community report - Frist Center for the Visual Arts
Transcription
community report - Frist Center for the Visual Arts
2014 COMMUNITY REPORT FRIST CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS IMPACT Letter from the President Letter from the Director Board of Trustees, Committees, and Councils Staff INSPIRE Exhibitions EDUCATE Education and Outreach CONNECT Community Outreach SUPPORT Corporate and Foundation Giving Circle Members Contributing-Level Members Annual Fund Donors Honoraria and Memorial Gifts The Frist Gala An Art Deco Affair Art Deco Society Cumulative Giving What’s Inside 203,303 visitors FRIST CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS Over the past year, more than 200,000 people chose to spend their day with us. COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | IMPACT GREETINGS, This community report acknowledges the generosity of our donors and contributors, members and patrons. With your help, we are able to offer meaningful opportunities to engage with art, and we are grateful. In January 2014, the Frist Center received its first regional Emmy® Award in the category of children’s programming for ArtQuest: Art Is All Around You, a series of one-minute art-related videos produced in partnership with Nashville Public Television. At the end of each episode, children and their families are encouraged to visit fristkids.org for additional art activities and online resources. Teacher lesson plans are also available on the site. Viewers are invited to the Frist Center to visit the Martin ArtQuest® Gallery, where they can participate in interactive, intergenerational learning activities. In this report, you will learn about many other programs offered to visitors on-site and in the community, which are designed by our educators to enhance an understanding of art, other cultures, and ourselves. All these activities further our vision of using art to change the way people see their world. Billy and Jennifer Frist enjoy tea at the Frist Gala. It is not coincidental that exhibitions at the Frist during 2014 investigated contrasting perspectives. In January, Carrie Mae Weems: Three Decades of Photography and Video, organized by the Frist Center and presented in Nashville in 2012, opened at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, the fourth and final venue of its national tour. Early in the year, Looking East: Western Artists and the Allure of Japan presented exquisite comparisons that demonstrated how different cultures can be mutually enriching, not only visually but also socially. Watch Me Move: The Animation Show, our first exhibition devoted to animation, was both fun and intellectually stimulating, and Kandinsky: A Retrospective was a comprehensive look at the working methods of one of the most influential artists of the twentieth century. Local artists Lain York and Marty Stuart were showcased at the Frist in 2014. Pairing the work of Steve Mumford and Francisco Goya provided a platform for intense discussions regarding the trauma of war. We ended the year with Sanctity Pictured: The Art of the Dominican and Franciscan Orders in Renaissance Italy, our first exhibition devoted to Renaissance art and the first in Nashville since 1934, when works from the Kress Collection were on view at the Parthenon. A full account of the year’s exhibitions appears in this report. On behalf of the Board of Directors and myself, I want to thank each of you for being a part of our mission and for your generous support of the Frist Center. Sincerely, Billy Frist Letter from the President 4 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | IMPACT FRIENDS, In 2014, the Frist Center welcomed more than 200,000 visitors. Thanks to the generosity of the donors acknowledged in this report, the Frist Center has become a treasured community resource, valued for its historic architecture as well as for providing access to world-class art, public programs, and opportunities for fellowship. The Frist Center is sustained not only by financial gifts but also by donated time and talent. Katie Delmez and Susan Edwards with Richard Armstrong, director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, at the opening of Carrie Mae Weems: Three Decades of Photography and Video in New York We thank each of you for investing in the quality of life in Nashville by supporting the Frist Center. Our gratitude extends to trustees, sponsors, foundations, government agencies, members, and a hardworking, loyal staff. Also, for over one hundred years, Tennessee has been known as the Volunteer State because of the role played by volunteer soldiers. That tradition of selflessness extends to community service, and we gratefully acknowledge the many hours donated by our volunteers, who help in myriad ways. Countless hours are contributed by committee members to ensure the success of our two major annual fundraisers. Cathy Brown and Betsy Wills, the 2014 Frist Gala co-chairs, exceeded all expectations. We thank them and the corps of dedicated friends and colleagues who worked tirelessly on Frist Gala events. We are also indebted to Taylor Middleton and Heidi Rose, who served as co-chairs for An Art Deco Affair. Their committee of volunteers rallied to support this annual occasion, which raises funds for the ongoing maintenance of the historic art deco building that houses the Frist Center for the Visual Arts. In this report, you will read about the exhibitions and programs the Frist Center offered members and visitors throughout 2014. Without your help, they would not have been possible. With each story of a path changed, an idea revealed, or a window opened, we rededicate ourselves to providing Middle Tennessee with a place for visitors to see, learn, and interact with art. We thank you again for your generosity and hope that you are inspired to continue your support in the year to come. We pledge responsible stewardship and our full commitment to the mission of bringing the world’s great art to Nashville, serving the vision of using art to change the way people see their world. We hope that when you visit the Frist Center, you find the experience you seek. Please join us as often as you can. Sincerely, Susan H. Edwards, PhD Executive Director and CEO 5 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | IMPACT LEFT, Brenda and Joe Steakley. CENTER, Venkatapur and Meera Reddy. RIGHT, Steve and Jan Riven, Robert Dennis, and Bernice and Joel Gordon There are many leaders in the community who generously give their time and talents to support the Frist Center. Their advice and insight are valuable resources to the organization. It is a pleasure to acknowledge the dedication of those who served in 2014. FRIST CENTER BOARD OF TRUSTEES Billy Frist Chair and President Jean Ann Banker H. Lee Barfield II Laura Chadwick Karyn McLaughlin Frist Frank M. Garrison Howard Gentry Bob Gordon Claire Gulmi Aubrey B. Harwell, Jr. Marlene Hays Melvin N. Johnson, DBA Ellen H. Martin Michael J. McBride Richard C. McCarty Ken Melkus Robin I. Patton Stephen S. Riven Luke Simons Joe N. Steakley Gloria M. Sternberg Deborah E. Story Jay Turner Julie W. Walker Gail P. Carr Williams Susan H. Edwards, PhD Executive Director and CEO Ex-officio Directors Emeriti Honorary Trustees Thomas F. Frist, Jr., MD, Chair Kenneth L. Roberts, President Martha Rivers Ingram Bernice W. Gordon J. Stephen Turner board of trustees, Karl F. Dean, Mayor Diane Neighbors, Vice Mayor 2014 Gala Co-Chairs Cathy Brown Betsy Wills Advisors Peter F. Bird, Jr. Jack F. Stringham II 6 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | IMPACT COMMITTEES OF THE FRIST CENTER BOARD OF TRUSTEES Executive Committee Billy Frist, Chair Frank M. Garrison Howard Gentry Melvin N. Johnson, DBA Joe N. Steakley Deborah E. Story Audit Committee Joe N. Steakley, Chair Frank M. Garrison Claire Gulmi Ken Melkus Stephen S. Riven Joe N. Steakley Julie W. Walker Human Resources Committee Finance Committee Frank M. Garrison, Chair H. Lee Barfield II Karl F. Dean Ken Melkus Stephen S. Riven Luke Simons board of trustees, Deborah E. Story, Chair H. Lee Barfield II Laura Chadwick Aubrey B. Harwell, Jr. Michael J. McBride Richard C. McCarty Stephen S. Riven 7 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | IMPACT FRIST CENTER COUNCILS Community Marketing and Outreach Council Howard Gentry, Chair Ramon L. Cisneros Janet Clough Michael Cooper Donna DeStefano Peskhout Duski Maribeth Farringer Karyn McLaughlin Frist Beverly Goetzman Aubrey B. Harwell, Jr. Kim Johnson Kawema Michael J. McBride Brenda McSurley Diane Neighbors Pat Patrick Tasneem Tewogbola Tom Ward Vivian Wynn Gail P. Carr Williams Development Council Joe N. Steakley, Chair Jean Ann Banker Claiborne Blevins Daniel Bryant Laura Chadwick Jana J. Davis Bob Gordon Dr. C. K. Hiranya Gowda Roy Jordan Peggy S. Kinnard Neil B. Krugman Ellen H. Martin Jana Lisle Parham Shannone E. Raybon Luke Simons Gloria M. Sternberg Jim T. Womack Jan Young Honorary Members Trish C. Frist Ronald L. Samuels Education Council Melvin N. Johnson, DBA, Chair Elyse Adler Jean Ann Banker David Braemer Paul Collins Carol Crittenden Karl F. Dean Vincent W. Durnan Dr. Kellie Hargis Everton A. Heron Catharine L. Hollifield Rocky Horton Justin Makemson Kyle Martindale Michael J. McBride Ellen Meyer Diane Neighbors Jamaal Sheats Dr. Gregory Stewart Diane D. Taylor Debrah C. Sickler-Voight, PhD board of trustees, Julie W. Walker Pat Ward John Watson Daryl Wilkinson Tom Williams Marketing Council John Smithwick, Chair Joey Amato Laura Chadwick Terry Clements Beth Fortune Marlene Hays Laramey Lawson Chris McPherson Brent Meredith Heather Middleton Robin I. Patton Doug Regen John Sharpe Daniel Tidwell Jay Turner Adelaide Vienneau Ex-officio for Councils and Committees Billy Frist Chair and President Thomas F. Frist, Jr., MD Chair Emeritus Kenneth L. Roberts President Emeritus Susan H. Edwards, PhD Executive Director and CEO 8 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | IMPACT The Frist Center for the Visual Arts acknowledges our dedicated staff. FRIST CENTER STAFF Camilla Aikin Marta Allen Samantha Andrews Richard Arocho Sharon Bass Emily Beard Duane Bragg Michael Brechner Rosemary Brunton Angela Butler Kristina Colucci Paul Cotter Quinton Creasy Ronny Criss Molly Cunningham Veronica de la Cruz Katie Delmez Kathy Demonbreun Nick Diamond Shane Doling Peg Duthie Linda Dyer Susan Edwards Tammi Edwards Phil El Rassi Jon Emmitt Richard Feaster Venus Ferdowsi Beth Fernandes Staff Josh Fletcher Dara Freiberg Kirk Futrell Amie Geremia Shaun Giles Sasha Griffith Angel Guadarrama Karen Gwaltney Mitch Hemann Anne Henderson Sheri Horn Ashley Howell Pam Howell Chasen Igleheart Richard Iheme Kayla Ingram Bonnie Jeffiers Emily Jenkins Keri Jhaveri Wallace Joiner Trinita Kennedy Caroline Kim Buddy Kite Caitlin Linkous Laura Lybeck Felicia Maldonado Rachel Malone Jean Martin Jennie McCabe Evan McKee Chuck Mitchell Alex Nazario Jessica Orvis Autumn Parrott Pamala Perkins John Pratt Ellen Pryor David Rice Eric Ridgill Megan Robertson Walter Rodgers, Jr. Kevin Sanderson Mark Scala Hans Schmitt-Matzen Martha Seiner Ginny Soenksen Marki Steele Scott Thom Dooby Tomkins Rick Trace Brittany Van Eysden Luis Vargas Carol Vollbrecht Jim Warren Shane Wise Jim Wrench LEFT TO RIGHT, Caroline Kim, Beth Fernandes, Dara Freiberg, Leeron Resnick, and Karen Gwaltney at An Art Deco Affair 9 16 COUNTRIES REPRESENTED FRIST CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS Over 800 original works of art were shown at the Frist Center in 2014. COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | INSPIRE EXHIBITIONS OVERVIEW In reviewing the 2014 exhibitions, we see reminders of the many ways that different cultures overlap and enrich each other. Civilizations have long been invigorated by the assimilation or adaptation of the languages, customs, and expressions of the societies with which they come into contact through trade, exploration, or war. Many visitors to Looking East: Western Artists and the Allure of Japan reported being surprised to learn of the influence of Japanese art on the works of Claude Monet and Vincent van Gogh. Approaches they had assumed were intrinsically European were actually imports that took root in the fertile ground of early modernism, yielding the wonderful hybrids we so admire today. While art arising from benign cultural commingling can be exhilarating, concurrent exhibitions in the Upper-Level Galleries on the subject of war demonstrated that conflict between cultures can also inspire creativity. Goya: The Disasters of War and Steve Mumford’s War Journals, 2003–2013 presented two distinct visions of war. Goya’s famous print cycle emphasized the pain and horror experienced during the Peninsular Wars between France and Spain (1808–1814). As true as the images may be with regard to capturing humanity’s capacity for cruelty, it is a truth that supersedes fact—Goya was unlikely to have been an eyewitness to much of what he depicted. Mumford was an actual observer. While he did experience battle, for the most part his works show periods between combat on the streets of Baghdad or Mosul, negotiations between the military and local leaders, and the efforts of civilians to lead normal lives. In viewing his works, we can momentarily imagine ourselves as soldiers—even as Baghdadis—striving to cope in the face of conflict. EXHIBITIONS 11 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | INSPIRE The international transmission of technology, style, and narrative was evident in Watch Me Move: The Animation Show, an anthology showing the rapid rise and global spread of animation as an art form. Visitors had the opportunity to compare Walt Disney’s renowned studio productions to the brilliant individualism of Czech auteurs like Jan Švankmaier, and to think of Chuck Jones—creator of Daffy Duck—and the South African artist William Kentridge as kindred spirits in terms of deconstructive invention. In our galleries, the cultures of the world have rarely seemed so entwined: Watch Me Move highlighted the influence of Japanese anime on American youth, the German avant-garde’s contributions to Disney, and American Max Fleischer’s rotoscoping process being used by the Wan brothers in Shanghai, China. The energy that comes from the infusion of outside influences was also the underlying subject of Real/ Surreal: Selections from the Whitney Museum of American Art. The exhibition included American paintings and works on paper by artists as diverse as Edward Hopper and Man Ray while citing the influence of French Surrealism on American art of the mid-twentieth century. By blurring the boundaries between seemingly opposed approaches, Real/Surreal raised fascinating questions about notions of national style, authenticity, and adaptation. The confluence of international styles can appear in the works of a single artist as well, as seen in Kandinsky: A Retrospective. Throughout his career, the artist was in thrall to his Russian origins, employing imagery relating to the Orthodox faith EXHIBITIONS and Russian fables and folk art. Yet his exposure to the works of Henri Matisse in Paris and the German Expressionists helped ignite his desire to use color as a vehicle for conveying primal emotions. Competition within a culture can also spark innovation. Sanctity Pictured: The Art of the Dominican and Franciscan Orders in Renaissance