FOLIO March-April 2007 - Pasadena Arts Council
Transcription
FOLIO March-April 2007 - Pasadena Arts Council
March/April 2007 Volume 2 Issue 2 Folio The publication of the Pasadena Arts Council HOW SWEET IT IS 1 Sweet Relief Provides Assistance to Music’s Most Precious Resource—The Artist T he office is definitely on the casual side, with music posters taped to the walls and a big orange couch in the middle of the room; it could be the headquarters of a software startup or hip design group. Instead, however, the staff of Pasadenabased Sweet Relief Musicians Fund deals on a daily basis with serious issues faced by musicians all over the country. Established in 1994, Sweet Relief helps musicians of all kinds with financial assistance when illness, disability or age-related problems affect their ability to work or perform. “Musician” covers a wide spectrum in the music industry, explains Man- aging Director JoAnne Klabin, but the organization has specific criteria which qualify an artist for aid. “Musicians can be performers or songwriters from any genre—classical, rock, jazz, blues, the whole range— but they must have performed publicly, or had their music performed, on a regular basis for a period of at least three years. It’s about whether someone has made a contribution to music,” she notes. “We also help elderly musicians, regardless of medical condition, who are having trouble making ends meet.” Sweet Relief’s grant committee is composed solely of musicians, who understand the health and financial sacrifices artists have to make in order to survive as artists. The Above: Beck performs at a Sweet Relief fundraiser, courtesy Berliner Photography LLC; Below: Sweet Relief staff from left: Julie Klabin, Eric Layer, JoAnne Klabin committee carefully reviews each request and makes decisions based on the applicant’s contribution to the field, the factors that have contributed to financial need, the seriousness of the musician’s medical condition, and other resources the musician might have. How Sweet It Is INSIDE THIS ISSUE 5 Historic Herkimer Arms 6 ArtNight Pasadena 8 Source Notes: Life During Wartime The organization was founded by singer/songwriter Victoria Williams, and is guided by a board of directors comprised of members of the music industry. It is funded primarily by the music community through benefit concerts, auctions and albums. continued on page 4 The Pasadena Arts Council is grateful to these Artists and Arts Advocates for their generous support. Thank you! Sustaining ($1,000+) Contributing (continued) Member (Under $100) Avery Dennison Foundation Maureen Carlson Margaret Adams and Joel Edstrom Patron ($500-$999) Bill & Claire Bogaard Ken Carmichael and Charles Lewis Janice Carr James Aguiar and Randi Burke-Aguiar Walter Askin Walter and Suzanne Cochran-Bond Bill and Rosemary Barbus Francine Tolkin Cooper John and Kathy Berchild Lynn and Carl Cooper Alice and Joe Coulombe Roman Andrew Borek Paul August Bruins-Slot Kitty Dillavou Janice Carr Louise Dougherty David and Rebecca Ebershoff Joanne Eccleston Vibiana A. Chamberlin Sandy Chestnutt John Clayton Evelyn English Esmeralda Gibson Jean and Donald Freshwater Cornelia Fuller Kimberly and Julio Gonzalez Betty Ho Donna Gale Raymond Girvigian Stan Kong Jane and Robert Leese Nancy Guth Annie Haggstrom Roger Lockie Ed Low Diane and Craig Martin Jim and Ginny Heringer Seta Injeyan Cynthia Martel Judy and Steve McDonald France Hughes Meindl Bob and Arlene Oltman Sarah Smith Orr Billy Mitchell Mei Lee Ney Marianna B. Plott Clifford Present Gregory Norton Inez Chapman Pickering Estelle Schlueter William Schubert John D. F. Tarr, M.D. Deborah and D Paul Thomas Charles S. Tilghman John and Andrea Van de Kamp Carlton and Charlotte Varner Barton and Pamela Wald Scott and Julie Ward Bill and Janet Wells Ian and Barbara White-Thomson Robert Winter Maureen and Sherman Railsback Deborah Reed Wendy Roach Norm Schmidt William F. Schubert, M.D. Linda Ledeen Schwartz Mervyn Seldon Mary Ann Shemdin Barbara Simpson Kathy Soulek Gretel Stephens Tom & Laney Techentin Deborah and D. Paul Thomas Barbara L. Harvey Terri and Jerry Kohl Steve Madison Dianne M. Magee John Moran 2 Arts Advocates Peggy Phelps Alexandra B. Reeves Barbara Steinwedell Sid and Betsey Tyler Lyla White Sponsoring ($250-$499) David and Nadine Alon Debbie Babcock Olin and Ann Barrett Jane Caughey Sheldon Epps Jetty & Miller Fong Charles and Kathryn Hofgaarden Steven Kanter, M.D. Lena L. Kennedy Richard and Dolores Kroop Joyce and Tom Leddy Annamarie Mitchell David Spiro Sally