Sky Is the Limit for Equestrian Sport as IOC President Presents Special Trophy to FEI President

IOC President Thomas Bach (right), presenting FEI President Ingmar De Vos with the IOC President’s Trophy. (FEI/Richard Juilliart)

Lausanne (SUI), 13 April 2017 – International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach paid a heartfelt tribute to equestrian sport when presenting FEI President Ingmar De Vos with the IOC President’s Trophy this week during the annual FEI Sports Forum 2017.

“Equestrian sport has a lot to be proud of, and the sky really is the limit,” President Bach said, to huge applause from more than 300 members of the global equestrian community in the Olympic capital of Lausanne on Monday (10 April).

“The sport not only has a long Olympic history, but has always been at the forefront of gender equality.

“It is great to be here with my friend Ingmar De Vos, and members of the global equestrian community, to celebrate the fact that the FEI is a gender equality champion, as well as a leader in good governance, and is opening up the sport to new fans while modernising this sport which has such a long Olympic heritage.”

“This trophy isn’t just for the FEI; it’s for our whole community,” Ingmar De Vos said after the presentation. “It’s a recognition of our incredible global sport and, to quote President Bach, the sky really is the limit!”

The contemporary “The Sky Is the Limit” sculpture, an abstract bronze created by Alexander Krivosheiw, is plated in 24-carat gold and symbolises the story of an athlete gold medallist from conception to consecration as a champion.

Equestrian sport celebrated 104 years in the Olympic movement and 20 years in the Paralympic Movement at the Rio 2016 Games in Brazil. The FEI Calendar now has close to 4,500 international events around the world each year.

About Alexander Krivosheiw

The sculptor Alexander Krivosheiw was born in New York in 1976. He holds a B.A. with Honors in sculpture from the School of Visual Arts in New York City. His interest in art was informed by his studies of Greek mythology, archaeology, and social anthropology, undertaken in Crete, Greece.  While enrolled at the School of Visual Arts, Krivosheiw embarked upon an intensive seven-year apprenticeship with sculptor Kevin Barrett, where he developed and honed his welding and fabrication skills for large-form sculpture. Works fabricated under Barrett’s tutelage included bronze and aluminum sculptures reaching heights of 18 feet, many of which now reside in private collections worldwide. Krivosheiw also fabricated numerous wall reliefs fabricated for the painter Tom Wesselmann, which are counted in the permanent collections of top-tier museums both internationally and abroad. For more information, visit: www.alexanderssculptures.com.

FEI Media Contact:

Ruth Grundy
Manager Press Relations
Email: ruth.grundy@fei.org
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