Italy offered a comparison between the works of two mendicant orders in Renaissance Italy who used art as propaganda for their respective teachings. Each order commissioned artists to portray its sacred narratives, which were often created in response to the other’s—for example, if Saint Francis of Assisi had stigmata, the Dominicans’ Saint Catherine of Siena should have these marks of Christ’s crucifixion as well. But the rapid stylistic developments that led to the flowering of the Renaissance did not arise solely from Italian traditions; many of the works in the exhibition show the influence of Byzantine panel paintings. In contemporary art, globalism seems to have flattened the world. Yet in counterpoint to the cross-fertilization shown in many of the year’s exhibitions, solo exhibitions in the Gordon Contemporary Artists Project (CAP) Gallery and the Conte Community Arts Gallery featured American artists whose works related specifically to their own region or country. Nashville artist Lain York’s Selections from the National Gallery evoked eighteenth- and nineteenth-century America’s strident political discourse. Another Nashvillian, musician and photographer Marty Stuart, presented engaging photographs of fellow 12 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | INSPIRE musicians, small-town residents, and Native Americans in his Conte Community Arts Gallery exhibition American Ballads: The Photographs of Marty Stuart. One cannot think of CAP Gallery artist Maira Kalman without thinking of her home, New York City, a locale so well suited to her urbanity and taste for eclecticism, both of which are reflected in the illustrations on view in Maira Kalman: The Elements of Style. The final CAP gallery exhibition of the year, Helen Pashgian: Light Invisible, included works by an artist long associated with the Light and Space school that originated in Southern California. EXHIBITIONS 13 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | INSPIRE Looking East: Western Artists and the Allure of Japan January 31–May 11, 2014 | Ingram Gallery The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries witnessed an explosion of interest in all things Japanese, which prompted a correspondingly radical shift in modern art that was dubbed japonisme by the Parisian critic Philippe Burty in 1872. Looking East: Western Artists and the Allure of Japan explored the fruitful encounter between East and West by showing Japanese ukiyo-e prints and decorative arts alongside the paintings and prints of Mary Cassatt, Edgar Degas, Vincent van Gogh, Claude Monet, and Edvard Munch, and the furniture of Frank Lloyd Wright. The exhibition was drawn from the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, which has one of the finest collections of both Japanese art and American and European art of this period in the world. Looking East: Western Artists and the Allure of Japan was organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Lain York: Selections from the National Gallery January 31–May 11, 2014 | Gordon Contemporary Artists Project Gallery Nashville artist Lain York was inspired by eighteenth- and nineteenth-century history, political cartoons, and engravings to create the vinyl collages in this exhibition. York’s vignettes combine abstraction with interpretations of the ambiguous information that comes to us from the past. Each work’s cryptic title evokes the biting rhetoric that has always marked our public discourse. Lain York: Selections from the National Gallery was organized by the Frist Center for the Visual Arts. EXHIBITIONS 14 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | INSPIRE Steve Mumford’s War Journals, 2003–2013 February 28–June 8, 2014 | Upper-Level Galleries For eight years, artist Steve Mumford traveled to occupied Iraq and war zones in Afghanistan, capturing—in drawings, recent watercolors, and written journals—the experiences of American troops and civilians in these regions. With sensitivity, urgency, and empathy, he portrayed the stress of occupation, the after-effects of battle in hospitals and therapeutic settings, and the resiliency of even the most traumatized. The exhibition included recent watercolors created at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, exploring broader implications of American efforts to combat terrorism. Steve Mumford’s War Journals, 2003–2013 was organized by the Frist Center for the Visual Arts. Goya: The Disasters of War February 28–June 8, 2014 | Upper-Level Galleries Featuring a complete set of the first published edition of etchings produced by Spanish painter Francisco Goya, The Disasters of War (Los Desastres de la Guerra) documented the horrors occurring during the Peninsular War of 1808–1814 between Spain and France under Napoleon Bonaparte. The etchings were grouped into three main sections: the effects of war, the Madrid famine of 1811–1812, and the disappointment at the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy. Perhaps because of their criticism of both France and the restored Bourbon monarchy, or perhaps because of their difficult subject matter, they were commercially unviable, and the works were not published until 1863, three decades after Goya’s death. Goya: The Disasters of War was a collaboration of Pomona College Museum of Art and the University Museums of the University of Delaware. EXHIBITIONS 15 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | INSPIRE American Ballads: The Photographs of Marty Stuart May 9–November 2, 2014 | Conte Community Arts Gallery Country music star Marty Stuart is a master storyteller not only in his songs, but also through his black-and-white photographs, which range from behind-the-scenes depictions of legendary musicians and images of eccentric characters from the back roads of America to dignified portraits of members of the impoverished Lakota tribe in South Dakota. Whatever the subject, Stuart teases out something unexpected or hidden beneath the surface. This exhibition was organized by the Frist Center for the Visual Arts. EXHIBITIONS 16 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | INSPIRE Watch Me Move: The Animation Show June 6–September 1, 2014 | Ingram Gallery A celebration of film animation, Watch Me Move included over one hundred works produced around the world since the 1890s. It featured industry pioneers, independent filmmakers, and contemporary artists, including Étienne-Jules Marey, Harry Smith, and William Kentridge, alongside the works of commercial studios such as Aardman, Walt Disney, Pixar, Studio Ghibli, and Warner Bros. Watch Me Move: The Animation Show was organized by Barbican Centre, London. The Barbican Centre is provided by the City of London Corporation. Maira Kalman: The Elements of Style June 6–September 1, 2014 | Gordon Contemporary Artists Project Gallery This exhibition featured gouache paintings by artist, illustrator, and author Maira Kalman, which were created to illustrate The Elements of Style. This treatise on the principles of writing was first published in 1919 by Cornell University professor William Strunk, Jr., and revised and reissued by the author E. B. White in 1957. In her illustrations, Kalman interpreted phrases from the book, using strong colors, expressive drawing, and irrepressible humor to make intuitive leaps between the authors’ prescriptions and her own vivid imaginings. Maira Kalman: The Elements of Style was organized by the Frist Center for the Visual Arts. EXHIBITIONS 17 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | INSPIRE Real/Surreal: Selections from the Whitney Museum of American Art June 27–October 13, 2014 | Upper-Level Galleries American artists working from the 1930s through the 1950s often explored connections between the observed and the imagined. Many of the painters in Real/Surreal were inspired by Surrealism, a movement that originated in Paris in the 1920s, which strove to reveal unconscious realities through art and poetry. Some Americans, such as Kay Sage and Man Ray, followed Salvador Dalí’s lead in using illusionistic representation to propose fantastic dream worlds. Others, like Edward Hopper and Andrew Wyeth, subtly invested images of the everyday with compelling psychological undercurrents. Real/Surreal was organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Kandinsky: A Retrospective September 26, 2014–January 4, 2015 | Ingram Gallery This exhibition followed the career of Wassily Kandinsky, one of the most influential artists of the twentieth century. It began with early figurative paintings, and then continued with a selection of exuberant abstractions Kandinsky made between 1911 and 1914, which emphasized spirituality over materialism. Later geometric works—created at the Bauhaus, an important school for art, design, and architecture in Germany—showed Kandinsky’s interest in analyzing the dynamic language of geometrical form. The exhibition concluded with paintings produced in Paris, which combine geometry with organic forms that reflect the influence of Surrealism. Kandinsky: A Retrospective was organized by the Centre Pompidou, Paris, and the Milwaukee Art Museum. EXHIBITIONS 18 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | INSPIRE Helen Pashgian: Light Invisible September 26, 2014–January 4, 2015 | Gordon Contemporary Artists Project Gallery Since the 1960s, Helen Pashgian, a native of Pasadena, California, has explored the expressive qualities of light as it interacts with industrial materials such as fiberglass, polyester resin, and glass. This exhibition included six tall columns made of molded acrylic sheets, in which internal elements reflected and refracted light in ways that changed depending on the position of the viewer. Also on view were gemlike spheres and cast epoxy wall pieces, which invited viewers to look from a variety of positions, engaging the entire body in the act of perception. Helen Pashgian: Light Invisible was organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Sanctity Pictured: The Art of the Dominican and Franciscan Orders in Renaissance Italy October 31, 2014–January 25, 2015 | Upper-Level Galleries The first exhibition dedicated to Italian Renaissance art in Nashville since 1934, Sanctity Pictured: The Art of the Dominican and Franciscan Orders in Renaissance Italy explored the role of two major religious orders in the revival of the arts in Italy during the period from 1200 to 1550. The exhibition presented drawings, illuminated manuscripts, liturgical objects, paintings, prints, printed books, and sculptures from the collections of major American and European libraries and museums, including works of art from the Vatican Library and Vatican Museums that had never before been exhibited in the United States. Sanctity Pictured: The Art of the Dominican and Franciscan Orders in Renaissance Italy was organized by the Frist Center for the Visual Arts. EXHIBITIONS 19 33,320 18 AND YOUNGER FRIST CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS That’s a lot of youngsters checking out our art! And they got in free, thanks to you! COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE Assistant curator of interpretation Ginny Soenksen leads FCVA volunteers on a tour to help familiarize them with an exhibition. The Education and Outreach Department inspires creativity and appreciation of the visual arts with programming for audiences with multiple learning styles. Throughout 2014, participants explored, discovered, and created art through various opportunities that addressed learners of all ages and abilities and reached over 130,000 visitors. Volunteers remain a vital part of the Frist Center family and visitor experience. The FCVA volunteer program includes 266 dedicated volunteers, with 97 new participants in 2014. These individuals contributed approximately 19,000 hours of their time to the successful operation of the Frist Center through their presence in Martin ArtQuest®, in the Gift Shop, at the Information Desk, at Coat Check, and in our administrative offices. They also greeted our visitors, handed out audio tours, and welcomed guests to special events, such as member previews and Frist Fridays. Docents provided invaluable support by leading guided tours for visitors of all ages. Special events to recognize volunteers included a behind-the-scenes look at Jack White’s Third Man Records, a tour of United Record Pressing, and trips to other cultural sites. EDUCATION AND OUTREACH 21 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE Oasis Center teens made a collaborative mural to adorn a shelter for the refugee family water tank at the Nashville Food Project’s Wedgewood Urban Gardens. The mural represents the need for nature and nourishment as a human right and connects this theme to the United Nations’ World Refugee Day, which takes place on June 20 each year. LEFT TO RIGHT, Nereida Ortega, Desmond Bush, Edward Silva, Liz Diaz, Erika Davila, and Jennifer Davila OUTREACH AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Outreach and community engagement is a centerpiece of the Frist Center’s mission. FCVA teams up with local service providers to develop programs that thoughtfully cross cultural, economic, educational, generational, and social divides. In 2014, FCVA actively partnered with 57 community organizations (our Sustaining and Core Partners) through hands-on workshops, including the ArtTrunk program, a mobile art-making kit that reached 50 organizations and 1,486 participants. An additional twenty-seven community organizations maintained Affinity Partnership status and participated in Frist Center programs on an occasional basis. The partnerships were celebrated with an art show in the Education Corridor in May. Special projects included Exquisite Nashville, an initiative that continued our exploration of the changing face of Nashville through various cultural groups. Participating organizations were the Center for Immigrants and Refugees of Tennessee, Conexión Américas, Edmondson Pike Branch Library, and Room in the Inn. This project has received funding from the Nissan Foundation and the U.S. Bank Foundation. Artworks created for this project during 2014 will be on view in the Conte Community Arts Gallery from March 13 through July 5, 2015. During the summer, FCVA staff celebrated World Refugee Day by creating an artwork with teaching 22 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE artist Audrey Deal-McEver and teens from Oasis Center at The Nashville Food Project’s Wedgewood Urban Gardens. Project Access, a collaborative project with the public library system, continued this year with participants from Conexión Américas. In the fall, staff volunteered at the Eighteenth Avenue Family Enrichment Center, a Frist Center partner, for the KaBOOM! community playground build. In response to our partners’ requests to educate their communities on elements and principles of art, a pilot program, Frist Community Studio, was launched. It made a strategic alignment with Martin ArtQuest and the newly launched Nashville Public Television (NPT) ArtQuest: Art Is All Around You TV segments. Off-site location visits for this program included Metro Parks and Recreation centers (Coleman Regional, East Regional, Hadley Regional, Hartman Regional, and McCabe Regional); Nashville Public Library branches (Edmondson Pike, Green Hills, Goodlettsville, and Thompson Lane); Oasis Center’s R.E.A.L. Program; Room in the Inn; and Vanderbilt Kennedy Center’s Hispanic Family Support Group. In total, visits were made to 17 locations, reaching over 300 people across Davidson County. FCVA maintains a strong relationship with teachers and schools. The Frist Center’s educational resources enrich visual arts curricula for grades K–12 through professional development opportunities, including in-service programs and exhibition-related workshops that support Common Core State Standards and address broad, cross-discipline themes. In addition, FCVA educational resources are utilized by homeschool groups throughout the area. As part of the Center’s commitment to children 18 and younger, free admission is provided and assistance with transportation costs for school groups is offered. In preparation for school tours, FCVA produced educator resource guides, which contain color art reproductions, curriculum connections, and exhibition-related activities. In 2014, over 13,000 children visited FCVA through guided and selfguided tours. FCVA proudly hosted art shows for several school districts, including Williamson County, Wilson County, and the Franklin Special School District, as well as the Mayor’s Art Shows for Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools (MNPS). More than 1,000 children exhibited their artwork at these shows. Special receptions were held to honor the students and art teachers, with more than 4,000 people in attendance. The community engagement team reached over 1,200 people at fairs and festivals throughout the city, including the Nashville Cherry Blossom Festival, Martha O’Bryan’s Ice Cream Crankin’, the Cumberland River Dragon Boat Festival, the African Street Festival, Gordon Jewish Community Center’s Art on the West Side, Tennessee Craft’s Fall Fair, Celebrate Nashville, the National Down Syndrome Society’s Buddy Walk®, and Safe Haven Family Shelter’s Hike for the Homeless. 