conjunto de Percusión (Percussion Ensemble), and Conjunto de Acordeones (Accordion Ensemble).[5]
Its symphony orchestra received a Senate Resolution from the Puerto Rico Senate in 2010.[4]
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