FINE ARTS WORK CENTER in Provincetown
Transcription
FINE ARTS WORK CENTER in Provincetown
FINE ARTS WORK CENTER in Provincetown ANNUAL 2011/2012 TIME. PLACE. COMMUNITY. INSPIRATION. OUR MISSION The Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown was founded in 1968 by a group of artists, writers and patrons, including Fritz Bultman, Salvatore and Josephine Del Deo, Stanley Kunitz, Phil Malicoat, Robert Motherwell, Myron Stout, Jack Tworkov, and Hudson D. Walker. The founders envisioned a place in Provincetown, the country’s most enduring artists’ colony, where artists and writers could live and work together in the early phase of their careers. The founders believed that the freedom to pursue creative work within a community of peers is the best catalyst for artistic growth. The Work Center has dedicated itself to this mission for over 40 years. CONTENTS 1 Our Mission 2 From the President and Director 3 Dedication 4 About the Work Center 5 Resident Fellows in Provincetown 6 Former Fellows at Work in the World 22 Margaret Murphy – Five Remarkable Years 25 Residencies and Spaces 26 Our Supporters 40 Financial Summary 41 Giving Societies 42 Our Leadership Today the Work Center is a leading long-term residency program for emerging artists and writers and one of the most renowned. Each year the Work Center offers residencies – the gift of time and place – to twenty Fellows selected from some 1,300 applications worldwide. From October to May, the Work Center gives the Fellows living and work space and a modest stipend. The only thing asked in return is that they focus on new work while they are in residence. In addition to the Fellowships, the Fine Arts Work Center offers returning residencies for former Fellows, collaborative residencies for visiting artists and writers, an openenrollment summer workshop program in visual arts and creative writing, a lowresidency MFA degree in visual arts in collaboration with Massachusetts College of Art and Design, and online writing workshops. The restoration of the year-round vitality of Provincetown as an historic artists’ colony lies at the heart of the Work Center’s mission. All of its programs are dedicated to enhancing this heritage. Each year we also bring nationally recognized artists and writers to Provincetown for lectures, readings and exhibitions, all free and open to the public and enjoyed by thousands of people in the community. 1 LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR As the Fine Arts Work Center welcomed its forty-fifth year of exceptionally talented emerging artists and writers last fall, we undertook two challenging transitions. Margaret Murphy and Marty Davis concluded their extraordinary service as Executive Director and Board President, leaving behind remarkable progress and achievement for the institution. Fortunately, we do not bid them goodbye. Marty remains on the Board and Executive Committee and Margaret joins Dan Mullin as Co-Chair of the Summer Awards Celebration. Margaret’s and Marty’s legacies are all around us, from our thriving Fellowship program, which now draws a larger pool of talented applicants than ever before, to the continued strength of our nationally renowned Summer Workshops and our collaborative low-residency MFA program with MassArt. Our innovative online Writing Workshops completed a second year in which the Work Center projected its impact around the world, bringing high-caliber instructors to budding writers as far away as Afghanistan. Collectively these programs fulfill another key purpose: to bring the regenerative energies of the visual and literary arts to the nation’s oldest art colony all year round. Board President Ted Chapin with Executive Director Michael Roberts The most conspicuous milestone of these two terms has been the dramatic renewal of our physical facilities, continuing this summer with the renovation of the historic Barn. And for the first time we have a long-range timetable for continuing upkeep and improvements. Less visible is a new degree of financial stability marked by a succession of budgetary surpluses and, for the first time, by operating and capital reserves. All who care about the Fine Arts Work Center owe a tremendous debt of gratitude to these two tireless and farsighted leaders. These advances depended vitally on the generosity of our supporters, to whom we again turned last year in a series of benefits that set records for the organization. We celebrated the Work Center here at home during the summer, while also reaching a growing body of supporters in both Boston and New York in the spring and fall. The ACME Gallery in Boston hosted last spring’s benefit saluting writer and former Fellow Nick Flynn. July’s fourth and most successful Awards Celebration honored playwright and Oscar nominee Tony Kushner and FAWC Founders and Benefactors, the Hudson and Ione Walker Family and their daughters Berta, Hatty, and Louise. A soldout benefit reading by poet and second Writing Committee chair Mary Oliver was an August highlight, and we capped the summer with the 36th annual Auction. Finally, in October we returned to New York for our second annual benefit and exhibition at Cheim-Read Gallery, honoring our trustee and former Fellow, artist Jack Pierson. As we move towards the next program year, we hope you will again mark your calendars and generously support these outstanding events. DEDICATION MARTY DAVIS We dedicate this year’s Annual to Marty Davis, who stepped down in October from an 8-year term as President of the FAWC Board of Trustees. Marty began her service as a FAWC Trustee nearly 20 years ago and, thankfully, continues to serve in that role. As President from 2004 to 2012, she led FAWC with imagination, generosity, vision, and grace during both my tenure as Executive Director and that of Hunter O’Hanian – a period of time when the Work Center made significant improvements in its properties and its programs. She was, for me, the ideal leader: passionately devoted to our mission, offering insight and support in every effort, at one with our culture and our aspirations for it. Marty is an accomplished artist – a life-long printmaker whose work is both lyrical and powerful. She also is a master gardener who delights in nurturing the natural beauty of this world. The Work Center was blessed in having as its President a person whose most deeply felt values and beliefs mirror its own. The urgency of creating art, the call to cultivate growth, the commitment to creativity – all of these are true of the Work Center’s purpose in life and of Marty’s personal trajectory. The investment Marty has made in FAWC is spectacular. In addition to the unstinting gift of her leadership, Marty and her life partner of 35 years, Alix Ritchie, have provided major capital, endowment, and operating funds that have been vital to the Work Center. They have given countless works of art from their private collection to support our annual art auction (and ended the evening with just as many winning bids to add to their collection!). We cherish Marty’s legacy as our President and dedicate this Annual to her with our abiding admiration and affection. Margaret Murphy FAWC Executive Director 2007–2012 In the end, it is all about supporting creativity and the work. To be part of that is honor enough, and I am grateful for it. Marty Davis As always, the centerpiece of this Annual is the report of the accomplishments of our Fellows past and present, whose work is our reason for being. It is also an acknowledgment of your remarkable generosity, which continues to provide to this talented group of artists and writers the time, the place, the community and the inspiration for creativity. We extend our warmest thanks to all of you who have helped carry forward this important work. 2 Ted ChapinMichael Roberts PresidentExecutive Director 3 ABOUT 2012-13 THE WORK CENTER The Fellowships The Work Center is one of the country’s leading long-term residency programs for emerging artists and writers and one of the most renowned. Each year the Visual Arts and Writing Committees, comprised of internationally recognized artists and writers, select twenty Fellows (ten visual artists and ten writers) from some 1,300 applications from around the world. The selection process is rigorous, and the Fellows are accepted entirely on the excellence of work submitted. For the seven-month period of October 1 to April 30, the selected fiction writers and poets and 2D, 3D and time-based media artists come to Provincetown to work on their creative endeavors. The Fellows receive living and studio space and a modest stipend; their only responsibility as Fellows is to their work. Writing Fellows present public readings of their work in the Stanley Kunitz Common Room; visual arts Fellows exhibit their work at the Work Center’s Hudson D. Walker Gallery; and all Fellows can participate in FAWC’s community outreach program by teaching workshops in the local schools. Since the Work Center’s founding, it has awarded more than 800 Fellowships. Fellows have made an enormous impact on American arts and letters, publishing hundreds of books of fiction, non-fiction and poetry, and exhibiting in countless museums and galleries worldwide. Past Fellows have won every major national award in their fields including the Pulitzer, MacArthur, Whiting, Pollock-Krasner, Tiffany, Prix de Rome, Guggenheim, National Endowment for the Arts, and National Book Award. The Summer Workshops The faculty and location have established the Work Center’s summer courses in creative writing and visual arts as among the nation’s finest and most attractive. The faculty includes some of the most respected and acclaimed artists and writers working today. The program’s location in America’s oldest continuous arts colony is ideal. Each summer 4 Resident Fellows in Provincetown up to 700 adults seize the opportunity to study with a faculty of master artists and writers. Revenues from this outstanding program help support the Fellowships. Other Residency Programs The popular Returning Residency Program encourages former Fellows to return to Provincetown by offering apartments and studios at discount rates during the Fall, Winter and Spring. This is a great opportunity for former Fellows to escape energy-sapping routines, recharge their batteries and once again live and work surrounded by other artists and writers in the Work Center community. The Long-Term Residency Program for former Fellows extends the opportunity to live in Provincetown for up to three years at below-market rents. We own five live/work spaces in an affordable housing development in Provincetown and offer them to former Fellows who meet the affordable rental guidelines; each unit is approximately 1,000 square feet with separate studio space. In collaboration with other arts organizations around the country and abroad, the Fine Arts Work Center hosts one- to three-month Collaborative Residencies in the summer and fall. Writers or visual artists are selected on the merit of their work by the collaborating organization, and are given an apartment, studio space and stipend. The Work Center provides the space and, perhaps most importantly, a community of like-minded peers with whom to share and discuss ideas, the very essence of collaboration. Collaborative residency partners have included the Ohio Arts Council; the Tennessee Arts Commission; the Maryland Institute, College of Art; Four Way Books; and The Copley Society of Art. Online Writing Workshops Our newest offering is an innovative online writing workshop program, launched in the Fall of 2011. This is our way of making the writing resources of the Work Center available to the global community. These resources include our Summer Program faculty, our former Fellows, and our wide net of personal and professional friends and colleagues who are among today’s most accomplished poets and writers. Poetry, fiction and nonfiction workshops are available fall, winter and spring on every level to writers wherever they are, whenever they choose. MFA in Visual Arts Since September 2005 the Massachusetts College of Art and Design (“MassArt”) has collaborated with the Fine Arts Work Center to offer a low-residency Master of Fine Arts program in Provincetown. The program combines the intensity of on-site community and peer-based learning with the freedom and flexibility of distance education. It encourages both traditional and non-traditional 2D practice; artists who are nominally painters draw, paint, print, photograph, and create installations and constructions in and outside their studios. Over two years, candidates selected by the Boston-based MassArt study and work at the Work Center in four 24-day residencies (September and May of each year). They are taught and evaluated by a faculty of prominent resident and visiting artists. The program emphasizes studio production and structures interactions where students can create work and receive critical feedback. Between residencies students return home to work under the guidance of artist-mentors through monthly studio visits and critiques. Online art history and critical studies courses support an understanding of the historical and cultural context