Warner and Christopher Davis Contributing ($100-$249) Gillian Bagwell Rocky Behr Rosey Bell Elayne Bernstein-Landy Judith B. Brandt John and Louise Brinsley David and Judith Brown Thomas R. Cantwell Additional generous support from the Los Angeles County Arts Commission Gifts received through February 1, 2007 From the editor but the system has truly energized and enlivened my reading program. Having just devoured Suite Française by Irene Némirovsky and Ian McEwan’s Saturday, I’m now deep into The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson, a fascinating study of the 1854 cholera outbreak in London. ONE CITY, MANY BOOKS I grew up finding refuge and wonder at the Pasadena Public Library. Those cork floors, the blond wood tables and chairs, the delicious scent of row after row of books, books, books. I remember being a 4th grader and eagerly awaiting the start of the Linda Vista branch summer reading program; that year’s theme was trains. You started off with a little paper locomotive with your name on it, which was placed on a model railroad set up on a big table in the middle of the room. For every book you read, you got a railroad car to add to your train. All that heavenly reading, all summer long, and you got to show off your efforts to boot. As a way-too-busy adult, though, my visits to the Library had tailed off. There was a blissful period when my son Alex was small and we were weekly regulars at the San Rafael branch; I could be seen pushing the stroller home with half a dozen books tucked under and around my 3-year-old. But trips to the library just for myself—with time for browsing and dreaming—were becoming precious few. Happily, technology came to the rescue, and now I’m completely addicted to ordering books via the Library’s excellent array of online services. Check it out: if you have a library card, you already have an online account (enter the number on the back of your card; your PIN is the last four digits of your home phone number). Browsing on my own, I keep a list of titles from book reviews and recommendations from friends, order them up on the website and then they magically appear at the branch I’ve designated. A cheerful green postcard arrives in my mailbox, telling me that a title is waiting and that I’ll have a week to pick it up. When I do, it’s an amazing gift—a free book! OK, you do have to give it back, Here’s a great way to jump in: This month the Library kicks off One City, One Story (Pasadena’s community-wide read-the-book campaign), presenting The Distant Land of My Father by Bo Caldwell (see below). Order it up on the library website, and learn more about the book, related discussion topics, reading groups and special events at www.onecityonestory. From the Editor com. You can meet Bo Caldwell on Friday, March 16th, at 7:00 pm, at All Saints Church (free) to hear her discuss her book and her writing. 3 And don’t forget to support the Pasadena Public Library on March 6th by voting yes on Measure C. The measure will cost a Pasadena resident only about the price of a store-bought novel per year, and in return you get access to...all those books! -Terry LeMoncheck Anna, the narrator of this riveting first novel, lives in a storybook world: exotic pre-World War II Shanghai, with handsome young parents, wealth, and comfort. Her father, the son of missionaries, leads a charmed and secretive life, though his greatest joy is sharing his beloved city with his only daughter. Yet when Anna and her mother flee Japanese-occupied Shanghai to return to California, he stays behind, believing his connections and a little bit of luck will keep him safe. Through Anna’s memories and her father’s journals we learn of his fall from charismatic millionaire to tortured prisoner, in a story of betrayal and reconciliation that spans two continents. The Distant Land of My Father, a breathtaking and richly lyrical debut, unfolds to reveal an enduring family love through tragic circumstances. continued from page 1 When Victoria was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1992, she, like most musicians, had no health insurance to help defray the mounting cost of her illness. Consequently, she faced the possibility of not getting adequate treatment to maintain her health. Her predicament did not go unnoticed however, and as word of her condition spread, the music community responded with an unprecedented flow of support. An impressive array of Victoria’s friends and fans volunteered their talents and performed at benefit concerts in New York and Los Angeles. The concerts raised over $20,000 and inspired Williams’ admirers to assemble the Sweet Relief album, which features fourteen versions of Victoria’s compositions. 