23 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE Chief curator Mark Scala and artist Steve Mumford discuss works in Steve Mumford’s War Journals, 2003–2013. INTERPRETATION AND PUBLIC PROGRAMS Our interpretative material and programs are developed in a variety of formats with our visitors’ interests in mind, attracting an increasingly diverse audience of both novice and experienced visitors and fostering meaningful connections with art. New initiatives during 2014 included additional accessibility programs. The Frist Center partnered with Bridges, a Nashville-area nonprofit resource for deaf, hard of hearing, and hearing communities, to provide American Sign Language interpreters for docent-guided and architecture tours on the first Saturday of each month. Multisensory tours designed for visitors with blindness and low vision were piloted during Sanctity Pictured. Making Memories, a program designed to engage senior citizens with Alzheimer’s and their caregivers in looking at and responding to works of art, continued through a collaboration with the Middle Tennessee Alzheimer’s Association. Frist Center staff also met with a remarkable group of U.S. army veterans, educators, therapists, and advocates to discuss the exhibition and programming for Goya: The Disasters of War and Steve Mumford’s War Journals, 2003–2013. This focus group inspired a new series called Connecting Conversations, developed to provide deeper engagement with the thematic content of these exhibitions. It reached seventy-two visitors through two gallery programs. EDUCATION AND OUTREACH 24 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE The panelists for the October 7 “Food for Thought: Kandinsky–Exploring Connections between Music, Science, Spirituality, and the Visual Arts” were Ginny Soenksen, assistant curator of interpretation, Frist Center for the Visual Arts; Joy H. Calico, associate professor of musicology and director of the Max Kade Center for European and German Studies, Vanderbilt University; and Megan Robertson, associate curator of interpretation, Frist Center for the Visual Arts. Films continued to be well received, with over 900 in attendance at screenings. “Film and Food: Yojimbo,” presented during Looking East, paired bento box suppers from Zumi Sushi with a screening of Akira Kurosawa’s samurai classic Yojimbo. In July, during Watch Me Move, Belcourt Theatre collaborated with the Frist Center to present a series of exhibitioninspired midnight movies, and its Saturday morning children’s programs focused on animation. And, three local breweries—Jackalope, Turtle Anarchy, and Yazoo—participated in the Art of Beer: The Art of Inebriation in Animation. Two three-part art history courses were offered during the year. “American Realism and Surrealism, 1920–1950,” with Vivien Green Fryd, Vanderbilt University professor in the Department of History of Art, was offered during Real/Surreal, and a Renaissance art history course was taught by Jim Womack, Jackson Family Chair of the Visual and Performing Arts Department, Montgomery Bell Academy, as part of Sanctity Pictured. In partnership with Vanderbilt University’s Office of Community, Neighborhood, and Government Relations, the Food for Thought program was held in conjunction with the exhibition Kandinksy: A Retrospective. It focused on Kandinsky’s interests in music, science, spirituality, and the visual arts. This three-part lunch and lecture series offered insights from Vanderbilt professors and Frist Center staff to the community at large. The series brought 563 guests to the Frist Center. In response to Looking East, Company Rose, with support from the Martha Rivers Ingram Commons at Vanderbilt University, presented two performances of an original dance composition, Pools of Glass, seen by approximately 300 attendees in February. In November, Robbie Lynn Hunsinger created an interactive installation, Blue-Yellow-Red, inspired by the art and writings of Wassily Kandinsky, and composed a complementary concert piece that incorporated acoustic instruments, a laptop, and a projector, with virtuoso bassist Missy Raines joining her for the premiere performance. 25 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE Sixty adults participated in a variety of hands-on exhibition-related workshops. During Looking East, “Traveling East to West with Tea,” “Elements of Batik: Eastern Symbols in Western Fashion,” and “Sumi-e to Plein Air: Landscape Painting Workshop” (offered in collaboration with Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of Art) all sold out. A two-part workshop on color exploration and technical rendering through drawing was offered during Real/Surreal. work of Helen Pashgian. “Understanding Kandinsky in His Early Twentieth-Century Context” was presented by Linda Dalrymple Henderson, professor of art history at The University of Texas at Austin. Curators who offered tours of various exhibitions included Janis Tomlinson, director of University of Delaware’s University Museums, for Goya, and Holly Flora, associate professor in Tulane University’s History of Art program, for Sanctity Pictured. Opportunities were offered to hear from artists in various exhibitions, including Steve Mumford; Lain York; Marty Stuart and his mother, Hilda Stuart; and Maira Kalman. The Artist’s Forum series, which brought local artists together to discuss their works, was reconceptualized to highlight the artists’ relationships to current exhibitions. Artists James Perrin and Jody Hayes, Jonathan Rattner and Michael Lapinsky, and Mark Hosford and Barry Jones participated in series connected to the 2013 exhibition Abstractometry and 2014’s Watch Me Move. Audio tours remained extremely popular with FCVA visitors. FCVA staff wrote and produced audio tours for Looking East, Real/Surreal, and Sanctity Pictured, and partnered with the Milwaukee Art Museum to produce an audio tour for Kandinsky: A Retrospective. The Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia and the male a cappella group Schola Pacis contributed their time and talents to perform thirteenth-century Dominican chants selected from two manuscripts in the exhibition for the audio tour for Sanctity Pictured. All audio tours were recorded and edited at Ocean Way Nashville Recording Studios. Throughout the year, curators, scholars, and experts shared insights into the exhibitions through lectures. Highlights included the introduction to Looking East by Helen Burnham, curator of prints and drawings at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the survey of japonisme’s impact on Western fashion by Patricia Mears, deputy director of the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology. Elliott Wilhelm, curator of film at the Detroit Institute of Art, gave a lecture on animation in conjunction with the exhibition Watch Me Move. During the opening weekend of Kandinsky and Helen Pashgian, Angela Lampe, curator of modern art at Centre Pompidou, presented a lecture on Kandinsky, and Carol Eliel, curator at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, gave a tour of the Members of local a cappella choir Schola Pacis—Nelson Berry, Riley Bryant, Gregg Colson, Rick Seay, Chris Simonsen, and Matt Smyth—sing a selection from a thirteenth-century choirbook for inclusion in the audio tour for Sanctity Pictured: The Art of the Dominican and Franciscan Orders in Renaissance Italy. An interactive iPad station conceptualized, written, and produced by Interpretation staff was designed to introduce visitors to Wassily Kandinsky’s color theory in the exhibition Kandinsky: A Retrospective. The Frist Center’s mobile interpretive platform, Toursphere, was also used to deliver exhibition content to visitors. 26 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE Senior graphic designer Kristina Colucci speaks to students from Hillwood High School’s Academy of Art, Design & Communication. EXPERIENTIAL LEARNING Experiential learning is a recent focus of the education department and encompasses the myriad opportunities available to high school and college students to learn about museum careers. FCVA supplied speakers for career exploration events, facilitated site visits, and offered job-shadowing opportunities for students and teachers. In addition, we provided support for the senior capstone projects that all MNPS students must complete to graduate. Students interested in more in-depth career exploration also participated at the Frist Center as volunteers, interns, or teaching assistants. This year twenty-six students gained valuable experience and college credits as interns in FCVA’s education, exhibitions, design, and development departments. Students came from local and national institutions, including Belmont University, Fisk University, Lipscomb University, Middle Tennessee State University, Ohio State University, San Diego State University, University of Alabama, University of Florida, University of Tennessee at Martin, Vanderbilt University, Watkins College of Art, Design and Film, Western Kentucky University, and Wofford College. Three college students were selected for the Teaching Assistant Program, which introduced them to museum education by providing hands-on teaching experiences. These positions required a greater time commitment, and included a small stipend. The Frist Center was pleased to be one of thirteen art museums to participate in a pilot program with the Association of Art Museum Directors and the United Negro College Fund. The program established fellowships for students of color to gain experience in the museum sector; during the fall semester, Fisk University sophomore Christopher Lowe, supervised by Deputy Director Ashley Howell, worked on FCVA’s reaccreditation materials. EDUCATION AND OUTREACH 27 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE Big Picture High School senior Eva Young at her capstone event, Fashion Reaction! FCVA continued to support MNPS’s Academies of Nashville program as a member of the Arts, Media and Communication advisory council and as a partner with Hillwood Comp High School’s Arts, Media and Communication Academy. Through the Pencil Foundation, FCVA also supported Antioch High School, Hume-Fogg Academic Magnet High School, and Nashville School of the Arts. Conversations continued with museum magnets John Early Middle School and Robert Churchwell Elementary School to identify ways Frist Center staff can support the schools’ educators and students. Staff also participated on various Alignment Nashville committees, including those for elementary, middle, and high school concerns, as well as on the operating board. A special highlight this year was Fashion Reaction!, the capstone project of Eva Young, a MNPS Big Picture High School senior and a FCVA intern from 2012 to 2014. The performance art piece, held in the Frist Center Auditorium, had ninety-three attendees, combined video, poetry, and fashion, and showcased the influences of various exhibitions, from 2012’s Carrie Mae Weems to 2013’s 30 Americans to 2014’s Looking East. Eva worked with Frist Center mentors over a two-year period and, prior to the final presentation, was interviewed by Channel 5’s Vicki Yates for the segment “School Patrol.” She is now pursuing her education at Nashville State Community College. Lindsey Victoria Thompson, a 2011 Hume-Fogg graduate, wrote Phoebe at the Frist, a children’s book, as her senior capstone project while volunteering in the Martin ArtQuest Gallery and Gift Shop and serving on both the Volunteer Advisory Council and Education Council of the Frist Center. Now an undergraduate student at New York University, Lindsey returned to the Frist Center in December for a book signing with her step-grandfather, Walter Knestrick, Phoebe at the Frist’s illustrator. 