of contemporary work. At the conclusion of the program, candidates return to the Work Center for a final oneweek residency in September to exhibit their thesis show, participate in thesis reviews, and submit their written theses. Writing FICTION Kathryn Bellas New York City Leopoldine Core New York City Aja Gabel Santa Rosa, CA Annie Sloniker Bellevue, NE Second year Michael Hinken Ann Arbor, MI POETRY Miriam Bird Greenberg Paris, TX Sara Miller Chicago Joshua Rivkin Baltimore Jacob Sunderlin Lafayette, IN Second year Margaret Reges Ann Arbor, MI Visual Arts Mike Calway-Fagen Sculpture, Photo, Video, Collage, & Social Practice Nashville, TN Jane Corrigan Painting Brooklyn, NY Esteban del Valle Drawing, Sculpture, Video & Performance Brooklyn, NY Heather Hart Social Practice Brooklyn, NY Lisa Iglesias Drawing, Sculpture & Animation Queens, NY Alison O’Daniel Sculpture & Film Los Angeles Jennifer Sullivan Video, Painting, Sculpture & Performance Ridgewood, NY Nicky Tavares Film & Video Boston Second year Nicholas des Cognets Sculpture Richmond, VA Jacolby Satterwhite Performance & Video Columbia, SC 5 former fellows C E L E B R A T I N G A C C O M P L I S H M E N T at work in the world Detail from painting by Visual Arts Fellow Sarah Sohn 2011-2012 Among the most important accomplishments of the Fine Arts Work Center in 2011-12 were those of our former Fellows – the hundreds of talented people who have emerged since their time at the Work Center to become notable artists and writers devoting their lives to creative work. Here are the highlights of their achievements during the last year. Space limits the following to selected awards, books and exhibitions. We extend our congratulations to these Fellows and all the others whose work gives us our reason for being. VISUAL ARTS FELLOWS Selected Exhibits 2012 Golnar Adili (2010-11, 2011-12) In Plain View, Nuartlink, Westport, CT; New Prints 2012/Summer, International Print Center, New York; Dimensions Variable, Waterhouse and Dodd, New York; Prints 2011, Visual Art Center, University of Texas, Austin, TX. Ellen Altfest (1999-2000) Head and Plant, New Museum, New York; It is what it is. Or is it?, Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston. Richard Baker (1989-1990, 1990-91) Richard Baker, Albert Merola Gallery, Provincetown, MA; Floralia: A Festival of Flowers, Brick Walk Fine Art, West Hartford, CT. Bob Bailey (1989-90, 1991-92) Drawing Invitational, Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Provincetown, MA; Provincetown Views, ACME Fine Art, Boston, MA; APPEARANCES, Provincetown Conservation Trust, Green Arts Festival, Provincetown, MA; Con/Se/In-Duction, artSTRAND, Provincetown, MA. 6 Taylor Baldwin (2008-09, 2009-10) Prodrome, Land of Tomorrow Gallery, Louisville, KY; Crush, RK Projects, Providence, RI; Birds, Bodies, and Bricolage, Toomer Labzda Gallery, New York. Jarrod Beck (2011-12) Equilibrio, Universidad Central de Venezuela, Caracas, Venuzuela; Masswasting, ArtCurrent, New York; Cinerum, Cape Cod National Seashore, Province Lands, Provincetown, MA; Reductive, Jeffrey Leder Gallery, New York; Pulp II, Beta Pictoris Gallery, Birmingham, AL; EAF’12, Socrates Sculpture Park, Queens, NY. Mary Behrens (1991-92) Divergence: Five New England Artists, Reynolds Ryan Gallery, New Orleans. Matt Bollinger (2009-10, 2010-11) Between the Days, Galerie Zürcher, Paris, France; Mark, Wipe, Scrape, Shape, Spaceshifter, Brooklyn, NY; Red Herring, FJORD, Philadelphia; Art Los Angeles Contemporary Art Fair, Zürcher Studio Booth, Los Angeles. Lee Boroson (1992-93) Lunar Bower, The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. Paul Bowen (1977-78, 1978-79) Paul Bowen, Sculpture, ArtStrand, Provincetown, MA; Paperwork, Clark Gallery, Lincoln, MA; ACME Fine Art, Boston (Group Show); Big Town Gallery, Rochester, VT (Group Show); Long Point Gallery at Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Provincetown, MA (Group Show); The Tides of Provincetown, Cape Cod Museum of Art, Dennis, MA. Julia Brown (2008-09, 2010-11) Rainbows, Hudson D. Walker Gallery, Provincetown, MA; Nineteen Ways of Looking at a Painting, Porch Projects, Washington, DC; Small Paintings from Seven Schools, Sarah Silberman Gallery, Montgomery College, Rockville, MD; The Faculty Show, Gallery 102, George Washington University, Washington, DC. Pamela Brown (1986-87, 1987-88) Three Views, Art Strand, Provincetown, MA; Provincetown Views, ACME Fine Art, Boston; Naturally, Hewitt Gallery of Art, Marymount Manhattan College, New York, NY; The Work of Women, Gallery North, Setauket, NY. 2011-12 Visual Arts Fellow Candice Lin working in her studio at FAWC Ken Buhler (1982-83) Ken Buhler, Gallerie Gris, Hudson, NY; Ken Buhler, Birdlands, Leslie Heller Workspace, New York. Nicholas des Cognets (2011-12, 201213) Summer Solstice, Reynolds Gallery, Richmond, VA. Angela Dufresne and Rico Gatson, Barbara Walters Gallery, Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, NY. Polly Burnell (1993-94) Provincetown Views, ACME Fine Art, Boston. Didier Corallo (1994-95, 1995-96) Provincetown Contemporary Art Preview 2012, Artcurrent NY, New York. Echo Eggebrecht (2006-07) Probably Science, Horton Gallery, New York. Charles Burwell (1989-1990) Fountain Restaurant, The Four Seasons, Philadelphia; Everything is a Series of Adjustments, Bridgette Mayer Gallery, Philadelphia. Roger Camp (1983-84) Summertime 2012, Robin Rice Gallery, New York. Kate Clark (2006-07) Fairy Tales, Monsters, and the Genetic Imagination, Frist Center for the Visual Arts, Nashville, TN, traveling to: Winnipeg Art Gallery, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, Glenbow Museum, Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Deborah Davidovits (2004-05) I Am What is Missing, RoCA, West Nyack, NY. Adam Davies (2008-09) Boundaries and Transitions, The Arts Club of Washington, Washington, DC. Karen Dow (1998-99) Holiday Art Show, Giampietro Gallery, New Haven, CT. Ellen Driscoll (1983-84, 1984-85) Core Sample, College of St. Rose Esther Massry Gallery, Albany, NY. Angela Dufresne (2002-03, 2003-04) New Paintings, CRG Gallery, New York; New Paintings, Monya Rowe Gallery, New York; Jonathan Ehrenberg (2011-12) Upstream Video Program, NADA Hudson, Hudson, NY; Faculty Exhibition, List Arts Center at Brown University, Providence, RI; Homecoming, List Arts Center at Brown University, Providence, RI; Video: Sound and Light, Schoolhouse Gallery, Provincetown, MA. James Esber (1991-92) J.Fiber: Split Decision (Collaborative Show with Jane Fine), Flood Gallery Fine Art Center, Asheville, NC; Image/Clot, Zola/Lieberman Gallery, Chicago, IL; Before Then After Now, The Art Museum, SUNY Potsdam, Potsdam, NY; Beasts of Revelation, DC 7 C E L E B R AT I N G A C C O M P L I S H M E N T Moore Gallery, New York; Cloud Nine, Front Room, Brooklyn, NY; Drawing the Mind: Neural Networks and the Emergence of Complexity, Osilas Gallery, Concordia College, Bronxville, NY. Ramon Fernandez-Bofill (2005-06) Cintas Fellowship Finalists Exhibition, MDC Museum of Art and Design at The Freedom Tower, Miami; Pulse Art Fair Project, ArtCenter/South Florida, Miami Beach, FL; Double Take, Bakehouse Art Complex, Miami; Council on Foundations Project, Philanthropy Conference, Loews Miami Beach, Miami; Annual Faculty Exhibition, Miami International University of Art and Design, Miami. (continued) Jane Fine (1992-93) Formulas for Now, Pierogi, Brooklyn, NY; Cloud Nine, The Front Room, Brooklyn, NY. David Fludd (1992-93, 1993-94) David Fludd, Great Falls Discovery Center, Turners Falls, MA. Adam Frelin (2005-06) 2nd Ural Industrial Biennial Of Contemporary Art – Production Of Meanings, Ural Industrial Biennial, Yekaterinburg, Russia; Objects of Influence, NYFA.org; SculptFest2012, Carving Center and Sculpture Studio, West Rutland, VT. Colette Fu (2005-06) West Collects, City Hall, Philadelphia; Pulp to Pixels: Artists Books in the Digital Age, Hampshire College Art Gallery, Amherst, MA; Weird World, Brooklyn Art Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; Diamond Leaves, China Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing, China; We are Tiger Dragon People, Philadelphia Airport, Terminal D, Philadelphia. Ellen Gallagher (1995-96, 1996-97) Elles: Women Artists from the Centre Pompidou, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle; Archetypes and Historicity: Painting and Other Radical Forms 1995 – 2007 by Mario Diacono, Collezione Maramotti, Reggio Emilia, Italy; Under Pressure. Contemporary Prints from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation, Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, NE; Medals of Dishonour, The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia; Manifesto Collage about Change, Berlinische Galerie, Landesmuseum für Moderne Kunst, Fotografie und Architektur, Berlin, Germany; Ashes and Gold: A World’s Journey, MARTa Herford, Herford, Germany, traveling to: Museum Schloss Moyland, Bedburg-Hau, Germany; Paris Triennial, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France; Printin’, Museum of Modern Art, New York; Print/Out, Museum of Modern Art, New York; Six Yards Guaranteed Dutch Design, Museum Voor Moderne Kunst, Arnhem, Netherlands. Christy Georg (2007-08) Fish, Lightwell Gallery, University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma; Inaugural Exhibition, Volo Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico David Gloman (1986-87) The River, Thornes Marketplace Gallery, Northampton, MA. Meghan Gordon (2007-08, 2008-09) Important Things, Interstate Projects, Brooklyn, NY; Another Side, The Re Institute, Millerton, NY; On Loan, Tiger Strikes Asteroid, Philadelphia. Robert Gutierrez (2007-2008) RolePlay Colonial, Casal Solleric, Palma, Mallorca (collaboration with Albert Pinya). Hiroyuki Hamada (1995-96) PechaKucha Night Hamptons, Parrish Art Museum, Water Mill, NY. Kimberley Hart (1999-2000, 2000-01) Brooklyn Artists Ball, The Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY. Kirsten Hassenfeld (1998-99) Cabin Fever, The Hunterdon Art Museum, Clinton, NJ; Arthamptons Fair, Cade Tompkins Projects, Providence, RI; Hunters and Gatherers, Cade Tompkins Projects, Providence, RI. Todd Hebert (1998-99) Todd Hebert, Devin Borden Gallery, Houston; Todd Hebert, North Dakota Museum of Art, Grand Forks, ND. Alicia Henry (1991-92, 1992-93) Taboo, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, Australia; Provincetown Contemporary Art Preview, Artcurrent NY, New York; Reflections From a Looking Glass, Carl Hammer Gallery, Chicago. Timothy Horn (2005-06) FUSION [A New Century of Glass], Oklahoma City Museum of Art, Oklahoma City; Seven, P.P.O.W., New York; Diadem, Lux Art Institute, Encinitas, CA. Sharon Horvath (1985-86) Sharon Horvath, The Drawing Room, East Hampton, NY; LOOKOUTOUTLOOK, Giampietro Gallery, New Haven, CT; The Annual, National Academy Museum, New York; Summer Exhibition, Schoolhouse Gallery, Provincetown, MA. Yun-fei Ji (2001-02) Water Work, Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China; All Our Relations, 18th Biennale of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. Sedrick Huckaby (1999-2000) Me, We: A Portrayal of the Fibers of Life, Irving Arts Center, Irving, TX; Faith & Family, The Grace Museum, Abilene, TX; Sedrick Huckaby, Martin Museum of Art, Waco, TX; Respect: Artists Invite Artists, Valley House Gallery, Dallas; Curate. Collaborate: Cura! Cura! Cura!, Bath House Cultural Center, Dallas; Espoused, Art Museum of Southeast Texas, Beaumont, TX; Houston Fine Art Fair, Reliant Center, Houston; DallasArt Fair, Fashion Industry Gallery, Dallas. Esther Jiskoot (2000-01) Esther Jiskoot, Nationaal Glasmuseum, Leerdam, Netherlands; Esther Jiskoot, Galerie Albus Lux, Roosendaal, Netherlands. Jenny Humphreys (2000-01) Graphite, Gallery Ehva, Provincetown, MA. Elliott Hundley (2001-02) Inaugural Exhibition by Gallery Artists, Regen Projects, Los Angeles; Pink Caviar: New Works in the Collection 2009-2011, Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark; Invitational Exhibition of Visual Arts, Academy of Arts and Letters, New York. Janelle Iglesias (2007-08) Cartwheel Galaxy, Larissa Goldston, New York; Miami Project Art Fair, Larissa Goldston Gallery, Miami; First Truth, Camel Art Space, Brooklyn, NY; Makeup on Empty Space, Larissa Goldston, New York. Mala Iqbal (1998-99, 1999-2000) Fact | Fission, Aicon Gallery, New York; The Female Gaze: Women Artists Making Their World, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Permanent Collection, Nancy Margolis Gallery, New York. Fleming Jeffries (2007-08) Call + Response III AFTERIMAGE, 123 Gallery, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA; Adjunct SoA Faculty Exhibition, School of Art Fine Arts Gallery, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA. Maryalice Johnston (1985-86, 1986-87) Members Open: Portraits, Provincetown Art Association & Museum, Provincetown, MA; Provincetown; Leap Into Butter, sound performance, artSTRAND, Provincetown, MA; APPEARANCES, Provincetown Green Arts Festival, artSTRAND sculpture garden, Provincetown, MA. Bo Joseph (1993-94) Empire of Spoils, McClain Gallery, Houston; Fragments of a Worldview, Sears-Peyton Gallery, New York; Be Inspired!, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art at the Crossroads, Kansas City, MO; Confluence, Rebekah Jacob Gallery, Charleston, SC; Shelf Life, Kunsthalle Am Hamburger Platz, Weissensee, Berlin, Germany. Rajkamal Kahlon (2004-05) Double Vision/ Doppelbilder, Wilhelm-Hack-Museum, Ludwigshafen, Germany; 2012 Taipei Biennial, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei City, Taiwan. 