4 As Klabin puts it, “Victoria being who she is, she said ‘I How Sweet It Is don’t need all this (continued) money. Why don’t we start a fund for other musicians who might have health problems?’” The fund was established as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation and its first grants were paid out in late 1994. Medical expenses, alternative therapies, prescriptions and living expenses are considered when applications are evaluated by the Sweet Relief team, and dental and mental health costs may also qualify. Applications are carefully evaluated and Klabin, a lawyer by training, also works with applicants on other financial strategies to help stabilize and improve the artist’s situation. “Our help is temporary,” she says. “When someone qualifies for help, we decide what we can do for them, but I might also refer that person to three or four other charities that can either continue what we do or do something else that we don’t do. We focus on what is really important for survival.” All musical genres are represented in Sweet Relief’s roster of grantees but, Klabin observes, “the people who have it most together [for the application process] not surprisingly are classical musicians, and the people who have a more difficult time are blues musicians. For a lot of blues musicians especially, this is more than just a profession; some are subliterate and there aren’t other jobs that they’re trained for or are able to do.” Funding for the grant program has changed over the years since the first and second Sweet Relief albums began generating a cash flow. Initially it was relatively easy for the organization to solicit contributions from the recording industry, before it became more centralized and “closed ranks,” according to Klabin, when solicitations began to increase dramatically. However, thanks to the legendary loyalty of rock and pop music fans, Sweet Relief benefits from an auction program which currently provides nearly all of its funding. Here’s how it works: The organization contacts the management of a performing artist for a concert package donation, which may consist of a pair of prime seats and two backstage “meet & greet” passes; the package is then auctioned on eBay. Musicians as diverse as Dwight Yoakam, Barbra Streisand, Patti Smith, Aerosmith, Billy Joel, Beck, Pearl Jam, Melissa Etheridge are among the hundreds of artists and bands who have donated concert packages or otherwise supported Sweet Relief over the years. Keith Urban is “of course, the king,” Klabin states with conviction. During a recent concert tour, Urban chose Sweet Relief and a children’s hospital in Nashville as special beneficiaries, and provided tickets and meet & greet passes for every show on the tour—packages which were auctioned for as much as $15,000 each. Lucky fans were admitted to a VIP acoustic set before the show, conversation with Keith, a photo op and excellent seats for the concert. While the 100 or so auctions per year bring in funds for grantmaking and operating costs, Klabin and her staff have begun to consider an individual donor campaign. The challenge, as she sees it, is “how to approach a huge population of people whose common denominator is simply that they love music, and how to channel compassion into that.” In the meantime, Sweet Relief provides a way for fellow artists and fans to acknowledge the importance of music in all of our lives by giving back to the musicians who make it happen. HISTORIC HERKIMER ARMS APARTMENTS THREATENED By Merry Ovnick President, Society of Architectural Historians, Southern California Chapter Pasadenans and architectural historians in general are astir about Pasadena City Council’s unanimous decision to grant a demolition permit to Fuller Theological Seminary for the Herkimer Arms (1912), the only apartment house designed by Greene & Greene. The religious school wants to replace it with a modern chapel. Neutra scholar Barbara Lamprecht, in an open letter to the seminary, has pointed out that this commission saw the Greene brothers experimenting successfully with the new technology and aesthetic of sprayed Gunite, employing built-in trundle beds and kitchen cabinetry with a modernist’s eye to functional efficiency, and integrating an apartment house into the scale of a residential neighborhood. Architect and former SAH/SCC President Ted Historic Herkimer Wells