28 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE LEFT, MAQ Attack! participants create transparent mixedmedia collages as part of the open studio art-making event. CENTER, A film still from Season 1 of Art Is All Around You, “Painting En Plein Air,” featuring hosts Dajiah Platt and Joseph Lopez. RIGHT, A MAQ Attack! participant creates a Japaneseinspired lantern. YOUTH AND FAMILY PROGRAMS A recent partnership with Nashville Public Television (NPT) inspired by Martin ArtQuest Gallery invites children to explore, create, make, and talk about art at the Frist Center and beyond. The thirty one-minute Emmy®-winning TV episodes called ArtQuest: Art Is All Around You air during children’s programming on NPT. All the current segments are available on fristkids.org, and selected episodes are shown on-site in the Martin ArtQuest Gallery. Each online episode has an accompanying art activity designed for children to follow, using easily accessible materials found in their homes or neighborhoods. A fun, interactive version of fristkids.org is anticipated for 2015. Our youth initiatives include the newly formed Teen Advisory Group, comprising seventeen students from eight public and private high schools across Middle Tennessee, including Nashville and Lebanon. These students will plan and implement quarterly MAQ Attack! teen events, to be held in the Martin ArtQuest Gallery and throughout the Frist Center. Also, ArtLab, which presents young artists between the ages of 14 and 18 the opportunity to work with contemporary art and artists, was offered in the spring and for the first time during Summer Art Camp. Frist Center educators continued a new aspect of the 2013 project Stop. Take Notice! with Hume-Fogg Academic Magnet High School students. Teens developed multiple collaborative art-making projects as part of their pedestrian awareness campaign. Teams of students stenciled and spray chalked alerts and pasted handbills throughout several downtown intersections to raise awareness about driver and pedestrian safety. This project was inspired by the memory of Hume-Fogg student Elena Zamora, who had participated in the original EDUCATION AND OUTREACH 29 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE LEFT, Family participants pose proudly with the musically inspired mural they made during the October Artful Tales. CENTER, Groups of children explore the pop-up installation BlueYellow-Red during our fall Family Festival Day event. RIGHT, Hume-Fogg Stop! Take Notice members use spray chalk and stencils to help raise awareness about pedestrian safety in downtown Nashville. STN project. She was tragically killed while walking in the crosswalk close to the high school in 2013. We continue to offer a variety of opportunities for families to learn about art together. Children ages three and up can participate in a monthly storytelling program, Artful Tales, which includes a hands-on art-making component; it reached 539 participants this year. A candy sushi family workshop was well received by 53 participants. Parents and kids enjoyed learning about Japanese dishes and recreating the food with Rice Krispies treats, gummy bears, and other confectionery delights. Two free Family Festival Days presented an interdisciplinary approach to specific exhibitions, drawing 2,762 visitors to Looking East in the spring and, in the fall, to Kandinsky, Sanctity Pictured, and Helen Pashgian. Robbie Lynn Hunsinger’s special pop-up art installation in the Rechter Room was part of the fall Family Festival Day event. AWARDS AND PRESENTATIONS OF NOTE ArtQuest®: Art Is All Around You received an Emmy® for Children’s Programming from the Mid-South chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for programming in 2013 and has been nominated for another Emmy® for 2014 programming. It also received an Award of Commendation for an audiovisual exhibition component from the Tennessee Association of Museums, and was honored at the National Educational Telecommunications Association Awards in the category of Instructional Media. The collaboration between Frist Center and Antioch High School’s Academy of Teaching and Service was recognized by the Academies of Nashville as the 2014 Academy Partnership of the Year in the 30 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE Community relations manager Emily Harper Beard and teaching assistant Kyle Martindale talk to ninth-grade students at the MNPS Career Exploration Fair. category of Health and Public Services. The award was for the Frist Antioch Community Exhibition (FACE) project. The Excellence in Volunteer Engagement (EVE) certification for the Frist Center’s volunteer program was received from Hands On Nashville. EVE recognizes nonprofit organizations that employ high-quality volunteer management practices. The goal of EVE is to increase volunteerism in Davidson County by encouraging all nonprofits to work toward volunteer management programs that offer first-rate volunteer opportunities and experience. Frist educators presented at the Southeastern Museum Conference (Knoxville), the National Art Education Association conference (San Diego), and the Tennessee Association of Museums conference (Greeneville). Staff participated in planning the Tennessee Art Education Association conference in Memphis, and served on a working group for a National Art Education Association and American Association of Museum Directors (AAMD) research initiative on single-visit K–12 field trips to art museums across the country. Staff is also involved in organizing a student art exhibition with AAMD institutions for display at the U.S. Department of Education in 2015. 31 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE Frank Lloyd Wright: Building the Imperial Hotel January 31–May 11, 2014 | Ingram Gallery The Education Gallery exhibition Frank Lloyd Wright: Building the Imperial Hotel allowed visitors to explore in greater depth how a single Western architect melded Japanese and Western aesthetics to create a hotel intended to symbolize both cultural exchange and Japan’s modernity. Visitors considered Wright’s design process and inspirations through architect’s drawings, photographs, and ephemera, as well as through an interactive mood board. A digital rendering of the hotel created by the Harvard University Graduate School of Design was also part of the exhibition. The Frist Center for the Visual Arts gratefully acknowledges the generous support of the Friends of Architecture. Young Tennessee Artists: 2014 Statewide Upper-Level Studio Art November 7, 2014–March 8, 2015 | Conte Community Arts Gallery This fifth biennial exhibition showcased a selection of the finest artwork created in Advanced Placement (AP) and International Baccalaureate (IB) studio art programs throughout Tennessee in 2014. The thirty-nine drawings, paintings, photographs, and mixed-media works represented student artists from sixteen schools and were chosen from six hundred submissions statewide. Works in this exhibition were selected for their skillful synthesis of form, technique, and content. Their range and quality of work demonstrate the growing sophistication of AP and IB Studio Art programs across Tennessee. Presenting Sponsor: Publix Super Markets Charities EDUCATION AND OUTREACH 32 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | EDUCATE 2014 VISITOR AND PARTICIPANT TOTALS School Tours: ADULT Tours: 13,461 Volunteers 7,223 6,937 92,551 Martin ArtQuest Experiential Learning Participants PARTICIPANTS 276 266 AUDIO Tours: 4,273 YOUTH AND FAMILY Outreach and Community Engagement Participants 1,571 PARTICIPANTS PROGRAM & EVENT PARTICIPANTS/visitors 744 Education and Outreach Special Projects and Events 1,223 Fairs and Festivals 4,722 Teacher and School Programs 5,143 Public Programs EDUCATION AND OUTREACH 33 17,000+ participants FRIST CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS Community engagement activities reached more than 17,000 Middle Tennesseans. COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | CONNECT In celebration of Artober, the bollards at the Turner Courtyard entrance were decorated with designs inspired by Real/Surreal and Kandinsky. SOCIAL MEDIA ENGAGEMENT Through a number of online outlets and social media platforms, the Frist Center continued to reach new audiences and foster a dialogue with its current community members. In 2014, the Frist Center reached 24,000 Facebook fans, 18,100 Twitter followers, 1,700 Instagram followers, and 1,700 Pinterest followers. The Frist Center works diligently to use social media as a tool to build stronger relationships with the community while offering online access to the institution, exhibitions, and programs. COMMUNITY RELATIONS PROGRAMS The goal of all community relations efforts is to make diverse groups feel welcome at the Frist Center. Notably, in 2014, the Frist Center worked with an advisory committee of military veterans and counselors from Clarksville-based organization Soldiers And Families Embraced (SAFE) to successfully engage veterans and active-duty service members and their families during the exhibitions of Goya: The Disasters of War and Steve Mumford’s War Journals, 2003–2013. The painting of the Frist Center bollards by area artists was a project that was revitalized in 2014 for Artober Nashville. Local artists and artist groups were invited to submit designs inspired by Frist Center exhibitions. More than fifty local artists and artist teams responded, and the results of their work were enjoyed through the winter. COMMUNITY OUTREACH 35 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | CONNECT College students drawing in one of the galleries. Photo: Ester Harper COLLEGE ADVISORY COMMITTEE College students continue to be involved with the Frist Center. Over the last several years, attendance by college students has grown steadily on Thursday and Friday evenings, when the Frist Center is open until 9:00 p.m. and students with college IDs are admitted free of charge. Helping build this audience is the Frist Center’s College Advisory Committee. Each year, the Frist Center recruits enthusiastic students to serve on the committee, and in 2014, its members represented eleven colleges and universities from Middle Tennessee and beyond. Members of the College Advisory Committee assist in relaying information about exhibitions, programs, and activities to their communities. This year’s committee also helped to shape a special College Night at the Frist. Held on Thursday, October 16, it included free parking, an open mic performance by Southern Word poets, a DJ set, light snacks in the Auditorium, art-making in Martin ArtQuest Gallery, a NowPlayingNashville.com photo booth, and a drawing for tickets to upcoming concerts provided by presenting sponsor AEG Live. 36 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | CONNECT Veteran service members attended Goya: The Disasters of War and Steve Mumford’s War Journals, 2003–2013 in large numbers. SPEAKERS BUREAU SENIOR MONDAYS The Frist Center Speakers Bureau has been active since before the Frist Center opened in 2001. Staff and volunteers provide an array of interesting programs for business, civic, church, senior, and social organizations. In 2014, more than 6,500 people learned more about the institution and its offerings through Speakers Bureau presentations. Volunteer and activist Genma Holmes focused her efforts on connecting Middle Tennessee’s military community with the exhibitions Goya: Disasters of War and Steve Mumford’s War Journals, 2003– 2013. We are grateful to her and all our Frist Center volunteers for their tireless support of our mission. On Senior Mondays—the third Monday of each month—the Frist Center offers half-price admission, live music in the Grand Lobby, discounts in the Gift Shop, and special pricing in the Café to all willing to claim their “senior” status. Working with FiftyForward Senior Center, church groups, senior communities, and assisted living facilities, the Frist Center is proud to be a popular destination for seniors. In 2014, approximately seven hundred visitors attended our twelve Senior Mondays. 37 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | CONNECT A visitor chats with Linda Dyer, gift shop associate, at the Gift Shop counter. AFFINITY DAYS Affinity Days are periods of time when organized groups are welcomed at the Frist Center free of charge. We work with civic and nonprofit organizations, church groups, businesses, and alumni groups to create these opportunities. In 2014, approximately 350 visitors enjoyed free admission through our Affinity Day program. Designed to remove barriers to attending the Frist, Affinity Days bring in participants who are often first-time visitors. GIFT SHOP The Frist Center Gift Shop is designed to extend the delight of a visit to the Center’s galleries. With the aid of colleagues and suggestions of visitors, the Gift Shop staff searches for items from around the region and around the world. Because much of the merchandise in the Gift Shop relates to our exhibitions, the offerings change frequently. In addition to a wide variety of exhibition catalogues and reference books, visitors will find prints, art-making supplies, educational toys, clothing, jewelry and other accessories, stationery, and music, including CDs that feature the generous musicians who perform for Music at the Frist on Thursday and Friday evenings. The Gift Shop staff works closely with the exhibition staff and educators to enhance the museum experience and to offer patrons tangible reminders of their visits. MUSIC AT THE FRIST The Frist Center presents free live music in the Frist Center Café each Thursday and Friday evening (with the exception of Frist Fridays) with performances by local and regional musicians and performance artists. The range of genres mirrors the tremendous variety of music available in Nashville. On these nights, visitors might hear jazz, blues, classical, gospel, bluegrass, Latin, Brazilian, Eastern European folk dance, Americana, medieval, or Renaissance music. In 2014, the Frist Center recognized in-kind gifts from more than 125 musicians. We are tremendously grateful to the artists who donate their time and talent to us and, in so doing, enrich the experiences we offer our visitors. 38 Over 200 enjoyed An Art Deco Affair FRIST CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS Proceeds from this annual event support ongoing care of our historic building. COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Installation view of Kandinsky, Ingram Gallery, 2014. Photo: John Schweikert Corporate donors make a direct investment in the community by providing funds that help make Nashville a great city in which to live and work. Sponsors enjoy enhanced access and benefits for employees and clients. INGRAM GALLERY EXHIBITION SPONSORS Looking East: Western Artists and the Allure of Japan PLATINUM SPONSOR The HCA Foundation on behalf of HCA and TriStar Health SUPPORTING SPONSORS Christie’s United States-Japan Foundation Watch Me Move: The Animation Show Kandinsky: A Retrospective PLATINUM SPONSOR The HCA Foundation on behalf of HCA and TriStar Health The HCA Foundation on behalf of HCA and TriStar Health PLATINUM SPONSOR SILVER SPONSORS HOSPITALITY SPONSOR Anne and Joe Russell Union Station Hotel The Frist Center for the Visual Arts gratefully acknowledges the generous support of the Friends of Architecture: HOSPITALITY SPONSOR Union Station Hotel R. C. Mathews Contractor Messer Construction Gresham, Smith and Partners 40 CORPORATE AND FOUNDATION GIVING COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT UPPER-LEVEL GALLERIES EXHIBITION SPONSORS Sanctity Pictured: The Art of the Dominican and Franciscan Orders in Renaissance Italy SUPPORTING SPONSORS Lynn and Ken Melkus HOSPITALITY SPONSOR Union Station Hotel SUPPORTED IN PART BY GRANTS FROM Samuel H. Kress Foundation Robert Lehman Foundation The National Endowment for the Arts Furthermore: a program of the J. M. Kaplan Fund The Frist Center for the Visual Arts gratefully acknowledges the Friends of Italian Art: Anonymous (2) Jennifer S. Cerasuolo Karl Dean and Anne Davis Susan H. Edwards Victoria B. Greene Kathy and John Griffin John and Betty Horn Mr. and Mrs. Toshinari Ishii C. Scott and Helen Jackson Tim Kyne Tommy Lasorda Jim McKanna and Vivien Casagrande Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Stack Mr. and Mrs. James P. Stonehocker Dr. Jan van Eys Kevin and Elizabeth Warren Real/Surreal: Selections from the Whitney Museum of American Art This exhibition’s tour was funded in part by a grant from the Henry Luce Foundation. The Frist Center for the Visual Arts gratefully recognizes our Picasso Circle Members as Exhibition Patrons: John and Laura Chadwick Kevin and Katie Crumbo Sheryl and Steve Durham Patricia Frist Elcan and Charles A. Elcan Jennifer and Billy Frist Julie and Tommy Frist Karyn McLaughlin Frist Patricia C. Frist and Thomas F. Frist, Jr., MD Bernice and Joel Gordon Dr. and Mrs. C. K. Hiranya