2011-12 Fellow Rob Swainston, Triumphal Arch, mixed drawing media on paper, mylar, and foam core 8 9 C E L E B R AT I N G A C C O M P L I S H M E N T (continued) School of Photography, Media, and New Music, Jerusalem, Israel; Rockland Shorts International Short Film Series, Farnsworth Art Museum at the Strand Theater, Rockland, ME. Linda Matalon (1992-93) Work, Jaffe-Friede Gallery, Dartmouth, MA. Michael Jones McKean (2002-03) circles become spheres, Gentil Apri, Berlin, Germany; Certain Principles of Light and Shapes Between Forms, Bemis Center For Contemporary Art, Omaha, NE; The Gilded Scab, Parisian Laundry, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Five Sculptures, Emily Davis Gallery, University of Akron, Akron, OH; Under Construction, Delaware Center for Contemporary Art, Wilmington, DE; Three Evidentiary Claims, CCS at Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY. Lilly McElroy (2008-09) Lilly McElroy, Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art, Winston-Salem, NC. 2011-12 Visual Arts Fellow Andy Ness’s studio at FAWC Gal Kinan (2010-11) The ABC of cinema, El Despacho, Mexico City, Mexico; BinnensteBuiten, Kunstmanifestatie LekArt, Netherlands; The mechanical Cocoon, Arti et Amicitiae, Amsterdam, Netherlands. David Kramer (1988-89) David Kramer ... This is What It’s Like, Galerie Laurent Godin, Paris, France; BAD FOR YOU, Shizaru Gallery, London, England; This is What it’s Like, Galerie Laurent Godin, Paris, France. Viet Le (2003-04) Past Present/Future Imperatives: Queer Space Time, Sabina Lee Gallery, Los Angeles. 10 Candice Lin (2011-12) It Makes the Patient See Pictures, François Ghebaly Gallery, Los Angeles; NADA Miami, François Ghebaly Gallery, Los Angeles; Contemporary Tendencies, Helene Bailly Gallery, Paris, France; Cave-In, Cueva Arcillas, Puerto Rico; Plus ou moins sorcières, La Maison Populaire, Montreuil, France. Irene Lipton (1988-89, 1989-1990) Irene Lipton, Albert Merola Gallery, Provincetown, MA; Paint: Contemporary Abstraction, Higgins Art Gallery, West Barnstable, MA; Recent Gifts, Provincetown Art Association & Museum, Provincetown, MA. Tristin Lowe (1990-91) Under the Influence, Museum of Contemporary Art, Jacksonville, FL. Susan Lyman (1981-82) Improbable Places, Chazan Gallery, Providence, RI. Tala Madani (2006-07) Speech Matters, Danish Pavilion at the 54th International Art Exhibition, la Biennale di Venezia, Venice, Italy; He disappeared into complete silence; rereading a single artwork by Louise Bourgeois, Museum De Hallen, Amsterdam, Netherlands. Robin Mandel (2009-10) 2012 Biennial, Center for Maine Contemporary Art, Rockport, ME; Israel Musrara Mix, Naggar Steve McClure (2006-07, 2007-08) unscripted, Craven Allen Gallery, Durham, NC. William Mead (1989-1990,1990-91) William Mead, Woodstock Framing gallery, Woodstock, NY. Nathalie Miebach (2006-07, 2007-08) DataVis: Information as Art, Beall Center for Art and Technology, Irving, CA; DataDriven: Aestheitc Responses to Weather, Massachusetts College of Art, Brant Gallery, Boston; Intersection of Art and Music, Salisbury University Gallery, Salisbury, MD; Random Access: Data as Art, Montserrat College of Art, Beverly, MA; When I Heard The Learn’d Astronomer, Space Gallery, Portland, ME; Weather Scores, Asheville Art Museum, Asheville, NC; Illuminating Data: Visualizing the Information that Moves Our World, TCNJ Gallery, College of New Jersey, Ewing, NJ; Weather Scores, Arkansas Art Center, Little Rock, AR; CONVERGE: Art and Science, Artcurrent Gallery, New York. Jason Mones (2008-09) Invisible Furnace, The Active Space, Brooklyn, New York. Elizabeth Mooney (2009-10) Sitelines, Beard and Weil Galleries at Wheaton College, Norton, MA. Bridget Mullen (2010-11) The Brucennial 2012: Harderer, Betterer, Fasterer, Strongerer, The Bruce High Quality Foundation, New York. Portia Munson (1993-94, 1999-2000) Texas Contemporary, P·P·O·W, New York; MTA Subway Commission, Fort Hamilton Parkway Station, Brooklyn, NY; Beautiful Garbage, Byrdcliffe Kleinert, James Arts Center, Woodstock, NY; Dear Mother Nature: Hudson Valley Artists, Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, SUNY, New Platz, NY; artMRKT Hamptons, P·P·O·W, New York. Leslie Murray (2008-09, 2009-10) Provincetown Contemporary Art Preview, Artcurrent NY, New York. Robert Nadeau (1999-2000) Motorcycle Mania, The Art Center, Blue Ridge, GA. Victoria Neel (2000-01, 2001-02) Victoria Neel, Jason McCoy Gallery, New York. Andy Ness (2010-11, 2011-12) Poor, Privileged, And Some Of Them Used, Wayfarers, Brooklyn, NY; NY I Love You Sometimes, Classic Six, New York. Paul Oberst (1982-83) Morphic Forms and Bronzes, Bridgette Mayer Gallery, Philadelphia; Art to Collect Now, Center for Maine Contemporary Art, Rockport, ME; APPEARANCES, Site-specific sculptural installations, Provincetown, MA; 2012 Primavera, Charles DuFour Gallery, Belfast, ME; Corrugation Nation, Waterfall Arts, Belfast, ME; Morphic Forms and Bronzes, Bridgette Mayer Gallery, Philadelphia; Bridgette Mayer Gallery, Dallas Art Fair, Dallas; Bridgette Mayer Gallery, Art Palm Beach, Palm Beach, FL. Kambui Olujimi (2007-08) A Life in Pictures, apexart, New York. Sarah Oppenheimer (1995-96) W-12, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, MD; D-33, PPOW, New York; Factory Direct, The Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA; Art Basel, Von Bartha Garage, Basel, Switzerland; Off the Beaten Track, Von Bartha Garage, Basel, Switzerland; Reinterpretation as Practice, Building 110: LMCC, Govenor’s Island, New York. Helen O’Toole (1991-92) Amid a Space Between: Irish Artists in America, SFMOMA Artists Gallery, Fort Mason Center, San Francisco. Micha Patiniott (2008-09) Figuurlijk, Museum Hilversum, Hilversum, Netherlands; Door Schildersogen / From a Painter’s Perspective, Arti et Amicitiae, Amsterdam, Netherlands; Het Ongerijmde, Tricot (Stichting Wim Izaks), Winterswijk, Netherlands; Refresh, PG Contemporary, Houston; Haarlemse Lente, Tanya Rumpff, Haarlem, Netherlands; MK Award Fundraiser Show, Re: Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands. John Peña (2010-11) 2012 TOUGH ART, The Children’s Museum of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh. Sarah Peters (2009-10) Modern Times, Lesley Heller Gallery, New York; Letters Not About Love, Regina Rex Gallery, Queens, NY; Twisted Sisters, Dodge Gallery, New 11 C E L E B R AT I N G A C C O M P L I S H M E N T York; Drawn To Sculpture, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Temple of Flora, Art Gallery at Eagle Hill Institute, Steuben, MA; Wavers, curated by EJ Hauser & Rob Nadeau, Brooklyn, NY. Lamar Peterson (2001-02, 2002-03) Minnesota Funk, Regis Center for Art, Minneapolis. Jack Pierson (1993-94) The Art of Collaboration with Bottega Veneta, Coconut Grove, FL; Jack Pierson : Jesus and Nazimova, Xavier Hufkens, Brussels, Belgium; The Palm Beach Story, or Whatever Happened to Baby Jane, Gavlak Gallery, Palm Beach, FL; It’s Always Summer on the Inside, Anton Kern Galley, New York; Silver Curtain, Stephen Wirtz Gallery, San Francisco. Stephen Read (1981-82) Lynn PainterStainer Prize, Mall Galleries, London, UK; Weston Park, Weston-under-Lizard, Shropshire, UK (Solo Show). Beverly Ress (1990-91) Signals, DCAC, Winging It, Heiner Contemporary, Washington, DC; 50th Anniversary Exhibit, McLean Project for the Arts, McLean, VA. Ann Reichlin (1988-89) Trace, Sculpture Space, Utica, NY; Raw Material, Davis Gallery, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, NY; Stone Canoe Number 6, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY. Justin Richel (2005-06, 2006-07) Threshold, Ross+Ross Galerie, Stuttgart, Germany; Cause and Effect, Marshall University, Huntington, WV; Threshold, June Fitzpatrick Gallery, Portland, ME. 12 (continued) Jacolby Satterwhite (2011-12, 2012-13) Fore, The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; Radical Presence, Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Houston; Trans Technology Exhibit, Rutgers University, Newark, NJ; 3-D Form: Aboveground Animation, The New Museum, New York; Bigger than Shadows, Dodge Gallery, New York; Made in Woodstock, CPW Biannual exhibition, Woodstock, NY; Operating Systems, Dean Projects, New York; Park Side of the Moon, Socrates Sculpture Park, New York; Beasts of Revelation, DC Moore Gallery, New York; Jacolby Satterwhite & Devin Troy Strother, Monya Rowe Gallery, New York; Spectrum Vision, Reverse, Brooklyn, NY; Shift, Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; Oh, You mean Cellophane & All that Crap, The Calder Foundation, New York; Score Contributor for Clifford Owens’ Anthology, PS.1 MoMA, New York; Pixelated, MoCADA, Brooklyn, NY; Studio LLC Group Show, Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning, Queens, NY. Carrie Scanga (2004-05, 2005-06) Ballast/ Break, Lawndale Art Center, Houston; Building New Traditions, The Janet Turner Print Museum at California State University, Chico, CA; East – West, traveling exhibition: Central Connecticut State University Art Gallery, New Britain, CT, University of Central Florida Visual Arts Gallery, Orlando, FL, Colorado University Art Museum, Boulder, CL, University Art Museum at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Lafayette, LA, Nicholls State University Art Gallery, Thibodaux, LA, Clara M. Eagle Gallery at Murray State University, Murray, KY, Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art at Utah State University, Logan, UT, Rockford College Art Gallery, Rockford, IL, McNeese State University Art Gallery, Lake Charles, LA. Kristen Schiele (2004-05) 100 Portraits, Bravin Lee Program, New York; Pulse Art Fair, Freight and Volume Gallery, Miami; New Future, Circuit 12 Gallery, Dallas; “Space//Form”, Breeze Block Gallery, Portland, OR; Permanent Collection, Nancy Margolis Gallery New York; One Hundred Dollars, Littlefield Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; Double Dirty Dozen, Freight and Volume Gallery New York; Thing, on site exhibition, Cornwall, CT; Transforma, Mill Fine Art, Santa Fe, NM; Opulent Vision, Ford Projects, New York; Mie Portraits, Freight and Volume Gallery, New York; Artists Merchandising Art, Wonderloch Kellerland Gallery, Los Angeles. Karen Schifano (1979-1980) Works on Paper, Side Studio Project Space, Sydney, Australia; I’ll Take You There, Sydney Non-Objective Contemporary Art Project, Gallery 1, Sydney, Australia; CCNOA 30/30 Image Archive Project #3, le Moins Un, Paris, France; Something Sacred, Imogen Holloway, Saugerties, NY; Making Room: Ten Interpretations, The Institute Library, New Haven, CT; 30 Year Jubillee Benefit Auction, GKG, Bonn, Germany; Right and Other Angles, Soft Spot (online curatorial project) www.soft-spot.net; Manic Episode #3: Hamburg Kunstlerhaus, Rathaus, Hamburg, Germany; Boundary Hunters, Fosdick-Nelson Gallery, Alfred University, Alfred, NY; As Far As The Eye Can See, Adam Lister Gallery, Farifax, VA; Doppler Effect, traveling suitcase exhibition: Berlin Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Zagreb; Grid List, The Center Galleries, College for Creative Studies, Detroit and Allegra La Viola Gallery, New York; Mic:Open (occupy), Slideshow Gallery, New York; Paperazzi, Janet Kurnatowski Gallery, New York. Minako Shirakura (2007-08, 2008-09) Minako Shirakura + Miyoko Yoshitani Exhibition, Gallery Kingyo, Tokyo, Japan. Ron Shuebrook (1969-1970) Ron Shuebrook: Selected Work, Studio 21 Fine Art, Halifax, Nova Scotia; Ron Shuebrook, Ingrid Mueller Gallery, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada; “C” Word: Craft in Contemporary Art, Doris McCarthy Gallery, University of Toronto, Scarborough, Ontario; Red Dot, Renann Issacs Contemporary Art, Guelph, Ontario; Provincetown Views, ACME Fine Art, Boston; Summer Salon, ACME Fine Art, Boston; Collection Resonance, Kitchener Waterloo Gallery, Kitchener, ON; Group Exhibition, Newzones Gallery, Calgary, Alberta; abstractions on paper, Studio 21 Fine Art , Halifax, Nova Scotia; Art Gives Good Gifts, Renann Isaacs Contemporary Art, Guelph, ON; Paintings: The Elora Connection, Elora Centre for the Arts, Elora, ON. Jeannie Simms (2011-12) That is the impression we receive, Commonwealth and Council, Los Angeles. Duane Slick (1990-91, 1991-92) We Are Here! Eiteljorg Contemporary Art Fellowship, National Museum of the American Indian, New York. MiYoung Sohn (2001-02, 2002-03) in plain view, Nuartlink, Westport, CT; of White, Nuartlink, Westport, CT. Xin Song (2007-08) Unveiling of MTA Permanent Arts for Transit: Bay Parkway Landmark Station, Design for Laminated Glass Work, Public Art, D Line, Brooklyn, NY; Every Pictures Tells A Story, Amy Simon Fine Art, Westport, CT. Jenna Spevack (1996-97) 8 Extraordinary Greens, Mixed Greens, New York; Birds of Brooklyn, Brooklyn Arts