emphasizes the significance of Herkimer Arms to understanding Arms Charles and Henry Greene’s body of work. This structure illustrates their post-Arts & Crafts period of innovation. Fuller Theological Seminary could well use a nearby underutilized church as its chapel and save Herkimer Arms within the context of its original neighborhood. Another possibility is to move Herkimer Arms, also known as the Parker A. Earle Apartments, to a new location—an empty or potentially vacant lot elsewhere in Pasadena. Wells notes Pasadena Mayor Bill Bogaard’s interest in funding adaptation to affordable housing. And Pasadena Heritage director Sue Mossman observes that city financial support for adaptive reuse—along with the $200,000 offered by the seminary for a relocation project—will be necessary, considering the high cost of land and house-moving, unless a funding angel comes to the rescue. The search is on for a prospective new location in a compatible neighborhood setting before the clock runs out. The city granted a 12-month stay on the demolition permit, until November 2007. If anyone knows of a Pasadena lot or of a way to persuade Fuller Theological Seminary to revise its plans, please speak up. Or go take a last look at this interesting Greene & Greene work at 527 E. Union Street in Pasadena. 5 About The Society of Architectural Historians, Southern California Chapter (SAH/SCC) is a non-profit organization of volunteer enthusiasts. Although its parent organization, the Society of Architectural Historians, is a professional organization for academics, SAH/SCC draws its members primarily from the community at large. The organization is dedicated to promoting the appreciation and understanding of Southern California’s rich architectural history, and offers on-site tours, lectures, discussions, and other events in support of its mission. Learn more at www.sahscc.org. This page, clockwise from right: Metro Gallery: Ray Kampf, Political Spin, ink jet digital illustration, 17 x 24 inches; Pasadena Museum of History, Sam Hyde Harris, Altadena, California, oil on canvas, 12 x 16 inches, collection of Harris Estate; The Pasadena Symphony: Jorge Mester, Music Director of the Pasadena Symphony, conducts a recent performance of Lalo’s Symphonie espagnole, featuring Russian violinist Ilya Kaler; Armory Northwest: In Darkness & Light, Craig Havens, Starball (detail), Los Angeles, California, 2005, Silver gelatin print, 20 x 24 inches. 6 ArtNight Pasadena A free event, Friday, March 9, 2007, 6 to 10 pm Come join this biannual Cultural Pasadena event! Experience the wide variety of art offered by museums and cultural institutions in Pasadena. Free shuttles will loop throughout the evening with stops at each venue. Park at any one venue and ride to the others. For more information on ArtNight Pasadena please call the ArtNight Pasadena Hotline 626-744-7887. ARMORY CENTER FOR THE ARTS Off the Wall/Silent Art Auction 2007 Over 90 works of art by Southern California contemporary artists are included in this exhibition. Visitors can bid on artworks at any time; final bidding for this silent auction will be at the Armory’s Off the Wall benefit Saturday, March 10, 7-11 p.m. The exhibition NewTown: Medical/Arts will also be on view. ARMORY NORTHWEST Darkness & Light This juried exhibition includes art by twelve Southern California artists in art installation, video, sculpture, painting and photography. The exhibition focuses on change in value (colors from black to white) as well as the psychological or emotive qualities light and darkness give to works of art. ART CENTER COLLEGE OF DESIGN WILLIAMSON/STUDENT GALLERIES reGeneration: 50 Photographers of Tomorrow In the Williamson Gallery, reGeneration looks at photography in the twenty-first century, and probes its changing relationship to the pictorial traditions and photographic technologies of the past. Also, experience the future of art and design innovation in the college’s Student Gallery. The Pasadena Summer Youth Chamber Orchestra performs from 7 to 9pm. BOSTON COURT PERFORMING ARTS COMPLEX Zebulon Projects An evening of live entertainment with an olio of jazz, blues, folk, classical guitar, a cappella doo wop, spoken word presentations, song, true life tales, fairy tales and tall tales—classical to modern day music and theatre, interactive and traditional entertainment. LIGHT BRINGER PROJECT Mentors at Metro A special exhibition in a unique space featuring artwork from faculty and students of the Art Department at Cal Poly Pomona University. Enjoy