Gowda Patricia and Rodes Hart Spencer and Marlene Hays Martha R. Ingram R. Milton and Denice Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Howard S. Kirshner Tom and Darlene Klaritch Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Lazenby Ellen H. Martin Lynn and Ken Melkus Ben and Joan Rechter Jan and Stephen S. Riven Delphine and Ken Roberts Anne and Joe Russell Ms. Virginia Severinghaus Luke and Susan Simons Judy and Joe Barker Claiborne Blevins Barbara and Jack Bovender Richard M. and Judith K. Bracken Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Cato 41 CORPORATE AND FOUNDATION GIVING COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Visitors explore a variety of art-making activities with us, including family days and workshops such as Drop-In Drawing in our galleries. CONTE COMMUNITY ARTS GALLERY EXHIBITION SPONSORS COMMUNITY OUTREACH AND EDUCATION SUPPORT Young Tennessee Artists: 2014 Statewide Upper-Level Studio Art The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee The Danner Foundation The William Stamps Farish Fund Samuel M. Fleming Foundation The Frist Foundation Macy’s The Memorial Foundation The National Endowment for the Arts The Nissan Foundation Southwest Airlines The Cal Turner Family Foundation U. S. Bank Foundation PRESENTING SPONSOR Publix Super Markets Charities GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT Metropolitan Nashville Arts Commission Tennessee Arts Commission 42 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Tyrone “Super T” Smith on stage, Frist Friday, August GLOBAL OUTREACH PARTNER Butler Snow DESIGN SPONSOR highbrowfurniture.com CORPORATE PARTNERS AND SPONSORS AEG Live! AIG AmSurg Bank of America Belmont University Corporate partners and sponsors CONTINUED James Duncan Creative The William Stamps Farish Fund First Tennessee Bank Glover Group Entertainment, Inc. Robert W. Herring, Jr., MD, and Quality Medical Research Messer Construction Nashville Arts Magazine Nashville Parent Magazine Nissan Corporation Ocean Way Nashville Recording Studios Pinnacle Financial Partners QD-Quality & Training Solutions, Inc. Regions Bank SunTrust Bank The Tennessean UBS Financial Services FRIST FRIDAYS SPONSORS SUPPORTING SPONSOR Jaguar Land Rover Nashville CONTRIBUTING SPONSOR Southwest Airlines MEDIA SPONSORS Lightning 100 Nashville Scene NowPlayingNashville.com 43 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT LEFT, Robert and Harriet Sewell. Photo by Sandy Burr. RIGHT, Dr. Thomas F. Frist, Jr., and Trish Frist Support from Circle Members makes it possible for the Frist Center to provide free admission to visitors 18 and younger, as well as funding exhibition programs for seniors and families. PICASSO CIRCLE ($10,000+) Judy and Joe Barker Claiborne Blevins Barbara and Jack Bovender Richard M. and Judith K. Bracken Mr.* and Mrs. Thomas H. Cato John and Laura Chadwick Kevin and Katie Crumbo Sheryl and Steve Durham Patricia Frist Elcan and Charles A. Elcan Jennifer and Billy Frist Julie and Tommy Frist Karyn McLaughlin Frist Patricia C. Frist and Thomas F. Frist, Jr., MD Bernice and Joel Gordon Dr. and Mrs. C. K. Hiranya Gowda Patricia and Rodes Hart Spencer and Marlene Hays Martha Rivers Ingram R. Milton and Denice Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Howard S. Kirshner CIRCLE MEMBERS Tom and Darlene Klaritch Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Lazenby Ellen H. Martin Lynn and Ken Melkus Ben and Joan Rechter Jan and Stephen S. Riven Delphine and Ken Roberts Anne and Joe Russell Ms. Virginia Severinghaus Luke and Susan Simons 44 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT REMBRANDT CIRCLE ($5,000–$9,999) David and Linda Anderson Mr. and Mrs. H. Lee Barfield II Mr. Martin S. Brown Iris Buhl John E. Cain III Dr. and Mrs. Brian R. Carlson Mr. and Mrs. Ansel L. Davis Karl Dean and Anne Davis The Rev. Canon Fred and Kathryn Dettwiller Frank and Claire Drowota Susan H. Edwards Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey B. Eskind Mr. and Mrs. Jon M. Foster Robert and Carol Frist The Honorable William H. Frist, MD Amy and Frank Garrison Bob and Julie Gordon Mrs. Kate Ransom Wilson Grayken Mr. and Mrs. James S. Gulmi L. O. Heidtke and Cynthia H. Luna Mark and Kay Kimbrough Mr. Neil B. Krugman and Ms. Lee Pratt Sheila and Richard McCarty Ms. Nancy Menke and Ms. Sara Rosson Karen and Bruce Moore Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Patton Drs. Jonathan and Donna Perlin Mr. and Mrs. Sid Pilson Sandy and Jay Sangervasi Mr. and Mrs. James C. Seabury III Danny and Caroline Shaw Joe and Brenda Steakley Mr. and Mrs. Donald Stinnett Laura Anne Turner Steve and Judy Turner Leslie and Robert Waterman Noel Williams Mr. and Mrs. Ridley Wills II PRESIDENT’S CIRCLE ($2,500–$4,999) Anonymous (2) Kevin and Colleen Atwood Mr. and Mrs. J. Barry Banker The Honorable Thomas M. Beck and Mrs. Amanda Beck Annie Laurie Berry Mr. and Mrs. J. William Blevins Phil Bredesen and Andrea Conte Ann and Frank Bumstead Victor, Tawnie, Wirth and Meredith Campbell Mr. and Mrs. John W. Clay, Jr. Anita and Bill* Cochran Helen and Harvey Cummings Laurie and Steven Eskind Jeanne and Mike Exner Mr. and Mrs. James Allen Fitzgerald, Jr. Tom and Judy Foster Chip and Heather Fridrich Mr. and Mrs. John Gawaluck Frank and Gwen Gordon Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey B. Harwell, Jr. Mrs. Charles W. Hawkins III Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Hayes Mr. and Mrs. Samuel N. Hazen Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Hegel Helen Jane Herring Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Herring, Jr. William Albert Herring Mr. and Mrs. Damon T. Hininger Mr. and Mrs. Ephriam H. Hoover III Bill Ivey and Susan Keffer Jeffrey and Gail Jacobs Katherine A. Johnson and Bob P. DeBastiani Will Kendrick and Emily Verchota Robin and Bill King John and Monica Mackie Jim McKanna and Vivien Casagrande Mr. and Mrs. Martin F. McNamara III Patricia and James Munro Hannah Paramore Jana and Randy Parham Mr. and Mrs. W. Paul Rutledge Mr. and Mrs. John Claiborne Sifford Joe and Joanne Sowell Mr. and Mrs. John M. Steele Gloria and Paul Sternberg Anne and Jack Stringham Leif Torkelsen Mr. and Mrs. James S. Turner, Jr. Julie and Breck Walker Jonathan and Janet Weaver Jim Womack and Anne Henderson 45 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE ($1,000–$2,499) Anonymous (4) Mr. and Mrs. Clint B. Adams Dr. and Mrs. Jeff Adams Carolyn E. Amiot and David B. Amiot Mr. and Mrs. George J. Anderson Ms. Michelle L. Anderson and Ms. Carla R. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. William F. Andrews Alexandra and James Armstrong Lindsey and Howell Arnold Mr. Gary Ashton and Ms. Shannon Skye Mr. and Mrs. Ray Basham Mr. and Mrs. David J. Baulch Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Baulch, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Baulch III Mr. and Mrs. David A. Berezov Phil and Amberly Billington Karen and Pete Bird Richard and Sara Bovender Michael and Sarah Brechner Betty and Bob Brodie Cathy and Martin Brown Kathryn and David Brown Linda and Dan Brown Daniel Bryant Melinda and John Buntin Sarah and Terry Calvani Mr. and Mrs. William H. Cammack Barbara and Eric Chazen Mr. and Mrs. Sam E. Christopher Connie and Tom Cigarran Mr. and Mrs. G. William Coble II Mr. and Mrs. Neely Coble III Teri and Alan Cohen Chase Cole Ms. Candy L. Coleman and Ms. Carol Coleman John O. Colton Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Cook, Jr. Ms. Linda G. Cooper Harvey and Elise Crouch Janine and Ben Cundiff Kim and Eddie DeMoss Mr. and Mrs. Walton Denton Marty and Betty Dickens Dee and Jerald Doochin Scott Dube Dr. Peggy Smith Duke Margaret and James Dunn Ann and Glenn Eaden Mr. and Mrs. Mark J. Eddy Mark and Deborah Edwards Mrs. Annette S. Eskind Jane and Richard Eskind Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt Ezell Jill L. Fachilla Jason Facio and Paul Vasterling Terry and Alex Fardon Mr. and Mrs. John D. Ferguson Admiral and Mrs. James H. Finney Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Fortunato Danna and Bill Francis Dr. Craig Freiberg and Mrs. Dara Freiberg Melissa and Robert Frist, Jr. Dr. Richard Geer Dodie and Carl George Mr. Andrew D. Giacobone and Mrs. Krysta J. McNaughton-Giacobone James C. Gooch and Jennie P. Smith Mr. and Mrs. C. David Griffin Kathy and John Griffin Barbara and Lee Grubbs Bill Gubbins and Mary Schaefer Carolyn and Hartley Hall Mr. Joel Hall and Ms. Amanda Gross Mr. and Mrs. Ray Harness Bill and Ruth Ann Harnisch Cordia and Tom Harrington Jonathan Harwell Mary Jeffords Hawkins Mr. and Mrs. Gary R. Haynes Dr. Stephan Heckers and Ms. Christine Konradi Helen and Neil Hemphill Ms. Patricia Hollander and Mr. Marc Hollander Ms. Sheri Horn and Mr. Mike Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Samuel H. Howard Ashley and Joe Howell Sherry and Everette Howell Ellen W. Hudson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Hulme Mr. and Mrs. Toshinari Ishii Ms. Gretchen P. Jackson and Mr. Charles H. Jackson Ellen and Kenneth Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. Clint Jennings 46 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT LEFT TO RIGHT, Mike Campbell, Ashley Howell, Deborah Story, and Sheri Horn at a Circle Reception. DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE CONTINUED Mr. and Mrs. David B. Johnson Melvin N. Johnson, DBA Mr. and Mrs. William P. Johnston Dr. and Mrs. David S. Jones Marty and Roy Jordan Caroline Kim and Aaron Gregory Mr. and Mrs. Randall L. Kinnard Chris and Beth Kirkland Mr. and Mrs. Marty Kittrell Walter and Sarah Knestrick Susan Knowles and Andrew Saftel Mr. and Mrs. Neil Kohler Lucy and Sam Kuykendall Mr. and Mrs. Randolph M. LaGasse Jeff and Andrea Lane Paul and Dana Latour Sandi and Tom Lawless Trish and John Lindler Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Lipinski Gage and Shelley Logan Jane and Jim Main Ms. Mary P. Mallen Pat and Dave Malone Mr. and Mrs. Stephen S. Mathews Mimsye* and Leon May Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. McRae III Mr. and Mrs. F. Max Merrell Hannah and James Miller Richard L. and Sharalena Miller Kenton Monesmith Juli Ann and Ralph Mosley Ms. Shelia Mullican and Mr. J. M. Mullican Mike and Teresa Nacarato Anne and Peter Neff Leslie and Scott Newman Gerald and Donna Nicely Agatha L. Nolen Dr. Harrell Odom and Mr. Barry Cook Jennifer and Eric Paisley Sonny Palmer and Jean Patton Tammy Parmentier Ms. Autumn Parrott Mr. and Mrs. George M. Parrott Hal and Peggy Pennington Mr. and Mrs. James W. Perkins, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Philip M. Pfeffer Adrienne and David Piston Scott M. and Carol Len Portis Ellen Jones Pryor Mr. and Mrs. Alan Purdy Ben and Linda Ragsdale Mr. Edwin B. Raskin Mr. and Mrs. Dudley C. Richter Mrs. Walter M. Robinson, Jr. Anne and Charles Roos Mark and Vicki Scala Dr. Norm Scarborough and Ms. Kimberly Hewell 47 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Visitors spending time with a work in Looking East DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE CONTINUED Rick and Lynn Scarola Dr. William Schaffner and Ms. Lois C. Knight Sandra Schatten Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Schatz Walter and Mary Schatz Mr. Jim Schmitz Mr. Blair P. Scott, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sewell Robert Sharp Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sherrard Nicholas and Sue Sieveking Mr. and Mrs. William C. Sites Mr. and Mrs. Overton T. Smith James and Leah Sohr Dr. and Mrs. Dan M. Spengler Mr. and Mrs. James R. Stadler Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Rye Steele Dr. and Mrs. Robert Stein Mr. and Mrs. James P. Stonehocker Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. Story Hope and Howard Stringer Bruce and Elaine Sullivan Catherine Cate Sullivan Rev. and Mrs. Tim Taylor Julianne and Scott Thomas Jackie and Dewitt Thompson Curt and Heather Thorne Alex and Emily Townes Byron and Aleta Trauger Dianne and Tom True Seab and Patti Tuck Judy and Tom Turk Ms. Linda Van Auken Ms. Joyce A. Vise Robert and Nancy Wahl Bayard H. Walters and Rosemary Lab Walters Peggy and John Warner Alix and Monica Weiss Sharp Mr. and Mrs. Morris Werthan Mr. Stacy Widelitz David and Gail Williams Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Williams III Mr. and Mrs. Duane S. Willis Mr. and Mrs. Ridley Wills III Justin and Barbara Wilson Mr. Matthew W. Wyatt and Mr. William B. Lyles Janet and Alan Yuspeh Shirley Zeitlin Nicholas S. Zeppos and Lydia A. Howarth 48 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Guests enjoying the July 25 Frist Friday concert Memberships at the Contributing Level support the mission of the Frist Center by providing additional operating funds for our exhibitions and programs. Contributing members enjoy an array of additional benefits. BENEFACTORS Anonymous (2) John and Jeanne Abernathy Kathy and Joseph Adams Mr. and Mrs. David Bailey Dr. and Mrs. Elbert W. Baker, Jr. Gordon and Julia Baker Dr. and Mrs. R. D. Beauchamp Mr. David M. Bennett Mr. and Mrs. David Bohan Dr. and Mrs. Glenn S. Buckspan Mr. and Mrs. William O. Caldwell Graham and Suzanne Carpenter John and Pamela Carr Mr. Terry W. Chandler Steve C. and Julie K. Davis Eddie and Susan DeGarmo Cathy and Jim Deppen Mr. Wayne Dugas and Mrs. Laura Dugas Robert Eisenstein Shannon and Skip Elders Mr. and Mrs. David Emery W. Tyree Finch Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. France John and Dana Franck Faith and Ronald Galbraith Mrs. Gene R. Gilchrist Kent and Becky Harrell Ms. Casilda Hermo and Ms. Lydia Hermo CONTRIBUTING-LEVEL MEMBERS 49 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Benefactors CONTINUED Leslie and Chuck Higgins Wanda Neal Hooper Mr. and Mrs. Ken Horner Mary and Oscar Jones Patricia and Howard Jones Wayne and Fran Kirkpatrick Elaine and Jon Levine Jeffrey C. Lynch Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. McNeilly, Jr. Mr. Stephen P. Miller and Ms. Connie V. Dowell Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Nelson Mr. Glen P. Oxford and Ms. Rozanne Jackson David and Pamela Palmer Dr. Barron L. Patterson and Mr. Burton Jablin Mr. Craig Philip and Ms. Marian Ott Mr. and Mrs. Don Polak Mr. David A. Price Michael W. Propper, MD Cherie Robbins and Ivan Robbins, MD Mr. Kenneth Roberts, Jr. Marc and Ruth Ann Rowland Joan Blum Shayne Beth and Byron Smith Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Stack Mrs. Sharon B. Stewart and Mr. David Stewart Bella and Pete Stringer Mr. and Mrs. James E. Summar Mr. and Mrs. Ron A. Swang, DDS Dr. and Mrs. Michael A. Todd Wanda and George B. Tomlin, Jr. Dr. Jan van Eys Kris, Kaitlyn and G. G. Waggoner Mr. and Mrs. Michael Walker Mrs. Eleanor Whitworth Paul and Deborah Yoder Mr. and Mrs. George L. Yowell Mr. and Mrs. Julian Zander, Jr. Dr. Michael Zanolli and Ms. Julie Sandine PATRONS Anonymous (7) Charles Akers and Frances Wolf Edgar and Kathi Allen Mr. and Mrs. Lawson C. Allen Mrs. Julie W. Allison Tedra K. Armstrong Hunter and Leigh Atkins Dr. and Mrs. George R. Avant Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Averbuch Sallie and John Bailey Cheryl Baird Anita and Don Baltimore Ms. Susan E. Barkley Don and Cathy Barnett Mr. George E. Barrett Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Bateman Ms. Avalyn Bauer Dr. and Mrs. Robert O. Begtrup Betty