Council, Brooklyn, NY. Bethany Springer (2001-02) Tidal, Full Tilt Creative Centre, McIvers, Newfoundland, Canada; Watermarks, Mallin Gallery Kansas City Artists Coalition, Kansas City, MO; Utopia/Dystopia, Urban Institute for Contemporary Art, Grand Rapids, MI; Faculty Exhibition, Fine Arts Center Gallery, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR. Charles Spurrier (1985-86, 1986-87) Charles Spurrier, Thatcher Projects Gallery, NY. Allyson Strafella (1996-97) Art=Text=Art: Works by Contemporary Artists from the Sally and Wynn Kramarsky Collection, Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, New Brunswick, NJ; Lighten Up, Gallery Joe, Philadelphia. Rob Swainston (2011-12) Handgepäck, Neuwerk Kunsthalle, Konstanz, Germany; Ctrl+P: New Directions in Printmaking, Arlington Arts Center, Arlington, VA; Revisions, Trestle Gallery, Brooklyn, NY. Hans Van Meeuwen (2000-01) In the Woods, Gallery Deschler, Berlin, Germany; Flashmob, Kathleen Cullen Fine Arts, New York; Flashmob, Re-institude, Millterton, NY. Tabitha Vevers (1995-96) LOVER’S EYES II: The Gaze of Desire, Albert Merola Gallery, Provincetown, MA; GOLD, Belvedere Museum, Vienna Austria (Book); The Tides of Provincetown: Pivotal Years in America’s Oldest Continuous Art Colony (1899-2011), traveling to New Britain Museum of American Art, New Britain, CT, Westmoreland Museum of American Art, Greensburg PA, Wichita Art Museum, Wichita, KS, The Cape Cod Museum of Art, Dennis, MA (catalog); (S)ML SUITCASE, International traveling show, Inez Suen, Art + Design Consulting, Woodridge, IL; Passions of the Soul, Trustman Art Gallery, Simmons College, Boston (catalog); Provincetown Views, ACME Gallery, Boston; Kinsey Institute Juried Show, Grunwald Gallery of Art, Bloomington, IN; Salon Show, Clark Gallery, Lincoln, MA. Chuck Webster (2004-05) Paintings, Zieher Smith Inc. Gallery, New York; Breadbox, Zieher Smith at the ICON, Nashville, TN; Abstract Summer, Philip Slein Gallery, St. Louis, MO; Casa De Empeño, Anonymous Gallery, Mexico City, Mexico; Studio of the Absurd, GoodBye Amsterdam, M55 Art, New York. Michelle Weinberg (1993-94) ShelfLife, DuPont Building storefront, Miami; homesession, homesession, Barcelona, Spain; Little Languages/Coded Pictures, Lesley Heller Gallery and Kathryn Markel Fine Art, New York; Michelle Weinberg: Pictorial Record, Bob Rauschenberg Gallery, Edison State College, Ft. Myers, FL; The Pretend Dimension, Dorsch Gallery, Miami; Backdrop, The Schoolhouse Gallery, Provincetown, MA; Inventory 02, Buena Vista Bldg, Miami; SWEAT, ArtCenter/South Florida & Centre Gallery, Miami Dade College, Miami; The Architectural Prism, The Schoolhouse Gallery at ArtCurrent, New York. Rachel White (1999-2000) The Action of the Polo Horse, Veuve Clicquot Gold Cup Finals, Cowdray Park, Midhurst, West Sussex, UK; La Acción Del Caballo De Polo, The Gallery at Altos De Chavon, Casa de Campo, Dominican Republic. Phillip Whitman (2005-06, 2006-07) End of Chaos, End of Emptiness Front Porch Forum Gallery, Winooski, VT; Storytime, Studio Place Arts, Barre, VT. Jordan Wolfson (1991-92) The Spaces Between Things, Prographica/Fine Works, Seattle; The Human Figure and Parts Thereof, Prographica/Fine Works, Seattle. 13 C E L E B R AT I N G A C C O M P L I S H M E N T Jacob Yanes (2009-10) Philomela, Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles. Bert Yarborough (1976-77, 1977-78) Bert Yarborough, The Wichita Art Museum, Wichita, KS; Faculty Exhibition, ColbySawyer College, New London, NH; FAWC Takes Wing, Hudson D. Walker Gallery, Fine Arts Work Center, Provincetown, MA. Lisa Yuskavage (1986-87) Faces, Onassis Cultural Centre, Athens, Greece; Print/Out, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. VISUAL ARTS FELLOWS Selected Awards 2012 Golnar Adili (2010-11, 2011-12) was selected as a 2012 Smack Mellon Studio Artist in Brooklyn, NY. (continued) Ellen Altfest (1999-2000) was awarded a 2012 John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship. Linda Bond (1978-79) was awarded a 2013 Artist Fellowship from the Massachusetts Cultural Council. Taylor Baldwin (2008-09, 2009-10) attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Skowhegan, Maine in 2012. Paul Bowen (1977-78, 1978-79) received a 2012 Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant. Jarrod Beck (2011-12) received the jury award from the Provincetown Conservation Trust, a 2012 Socrates Sculpture Park Emerging Artist Fellowship and a PollockKrasner Foundation Grant. He was an artist in residence at Vermont Studio Center, Johnson, VT, and the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, NH, and will be in residence at the Rauschenberg Foundation Residency in Captiva, FL, and the Bemis Art Center, Omaha, NE, in 2013. Pamela Brown (1986-87, 1987-88) was a 2013 Artist-in-Residence at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in Amherst, VA, and a 2012 resident at Gallery North in Setauket, NY. Geoffrey Chadsey (2003-04, 2005-06) was a Queer Art Mentorship Mentor for 20122013. Kate Clark (2006-07) was awarded a 2012 Marie Walsh Sharpe Studio Space Grant. Nicholas des Cognets (2011-12, 2012-13) received an Emergency Grant from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts and was an Artist-in-Residence at Seven Below Arts Initiative in Westford, VT, and featured in Smack Mellon’s Hot Picks Program. Jonathan Ehrenberg (2011-12) was an Artist-in-Residence at Triangle Arts in Brooklyn, NY, and featured in Creative Capital’s On Our Radar program. Colette Fu (2005-06) was an Artist-inResidence at the Brush Creek Foundation for the Arts, Saratoga, WY, The Institute for Electronic Arts, Alfred, NY; Asian Arts Initiative Social Practice Lab, Philadelphia, PA; Frans Masereel Centrum Kasterlee, Belgium; Atelier Graff, Montreal, Mural Arts Program, Philadelphia; and received a Full Fellowship at the Vermont Studio Center in Johnston, VT. She received a 2012 West Collects award and a Canadian Council for the Arts Visiting Foreign Artist Grant for 2012. Christy Georg (2007-08) received a Lighton International Artist Exchange Program Grant and an Arctic Circle Residency. Meghan Gordon (2007-08, 2008-09) was an Artist in Residence at Sculpture Space in New York. Robert Gutierrez (2007-08) was an Artist-inResidence at CRiDA in Mallorca, Spain, and at Kongaecho Bazaar in Yokohama, Japan. Sharon Horvath (1985-86) received a 201314 J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Award to India. Sedrick Huckaby (1999-2000) received a Visiting Artist Residency and Fellowship at Brandywine Workshop in Philadelphia. 14 Nicholas des Cognets’s solo show and Rainbow Show in the fall of 2012 Rajkamal Kahlon (2004-05) received a 2012 Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant and was an Artist-In-Residence at the American Civil Liberties Union. Jonggeon Lee (2010-11) received a Special Editions Residency at the Lower East Side Printshop in New York. Tristin Lowe (1990-91) received a 2012 Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship. Linda Matalon (1992-93) was a 2012 Artistin-Residence at Dartmouth College. Jason Mones (2008-09) was an Artist-inResidence at Bemis Center Artist in Omaha, NE, and participated in the Bronx Museum’s Artist in the Marketplace Program. Kambui Olujimi (2007-08) was named a Blade of Grass Fellow and received an Artist Files Grant of $10,000. Helen O’Toole (1991-92) received an award from the Milliman Endowment Fund, University of Washington, WA and a 2013 Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant. Micha Patiniott (2008-09) received a 2012 Basic stipend from the Mondriaan Foundation. John Peña (2010-11) received the first Carol R. Brown Creative Achievement Award sponsored by The Heinz & Pittsburgh Foundation Grant and was a Tough Art Artist-in-Residence at the Children’s Museum of Pittsburgh. Ann Reichlin (1988-89) successfully crowdsource funded her project, Trace, through USA Projects. Justin Richel (2005-06, 2006-07) will be an Arts/Industry resident at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center in Sheboygan, WI. Christopher Romer (1994-95) received a 2012 Creative Capacity Fund Grant from the Center for Cultural Innovation, San Francisco. Jacolby Satterwhite (2011-12, 2012-13) was an Artist-in-Residence at the Headlands Center for Arts in CA. Ron Shuebrook (1969-1970) was an Artistin-Residence at Thames Art Gallery in Chatham, Ontario and received a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal for service to the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, Toronto, Ontario. Sarah Sohn (2011-12) received a J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Award to India. She was was an Artist-inResidence at Art, Resources and Teaching Trust in Bangalore, India and the Kerala Kalamandalam in Thrissur, Kerala, India. Bethany Springer (2001-02) was an Artistin-Residence at Full Tilt Creative Centre in Newfoundland, Canada and the Hambidge Center for the Creative Arts & Sciences in Rabun Gap, GA. Rob Swainston (2011-12) was awarded a Robert Blackburn Printshop Fellowship in New York. Michelle Weinberg (1993-94) was an Artistin-Residence at homesession in Barcelona, Spain. Jacob Yanes (2009-10) received a PollockKrasner Foundation Grant. Beverly Ress (1990-91) received a Maryland State Arts Council Individual Artist Award for 2013. 15 C E L E B R AT I N G A C C O M P L I S H M E N T (continued) VISUAL ARTS FELLOWS Forthcoming Exhibits 2013 Xiaoqing (Jenny) Ding (2001-02) Freak Wave, Museum of Eroticism, Paris, France. Yee Jan Bao (2000-01) Some of Its Parts, Alter Space, San Francisco. Ellen Driscoll (1983-84, 1984-85) Alluvial; Recent Books and Drawings, Eli Marsh Gallery at Amherst College, Amherst, MA. Jarrod Beck (2011-12) Talus, Sunroom Project Space Wave Hill, New York; Balance, Central University of Venezuela, Caracas, Venezuela; Disruption Regime, Inde/ Jacobs Gallery, Terlingua, TX; Surface Tension, MASS Gallery, Austin, Texas; twothreefourfivesix,one, beta pictoris gallery, Birmingham, AL. Matt Bollinger (2009-10, 2010-11) Bed on the Floor, Zürcher Studio, New York; Thunder Perfect Mind, Land of Tomorrow Gallery, Lexington, KY. Linda Bond (1978-79) Inventory, DEIS Impact, Brandeis University, campus-wide installation; Wheaton Biennial: Drawing Out of Bounds, Wheaton College, Norton, MA; The Newtown Project: A Call to Arms!, Charles Krause Reporting Fine Art, Washington DC; Human Rights Exhibition, South Texas College (traveling), McAllen, TX. Lee Boroson (1992-93) Solo project, Mass MOCA, North Adams, MA. Nicholas des Cognets (2011-12, 2012-13) Thunder Perfect Mind, Land of Tomorrrow, Lexington, KY; Get Us Through The Night, The Front, New Orleans. Eric Conrad (2000-01, 2001-02) Solo Installation, MIA Galleries – Miami International Airport, Miami. Didier Corallo (1994-95, 1995-96) MidCareer: Betty Caroll Fuller and Didier Corallo, Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Provincetown, MA. Jonathan Ehrenberg (2011-12) The Castle, Nicelle Beauchene Gallery, New York. Andrea Epstein (1980-81) Andrea Epstein, Pearl Street Gallery, Elizabeth, NJ; Winter Group Show, Gallery 54, Chatham, NJ. David Fludd (1992-93, 1993-94) David Fludd, Great Falls Discovery Center, Turners Falls, MA. Colette Fu (2005-06) Colette Fu, BRIC Arts Rotunda Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; We are Tiger Dragon People, Towson University Asian Arts Gallery, Towson, MD; Paper Architecture, Muhlenburg College, Allentown, PA. Ellen Gallagher (1995-96, 1996-97) Ellen Gallagher, Tate Modern, London, England; Don’t Axe Me, Sara Hildén Art Museum, Tampere, Finland; AxME, Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany; The New Museum, New York Robert Gutierrez (2007-08) The Moon My Mother, Drawing Room, Singapore; Poem of the River, Osage Gallery, Hong Kong, China; Algo Raro, SKL Gallery, Mallorca. Elliott Hundley (2001-02) Elliot Hudley, Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York; A Different Kind of Order: The ICP Triennial, International Center of Photography, New York; Transforming the Known: Works from the Bert Kreuk Collection, Gemeente Museum Den Haag, The Hague, Netherlands. Janelle Iglesias (2007-08) NY I Love You Sometimes, Classic Six, New York; Thunder Perfect Mind, Land of Tomorrow, Louisville, KT; Superreal (Las Hermanas), El Museo del Barrio, New York; Duologues (Las Hermanas), Gallery 307, University of Georgia, Athens, GA; (re/spond/re/ peat) (Las Hermanas), Soapbox Gallery, Brooklyn, NY. Rajkamal Kahlon (2004-05) When Violence becomes Decadent, ACC, Weimar, Germany. Sarah Oppenheimer (1995-96) Sarah Oppenheimer, Von Bartha Chesa, S-Chanf, Switzerland; Sarah Oppenheimer, Duve Berlin, Berlin, Germany; Sarah Oppenheimer, Wallhouse, Groningen, Netherlands; Against the Grain, Museum of Art and Design, New York. John Peña (2010-11) Daily Geology, Perlman Teaching Museum, Northfield, MN; Significant Ordinaries, California State University Art Museum, Long Beach, CA. Sarah Peters (2009-10) Utopians, John Davis Gallery, Hudson, NY. Jim Peters (1982-83, 1983-84) Jim Peters: a Retrospective (1983-2013), Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Provincetown, MA; Jim Peters, artSTRAND Gallery, Provincetown, MA. Jack Pierson (1993-94) The