refreshments and view this collaborative show of sculpture, painting, mixed media and digital work by 32 faculty and students. NORTON SIMON MUSEUM OF ART A Centennial Celebration: The Life of Norton Simon Pairing informative text with rarely seen photographs from the Museum’s archive, A Centennial Celebration explores Simon’s many accomplishments in the business and art world. Also, last chance to view the exhibition The Collectible Moment: Photographs in the Norton Simon Museum, closing March 12! ONE COLORADO IN OLD PAS Armory Public View: Daniel Buren One of the world’s most famous installation artists, Buren has created a monumental artwork, titled Pergola—a long walkway covered with colored pieces of Plexiglas. Videos by four contemporary artists, including Brian Bress and Silvia Gruner, are on view as part of Armory DigitalForum. PACIFIC ASIA MUSEUM & PASADENA SYMPHONY Jade, Silk and Porcelain: the Materials of Asian Art Enjoy exquisite natural beauty in the debut of this exhibition; also, go beyond the clichéd image of Shangri-la and reincarnated lamas in Daily Rituals: Himalayan Art in Practice; and explore an all-new Korean Gallery. The Pasadena Symphony is going ‘on tour’... to Pacific Asia Museum! An ensemble of musicians will perform a medley of Asian-inspired works by classical and contemporary composers selected to enhance your museum experience, including Brahms’ Hungarian Dances, chamber pieces by Haydn, and, in between sets, information about the works and composers. PASADENA CITY COLLEGE Peter Alexander The College Art Gallery features paintings and sculptures by Alexander, known for his beautifully painted skies, water vistas and fetish finish surfaces. Also, live music, a 32video projection site-specific installation exploring movement, action and the struggle for power, as well as international sculpture in the George Boone Sculpture Garden. PASADENA CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Spontaneous Fantasia - 6:30 7:30 8:30 Experience classic music works in an exciting new way as musicians play music by Chopin, Saint-Saens, Bach and others while artist J. Walt Adamczyk draws with computer interfaces, creating gestural shapes and sequences that move and flow with the music. PASADENA JAZZ INSTITUTE Hot House Features the music of Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie with two world class ensembles playing opposite each other for continuous swinging sounds from 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm. Enjoy the jazz gallery, blue room and ArtNight After Party from 10:00 pm to midnight featuring the Paul Lines Trio. PASADENA MUSEUM OF CALIFORNIA ART Dark Metropolis: Irving Norman’s Social Surrealism Irving Norman is a Surrealist painter whose murals seek to “tell the truth of our time.” Also, view a new installation by JPL’s artist-in-residence, Dan Goods: The Hidden Light, experience Collector’s Choice; Hanson Puthuff, and a performance by Lineage Dance. Visit the terrace for a DJ set by Soup Kitchen Collective and cash bar. PASADENA MUSEUM OF HISTORY Who Was Sam? The Art of Sam Hyde Harris (1889-1977) At the Pasadena Museum of History, view 250+ works by the celebrated Southern California painter and commercial artist. Also, art demonstrations, workshop and slideshow by Pasadena Society of Artists, and a living history experience with actors portraying Sam Hyde Harris, Eva Fenyes and Benjamin Brown. 7 ArtNight Pasadena PASADENA PUBLIC LIBRARY CENTRAL LIBRARY Onochie Chukwurah Celebrate with Onochie Chukwurah’s African storytelling, singing and drumming, 6-7:00 p.m.; Flights of Fantasy folktale story theatre, 6:30 and 8:30 p.m.; learn to salsa, cha-cha and meringue, 7-9:00 p.m. and listen to musical performances by the Crown City Chamber Players. The Coffee Bar is open. This page, clockwise from left: Boston Court: Zebulon Projects’ production of Canta Luna, Danny Bolero as Federico Garcia Lorca; One Colorado:Daniel Buren, Pergola, work in situ for Pasadena, 2007, Courtesy Kamel Mennour Gallery, Paris, France; One of the arrtworks for sale in the Armory’s Off the Wall: Gregory Michael Hernandez, Hole in the Wall #21 (Angelus), 2006 oil on photos stapled to linen 15 x 24 inches; Pacific Asia Museum: Irving Norman, To Have and Have Not, 1980, oil on canvas. Source Notes LIFE DURING WARTIME WWW.POSTSECRET.BLOGSPOT.COM WWW.FINSTER.COM LEV MOROSS GALLERY BLUE – JONI MITCHELL, 1971 By SUSAN TURNER-LOWE 8 Source Notes I am sure I’m the last person on the planet to come across this, but I was really taken with Frank Warren’s