Bellamy Cherry and Richard Bird Julia and Budd Bishop Jeff Boggan Gilbert Bosse, Jr. Leilani and Dwaine Boulware Jere and Crystal Brassell Pamela and Bruce Brown Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bryan III Mr. and Mrs. Alfred R. Butler Ms. Ann V. Butterworth and Ms. Elizabeth Ockerman Mr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Byrd Maria and Billy Caldwell Mary and Francis Caprio Mr. and Mrs. William F. Carpenter III Mr. Fred J. Cassetty Scott C. Chambers Mr. James H. Cheek III Mr. James K. Christain Mark and Bette Christofersen George D. Clark, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Claverie, Sr. Victoria Clayton and Jerry W. Clayton Cynthia Clinard Douglas and Cindy Cobb Esther and Roger Cohn Margaret and Wiley Coley The Honorable and Mrs. Lew Conner David and Karen Conrad Michael and Cherry Conrad Sandra Cooper Dr. and Mrs. Seth Cooper, MD Robert Cowden, MD Joseph Crace 50 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT PATRONS CONTINUED Tom Croffut and Deborah Fertitta The Honorable and Mrs. J. Dewey Daane Delphine and Allen Damon Gloria and Don Daniel Ronald and Sara Davidson Barbara and Willie K. Davis Ms. Devereaux Davis Mr. and Mrs. Elliott P. Dawson James Deal Kathryn Delmez Mrs. Edwin F. DeMoss Lydia Denkler Dennis Di Traglia and Timothy Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Diehl, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Doochin Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Dorn Ellen and Townes Duncan Michael and Jane Dungan Mr. Charles W. Dunn Robert and Deborah Durrett Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Edmondson, Sr. Reshana and John Eells R. W. and Constance Elliott William and Jamie Eskind Mr. and Mrs. Rod Essig Joyce and David Eyler Mr. and Mrs. Steven D. Ezell Mr. and Mrs. Richard Farmer Dave and Heather Fentress Lee Ferrell and Adelita Silver Tory and Will Fitzgibbon Rebecca Foster Dr. John C. Frist, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Frist III Rhonda and Michael Galligan Dr. and Mrs. Richard W. Garman, Jr. Felicia Gates and Larry Gates Harris Gilbert Warren and Melissa Gill John and Allis Dale Gillmor Mr. and Mrs. Martin E. Gilmore, Jr. Mariagabriella Giro and Jeff Davidson Mr. and Mrs. Ralph T. Glassford Mr. and Mrs. Michael Glenn Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Goodrich, Jr. Patty and Bill Harbison Ms. Peggy R. Hays Mrs. Edwin Anthony Heard Mr. and Mrs. E. Randall Henderson, Jr. The Honorable and Mrs. Douglas S. Henry, Jr. Mr. and Ms. Kevin E. Hickman Ms. Amy Hill J. Reginald Hill Ruth Hill and Letizia Modena Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Hilmer Melissa Hilmes and Jeff Martus Dr. Alice A. Hinton Robert D. Hoffman and Rosana Eisenberg Susan S. Hollyday Dale A. Holmer and Willa B. Holmer Margaret Homolya and Shirley Sills Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Hooker Dr. Carlene L. Hunt Kathy Jabs Frances C. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Jantz Dennis A. and Gloria L. Jenkins Richard Jett Cathy and Bill Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Warren T. Johnson, Jr. Ted and Evelyn Jones Ms. Barbara F. Kaczmarska, MD, FAAP Mr. and Mrs. James Kelley Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Kerrigan, Jr. David and Janet Kleinfelter Mr. and Mrs. William C. Koch, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gene C. Koonce Heloise Werthan Kuhn Tim Kyne Mr. and Mrs. Adam M. Laker Kristine Lalonde and Claudio Mosse Mr. and Mrs. Larry Larkin Mr. and Mrs. Baxter Lee Lewis and Judy Lefkowitz Sally M. Levine Caroline and Mary Lewis Julia and Edmund Lewis Drs. Thomas J. and Lee E. Limbird Roberta Lochte-Jones John and Carolyn Long Mr. Tom Loventhal Mr. and Mrs. John Powell Lowe Amy and George Lynch Bob and Marcia Mallard Ms. Mary P. Mallen Mark and Anne Manner Rebecca Marshall and Don Light Walker and Renee Mathews 51 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT PATRONS CONTINUED Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. May Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. May Lewis W. McDaniel Sally and Allen McDaniel Marcia A. McDonald Mr. and Mrs. Mark McDonald Mr. and Mrs. John W. McDougall, Jr. Mary Mcelroy-Smith and Barry Smith Ms. Jan McKeel and Ms. Katherine J. McKeel Dr. and Mrs. Timothy E. McNutt, Sr. Bob and Billie Sue Medling Dr. and Mrs. Anthony Meluch Mr. and Mrs. Alan Miller Casi and Aaron Miller Doug and Janice Minton Dr. Fernando Miranda and Dr. Patricia Bihl-Miranda Charlie and Janis Mitchell Jeffrey and Diana Mobley Nina and David Morel Mr. and Mrs. William P. Morelli David Morgan Melanie and Russell Morgan Michael and Shelly Morgan Mr. William T. Morris and Mrs. Debbie Morris J. Craig and Jennifer Morrison Mr. Lannie W. Neal, Jr. Mary and Gudger Nichols Mrs. Jane K. Norris Rosann and Bill Nunnelly Thomas and Elaine O’Brien Cdr. John F. Ohlinger William and Deborah Oliver Dr. and Mrs. James A. O’Neill, Jr. J. Barry Otto and Martha P. Fouce Mrs. Sandra Owen Mr. David B. Parsons and Ms. Theresa Ball Mr. David K. Patzer and Ms. Marina Portillo Courtney and Carolyn Pearre Lisa and Bill Peerman Charlie and Connally Penley Ali Perry Mrs. Haden Pickel MaryEllen and Mark Pickrell Dr. and Mrs. V. Douglas Pierce, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. R. Shannon Pollard, Jr. Richard and Brigitte Porter O. Wayne Puckett Ms. Joan K. Raskin Mr. and Mrs. Darrell W. Ray Mr. and Mrs. Michael B. Reid Margaret and Brian Roark Mrs. Martin S. Roberts, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John T. Rochford III The Judson Rogers Family David and Karin Roland Mary Rolando Judith R. Roney Dr. and Mrs. Howard E. Rosen Mr. Robert L. Sadler Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Samuels Tara and Mike Schneider Kenneth Schriver and Anna Roe Kathy Selghmann and Nicole Heidemann Dr. and Mrs. R. Bruce Shack Davida and Lonnie Sharpe William and Connie Shreffler Mr. Mark Simmons Frank and Ellen Simpson Melody and James Sipes Gary J. and Ann Evers Smith Mr. and Mrs. John C. Smith Mrs. Rachel G. Smith Mr. and Mrs. S. Douglas Smith Mr. and Mrs. Brian J. Smokler Ms. Dana D. Snodgrass Joan D. Solomon Mike and Cathy Sowers Harvey and Catherine Sperling Janice Spillman Christopher M. Steigerwald and Heather A. Steigerwald Ronnie and Beverly Steine Mr. and Mrs. Lowell L. Stokes Gail A. Stroud Dr. and Mrs. Fridolin Sulser Dr. and Mrs. Craig R. Sussman Frank Sutherland and Natilee Duning Judge and Mrs. M. T. Taylor Kristin and Jason Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Alfred L. Thomason Mr. and Mrs. David G. Thompson Mr. Wayne Tisei Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Tompkins 52 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Holly Flora, associate professor of art history at Tulane University, gives a lecture about Sanctity Pictured. PATRONS CONTINUED Martha J. Trammell The Rev. Sherry M. Travis Mr. and Mrs. Phillip M. Trella Claire W. Tucker Mr. and Mrs. James F. Turner, Jr. Frances Anne Varallo Ms. Lucy Visceglia and Mr. David W. Coulam Robert H. and Doris B. Waldschmidt Dr. and Mrs. John J. Warner and Family Tina and Joseph Wavra James Weathers Kathleen Whalen Ms. Anne White David W. White Mr. and Mrs. John Warner White Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. White Pamela and David White Laura and Geoffrey Wile Mr. and Mrs. James Williams Katherine and James Willliams Mr. Robert W. Williams Hailey and Courtney Williamson Mr. and Mrs. John A. Witherspoon, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence K. Wolfe Mr. and Mrs. Stephen F. Wood Tracy L. Woodard Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Wylie III Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Wynn Mr. and Mrs. Peter York Steve and Mary Lou Zagorski 53 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Summer campers make tie-dyed T-shirts as part of the Paint-n-Play summer art camp for five- to seven-year-olds. Gifts to the Annual Fund help bring fantastic exhibitions to the Frist Center and allow us to provide FREE admission to children 18 and younger and FREE educational programs to Nashville and neighboring communities. Anonymous (24) Robin Holab-Abelman and Stephen Abelman Rima and Bassel Abou-Khalil Melodie and Matt Adams Dr. Jean K. Alexander Brandee Anderson Francine and James Attrill Michael L. Aurbach Mr. and Mrs. Wiley C. Baines, Jr. Wil and Rosemary Bane Jodi and Mark Banks Carole and Marvin Batson Nanci and Jim Bauchiero William Baucom and Susan Spurgeon Donald and Marita Beck Annie Laurie Berry Stephanie and Michael Berry Randolph and Elaine Blake Denise W. Boosalis Merle C. Born Drew Ann and Dan Borsos Joseph T. Botz Jennie G. Bowman Ms. Jane E. Braddock Jere and Crystal Brassell Michael and Sarah Brechner Jocelyn Briddell Ms. Marilyn S. Brisbois Judy and Jerry Brookshire Allen C. Brown, Jr. Ruth Ann Brown Steven and Jill Brown Rhea and Carole Bucy Mr. William J. Burns ANNUAL FUND DONORS 54 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT ANNUAL FUND DONORS CONTINUED Robert and Martha Burrows Mark Calarco Evelyn Campbell Marla and Mary Thompson Alice Chapman Mr. and Mrs. James A. Charron George D. Clark, Jr. Kay Hancock Clarkson and Thomas Clarkson Dan and Barbara Coleman Michael and Cherry Conrad Delores and William Cook Charlotte and Joel Covington Steven and Suzanne Crook Ann and Robert Crownover Tom and Wray Cullen Patricia and Fred Dalessandro The Danner Foundation Bettye D. Daugherty Martha S. Davenport Lynnette and Samuel Davidson Mr. and Mrs. Alphonse H. Davis Starling Davis and David Clark Mat Deaton Mary-Elizabeth Debicki Roy and Julia DeHart Delek Fund for Hope Spiro and Dawn Dellos Jeff and Kathy Demonbreun Mrs. Edwin F. DeMoss Mrs. Keith C. DeMoss Mr. and Mrs. J. William Denny Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Diehl, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Larry A. Dillingham Bonnie J. Dow Bob and Nancy Dunkerley Amy Dunlap May Dean Eberling Susan H. Edwards Robert and Marcia Erickson M. Houston Estes Mr. and Mrs. Ronald M. Everett Katherine Ezell Terry and Alex Fardon Jeffrey M. Feix James W. Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. John and Valerie Fields Lavinia Fillebrown Alice Fitzgibbon Samuel M. Fleming Foundation Toni Foglesong Robin Ford Karen and Herman Fortenberry John Franck Dr. Craig Freiberg and Mrs. Dara Freiberg Betty Friedlander and Bob Haines Jan Freitag Emily and Randy Frey Cathey and Wilford Fuqua Danny Futrell Kay K. Gaines Gannett Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Scott Garfinkel Amy and Lucian Geise Van Gilmore Judith D. Ginn Carol and Joe Glaser Goodrum Advertising Steven Greil Gullett Charitable Lead Trust Guy Harmon Jill and Jack Harmuth Arthur and Martha Harrison Ms. Catie L. Harwell Ann H. Haynes Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Hazlehurst Lisa and Bill Headley Susan and Andrew Heath Russell and Mimi Heldman Fred and Judy Helfer Mr. Anthony Herrington Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Hilmer Mr. and Mrs. Joe M. Hodgson Frances and John Hoff Catherine J. Holsen Robert G. Hornbuckle and Garry Hornbuckle Brian Howard Ashley and Joe Howell Bill Hudgins and Wilda Dodson Karen Hudson Charlotte Huff The Hunt Family Foundation Thomas Irvin Mr. and Mrs. Toshinari Ishii Anne Jackovich Dee and John Jacobson Carmelle Jasenovic Maggie and Bruce Jennings Mary M. Johannes The Keith and Nancy Johnson Family Foundation Vikki and Charlie Johnson Christy and Tom Jones 55 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Michael Brechner, director of design and operations, describing exhibition design to a group of incoming college interns. ANNUAL FUND DONORS CONTINUED Dan Jones Evelyn Jones Patricia and David Jones Steve Jones Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Kane Sol and Carol Katz Jim and Beth Kelso Paul Kennerley Teresa Kersey Joni and Lee Kies Sandra and Sanford Krantz Peter A. Kult Elise Lamar Tom Lampe Jane and James Landers Mrs. Theresa Lapidus Mr. and Mrs. James E. Lawson Amy L. Leonard Susan and Phillip Levitan Tony Lewis Todd M. Liebergen Andrea Lindsey Julia and Robert Lowe Mary Macauley Lukens The Donald M. and Florence E. Maillie Fund William and Kathy Malone Andrea Maneschi Geraldine and Richard Markus Ida K. Martin Adam Masterson Rita and Harry Matthews Carol and Colin McArthur Suzanne McCafferty Kerry and Lynne McCalla Holland and Glenn McConnell Elizabeth and Patrick McDougal Mr. and Mrs. James M. McFarlin Susan and Pat McLemore Dwight McWhorter Dr. Arthur M. Mellor Susan Menking and Ellen Menking Messer Construction Robert and Carol Mode Ellen L. More Douglas K. Morris Margaret and David Moss Catharine and Patrick Murphy Carla and Thomas Nankervis Mr. and Mrs. Frank I. Nebhut, Jr. Jean Nelson and Will Martin Agatha L. Nolen Mrs. Jane K. Norris Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. Nuyens Mark O’Bryan Robert K. Oermann Patricia Olsen Sherry Owens Dr. and Mrs. James Pace Doria Panvini Jamie S. Parks Ms. Autumn Parrott Kiran and Anjna Patel 56 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT ANNUAL FUND DONORS CONTINUED Cheryl and Allen Patton Dr. and Mrs. Wesley Patton Ms. Rita A. Payne Adam Perkinson Perle Fine Retrospective, Inc. Sabrina and Steven Pflug Dan E. Pomeroy Susan and Gordon Postal Betty and James Poston Ellen Jones Pryor Bets Ramsey Diane and Joseph Raposa Eleanor and Charles Raths Katherine and Rhett Raum Marie Carney Reed Robinson and Douglas Regen J. William Rich, Amy L. Rich, and D. Tate Rich Barbara Richards and Stanley Chervin Mary C. Roberts and Wm. Carson Fraser Thomas and Marie Robinson Mary and David Rollins Andre Rolsin Victoria Olin Ross J. R. Rudd and Margaret Schuyler Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Scala Linda and Melvin Schlanger Susan and Roy Schulz Elaina and J. Scott Lillie Ann and Marvin Sells Phyllis and Ray Sells Rachel and Will Settle Richard C. Shadinger Ethel H. Shaffer Sherry and Robert Shearer Beverly Shelton Nicholas and Sue Sieveking Mary Silveira and Robin Adair Debra Simpkins-Bauer Ruth G. Singley Lisa and Stephen Small Jeanne and Bob Smith Jim and Gayle Smith Robert B. Snyder Ann Soderquist Ken and Lisa Spradley Katelyn Sprang Sarah Frost Stamps Hilary and Shane Stapleton Dr. and Mrs. Robert Stein Suzanne and Stan St. Pierre Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Strait C. Eugene and Frances S. Stribling Gail and Jackie Stroud Lottie Strupp Ms. Mary E. Stuck Nancy Sugg Dr. Becky E. Swanson-Hindman Margaret and Ed Tate David Taylor Lisa Kaye Taylor and Cynthea Taylor Ann M. Teaff and Donald P. McPherson Jeremy and Carrie Teaford Mr. and Mrs. J. Lillard Templeton Tennessee Association of Craft Artists Chris and Jennie Thomas Rubye Lynn and Bethel Thomas Mr. and Mrs. David G. Thompson Jan and John Thompson Marla and Mary Thompson Martha C. Thompson Joe and Ellen Torrence Martha J. Trammell Truist Inc. Van Tucker John and Carol Tures Barbara S. Turner Mieah Turner Carole J. VanderWal Don Van Vleet Alex and Mary Wade and DeeDee J. Wade William W. Wade Charles and Carol Walker Frank and Jane Wcislo Betty and Bernard Werthan Dr. and Mrs. Jerry D. Westbrook Anne M. Westfall Christine Whitworth Dianne and Warren Wild Rebecca A. Wildsmith Margaret Wiley F. Clark Williams Missy Willoughby, PhD Karen and Jeffrey Witte William Woerner Jim Womack and Anne Henderson Pam and Tom Wylly Dena Young and Michael Humnicky Elizabeth and Frank Young Lisa and Melvin Ziegler Manon Zouai 57 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Honorariums and memorials are a meaningful way to pay tribute to someone who has had a lasting impact in your life while also contributing to the mission of the Frist Center. HONORARIA IN HONOR OF CATE ALLEN IN HONOR OF SUSAN EDWARDS Grace Allen Julie and Breck Walker IN HONOR OF BOB BARRETT AND ANDY PETERSON IN HONOR OF JEAN ESKIND Mr. and Mrs. Julian Zander, Jr. Sally M. Levine IN HONOR OF DÉJA, TAJ, NADIA, NOELLE, AND JAXEN Johnny and Angela Butler IN HONOR OF JENNIFER AND BILLY FRIST ARTifice, LLC Steve Durham Anna Roberts-Tettleton and John R. Tettleton HONORARIA AND MEMORIAL GIFTS 58 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT IN HONOR OF DR. THOMAS FRIST Glover Group Entertainment, Inc. IN HONOR OF TOMMY AND TRISH FRIST Anonymous IN HONOR OF MSGR. JAMES R. HITCHCOCK Marvin M. Brown IN HONOR OF KERI JHAVERI Ruth Rosenberg IN HONOR OF MYLES MAILLIE Rife Hughey IN HONOR OF PHIVE PHOEBE BOOKS Mr. Joseph L. May Mrs. Lynn H. May IN HONOR OF SYLVIA RUDY Leo and Miriam Bragg IN HONOR OF JAMES SETTLES Thomas L. Smith IN HONOR OF ANDREA STEELE Alex and Susie Bonner IN HONOR OF DEAN TIRATTO MEMORIALS IN MEMORY OF STEVE CLARK Vicki A. Clark IN MEMORY OF IDA COONEY John F. Cooney IN MEMORY OF JULIAN DE LA GUARDIA Alma de la Guardia IN MEMORY OF SUZY EMMITT Susan H. Edwards IN MEMORY OF MARIBELLE R. MOORE Martha E. Moore IN MEMORY OF BILL PRYOR Hannah Paramore IN MEMORY OF MARTHA RICE Susan H. Edwards IN MEMORY OF PAT RICHARDSON Carolyn and Hartley Hall IN MEMORY OF LINDA GAMBEL WOOD Vanessa and Chris Sellers Vickie Mouser SPECIAL THANKS The Frist Center gives special thanks to Northstar Real Estate Advisors, LLC, and Genma Holmes for their support of the Active Military Membership Fund. In recognition of their service, active military and their families are eligible to receive free Family-Level memberships to enjoy. 