End of the World, Regen Projects, Los Angeles; Ennui (La Vie Continue), Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France. Justin Richel, (2005-06, 2006-07) Justin Richel , June Fitzpatrick Gallery, Portland, ME; Esta Tierra Plana, Embajadores con Provisiones, Madrid, Spain; This Flat Earth, Rose Contemporary, Portland, ME. Jacolby Satterwhite (2011-12 2012-13) The Matriarch’s Rhapsody, Monya Rowe Gallery, New York; Reifying Desire: Model It, The Studio Museum of Harlem, New York; The House of Patricia Satterwhite, Mallorca Landings Gallery, Mallorca, Spain. Candice Lin (2011-12) Candice Lin, Quadrado Azul Gallery, Porto, Portugal. Susan Lyman (1981-82) Susan Lyman: Sculpture in Wood, Boston Sculptors Gallery, Boston. Michael Jones McKean (2002-03) Fosdick-Nelson Gallery, Alfred University, Alfred, New York (Solo Show); Horton Gallery, New York (Solo Show); Love and Resources, Favorite Goods, Chinatown Los Angeles. Nathalie Miebach (2006-07, 2007-08) Blizzards, Gales, and Ocean Buoys, Common Street Art, Waterville, ME; Craft and Folk Art Museum, Los Angeles (Solo Show); St. Botolph’s Club, Boston (Solo Show); Above the Din: Unstructured Conversations, Artworks, New Bedford, MA; University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI (URI Sea Grant Anniversary exhibition); Weaving Science into Sculpture, Museum of Science, Boston; Gallery Nord, San Antonio, TX. Portia Munson (1993-94, 1999-2000) Portia Munson: Reflecting Pool, P·P·O·W Gallery, New York. 2009-10, 2012–13 Writing Fellow Margaret Reges 16 17 C E L E B R AT I N G A C C O M P L I S H M E N T Karen Schifano (1979-1980) Sideshow Nation, Sideshow Gallery, New York; Mic:Open (occupy), Sideshow Gallery, New York; Paparazzi, Janet Kurnatowski Gallery, New York. N. Kahn/R. Selesnick (1994-95) Kahn & Selesnick: Truppe Fledermau, Kopeikin Gallery, Culver City, CA. Ron Shuebrook (1969-1970) Ron Shuebrook: Drawing Survey, organized by The Thames Art Gallery Chatham, Ontario, traveling to Kelowna Art Gallery, Kelowna, British Columbia, MacDonald Stewart Art Centre, Guelph, ON, The Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Oshawa, ON, Mount Said Vincent University Art Gallery, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Duane Slick (1990-91, 1991-92) 4 White Walls and A Sermon, RK Projects, New York. Ronald Sloan (1984-85) Big Story: The Art of Levent Isik, Ronald Sloan, and Derek Webster, The Baron and Ellin Gordon Art Galleries, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA. Bethany Springer (2001-02) Seismic Reflection, Twin Kittens, Atlanta, GA; Coast to Coast by Post: A Sculptural Exploration, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY. Allyson Strafella (1996-97) Allyson Strafella, Gallery Joe, Philadelphia. Tabitha Vevers (1995-96) 25th Anniversary Exhibition: Rhode Island Visual Arts Sea Grant, University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI. Michelle Weinberg (1993-94) Inventory 03, MIA Gallery – Miami International Airport, Miami. 18 (continued) Jordan Wolfson (1991-92) Jordan Wolfson, J.Cacciola Gallery, New York; Jordan Wolfson, Rothschild Fine Art, Tel Aviv, Israel. WRITING FELLOWS Selected Awards 2012 Ari Banias (2011-12) received the 2012 Campbell Corner Poetry Prize. He was also the 2012-13 Halls Poetry Fellow at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Amanda Coplin’s (2008-09) debut novel, The Orchardist, was a New York Times bestseller and won the Barnes & Noble Discover Award of $10,000. Nicole Terez Dutton (2011-12) won the 2011 Cave Canem Poetry Prize for her collection, If One of Us Should Fall. Marie Howe (1983-84) was named the tenth New York State Poet Laureate. She will serve from 2012 to 2014. Rebecca Gayle Howell (2010-11) won the Cleveland State University Poetry Center’s First Book Prize for her collection, Render / An Apocalypse. Her translation, with Husam Qaisi, of Hagar before the Occupation / Hagar after the Occupation by Amal al-Jubouri was listed as a best poetry book of 2011 by the Library Journal and was a finalist for Three Percent’s Best Translated Book Award. Victor LaValle’s (1998-99) novel The Devil in Silver was selected as a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2012, a New York Times Notable Book of 2012, and a Washington Post Notable Book of 2012. Rebecca Lindenberg (2009-10) received a 2013-14 Amy Lowell Poetry Travelling Scholarship of approximately $50,000. Cynthia Lowen (2007-08) was selected as a winner of the 2012 National Poetry Series for The Cloud That Contained the Lightning. She also co-produced and wrote Bully, a feature documentary film, along with Lee Hirsch. Andrew Hudgins (1986-87) won a 2013 Pushcart Prize for his essay “Helen Keller Answers the Iron.” Jill McDonough (2000-01) won a 2013 Pushcart Prize for her poem “Preface.” Cynthia Huntington (1978-79, 1982-83) was a finalist for the 2012 National Book Award in poetry for her book Heavenly Bodies. Fiona McFarlane (2006-07, 2007-08) received the 2012 Keene Prize for Literature of $50,000 from the University of Texas College of Liberal Arts. Esi Edugyan (2002-03) won the 2012 Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, the 2012 AnisfieldWolf Book Award, and the 2011 Scotiabank Giller Prize for her novel Half Blood Blues, which was also an Oprah Magazine Best Book of the Year, and a finalist for the Man Booker Prize and the Governor General’s Literary Award. Denis Johnson (1981-82) was a finalist for the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for his novel Train Dreams, which was a New York Times Notable Book and was named a best or favorite book of the year by Esquire, the New Yorker, and the Los Angeles Times. Boris Fishman (2010-11) received a CEC Arts Link’s 2012-13 grant for American artists doing research in Eastern Europe. Nadia Kalman (2007-08, 2008-09) was awarded a 2012 National Endowment for the Arts literature fellowship of $25,000. Thomas Glave (1995-96) was a 2012 Visiting Fellow at Clare Hall, University of Cambridge. Kirun Kapur (2002-03) won the 2013 Arts & Letters/Rumi Prize for Poetry. Miriam Bird Greenberg (2012-13) was awarded a 2013 National Endowment for the Arts literature fellowship of $25,000. Suji Kwock Kim (1997-98) won the George Bogin Memorial Award and the Lucille Medwick Memorial Award, both from the Poetry Society of America. Robin Hemley (1985-86) won a 2012 Pushcart Prize for his essay, “To the Rainforest Room.” Victoria Lancelotta (1998-99) was awarded a 2012 National Endowment for the Arts literature fellowship of $25,000. Heather McGowan (1996-97) received the 2012 Mary Ellen Von Der Heyden Fiction Fellowship at the American Academy in Berlin. John Murillo (2007-08) won a 2011 Pushcart Prize and was a Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference fellow in 2011. He was awarded a 2013 National Endowment for the Arts literature fellowship of $25,000. Viet Thanh Nguyen (2004-05) was a 20112012 fellow at the American Council of Learned Societies. He also received an Artistic Innovation grant of $10,000 from the Center for Cultural Innovation. Sarah Rose Nordgren (2008-09, 2011-12) received a Louis Untermeyer Scholarship in Poetry from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference in 2011, and the James Wright Poetry Award from Mid-American Review in 2012. Ann Patchett (1990-91) was named one of Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in 2012. Her story “The Mercies” won a 2013 Pushcart Prize. Lydia Peelle (2006-07) won the 2012 Anahid Literary Prize from Columbia University’s Armenian Center for her book Reasons and Advantages of Breathing. Hanna Pylväinen (2011-12) received a 2012 Whiting Writers’ Award of $50,000. David Rigsbee (1976-77) was awarded a 2013 National Endowment for the Arts literature fellowship of $25,000, and a 2012 Pushcart Prize for his poem “Russians.” Dominic Saucedo (2002-03) was a 2011 McKnight Foundation fellow. Salvatore Scibona (2001-02, 2002-03) won a 2012 O. Henry Award. Timothy Seibles (1991-92) was a 2012 National Book Award finalist for Fast Animal. Solmaz Sharif (2011-12) was awarded a 2013 National Endowment for the Arts literature fellowship of $25,000 as well as a Stegner Fellowship at Stanford University. Jacob Shores-Argüello (2010-11) won the Dzanc Books International Literary Award in 2011. Bruce Smith (1981-82) received a 2012 William Carlos Williams Award presented by the Poetry Society of America. Brandon Som (2011-12) won the Nightboat Poetry Prize for his manuscript The Tribute Horse. Jennifer Tseng (2000-01, 2001-02) won the 2012 Marick Press Poetry Prize for her manuscript of Red Flower, White Flower. Melissa Tuckey (2009-10) won the ABZ Press first book contest for her manuscript Tenuous Chapel. Joshua Weiner (1993-94) received a 2012-13 Amy Lowell Poetry Travelling Scholarship of approximately $50,000. Jillian Weise (2004-05, 2005-06) won the Isabella Gardner Poetry Award in 2012. Katharine Whitcomb (2000-01) received a 2011 Jack Straw Productions Writing Program fellowship. Marcus Wicker (2010-11) was selected as a winner of the 2011 National Poetry Series for Maybe the Saddest Thing. He is the recipient of a 2011 Ruth Lily Fellowship of $15,000. Jacqueline Woodson (1991-92) won the 2012 Anne V. Zarrow Award for Young Reader’s Literature. Her picture book Each Kindness was named a Best Book of 2012 by the School Library Journal. WRITING FELLOWS Recent and Forthcoming First Books by Former Fellows Nuar Alsadir (1995-96) More Shadow Than Bird, poems, Salt Publishing, 2012. Malachi Black (2010-11) Storm Toward Morning, poems, Copper Canyon Press, forthcoming 2014. Amanda Coplin (2008-09) The Orchardist, novel, HarperCollins, 2012. Nicole Terez Dutton (2011-12) If One of Us Should Fall, poems, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2012. Boris Fishman (2010-11) A Replacement Life, novel, HarperCollins, forthcoming in 2014. 19 C E L E B R AT I N G A C C O M P L I S H M E N T Patrick Ryan Frank (2005-06, 2006-07) How the Losers Love What’s Lost, poems, Four Way Books, 2012. Rebecca Gayle Howell (2010-11) Render / An Apocalypse, poems, Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 2013. Anna Keesey (1994-95) Little Century, novel, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012. Rebecca Lindenberg (2009-10) Love, an Index, poems, McSweeney’s Poetry Series, 2012. Cynthia Lowen (2007-08) The Essential Guide to Bullying: Prevention and Intervention, nonfiction, Alpha, 2012 (coauthored by Cindy Miller); Bully: An Action Plan for Teachers, Parents, and Communities to Combat the Bullying Crisis, nonfiction, Weinstein Books, 2012 (coauthored by Lee Hirsch and Dina Santorelli). Caitlin Grace McDonnell (2002-03) Looking for Small Animals, poems, Nauset Press, 2012. Fiona McFarlane (2006-07, 2007-08) The Night Guest, novel, Faber & Faber, forthcoming 2013. Sophie McManus (2008-09, 2009-10) The Brightest Day, novel, Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2014. Hanna Pylväinen (2011-12) We Sinners, novel, Henry Holt and Co., 2012. Jacob Shores-Argüello (2010-11) In the Absence of Clocks, poems, Southern Illinois University Press, 2012. Brandon Som (2011-12) The Tribute Horse, poems, Nightboat Books, forthcoming 2014. 20 (continued) Laurie Weeks (2000-01) Zipper Mouth, novel, The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2011. Monica Wesolowska (1998-99) Holding Silvan: a Brief Life, memoir, Hawthorne Books, forthcoming 2013. Marcus Wicker (2010-11) Maybe the Saddest Thing, poems, HarperCollins, 2012. Nick Flynn (1991-92, 1999-2000) The Reenactments, memoir, W. W. Norton & Company, 2013. Indira Ganesan (1984-85, 1985-86) As Sweet As Honey, novel, Alfred A. Knopf, 2013. Thomas Glave (1995-96) Among the Bloodpeople: Politics and Flesh, nonfiction, Akashic Books, forthcoming 2013. WRITING FELLOWS Other Recent and Forthcoming Books by Former Fellows Louise Glück (1969-1970) Poems 1962– 2012, Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2012. Samuel Amadon (2006-07) The Hartford Book, poems, Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 2012. Eli Gottlieb (1990-91) The Face Thief, novel, William Morrow, 2012. Peter Behrens (1984-85) The O’Briens, novel, Parthenon Books, 2012. Paul Harding (2000-01) Enon, novel, Random House, forthcoming 2013. Sophie Cabot Black (1988-89) The Exchange, poems, Graywolf Press, 2013. Robin Hemley (1985-86) A Field Guide for Immersion Writing: Memoir, Journalism, and Travel, nonfiction, University of Georgia Press, 2012. Cyrus Cassells (1982-83) The Crossed-Out Swastika, poems, Copper Canyon Press, 2012. Paul Lisicky (1991-92, 1992-93) Unbuilt Projects, fiction, Four Way Books, 2012; and The Narrow Door, memoir, Graywolf Press, forthcoming 2014. Jon Loomis (1994-95, 2001-02) Fire Season (Frank Coffin Mysteries), novel, Minotaur Books, 2012. Janet MacFadyen (1992-93) In the Provincelands, poems, Slate Roof Press, 2012. Maurice Manning (1999-2000) The Gone and the Going Away, poems, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, forthcoming 2013. Laura Marello (1981-82) The Tenants of the Hôtel Biron, novel, Guernica Editions, 2012. Kathryn Maris (1996-97, 2003-04) God Loves You, poems, Seren, forthcoming 2013. David Rigsbee (1976-77) School of the Americas, poems, Black Lawrence Press, 2013. Heidi Jon Schmidt (1982-83, 1985-86) The Harbormaster’s Daughter, novel, New American Library, 2012. Timothy Seibles (1991-92) Fast Animal, poems, Etruscan Press, 2012. Roger Skillings (1969-1970, 1970-71) Summer Nights, stories, Pressed Wafer, 2013. Jennifer Tseng (2000-01, 2001-02) Red Flower, White Flower, poems, Marick Press, forthcoming 2013. Melissa Tuckey (2009-10) Tenuous Chapel, poems, ABZ Press, 2013. Joshua Weiner (1993-94) The Figure of a Man Being Swallowed by a Fish, poems, University of Chicago Press, 2013. Jillian Weise (2004-05, 2005-06) The Book of Goodbyes, poems, BOA Editions, forthcoming 2013. Ronaldo Wilson (1999-2000) Farther Traveler: Poetry, Prose, Other, Counterpath Press, 2012. Jacqueline Woodson (1991-92) Each Kindness, picture book, Nancy Paulsen Books, 2012. Mark Wunderlich (1996-97, 2000-01) The Earth Avails, poems, Graywolf Press, forthcoming 2014. Dean Young (1986-87) Bender: New and Selected Poems, Copper Canyon Press, 2012. Carole Maso (1986-87, 1990-91) Mother and Child, novel, Counterpoint, 2012. Edward Hower (1980-81) Slick, novel, Cayuga Lake Books, 2012. Jill McDonough (2000-01) Where You Live, poems, Salt Publishing, 2012. Matthew Dickman (2005-06) Mayakovsky’s Revolver, poems, W.W. Norton & Company, 2012. Andrew Hudgins (1986-87) The Joker, memoir, Simon & Schuster, 2013; and A Clown at Midnight, poems, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013. Neil McMahon (1982-83) Fifty Shades of Great Aunt Elinor, novella, Quinotaur Press, 2012. Michael Dickman (2006-07) 50 American Plays, poems, Copper Canyon Press, 2012 (coauthored by Matthew Dickman (2005-06)). Cynthia Huntington (1978-79, 1982-83) Heavenly Bodies, poems, Southern Illinois University Press, 2012. Esi Edugyan (2002-03) Half-Blood Blues, novel, Picador, 2012. Michael Klein (1990-91) The Talking Day, poems, Sibling Rivalry Press, 2013. Jennie Fields (1976-77) The Age of Desire, novel, Pamela Dorman Books, 2012. Jhumpa Lahiri (1997-98) The Lowland, novel, Alfred A. Knopf, forthcoming 2013. William O’Rourke (1970-71, 1971-72) Confessions of a Guilty Freelancer, nonfiction, Indiana University Press, 2012. Victor LaValle (1998-99) The Devil in Silver, novel, Spiegel & Grau, 2012. Emily Rapp (2004-05) The Still Point of the Turning World, memoir, Penguin Press, 2013. Susan Choi (1997-98) My Education, novel, Viking, forthcoming 2013. Evelyn Reilly (1987-88) Apocalypso, poetry, Roof Books, 2012. Josip Novakovich (1988-89) Shopping for a Better Country, essays, Dzanc Books, 2012. Thomas O’Malley (2003-04) This Magnificent Desolation, novel, Bloomsbury, 2013. 2011-12 Visual Arts Fellow Rob Swainston in the print shop 21 MARGARET MURPHY F I V E R E M A R K A B L E Y E A R S MARGARET MURPHY F I V E R E M A R K A B L E Y E A R S For the last five years Margaret Murphy has been an extraordinary and much-loved leader at the Work Center. With her retirement as Executive Director in December, she leaves behind a remarkable legacy of accomplishments, new programmatic initiatives and financial stability that will help guide the Work Center for years to come. OUR FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM OUR REVITALIZED CAMPUS At the core of the Work Center’s mission is our renowned Fellowship Program. Through Margaret’s vision and guidance, the program continued to thrive and grow. In the last year alone, we received more than 660 applications for Writing Fellowships and, with the introduction of a new application process, a record 660 applications for Visual Arts Fellowships – from all over the world. During her tenure, Margaret led the effort to increase the critical monthly stipends given to our Fellows, for the first time in ten years; and obtained new funding for our Fellows from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, and several individual major donors. One of her earliest accomplishments was leading the construction project that completely rebuilt the historic Days Lumberyard Building – the center of FAWC’s programming and operations – and bringing the project in on time and under budget. Completed in 2010, the renovations focused on the six historic studios on the second floor, a new meeting room and library, the administrative offices, a building-wide fire-protective sprinkler system, and new garden beds. She was also able to fund renovation of our historic residential facilities on Brewster Street, in 2012, and in the Barn, which will be completed in Fall 2013. Through Margaret’s untiring efforts, she was instrumental in expanding the Work Center’s support and donor base – locally, regionally and nationally – to help raise the funds to pay for these capital projects. OUR INTERNATIONAL REPUTATION From the beginning, Margaret recognized the importance of expanding the Work Center’s visibility and reputation beyond our local and regional supporters. Her insight led the effort to establish a higher profile for FAWC, creating a much stronger presence in Boston and New York City through a series of annual fundraising events and a growing presence globally with the launch of the Work Center’s exciting new online writing program, 24PearlStreet. Margaret was the inspiration behind our hugely successful annual Summer Awards Celebration that attracts a devoted group of Work Center supporters from across the Cape, Boston and New York City. And she helped reinvigorate the Work Center’s engagement locally with the Provincetown community through the funding of dozens of new Summer Workshop scholarships for Provincetown and Outer Cape residents. May 6, 2010, Reopening Ribbon-cutting Celebration 22 23 MARGARET MURPHY F I V E R E M A R K A B L E Y E A R S OUR FINANCIAL STABILITY Margaret also strengthened the financial stability of the Work Center to an unprecedented degree, culminating in the funding of operating and capital reserve accounts for the first time in its history. Her financial insight and remarkable success in diversifying our funding sources led to the significant growth of the Work Center’s annual operating budget over the last five years. From the creation of 24PearlStreet (the Work Center’s innovative online writing program), to the establishment of our highly successful annual benefits in Provincetown and New York, to the wide range of new relationships she has built with our generous supporters across the country, Margaret’s efforts have made a profound and lasting difference in the Work Center’s strong financial position. RESIDENCIES AND SPACES Gifts for Residencies: Annual and Endowed Fellowships Gifts for Studios and Other Spaces Major gifts to underwrite the Fellowship residencies are essential to our ability to offer them. By design, the Fellowship Program generates no revenue. Its purpose is to provide, without charge, time and space to emerging artists and writers so they can do new work. To run the Program each year, it costs the Work Center nearly $30,000 per Fellow, for a total of approximately $600,000. Annual Fellowships give recognition to major donors whose contributions help fund one or more residencies in the year the gift is made. Endowed Fellowships give recognition to major donors, and their families and friends, whose contributions to our endowment over the years help provide support in perpetuity, based on investment income, for the cost of a residency each year. The following Annual and Endowed Fellowships support our Fellows in residence. We thank the donors of these Fellowships, both past and present, for their generosity in providing this support. Major gifts may also be recognized through the dedication of studios and other spaces on our historic properties in Provincetown. The following spaces are named for artists, writers and patrons in whose honor major gifts have been made over the years. We thank the donors of these gifts for their generous support of some of our most important resources, the buildings we live and work in. Annual Fellowships Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation Fellowship in Fiction Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation Fellowship in Poetry As we look to the years ahead, Margaret’s exceptional leadership over these last five years and her loving commitment to the Work Center’s mission will provide lasting inspiration to all who care about this extraordinary organization. 24 Endowed Fellowships Elise Asher Visual Arts Fellowship Iva Kaplan Ashner Creative Writing Fellowship Milton and Sally Avery Visual Arts Fellowship Louise Bourgeois Visual Arts Fellowship Alan Dugan/Judith Shahn Fellowship in Creative Writing/Visual Arts Richard Florsheim Visual Arts Fellowship Robert C. Graham Visual Arts Fellowship Stanley Kunitz Fellowship in Poetry Christine Fairchild Magriel Visual Arts Fellowship Robert Motherwell Visual Arts Fellowship Grace Paley Creative Writing Fellowship George Rickey Visual Arts Fellowship Alix Ritchie and Marty Davis Fellowship in Creative Writing/Visual Arts David Shainberg Visual Arts Fellowship Myron Stout Visual Arts Fellowship Kenneth Stubbs Visual Arts Fellowship Hudson D. and Ione Walker Fellowship in Creative Writing/Visual Arts Bill Webb Fellowship for Fiction Whiting Foundation Annual Fellowship 24 Pearl Street Frances E. Upham Studio (Studio #1) Louise Walker Davy Studio (Studio #4) James Hansen Studio (Studio #5) Jack Tworkov Studio (Studio #8) Graham Foundation Studio (Studio #10) Michael Mazur Printmaking Studio Hans Hofmann Studio Level (Apart. 1-7) Stanley Kunitz Common Room Judith Shahn-Alan Dugan Library Hudson D. Walker Gallery 4 Brewster Street Reeves Euler Building David Shainberg Studio (#6) 516 Commercial Street Gerrit Hondius Residence and Studio We also recognize the generosity of the following private and public donors who made capital gifts or grants of $100,000 or more to the Fine Arts Work Center as part of our multi-year Building for the Future capital campaign: Marty Davis and Alix Ritchie Renate, Hans and Maria Hofmann Trust Jamie and Stephania McClennen Stephen Mindich, Phoenix Legacy Trust Massachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund 25 OUR SUPPORTERS O P E R AT I N G A N D C A P I TA L S U P P O RT 2 0 1 1 - 1 2 The Fine Arts Work Center is deeply grateful for the donations from individuals, corporations, foundations and government agencies who have supported our mission and programs from October 1, 2011 to September 30, 2012. O P E R AT I N G S U P P O RT 2 0 1 1 − 1 2 DONORS $200,000 AND UP Estate of Judith S. Shahn DONORS $25,000 AND UP Marty Davis and Alix Ritchie DONORS $20,000 AND UP Yvette and John Dubinsky Alison and John Ferring DONORS $15,000 AND UP Archie D. and Bertha H. Walker Foundation James C.A. and Stephania McClennen Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation National Endowment for the Arts DONORS $10,000 AND UP Aeroflex Foundation Bilezikian Family Foundation Ted Chapin Barbara Kapp Jhumpa Lahiri and Albert Vourvoulias Margaret Murphy DONORS $7,500 AND UP ACME Fine Art & Design, Jim Bennette and David Cowan Michael Field and Jeff Arnstein Massachusetts Cultural Council Daniel A. Mullin Pete Petas and Ted Jones Michael Prodanou and Costa Manos Tina Trudel and Dorothy Palanza DONORS $5,000 AND UP Bydale Foundation Community Foundation of Greater Memphis Cricket Foundation Michael Fernon and Kenneth Weiss John Guerra Herman Goldman Foundation André Gregory and Cindy Kleine Marty Michaelson and Anne Taylor Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation Andrew Mockler Dan Roche Roger Skillings Tworkov Ford Partnership Richard and Judith Wurtman DONORS $2,500 AND UP Jim Bennette and David Cowan Cape Associates Kay Knight Clarke Robert Cummings and Dennis Condon Dorothy Antoinette Laselle Foundation Lucas Garofalo Russ and Betty Gaudreau Paige Gillies and Martha Zinn Richard Lane Bryan Rafanelli and Mark Walsh Peter and Linda Saunders Seamen’s Bank Sovereign Bank Foundation Town of Provincetown Trust Family Foundation C A P I TA L G I F T S 2 0 1 1 − 1 2 DONORS $30,000 AND UP Hiebert Charitable Foundation DONORS $1,000 AND UP $1,000 AND UP DONORS Cape Cod Five Cents Savings Bank Alliance Bernstein (matching gift) 26 Harvey Allen David Altarac and Brian Koll artCurrent Anonymous Arts Foundation of Cape Cod Berta Walker Gallery Barbara Cardinal Michael Carroll Coldwell Banker Pat Shultz Real Estate Crown and Anchor John Cunney and Jared Wollaston Louise Walker Davy David Dechman DJ McManus Foundation, Inc. Tom Donegan and Mark Weinress Alan Duggan Diane Friedman William and Joyce Friedman John Frishkopf Michael Geisser Chris Getman and Joe Freitas Christopher and Katherine Gilson Peter Gilson Marlene Goldstein Jaimy Gordon Barbara Lemperly Grant Ellen and Rick Grossman Gabby Hanna and Marcy Feller David Herskovits and Jennifer Egan Linda and Marley Hodgson Kaplansky Insurance Agency Helen and R.J. Kaplus Jane Katims and Daniel Perlman Eugene Kelly Ron Kollen and Mark Wisneski Ram Koppaka Cecile and Fraser Lemley Danielle Lemmon Donna Lively Kathryn Lynch Amy Baxter MacDonald Harry Macklowe Edward Malone David Marshall Gail Mazur Candace Nagle and Deborah Grabler Antonia Neel New York Community Trust Dion Oglesby Ann Patchett Patricia P. Irgens Larsen Charitable