59 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT The Frist Gala included delightful floral designs from The Tulip Tree and a stunning umbrella installation by Sherbe Green. The 2014 Frist Gala celebrated Looking East: Western Artists and the Allure of Japan on Saturday, April 5. Co-chairs Cathy Brown and Betsy Wills orchestrated an exquisite evening, transforming the Frist Center into a beautiful world that captured the aesthetic and culture of Japan through stunning decorations and koto music. After cocktails in the Grand Lobby, guests were treated to exclusive access to the exhibition and then a seated dinner under a tent adorned with a breathtaking Japanese parasol sculpture that snaked along the ceiling. The 2014 Frist Gala raised funds for the Frist Center’s educational and outreach programming initiatives. We thank Cathy Brown and Betsy Wills, as well as the committee chairs and volunteers, for devoting their time and efforts to the Frist Center. We also thank the generous patrons, the members of the Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Committees, the gala attendees, and all the others who contributed to this incredibly successful event. THE FRIST GALA 60 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT SPONSORS PATRONS Supporting Sponsors Floating World Patrons (Contribution of $10,000) Lipman Brothers and R. S. Lipman Company Nordstrom Frist Gala co-chairs Betsy Wills and Cathy Brown Mr. and Mrs. J. Barry Banker Mr. and Mrs. Dennis C. Bottorff Barbara and Jack Bovender Richard M. and Judith K. Bracken Mr. and Mrs. Martin S. Brown, Jr. Joanne and Tom Cato Laura and John Chadwick Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Crumbo Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Dennis Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Elcan Jennifer and Billy Frist Julie and Tommy Frist Patricia C. Frist and Dr. Thomas F. Frist, Jr. Bernice and Joel Gordon Mr. and Mrs. John R. Ingram Mr. and Mrs. R. Milton Johnson Robert S. Lipman Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Melkus Mr. and Mrs. A. Bruce Moore, Jr. Jan and Stephen Riven Bill and Nancy Rutherford Jim and Leah Sohr Jay and Christi Turner Bob and Leslie Waterman Mr. and Mrs. W. Ridley Wills III Japonisme Patrons (Contribution of $5,000) David and Linda Anderson Mr. and Mrs. H. Lee Barfield II Judy and Joe Barker Janet and Earl Bentz Mr. Claiborne Blevins Barbara and Jack Bovender Mr. and Mrs. David H. Brown Martin S. Brown Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bryan III Barney and Elena Byrd Mr. and Mrs. Victor L. Campbell Susanne and Todd Cato Nicky and Jim Cheek Mr. and Mrs. Brownlee O. Currey, Jr. Collie and Greg Daily Anne Davis and Karl Dean Mr. and Mrs. Ansel L. Davis Marty and Betty Dickens Susan H. Edwards Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Eskind Dr. and Mrs. Steven J. Eskind Mr. and Mrs. James A. Fitzgerald, Jr. Mrs. Johnna Watson Ford and Dr. William Ford III Mr. and Mrs. F. Tom Foster, Jr. Steve and Phyllis Fridrich Ashley and Harrison Frist Karyn McLaughlin Frist The Honorable William H. Frist, MD Amy and Frank M. Garrison, Jr. Gwen and Frank Gordon 61 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT GENTLEMEN’S COMMITTEE Hiranya and Saraswathi Gowda with Thomas F. Frist, Jr., at the Frist Gala JAPONISME Patrons CONTINUED Julie and Bob Gordon Mrs. Kate R. W. Grayken Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey B. Harwell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Hayes Mr. and Mrs. Samuel N. Hazen Rebecca and John Howard Martha Rivers Ingram Mr. and Mrs. Orrin H. Ingram II Edie and David Johnson Kent and Nora Kirby Tom and Darlene Klaritch Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Lazenby Trish and John Lindler Ellen Harrison Martin Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. McCabe, Jr. Ann Marie and Martin F. McNamara III Marty and Rebecca Paslick Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Patton Mr. and Mrs. Ben R. Rechter Mr. and Mrs. H. Moore Rhett III Delphine and Ken Roberts Mr. and Mrs. Joseph V. Russell Sandra Schatten Mr. and Mrs. Alec Scott-Barnes Luke and Susan Simons Joe and Joanne Sowell Mr. and Mrs. George B. Stadler Joe and Brenda Steakley Gloria and Paul Sternberg Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Stinnett Steve and Judy Turner Julie and Breck Walker Jay and Beverly Wallace Ms. Noel Williams Mr. and Mrs. W. Ridley Wills II Mr. and Mrs. William M. Wilson C. Dale Allen Mr. Lawson C. Allen Joseph P. Altman III David Bruce Amiot David G. Anderson James Wesley Ayers Mark Banks Gentry Barden Lee Barfield II George E. Barrett Mr. Arthur Best Mr. Claiborne Blevins J. William Blevins Dr. Frank H. Boehm Jack Bovender Charles C. Boyd IV Douglas G. Bradbury III Roger Briggs Mr. David H. Brown Martin S. Brown Martin Brown Dr. Phillip N. Brown Rawls Butler Andrew W. Byrd Barney D. Byrd Dr. Benjamin Caldwell, Jr. Victor L. Campbell Hamilton Candee Thomas H. Cato* Todd H. Cato John Chadwick 62 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Gentlemen’s Committee CONTINUED James H. Cheek III Thomas G. Cigarran Mr. G. William Coble II Neely Coble III Chase Cole John O. Colton J. Overton Colton The Honorable Lew Conner Barry Cook Robert C. Crosby Mr. Kevin Crumbo G. Thomas Curtis The Honorable J. Dewey Daane Greg Daily Albert J. Dale III Mr. M. Duncan Dashiff Page Davidson Casper de Clerq George Frederick Dettwiller II John H. Dinkins Adam Dretler Frank Drowota Charles A. Elcan Daniel Elcan Mike Exner Steven D. Ezell John Ferguson Admiral J. H. Finney Mr. James A. Fitzgerald, Jr. Gene Fleming Matthew H. Fones David P. Freese Harrison Frist Dr. John C. Frist, Jr. Robert A. Frist, MD Dr. Thomas F. Frist, Jr. Tommy Frist William H. Frist, MD V. Carl George Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Giacobone Bob Gordon Joel C. Gordon C. K. Hiranya Gowda Mr. Mark C. Griffin Jim Gulmi Mr. Gregory Hagood Carl Haley Aubrey B. Harwell, Jr. Jonathan Harwell Gary J. Haugen Gary R. Haynes Sam Hazen Russ Heldman Damon T. Hininger James Holbrook E. Berry Holt Richard Holton Max Horkin John Howard James V. Hunt, Sr. Robert M. Hutton, MD Mr. David B. Ingram G. Brian Jackson Mr. R. Milton Johnson Mr. Samuel Lewis Johnson III Bart A. Johnston Crews Johnston III Mark H. Kelly Mr. Brock Kidd Mr. William Mark Kimbrough Kent Kirby Mr. Thomas Klaritch Herb Kneeland Neil Krugman Christopher F. Kyriopoulos Fred W. Lazenby Dr. John W. Lea IV Robert S. Lipman Dr. Graham Locke David J. Malone Frank Mastrapasqua Joseph May Samuel T. McGraw Martin F. McNamara III Ken Melkus Shade Murray, Jr. Pete Nebhut Jonathan C. Nesbitt Dr. Clint Newman Charles Ralls Niewold Harrell Odom Dr. James A. O’Neill, Jr. Buford H. Ortale Randy Parham Rob Parrish Mr. William W. Peerman Dr. Philip M. Pfeffer Jimmy Pickel Mark Pickrell Sid Pilson Gustavus A. Puryear IV Hugh M. Queener 63 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Gentlemen’s Committee CONTINUED James G. Ramsey Brian Reames Martin Renkis Stephen S. Riven Kenneth L. Roberts John T. Rochford Joe B. Rowland Joseph V. Russell Bill B. Rutherford Chenault Sanders Jay Sangervasi Frederic Scarola Bob Schatz Dr. Michael Schlosser James C. Seabury IV Dr. John S. Sergent Will Edwards Settle Steve Shankle Tom Sherrard Luke Simons Brooks R. Smith John Smithwick Scott Sohr Dan M. Spengler, MD Dr. S. Tyler Staelin Guests arrive at the Frist Center Gala. Photo by Peyton Hoge Stanford Fine Art Joe N. Steakley Thomas R. Steele John F. Stein Dr. Paul Sternberg, Jr. Donald W. Stinnett Charles Story Sam Strang Robert H. Street Bruce D. Sullivan T. Stephen C. Taylor Mr. Cromwell Tidwell III Reed Trickett Cal Turner, Jr. Mr. Mish Tworkowski Robert W. Wahl, MD John S. Warner, MD James A. Webb III Ted Welch* Bernard Werthan David Williams II Jim Williams Mr. W. Ridley Wills III Mr. Toby S. Wilt, Jr. LADIES’ COMMITTEE Anonymous Elizabeth Akers Honey Alexander Julie Allen Mrs. Lawson C. Allen Carolyn Amiot Linda R. Anderson Mrs. James Armstrong Mrs. J. Hunter Atkins Janet Elizabeth Ayers Mrs. David F. Baker III Rachel Barden Mary Frist Barfield Candice C. Bass Edith McBride Bass Bonnie D. Bell Annie Laurie Berry Debbie Best Mary Bettis Mrs. Frank H. Boehm Jennifer Bottorff Jessica Bracken Mrs. Douglas G. Bradbury III Elisabeth Brodie Mrs. J. Stewart Bronaugh, Jr. Mrs. David H. Brown Eliza Brown Mrs. Martin S. Brown, Jr. Sue Brown Daphne Butler Mrs. Victor L. Campbell Joanne G. Cato Kerri Cavanaugh 64 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT LADIES’ COMMITTEE continued Nancy Cheadle Mrs. John W. Clay, Jr. Mrs. G. William Coble II Mrs. Neely B. Coble III Mrs. Donald Q. Cochran, Jr. Mrs. Robert T. Coleman Amy Colton Mrs. Tom F. Cone Mrs. Lew Conner Stephanie Conner Mrs. Kelly P. Crockett Crook Mrs. Kevin Crumbo Beth Curley Ann H. Curtis Collie Daily Mrs. Albert J. Dale Nina de Clercq Mrs. George Frederick Dettwiller II Ann B. Dobson Julie Riven Dretler Claire H. Drowota Lake Eakin Susan H. Edwards Mrs. Irwin B. Eskind Mrs. Alec T. Estes Jeanne Exner Kate Read Ezell Laurie Farris Mrs. James A. Fitzgerald, Jr. Karen M. Fleming Katherine Follin Anne Taylor Fones Mrs. Johnna Watson Ford Chloe Fort Mrs. Jon M. Foster Judy Foster Friends of Bells Bend Ashley Frist Carol Knox Frist Julie Frist Karyn McLaughlin Frist Mrs. Patricia C. Frist Amy Price Garrison Mrs. Andrew Giacobone Gwen Gordon Julie Gordon Saraswathi D. Gowda Mary Greer Gail Greil Mrs. Mark Griffin Claire Gulmi Mrs. Gregory Hagood Connie Haley Carolyn Griffin Hall Patsy Harvey Carlana Harwell Mrs. James A. Haslam III Mrs. Gary Haugen Mrs. Jeffery N. Haynes JoAnne Haynes Glenna Hazen Mrs. Ashley LaRoche Heeren Mimi Heldman Cynthia B. Hickerson Mrs. James T. Holbrook Mrs. Richard Holton Mrs. James V. Hunt, Sr. Jacqueline Ruger Hutton Martha R. Ingram Sarah L. Ingram Stephanie Carrey Ingram Ms. Katherine Johnson Mrs. R. Milton Johnson Mrs. Samuel Lewis Johnson III Mrs. Mary Loventhal Jones Trinita Kennedy Mrs. Brock Kidd Kay Kimbrough Peggy Kinnard Mrs. C. Kenton Kirby Darlene Klaritch Erica Klaritch Mrs. David C. Kloeppel Judy Kneeland Mrs. Fred W. Lazenby Ellen Bradford Lea Ms. Ellen Lehman Sally Levine Mrs. Jane M. Main Patricia B. Malone Mrs. Ellen H. Martin Wendy W. Martin Laura Mastrapasqua Mrs. David Gray McClellan Mrs. Daniel J. McDonald III Elizabeth McDonald Mrs. John McDougall, Jr. Audrey F. McGraw Mrs. Martin F. McNamara III Lynn Melkus Ms. Nancy Menke Mrs. F. Max Merrell Ellen Livingfield More Anne W. Nesbitt Sally Nesbitt Dr. Agatha Nolen Felice Oldacre Cynthia C. Ortale 65 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT At the Frist Gala. LEFT, Floral accents from The Tulip Tree. CENTER, Consul general Motohiko Kato, Trish Frist, and Susan Edwards. RIGHT, Yukiko Nishimuro performing on the koto LADIES’ COMMITTEE continued Jana Lisle Parham Mrs. James W. Perkins III Mrs. James Rees Pickel, Jr. MaryEllen Pickrell Jane Anne Pilkington Linda Pilson Mrs. Gustavus A. Puryear IV Laura H. Queener Mrs. James G. Ramsey Julia Reed Jan Riven Delphine Oman Sloan Roberts Carole Rose Nancy S. Rutherford Tracey Sanders Lynn Scarola Lisa Schatz Rachel Settle Mary Jo Shankle Joan B. Shayne Dorothy Sifford Cynthia P. Smith Josephine Smithwick Lyn Sohr Frances Berry Spradley Mrs. Stephen Tyler Staelin Brenda Steakley Katie G. Steele Gloria Sternberg Elizabeth M. Stinnett Deborah Story Hope Stringer Elaine Sullivan Carolyn Taylor Ann Teaff Mrs. Cromwell Tidwell III Christi Turner Peggy Warner Ms. Jillian Waters Colleen Welch Betty Werthan Joni Werthan Mrs. David M. Wilds Gail Williams Ms. Noel Williams Sadhna Williams Mrs. Betsy M. Wills Eleanor L. Willis Dallas H. Wilt Mrs. Toby S. Wilt, Jr. 66 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Frist Gala guests enjoyed dinner from Kristen Winston Catering amid decorations from The Tulip Tree and Sherbe Green. GENERAL CONTRIBUTIONS Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Altman III Lindsay and Alice Bohannan Ms. Jennifer Bottorff Mrs. James C. Bradford, Jr. The Honorable Philip N. Bredesen and Ms. Andrea Conte Alison C. Bueschen Ms. Catherine Robette Campbell Mr. Hal Candee and Ms. Eliza Brown Andrea and Rick Carlton Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Cigarran Ms. Kelly Crockett-Crook Dr. and Mrs. Mark Deaton Mr. and Mrs. Matthew H. Dobson V Mr. and Mrs. David Emery Mr. and Mrs. William Edward Fitzgibbon IV Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Fleetwood Mary and Tom Gambill Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Ghertner Ms. Carolyne B. Hadden Mr. and Mrs. David G. Hitt Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Hooper Mr. and Mrs. David B. Ingram Lee Ann and Orrin Ingram Mr. and Mrs. Boyd G. Jacoway, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Warren T. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H. Joyce Mr. and Mrs. L. Owen Kelly Mr. and Mrs. W. Mark Kimbrough Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Kinard, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Klaritch Mr. and Mrs. James S. Main Mr. and Mrs. Todd C. McKee Mr. and Mrs. Martin F. McNamara III Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Melkus Dr. and Mrs. F. Michael Minch Mr. and Mrs. J. William Morrow Mr. and Mrs. Buford H. Ortale The Honorable George Paine and Mrs. Paine Mr. and Mrs. Martin Renkis Mr. and Mrs. William J. Rich Mrs. M. Walter Robinson, Jr. Ms. Dara Russell Mr. and Mrs. Roland L. Samuels Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Shayne Mr. and Mrs. Scott Sohr Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Stein Mr. and Mrs. Cal Turner III Mr. and Mrs. Blair J. Wilson 67 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT Guests enjoy An Art Deco Affair in our Grand Lobby. Photo: Sandy Burr An Art Deco Affair, held on Saturday, August 16, brought nearly 200 guests to the Frist Center for a night celebrating both the building in which the Frist Center is housed and the exhibition Watch Me Move: The Animation Show. Co-chairs Taylor Middleton and Heidi and Tony Rose helped plan this event, which attracted many guests who had never previously visited the Frist Center. Partygoers were encouraged to dress as “flappers or dapper gents” to go along with the Art Deco/1920s theme. Food was provided by Sharon Johnson Catering, and guests enjoyed live music from the Aaron Till Jazz Duo while they ate and danced. Attendees who chose to take a break from the many festivities in the Grand Lobby could make their way into the Ingram Gallery to view Watch Me Move or go on a docent-led architecture tour of the building. An Art Deco Affair is now an annual summer event at the Frist. All proceeds from the event, along with money raised from members of the Art Deco Society, support the care and maintenance of the Frist Center’s historic Art Deco building. Special thanks to the following sponsors of An Art Deco Affair: Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams, Nashville Lifestyles, Nothing Bundt Cakes, and NowPlayingNashville.com. AN ART DECO AFFAIR 68 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT At An Art Deco Affair. LEFT, Guests in summer finery. CENTER, Treats from sponsors Nothing Bundt Cakes. RIGHT, Amy and Owen Joyner dancing The Art Deco Society is a giving society created to support the ongoing care of the Frist Center’s historic building. We gratefully acknowledge the generosity of our 2014 Art Deco Society members. PATRONS ($2,500) FRIENDS ($1,000) SUPPORTERS ($500) Annie Laurie Berry Barbara and Jack Bovender Ann and Frank Bumstead Mrs. Kelly P. Crockett Crook Carol and Bobby Frist Karyn McLaughlin Frist Tom and Darlene Klaritch Dr. and Mrs. Graham Locke Mr. and Mrs. Martin F. McNamara III Lynn and Ken Melkus Jan and Stephen Riven Joe and Brenda Steakley Judy and Steve Turner David and Linda Anderson Mr. and Mrs. J. Hunter Atkins Iris Buhl Mr. and Mrs. Robert Durrett Susan H. Edwards Dr. John Frist Amy P. and Frank M. Garrison, Jr. Corinne and Harrison Kidd James and Patricia Munro Neal & Harwell, PLC Lyn and Scott Sohr Mr. and Mrs. William T. Spitz Colleen Conway Welch Anonymous Dr. and Mrs. Frank H. Boehm Richard and Sara Bovender Mark and Bette Christofersen Annette S. Eskind The Honorable William H. Frist, MD Mrs. Stewart J. Gilchrist Bob and Julie Gordon Dr. and Mrs. C. K. Hiranya Gowda Carolyn and Hartley Hall Mr. and Mrs. Neil Hemphill Kevin Hickman Charles and Leslie Higgins 69 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT supporters continued John Reginald Hill Everette and Sherry Howell Mr. and Mrs. James V. Hunt, Sr. Martha R. Ingram Dr. Ralph G. Leverett and Ms. Heather Leverett Trish and John Lindler Jane and Jim Main Lisa and David Manning Dr. and Mrs. David Mastran Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. McNeilly, Jr. Ellen L. More Mike and Teresa Nacarato Peter and Anne Neff Rosann and Bill Nunnelly Dr. and Mrs. James A. O’Neill, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dudley C. Richter Delphine and Ken Roberts Ken Roberts, Jr. Anita Schmid and Tyree Finch Mr. and Mrs. James C. Seabury III David R. Smith and Catherine Gemmato-Smith Mr. and Mrs. John C. Smith Nan and Doug Smith Josephine and John Smithwick Sally and Ed Stack Mr. and Mrs. George B. Stadler W. Alexander Steele Gloria and Paul Sternberg Deborah Story Hope and Howard Stringer Dr. and Mrs. Karl VanDevender Dr. Jan van Eys MEMBERS Anonymous Anonymous, in memory of Sara Ezell Edith McBride Bass Bonnie D. Bell Nancy and John Cheadle, in honor of Caylan Cheadle, Taylor Middleton, and Heidi and Tony Rose Esther and Roger Cohn John O. Colton Linda G. Cooper Em J. Ghianni Marcia A. Griffin Mary Johannes Ophelia and George Paine Anthony A. Rose Zulu and Susannah Scott-Barnes Mr. Matthew W. Wyatt and Mr. William B. Lyles Taylor Middleton and Heidi Rose at An Art Deco Affair 70 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT TOP LEFT, Youth at the Center for Refugees and Immigrants of Tennessee (CRIT) work on a collaborative painting for Exquisite Nashville. TOP CENTER, Jamaal Sheats, Michael Mitchell, and Tasneem Tewogbola at a reception. TOP RIGHT, Matthew at Room in the Inn contributes to a work of art for Exquisite Nashville. BOTTOM RIGHT, CRIT youth with teaching artist Sisavanh Houghton (third from left) The Frist Center gratefully acknowledges the generosity of those who have helped sustain our mission. We recognize the cumulative giving of individuals, corporations, and foundations. $50,000,000+ The Frist Foundation $5,000,000+ The HCA Foundation on behalf of HCA and TriStar Health The Patricia C. and Thomas F. Frist, Jr., Family Ingram Charitable Trust Ellen H. Martin, Charles N. Martin, and the Martin Foundation Metro Nashville Arts Commission $500,000+ AmSouth Bank The Ayers Foundation Laura and John Chadwick and The William Stamps Farish Fund The DeBartolo Family Foundation Fifth Third Bank Joel and Bernice Gordon Marlene and Spencer Hays Lynn and Ken Melkus Ben and Joan Rechter Tennessee Arts Commission $3,000,000+ The Judy and Steve Turner Family $1,000,000+ Phil Bredesen and Andrea Conte First Tennessee and the First Tennessee Foundation The Institute of Museum and Library Services cumulative giving 71 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT $250,000+ AT&T Barbara and Jack Bovender Jennifer and Billy Frist Anne and Joe Russell Luke and Susan Simons The Cal Turner Family Foundation Nordstrom Robin and Richard Patton Jan and Stephen Riven The Kenneth L. Roberts Family Joe and Brenda Steakley SunTrust Bank Union Station Hotel $100,000+ $50,000+ Mary and Lee Barfield Judy and Joe Barker Jean and Denny Bottorff Judith and Richard Bracken Iris and Mike* Buhl Butler Snow Joanne and Tom* Cato Patricia Frist Elcan and Charles A. Elcan Judy and Tom Foster Julie and Tommy Frist Karyn McLaughlin Frist The Honorable William H. Frist, MD Amy and Frank Garrison Gaylord Entertainment Foundation Julie and Bob Gordon Kate R. W. Grayken Patricia and Rodes Hart Joanne and Michael Hayes Martha R. Ingram R. Milton and Denice Johnson Darlene and Thomas Klaritch The Memorial Foundation Mercedes-Benz of Nashville Karen and Bruce Moore Morgan Keegan / Raymond James National Endowment for the Arts The Nissan Foundation Anonymous K. S. “Bud” Adams, Jr.* Allstate Aspen Highland Partners, LLC Bank of America Jean Ann and Barry Banker Kelley and Lee Beaman BellSouth Claiborne Blevins Mrs. James C. Bradford, Jr. Betty* and Martin Brown Kathryn and David Brown Ann Carell* Anita and Bill* Cochran Connie and Tom Cigarran The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee Cracker Barrel Foundation Greg and Collie Daily Jana and Ansel Davis Karl Dean and Anne Davis Marty and Betty Dickens Susan H. Edwards Donna and Jeffrey B. Eskind Steve and Phyllis Fridrich Carol and Bobby Frist Genesco, Inc. Frank and Gwen Gordon Guardsmark Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey B. Harwell, Jr. Glenna and Sam Hazen L. O. Heidtke and Cynthia Luna H. G. Hill Realty Company Stephanie and John Ingram Jaguar Land Rover Nashville Edith and David Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Howard S. Kirshner Walter and Sarah Knestrick Samuel H. Kress Foundation Trish and John Lindler Lipman Brothers Rob and Jennie McCabe Andrew Woodfin Miller Drs. Jonathan and Donna Perlin Linda and Sid Pilson Pinnacle Financial Partners Publix Super Markets Charities Regions Bank Barbara and Doyle Rogers Sandra Schatten Laurie and Jim Seabury Mr. and Mrs. George B. Stadler Gloria and Paul Sternberg Elizabeth and Donald Stinnett Harold H. Stream Jamie Stream The Tennessean Christi and Jay Turner Laura Anne Turner Margaret and Cal Turner UBS Julie and Breck Walker Beverly and Jay Wallace The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. 72 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | SUPPORT $50,000+ Continued Leslie and Robert Waterman Noel Williams Sissy and Bill Wilson $25,000+ Anonymous Linda and David Anderson Sue and Nelson* Andrews The Atticus Trust Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz, PC Janet and Earl Bentz Annie Laurie Berry Tom Black Julie and Frank Boehm Bridgestone Cathy and Martin Brown Phillip and Sue Brown Tawnie and Vic Campbell Caremark Rx, Inc. Dr. and Mrs. Brian R. Carlson Caterpillar Financial Susanne and Todd Cato James H. Cheek III Anne and John Clay John O. Colton Helen and Harvey Cummings Mr. and Mrs. Brownlee O. Currey, Jr. Elizabeth and Robert Dennis The Rev. Canon Fred and Kathryn Dettwiller Dream Systems Frank and Claire Drowota Rosalyn Elton Glenda and David Emery Annette S. Eskind Jane and Richard Eskind Laurie and Steven Eskind Samuel M. Fleming Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Jon M. Foster Gannett Foundation John and Lorelee Gawaluck Constance Bumgarner Gee Bill and Ruth Ann Harnisch Mr. and Mrs. Ephriam H. Hoover III Lee Ann and Orrin Ingram Gail and Jeff Jacobs Joey Jacobs Will Kendrick and Emily Verchota Robin and Bill King Peggy and Randy Kinnard Nora and Kent Kirby Mr. Neil B. Krugman and Ms. Lee Pratt Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Lazenby Sandra and Larry Lipman The Henry Luce Foundation Monica and John Mackie Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Maillie Mrs. Jack C. Massey* Sheila and Richard McCarty David and Mary Catherine McClellan Mark and Elizabeth McDonald Mr. and Mrs. F. Max Merrell Sharalena and Richard Miller Juli Ann and Ralph Mosley Nashville Parent Magazine Nashville Scene National Bank of Commerce Dr. Harrell Odom and Mr. Barry Cook Parisian Mr. and Mrs. H. Moore Rhett III Bill and Nancy Rutherford Mr. and Mrs. W. Paul Rutledge Mr. and Mrs. John J. Sangervasi Virginia Severinghaus Danny and Caroline Shaw Mr. and Mrs. John Claiborne Sifford Jim and Leah Sohr Lynn and Scott Sohr Southwest Airlines Joe and Joanne Sowell Hope and Howard Stringer Anne and Jack Stringham Mr. and Mrs. Bruce D. Sullivan Cathy and Bob Sullivan Sue and Earl Swensson The Tiffany & Co. Foundation Dianne and Tom True Seab and Patti Tuck Vanderbilt University Janet and Jonathan Weaver Mr. and Mrs. Ridley Wills II Mr. and Mrs. Ridley Wills III Mr. and Mrs. Toby S. Wilt Janet and Alan Yuspeh CHARTER PATRONS Dave and Carol Cox Patricia and Sheldon Krizelman Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Maillie Raymond and Elizabeth Pirtle Rocketown Records Peggy Weil Steine Tuck Hinton Architects Susan and Bruce Wohlfeld and Guidant Corporation *denotes deceased We make every effort to acknowledge donors accurately and according to their preferences. To alter future listings, please call 615.744.3341. Gifts received through December 31, 2014 73 COMMUNITY REPORT 2014 | IMAGE CREDITS IMAGE CREDITS Cover: Photo by Sanford Myers Page 2: Utagawa Hiroshige I. Suidō Bridge and Surugadai, from the series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, 1857. Woodblock print, 14 1/16 x 9 5/8 in. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, William Sturgis Bigelow Collection, 11.36876.34. Photograph © 2015 MFA, Boston Page 3: Frist Friday with Marty Stuart, July Page 10: A visitor enjoys Looking East: Western Artists and the Allure of Japan in our Ingram Gallery. Page 13: Site-specific title wall installation for Lain York: Selections from the National Gallery Page 14: TOP, Claude Monet. The Water Lily Pond, 1900. Oil on canvas, 35 1/2 x 36 1/2 in. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Given in memory of Governor Alvan T. Fuller by the Fuller Foundation, 61.959. Photograph © 2015 MFA, Boston. BOTTOM, Lain York. The Curious Effects of Clean Linen, 2013. Vinyl with acrylic paint on panel, 24 x 16 in. Courtesy of the artist and Zeitgeist Gallery. © Lain York Page 15: TOP, Steve Mumford. A patrol from 1st Cav 4/9 checks in with Iraqi checkpoints throughout Haifa Street and Khark in Baghdad in 2007. I had been in this area in 2004 when it was a Sunni insurgent stronghold and US forces couldn’t move down the street without being attacked, 2007. Ink, watercolor, and gouache on paper. Courtesy of the artist and Postmasters Gallery, New York. © Steve Mumford. BOTTOM, Francisco Goya. Y no hai remedio (And There Is No Remedy) from The Disasters of War, ca. 1811–12 (1st edition, printed 1863). Etching, drypoint, burin, and lavis, 5 11/16 x 6 1/2 in. Pomona College Museum of Art, Gift of Mr. Norton Simon, P74.67 Page 16: Marty Stuart. Orville Looking Horse, 2004. Archival pigment print. © Marty Stuart Page 17: TOP, Winsor McCay. Little Nemo Moving Comics (film still), 1911. 35mm hand-colored film, silent, 2:18. Courtesy Ray Pointer, Inkwell Images, Inc. BOTTOM, Maira Kalman. Hot day. Book found. Aha! Words cannot express. If only I could. Without a doubt. Goodness. Good. Good. Good. Maira Kalman, 2004. Gouache on paper. Courtesy of the artist and Julie Saul Gallery, New York. © Maira Kalman Page 18: TOP, Edward Hopper. Cape Cod Sunset, 1934. Oil on canvas. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Josephine N. Hopper Bequest 70.1166. © The Heirs of Josephine N. Hopper. Licensed by Whitney Museum of American Art. BOTTOM, Wassily Kandinsky. Black Grid, 1922. Oil on canvas. Collection Centre Pompidou, Musée national d’art moderne/Centre de creation industrielle, Paris, Bequest of Mrs. Nina Kandinsky in 1981, AM 81-65-44. Photograph © Centre Pompidou, MNAM-CCI/Service de la documentation photographique du MNAM/Dist. RMN-GP © 2015 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris IMAGE CREDITS Page 19: TOP, Helen Pashgian. Installation view of Helen Pashgian: Light Invisible at Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Formed acrylic. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, purchased with funds provided by Carole Bayer Sager on the occasion of the 2014 Collectors Committee. © Helen Pashgian. Photograph by Josh Morton. Bottom, Giovanni di Paolo. Saint Catherine of Siena Invested with the Dominican Habit, 1460s. Tempera and gold on wood, 11 3/8 x 9 in. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of the John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust, 1966.2. Photography © The Cleveland Museum of Art Page 20: ArtQuest: Art Is All Around You television hosts Dajiah Platt and Joseph Lopez greet a visitor at the Season 2 launch party. Page 32: TOP, Installation view of Frank Lloyd Wright: Building the Imperial Hotel, Ingram Gallery, 2014. Photo: John Schweikert. BOTTOM, Rachel Clark. Oblivious Stress, 2013. Digital photograph. Courtesy of the artist. © Rachel Clark. Photo by Sam Angel Page 34: Visitors enjoy our galleries. Page 39: Bill and Candace Wade dance at An Art Deco Affair. Page 40: Installation view of Kandinsky, Ingram Gallery, 2014. Photo: John Schweikert Page 58: Photo by Sanford Myers 74 Marty Stuart onstage at our July 25 Frist Friday event Downtown Nashville 919 Broadway | Nashville, TN 37203 fristcenter.org