Foundation Anne Peretz Jack Pierson Jon Van Rens and Sarah Lutz David and Letita Richardson Greg Rose Alice Spencer Richard Wallgren and Marty Rook Andy Wentz Laura and Kenneth Wernick Gayle and David Williams Ike Williams and Noa Hall Mark Williams and George Nash DONORS $500 AND UP Scott Allegretti, D.D.S Dorothy Antczak Jim Asp Elizabeth Awalt Neil Baker Jeffrey Bloomberg Marcus Boggs Axel Brunger and Thomas Burke Rob Caro The Clara Weiss Fund Douglas Coelho Arthur Cohen J.P. DeVillars John Douhan and William Rawn Donna Farrelly Nick Flynn Pamela Foss Frank A. Days and Sons Margery Gans Tom Gilmore and Sally Walker Laurie Glassman Jill Goodman Charles Grigg J. Timothy Grobleski Diana Hall Adam Haslett Derek Howe John and Consuelo Isaacson Jay Jakubowski Mimi Jigarjian Terence Keane Paul Kelly and Ed Dusek Galway Kinnell and Barbara Bristol John Krajovic Wayne Lawson Richard Levy Maria Lopez and Stephen Mindich Stephen Magliocco Fred Marchant Margaret Evans Tuten Foundation Gail Marks Sean McCabe and Craig Jannino Kevin and Jeannie McLaughlin Albert Merola and Jim Balla Mike Minore Daniel Moon and Harry Collings Lise Motherwell and Bob Steinberg Ricki Nenner Fred Ramos and Bob Starmer Lynne Raughley and Peter Ho Davies Cary Raymond and Jon Goode Redel Foundation Sally Rose and Joan Lenane Robert Rosenberg Nancy Rosenblum Sandra Schafer and Bernard LaCasse Paul and Joanne Schnell William Schwartz Christopher Scinto James and Regina Shakin Wendy Shattuck and Sam Plimpton Daniel Sheib and Lynda Kelly Fay Shutzer Richard Sime Daniel Sullivan Stewart Tabakin Andrew Tobias Selina Trieff and Robert Henry 27 OUR SUPPORTERS (continued) DONORS $500 AND UP (CONTINUED) Marc Valois Susan and Gaetano Vincinelli William Walker Michel Wallerstein David and Jade Walsh Phoebe Dent Weil Ellyn Weiss Lisa Westervelt, Esq. Mary Wolfson Kenneth and Clarisse Zalcman DONORS $250 AND UP David and Jill Adler Aerie House and Beach Club Mary Armstrong and Stoney Conley Andrew Aull Audri Bazlen-Weglarz Clara Bingham Kathleen Biro Sarah Blake and Josh Weiner Daniel Bodner Erik Borg Vivian Bower John Brennan Derik Burgess Ronald Chapman Barbara and Sidney Cheresh Judy Cicero John Clark Kate Clinton and Urvashi Vaid Gray Coleman Jeff Conklin Michael Constantinides Greg Craig Ward Cromer David Cuniffe Bruce Danzer Barry DeCosta Kenneth Dietz Don Dirocco Janine Dowling Wendy Dubow Polins 28 Eric Engstrom and Richard Keeling Anthony and Martha Fouracre Martha Fowlkes and Frank Egloff Milton Gatch Paul Glover Roger Hanzes Paul Harding Myrna Harrison Bruce Heron Will Heron Mala Iqbal Jack Krumholz and Marjorie Jacoby Kevin Jennings Josephine Johnson Simone Joseph Eric Lombardo Edmund Luciano Margaret MacNeil Cynthia Malm David Maril Marc Marin Gary Marotta Tim McCarthy Hugh McLoughlin Helen McNeil Dermot Meagher Edward Moore Jacob Murray Steven Nason Julie Nave Erna Partoll Steven Pesner Phillip Green Foundation Sharli Polanco Pollock-Krasner Foundation Peter Portney Ellen Poss Sky Power David Quinn Brian Reagan Glenn Rigoff Charles and Nancy Roach Michael Roberts and Jay Corcoran Daniel Silver Richard Sime Craig Smith and Ian Bruce Emily Smith and Mack Ewing Gregory Smith Kenneth Snyder Andrew Solomon Somerset House Inn Claire Sprague Bonita Stewart John Stewart and Sharon Stoliaroff Barbara Torrey Kathleen VanGorder Bruce Van Dusen Village Care Jeffrey Wade Kristen Wainwright Michael Walczak Scott Warner Carol Warshawsky Michael Wasserman Howard Weisman Leora Werthenschlag Gail Williams Julie Williams Lisa Yuskavage DONORS UP TO $250 Alyson Adler Sandy Anderson Jason Andrew Stuart Anthony John Argos Bruce Aufhammer Susan Austrian Barbara Baker Curtis Balom Hilary Bamford Janice Barcone Deborah Barry Carl Bazil Mary Behrens David Beitzel 29 OUR SUPPORTERS Our Fellows 30 (continued) Barbara Bell Jerry Bernhard Carla Bettano and Laurie Glassman Michael Biddle Sophie Black Kate Blehm Amy Bloom Rebecca Blunk James Bonanno Linda Bond and Rick Brotman Sheila Bonnell Sarah Bowlin Anthony Brackett Richard Branson and Edward Keefe Shelley Brauer Lee Briccetti Laura Brody Diane Brown Susan Brown Margaret Burden Barton Burstein and Leslie White Chris Busa Susan Okie Bush Carla Carlson Valerie Carney Luceil Carroll Robert and Mary Carswell Amy Casey Cavallon Family LTD Partnership Claire Chafee Herrick Chapman and Lizabeth Cohen David Chilinksi Nancy Clark Billy Clem Jim Coffman Matt Cole Paul Connolly Elizabeth Cooper Mark Cortale G.M. Coxe John Crane and David Chambers Catherine Cryan Judith Cumbler Jaime Delmanzano Alison Hawthorne Deming Saul and Ellyn Dennison John Derian Peter Deveney Paula DiPerna Ron Dodd Bonnie Dolin Susan Donovan Tim Donovan Steve Downing Ellen Driscoll Margaret Dwyer Sean Eldridge Andrew Epstein Jennifer Epstein Joe Eron Bill Evaul Lauren Ewing Diane Faissler Vanessa Falco Jacqueline Fein-Zachary Judith and Carl Felsenfeld Meghan Finn Joe Fiorello Hatty and Bill Fitts John Flannery Jonathan Floe Catherine Ford James Fox Ethel Fraga Nancy Frane William French Michael Gallagher Robert Gardner Doug Gates Michael Gazala Michael Geer Joe Giangrasso Peggy Gillespie Julia Gilmore Bill Goettler Edward P. and Eugenie Goggin Ivy Goodman Linda Ohlson Graham Elizabeth Gray Jr. Kelle Groom Stewart Grossman Mary Gulrich Mark and Martha Hall Esmond Harmsworth Michael Harper Robin Haueter Tom Healy Nancy Hechinger Marcie Hershman Charles Hewett Jean Hey Nelson Hitchcock Lenore Hill Carole Horn Gail Horowitz Sharon Horvath Susan Howard Edward Hower Lisa Howley David Humphrey Elliot B. Hundley Major Jackson Mindy Jacobs Mary Jameson Joshua Janson Fleming Jeffries Diane and Tom Johnson Amy Kahn Cheryl and Jeffrey Katz Sam Kaufman Barry Kean Margaret Keenan James Keough Carol Keyes Barry Kitterman Michael Klein Marshall Klimasewiski Geoffrey Kloske Lynne Kortenhaus 31 OUR SUPPORTERS (continued) Gretchen Kunitz Kyla Kupferstein Rona Laban Bernard LaCasse and Sandra Schafer Marianne Lampke and Elisa Linnehan Patty Larkin Peik Larsen Kate Lear Jane Leavy Paul Lee Gemma Leghorn Edward Lehman Paulo Lemgruber Mary Ellen Letarte Rebecca Levin Brian Lewis Susan Lewis Thomas Lindsay Anne Lord Harvey and Kathryn Lord George King and Vanessa Lui Mathias Maguire Arthur Mahoney Doug Lester and John Mandeville H. Richard Maniace Holly and Mark Manley Natalian Mariano Barbara Marks Sandra Markus Kim Marrkand Carol Masshardt Cleopatra Mathis Edward Mattison Maureen McCoy Jay McDermott Hirschel McGinnis Jonathan McKown Maryjanet McNamara Lenore Meyer Daniel Minahan Nancy Modlin Katz Mary Moore Jeannie Motherwell Martin Mugar Joanne Naegele Alan Naylor Victoria Neel Network for Good Bob Nicoson Cathleen Noland Hunter O’Hanian Jane Paradise Judith Partelow The Penney Patch Richard Pepitone Mark Perez and Jay Bell Charles and Caroline Persell Heather Pilchard Susan Pollak Meredith Pond Daniel Posener Wendy Prellwitz Eric Price Provincetown Inn Anne Marie Rabke Victoria Redel David Reichert Martha Rhodes Mary Ann Rishel Diane Roehm Barbara Rushmore John Russell Jo Sandman Anne Sanow Jack Sansolo Stephanie Sassoon Salvatore Scibona Karen Schifano Jeanne Schmidt Wolfgang Schmidt Mel Schorin Lowell Schulman Christine Schutt Joan Seidel Jo Ann Share Linda Shelton Eric Shenholm Mary Shepherd Greg Shufro William Shutzer Harvey Silvergate and Elsa Dorfman Emily Sinclair Brenda Skarphol Duane Slick Myra Slotnick Mi Young Sohn Kathleen Spivack Peter Stansky Charles Steinman Jadene Felina Stevens Seth Stuhl Michaela Sullivan and David Rivard Jeffrey Swanson William and Joyce Tager Marie Thibeault Karen Tice Jennifer Tseng Sherry Turkle Oriana Van Daele Shelley Vermilya George and Melanie Vetter Victor Powell’s Workshop Mary Walker Rory Fitzpatrick and Mary Anne Walsh Bette Warner Mitchell Waters Nancy Webb Marilyn Weisman Anna Weissman Kathlene Welch Heather Wells Jeane Whitehouse Robert Wilson Our Fellows 32 33 OUR SUPPORTERS (continued) Eleanor Ann Winberg Anna Beth Winograd Ellen Wittlinger Katherine Wolf David Wright and Rocque Dion Bari Zahn The Summer Program 34 MEMBERSHIP SOCIETY DONORS Pam Ahlen Barbara Andrews Joanne Avallon Christopher Beardsley Jonathan Beckwith James Bennette Scott Blagden Bette Blank Elizabeth Bodien Erica Bodwell Vivan Bower Benigna Chilla Judith Beth Cohen Jeremy Cohn Martha Collins James Connors and Robert Rindler Sarah Cross Michael Crowley Stephen Dickinson Tom Donegan Jacqueline Fein-Zachary Lili Flanders Kenneth Fruhman and Frank Thompson Indira Ganesan Lucinda Garthwaite Michael Geisser David Genest Matt Harle and Deborah Davidovits Eileen Hennessey Donna Hunt Linda Illingworth Marjory Jacoby and Jack Krumholz Liz Janik Phyllis Katz Caroline Knox Jusi Komaki Diane Lederman Sally Luce Frank MacGrory Fred Marchant Natalie Mariano Janet McFayden Jeanne Meredith KD Mernin Margaret Murphy Kathleen Naureckas Paul Oberst Tom Pappas Susan Porter Nancy Reisman Dian K. Reynolds Alix Ritchie Ellen Rolli Andrea Rosenthal Karen Schifano Jennifer Schmitt Henry Seiden Carol Seitchik Ron Shuebrook Harvey Silvergate and Elsa Dorfman Richard Sime Michelle Spiezia Lenore Tennenblatt Vicky Tomayko Barbara Torrey Selina Trieff and Bob Henry Marian Van Soest Tabitha Vevers Joannie Wales Kellie Wardman Nancy Webb Mark Weinress Ellyn Weiss Phoebe Weil Lynne Yamamoto IN-KIND DONORS Spring Benefit 2012 ACME Fine Art, Jim Bennette and David Cowan Kortenhaus Communications, Lynne Kortenhaus Tim McCarthy Video The Phoenix, Stephen Mindich Summer Awards 2012 ArtCo Berta Walker Gallery Rick Grossman IONA Print Studio MAX Ultimate Food, Neal Balkowitsch Tim McCarthy Video Daniel Mullin Outer Cape Health Services Provincetown Banner Wildflower Mary Oliver Poetry Reading Mary Oliver Annual Auction 2012 Adam’s Pharmacy Admiral’s Landing Aerie House & Beach Club Dennis Allee Janet Amphlett Art’s Dune Tours Atlantic Spice Company Bailey Bob Bailey Richard Baker Jim Bakker Bay State Cruise Company Bayside Betsy’s Donald Beal Berta Walker Gallery Jim Bennette Big Daddy’s Burritos Birdie Silkscreen 35 OUR SUPPORTERS (continued) Bette Blank blu day spa Boatslip Resort BodyBody Varujan Boghosian Cid Bolduc Linda Bond Stephen Borkowski Paul Bowen Box Lunch Bradford Natural Market Bubala’s By the Bay Polly Burnell Café Edwige Café Heaven Cape Air Cape Associates, Inc. Cape Cod Gourmet Cape Cod Oil Company Captain John Whale Michael Carroll Central House Bar & Grille Chach Restaurant Ted Chapin Linda Clare Kay Knight Clarke Peter Clemons and Marianna Benson Jay Coburn and John Guerra Barbara Cohen Matt Cole Betsi Corea Cortile Gallery D. Flax Marty Davis and Alix Ritchie Louise Walker Davy Romolo Del Deo Sal Del Deo Devon’s Larry Dobens and Asami Onuki Dolphin Fleet Whale Watching Yvette and John Dubinsky Breon Dunigan Lauren Ewing Fanizzi’s by the Sea Far Land Provisions Nathalie Ferrier Joe Fiorello Bill Fitts Hatty Walker Fitts Forbidden Fruit Frank A. Days & Sons, Inc. Front Street Restaurant Gallery Voyeur George’s Pizza Peggie Gillespie Glaceteria INC dba Ben and Jerry’s Go Fish Jerome Greene Iren Handschuh Myrna Harrison Conny Hatch Robert Henry Sharon Horvath Hot Chocolate Sparrow Janelle Iglesias Joel Janowitz John’s Foot Long Hot Dogs Maryalice Johnston Barbara Kapp Karoo Kafe Zehra Khan Kiss and Makeup Cindy Kleine and Andre Gregory Lynne Kortenhaus Jack Krumholz and Marjorie Jacoby Marc Kundmann Land’s End Marine Supply, Inc. Tru-Value Peik Larsen Wayne Lawson Gemma Leghorn Lewis Brothers Homemade Ice Cream Irene Lipton Susan Lyman Stephania and James McClennen Mews Restaurant Joel Meyerowitz Andrew Mockler Mojo’s Muir Music Margaret Murphy Mussel Beach Health Club Napi’s Restaurant Pasquale Natale P-Town Bikes Anne Packard Leslie Parsons Pearl Restaurant and Bar Rosemarie Peele Richard Pepitone Perry’s Liquors PJ’s Family Restaurant Anna Poor Post Office Café and Cabaret Sky Powers Michael Prodanou Provincetown Banner Provincetown Fudge Factory Provincetown Gym Provincetown House of Pizza Provincetown Inn Provincetown Portuguese Bakery Provincetown Trolley Inc. Purple Feather Dessert Café Puzzle Me This Janice Redman Rice Polak Gallery Robert Rindler Lorraine Rosenbaum Ross’s Grill Marian Roth Ron Rumford Saki Restaurant Sal’s Place Salon 54 Schoolhouse Center for the Arts ScottCakes Summer Awards Celebration 2012 honoringTony Kushner and the Walker Family 36 37 OUR SUPPORTERS (continued) Seasons Secret Garden Inn Serenade Shor Home Furnishings Silk and Feathers Sips & Lix Roger Skillings and Heidi Jon Schmidt Spiritus Pizza Stanhope Farmers The Lobster Pot The Penney Patch Candy Store The Red Inn The Squealing Pig The White Horse Inn the wicked oyster Vicky Tomayko Selina Trieff Truro Vineyards of Cape Cod Victor’s Restaurant & Bar WA Bette Warner Wequassett Resort & Golf Club West End Salon & Spa Annie Wildey Willy’s Gym Tim Winn Cyndi Wish Womencrafts Mike Wright Bert Yarborough Yardarm Liquors, Inc. VOLUNTEERS Spring Benefit 2012 Co-Chairs James Bennette and David Cowan Lynne Kortenhaus Host Committee Neil Balkowitsch and Donald Nelson Chris Busa George Creamer Michael David Marty Davis and Alix Ritchie John Dowd Rick and Ellen Grossman Esmond Harmsworth Barbara Kapp and Paul Mitarachi Paul Kelly and Ed Dusek Robert Klein Gail Mazur Ellen Miller Stephen Mindich and Maria Lopez Dan Mullin Christopher Quidley Cary Raymond and Jon Goode Martha Richardson Nancy Rosenblum Tabitha Vevers and Dan Ranalli Ike Williams and Noa Hall Dick and Judy Wurtman New York City Benefit 2012 Tim McCarthy Video Provincetown Arts Other Events Angel Foods Old Colony Tap The Phoenix Provincetown International Film Festival Special Guest and Former Fellow Nick Flynn – 2012 Spring Benefit in Boston SUMMER AWARDS 2012 Co-Chairs Lynne M. Kortenhaus Daniel A. Mullin Vice-Chairs Kenneth D. Dietz Tom Donegan Betty & Russell Gaudreau Tina M. Trudel Host Committee Neal Balkowitsch & Donald Nelson James Bennette & David Cowan Ted Chapin & Torrence Boone Kay Knight Clarke Rob Cummings & Dennis Condon Marty Davis & Alix Ritchie Don Dirocco John Dowd Yvette & John Dubinsky Alan Duggan Michael Fernon & Ken Weiss Alison & John Ferring Lucas Garofalo & Jeff Swanson Andre Gregory & Cindy Kleine John F. Guerra & Jay H. Coburn Gene Kelly Paul Kelly & Edward Dusek Maria Lopez & Stephen Mindich Margaret MacNeil Jamie & Stephania McClennen Mike Minore Dan Moon & Harry Collins Margaret Murphy Dan Sullivan & Lou Ficociello Dick & Judy Wurtman Annual Auction 2012 Co-Chairs Hatty Walker Fitts Michael Prodanou Host Committee Cid Bolduc Matt Cole Mike Carroll Betsi Corea Marty Davis Yvette Dubinsky Hatty Walker Fitts Barbara Kapp Gemma Leghorn Margaret Murphy Leslie Parsons Michael Prodanou Janice Redman Bob Rindler Bette Warner New York City Benefit Co-Chairs Ted Chapin and Torrence Boone Host Committee Jeff Arnstein and Michael Field Richard Baker* John Cheim Michael Cunningham* Marty Davis and Alix Ritchie John and Alison Ferring Nick Flynn* and Lili Taylor Andre Gregory and Cindy Kleine Marie Howe* Janelle Iglesias* Major Jackson* Ron Kollen and Mark Wisneski Tony Kushner and Mark Harris Richard McCann Jamie & Stephania McClennen Albert Merola and James Balla Daniyal Mueenuddin* Sarah Oppenheimer* Howard Read Victoria Redel* Salvatore Scibona* John Waters *Fine Arts Work Center Fellow 38 Steering Committee Dana Boll Ted Chapin Elizabeth Haukaas Margaret Murphy Dan Roche Richard Wallgren Bette Warner Event Volunteers Naya Bricher Terry Catalano Dennis Clark Jay Coburn Matt Cole Alana Folsom Paige Gillies Bruce Heron Will Heron Leana Hirschfield-Kroen Frank MacGrory Lori Meads Madeline Miller Joel Orloff Erna Partoll Tracey Primavera Stacey Eichenlaub Jim Pipilas Steve Roderick Bert Yarborough Martha Zinn Board Committee Volunteers Tom Donegan Taylor Polites Tina Trudel Ike Williams Dick Wurtman Program Volunteers Paige Gillies Mairead Hadley Angela Martinez Margaret MacNeil Summer Interns Naya Bricher Alana Folsom Leana Hirschfield-Kroen Maddie Lesser Joel Orloff Sylvia Tomayko-Peters Summer Program Committee Dean Albarelli Linda Bond Peik Larsen Martha Rhodes John Skoyles Bert Yarborough Program Space Ted Chapin Conrad Malicoat and Anne Lord Provincetown Art Association and Museum Professional Services ACME Fine Art & Design, Jim Bennette and David Cowan Flower Power, Tim Callis Hogan Lovells US LLP IDPR Group, Cary Raymond Kortenhaus Communications, Lynne Kortenhaus Lamb, Mason, Bulger & Co. Inc Michael Prodanou Architect Collaborative Residencies Copley Society of Art Four Way Books Ohio Arts Council Tennessee Arts Council We have made every effort to provide an accurate listing of donors. We realize, however, that errors may occur in a listing of this length. If we have made an error regarding your listing, we sincerely apologize. Please let us know by contacting Michael Roberts, Executive Director, at 508.487.9960, x102 or at mroberts@fawc.org. We appreciate your help in keeping our donor files accurate. Please note that the preceding list includes gifts received between October 1, 2011 and September 30, 2012. 39 S E L EC T E D F I N A N C I A L I N FO R M AT I O N FINANCIAL SUMMARY GIVING SOCIETIES The following is a summary of the Fine Arts Work Center’s operating income and expenses for the fiscal year Oct. 1, 2011 – Sept. 30, 2012 based on FAWC’s 2011-12 audited financial statements. Operating expenses reflect depreciation, a non-cash item, of $115,218. OPERATING EXPENSES OPERATING INCOME (e) (d) (d) (c) (c) The WALKER Society THE MEMBERSHIP SOCIETY The Walker Society recognizes friends of the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown who have included the Work Center in their estate plans. There are no dues, fees or minimum gifts required for membership in the Society, and you may qualify in a number of ways: The Fine Arts Work Center Membership Society is a new initiative to connect everyone who appreciates FAWC’s diverse programs and events. Summer Workshop students, MFA students, former Fellows, Trustees, Advisors, patrons and enthusiasts have joined as members of the Membership Society to deepen their connection with and commitment to the Fine Arts Work Center. • Making a gift to the Fine Arts Work Center in your will (b) • Creating a charitable remainder trust or lead trust for the Work Center’s benefit (a) (a) (b) (a) Earned from programs (b) Contributed (c) Events (d) Interest $833,548 603,891 202,802 29,022 Total$1,669,263 (a) Programs (b) Buildings and Grounds (c) General Administration (d) Fundraising (e) Mortgage interest Total • Making an outright gift of cash or stock to the Work Center $679,361 368,161 157,374 101,350 62,157 $1,368,403 The endowment of the Fine Arts Work Center as of September 30, 2012 was $1,075,252. The Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Inc. is organized under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Contributions to the Fine Arts Work Center are tax-deductible to the full extent allowed by applicable law. A copy of our audited financial statements, which include the unqualified opinion of Lamb, Mason, Bulger & Co., PC, may be obtained upon request to the Fine Arts Work Center, 24 Pearl St., Provincetown, MA 02657 (508.487.9960). 40 • Naming the Work Center as the beneficiary of a retirement plan or life insurance policy The group owes its name to our founding patron, Hudson D. Walker, and the philanthropic support provided over the years by the Walker Family and the Archie D. & Bertha H. Walker Foundation. The commitment made by Society members helps ensure that future generations of Fellows will be able to live and work in a community of their peers at the Work Center’s historic site in Provincetown, one of the country’s oldest arts colonies. Benefits Society members receive invitations to selected Work Center openings and programs, including private tours and educational lectures especially for Society members. They are acknowledged, with their permission, in Work Center publications, on the website, and on a Walker Society plaque on public display at the Work Center. How To Join If you have already remembered the Fine Arts Work Center in your estate plans and would like to join The Walker Society, or if you would like to learn more about how to make a gift to the Fine Arts Work Center through your estate, please contact Michael Roberts, Executive Director, at 508.487.9960, x102, or email mroberts@fawc. org. Please also visit the Work Center’s website at www.fawc.org under Planned Giving in Ways to Give. Membership is offered at the following levels: $50 $40 Former Fellows, MFAWC graduates and Students (enrolled full-time in an undergraduate or graduate program) Benefits: • FAWC Membership Society decal • Recognition in FAWC’s Annual Report • 10% discount in FAWC retail shop and on books at readings • Membership Society card $100 Benefits: All of the above, plus: • $50 discount on Summer Program workshop or 24PearlStreet Online Writing class • Set of FAWC note cards $150 Benefits: All of the above, plus: •10% discount for ticketed events in Provincetown, Boston and New York City • FAWC T-shirt The Membership Society of the Fine Art Work Center is a dynamic community dedicated to enriching the future of contemporary art and literature. For more information, please visit www.fawc.org/membership. 41 OUR WRITING COMMITTEE LEADERSHIP BOARD OF TRUSTEES Hatty Walker Fitts, Co-Chair and Clerk Provincetown, MA Management Consultant/Foundation Trustee Yvette Drury Dubinsky St. Louis, MO Visual Artist Stephen Mindich Boston, MA Publisher, The Boston Phoenix Lynne Kortenhaus, Co-Chair Boston, MA Principal, Kortenhaus Communications, Inc. Visual Artist Alison Nichols Ferring St. Louis, MO Community Volunteer/Visual Artist Andrew Mockler Brooklyn, NY Visual Artist André Gregory New York, NY Actor/Director Dan Mullin Boston, MA Daniel A. Mullin & Associates Real Estate John F. Guerra Truro, MA Community Volunteer/Investor Jack Pierson New York, NY Visual Artist Major Jackson Burlington, VT Professor, University of Vermont, Poet Michael Prodanou Provincetown, MA Michael Prodanou Architect Visual Artist Ted Chapin, President New York, NY Visual Artist Michael Cunningham, Vice President New York, NY Writer Kay Knight Clarke, Treasurer Essex, CT Visual Artist /Corporate Director David Altarac Montclair, NJ Physician Neal Balkowitsch Boston, MA Caterer James Bennette Boston, MA Principal, ACME Fine Art and Design Marty Davis Provincetown, MA Visual Artist Tom Donegan Provincetown, MA Retired Marketing Executive 42 June Kelly New York, NY June Kelly Gallery Cindy Kleine New York, NY Film and Video Artist Wayne Lawson Columbus, OH Director Emeritus, Ohio Arts Council James C.A. McClennen New York, NY Investment Counselor Martin Michaelson Provincetown, MA Partner, Hogan Lovells US LLP Christopher Schwabacher New York, NY Member, Windels Marx Lane & Mittendorf LLP Lawrence Shainberg New York, NY Writer Janet Silver Concord, MA Literary Director, Zachary Shuster Harmsworth Agency Roger Skillings Provincetown, MA Writer Bert Yarborough White River Junction, VT Associate Professor of Fine & Performing Arts, Colby-Sawyer College Visual Artist Roger Skillings, Chair Salvatore Scibona, Coordinator Dean Albarelli Elizabeth Arnold Louis Asekoff Susan Choi Jaimy Gordon Major Jackson Jhumpa Lahiri Victor LaValle Zachary Lazar Fred Leebron Paul Lisicky Maurice Manning Cleopatra Mathis Gail Mazur Sarah Messer Carl Phillips Robert Pinsky Claudia Rankine Victoria Redel David Rivard Tom Sleigh A.J. Verdelle Joshua Weiner VISUAL ARTS COMMITTEE Bert Yarborough, Chair Janelle Iglesias, Coordinator Bailey Bob Bailey Polly Burnell Kate Clark Ellen Driscoll Lauren Ewing Ellen Gallagher Pat de Groot David Humphrey Mala Iqbal Maryalice Johnston Elizabeth King Jennie Livingston Susan Lyman Daniel Martinez Andrew Mockler Pasquale Natale Victoria Neel Itty Neuhaus Sarah Oppenheimer Jim Peters Lamar Peterson Jack Pierson Douglas Ritter Mira Schor Duane Slick Nora Speyer BOARD OF ADVISORS Barbara Baker Charles C. Bergman Stephen Borkowski Vivian Bower Chris Busa Michael Carroll Betsi Corea David Cowan Kim Cromwell Pat de Groot Annie Dillard Ellen Driscoll Michael Fernon Joe Finder Bill Fitts Carol P. Green Rick Grossman James Haba Noa Hall Robert Henry A. M. Homes Bernard Lacasse Florence Ladd Peik Larsen Fred G. Leebron Cecile Lemley Maria Lopez Conrad Malicoat Ted Malone Costa Manos Richard McCann Summer Program Workshop Elizabeth McCracken Dermot Meagher Victoria Neel Rebecca Okrent Peter Page Jarald Lamar Taylor Polites William Rawn Alix Ritchie Ted Rosenberg Nancy Rosenblum Sandra Schafer Michelle Souda Donald Stanton Gerald Stern Charles Storer Selina Trieff Tina Trudel Napi Van Dereck A.J. Verdelle Berta Walker Clarence Walker Ike Williams Donald Winter FAWC STAFF Michael Roberts Executive Director Bob Bailey Buildings & Grounds Manager Melenie Flynn Grantwriter Janelle Iglesias Visual Arts Coordinator Gemma Leghorn Administrative Coordinator Jill McDonough Online Writing Coordinator Mona Poor-Olschafskie Summer Program Assistant Salvatore Scibona Writing Coordinator Vicky Tomayko Print Studio Monitor Bette Warner Event Director Cyndi Wish Summer Program Director Dawn Zimiles Webmaster 43 THANK YOU Please make a gift to FAWC. Every gift makes a difference. Donate online at www.fawc.org or mail your gift to: Fine Arts Work Center 24 Pearl Street Provincetown, MA 02657 CREDITS Production | Melenie Flynn, Mairead Hadley, Janelle Iglesias, Gemma Leghorn, Margaret Murphy, Cary Raymond, Michael Roberts, Salvatore Scibona, Bette Warner, Dawn Zimiles Photos | Lauren Ewing, Rick Grossman, Angela Martinez, Annalise Mecham, Dawn Zimiles, and the FAWC archives Front Cover | Nicholas des Cognets, untitled, mixed media on paper, 2012 Funding for FAWC provided by the Massachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund, a program of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, administered through a collaborative arrangement between MassDevelopment and the Massachusetts Cultural Council. . In accordance with Federal law and U.S. Department of Agriculture policy, this institution is prohibited from discriminating on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, religion, sex, and familial status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) To file a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (800) 795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720-6382 (TDD). 44 FINE ARTS WORK CENTER in Provincetown 24 Pearl Street Provincetown, MA 02657 • 508.487.9960 • www.fawc.org