Jan. 14 piece in the LA Times about his “PostSecret Project.” Warren is the guy who a few years ago started handing out postcards to people, inviting them to mail him their secrets. This month, he received his 100,000th. Lots of people out there with lots of secrets, it seems. The postcards themselves are cleverly designed . . . and often ruthlessly candid. There’s one on the Web site that reads: “Through various means many of which were highly unethical I’ve managed to acquire nude photographs of many of my friends’ wives.” And the postcard, of course, is a (eyes blanked out) photo of one of them. Wild. Not very nice. But wild. But wait. What really struck me about Frank Warren was something he said. “I consider myself an accidental artist. I have no artistic training or education. I live in a suburb with my family and have run a small business for more than 15 years. When people, including my wife, asked me why I was soliciting secrets from strangers, I could not even come up with a satisfactory answer for myself.” For me, this is the essence of art—that it defies explanation. Where does it come from? The late Howard Finster said he saw a vision of his dead sister in a drop of paint and heard the voice of God, and with that, he simply started painting— mostly religious pictures—because he felt as though the experience must have signaled a calling—to go forward and spread the word. Finster’s work arguably did more to spread the word about the intrigue of visionary art than perhaps it did about religion. By the late 1980s, I was hooked. I had a colleague way back when who taught English at Clemson University in South Carolina. She said, “Everybody’s a writer.” I responded: “How can you say that?” To which she replied, “Everybody’s got a story to tell.” Indeed. Especially these days, with body counts mounting, the polar ice caps melting, rates of obesity up, math scores down . . . maybe people are desperate to unleash some creative voice that provides for a bit of grounding. Maybe life’s overwhelming drama is causing them to interpret, analyze, transpose, quantify, qualify, deconstruct, reconstruct, fabricate . . . and then, share. Think YouTube. I love this notion of the accidental artist. Art as capriciousness. A few weeks ago, I trotted down to see Joni Mitchell’s exhibition, “Green Flag Song,” at the Lev Moross Gallery on La Brea. I had read about the show not in an art review, but in Megan Daum’s 12/6/06 op-ed column in the Times. Talk about accidental. I never get time anymore to read the op-ed page. And talk about accidental art. Mitchell’s big-screen plasma TV went on the fritz, and so all she could see were hazy forms moving about in a green syrupy motion. She grabbed a disposable camera, started shooting the screen, and, well, art was born. Her show consisted of 100 or so very large canvases composed of three panels each—many from what appeared to be screen shots from Iraq, Vietnam perhaps, and even World War II. This was not an easy show to visit, and in fact, so dark that on a sunny January day in Los Angeles, it was hard to step back out onto the pavement without feeling a bit traumatized. But if Mitchell’s point was to take an accidental moment in time and transform it into a punch-in-the-chest political statement, she certainly succeeded. A van parked across the street as walked back to our car, was emblazoned with, “We restore murals!” —and it was covered in a fabulous montage of very spontaneous-looking stencil and street art. And then a little voice started spinning inside my head: Oh it gets so lonely When you’re walking - And the streets are full of strangers - All the news of home you read - More about the war - And the bloody changes - Oh will you take me as l am? Will you take me as l am? Will you? I sang Joni Mitchell tunes (who didn’t?) all over Spain in the mid 1970s, a student at the University of Valencia. And then I fell madly in love with Goya and spent hours at the Prado Museum, slack-jawed in front of his firing-squad masterpiece The Third of May 1808. There is this accidental function of war, I now realize: it produces art. And artists, and writers. Even when the news headlines push us away, these are the guerrillas among us who call us back, and force us to look, and deeply. Into the mirror. 9 Source Notes Call it kismet, call it an accident, Susan Turner-Lowe is vice president for communications at The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. Now on view: Constable’s Great Landscapes – This Six Foot Paintings, through April 29. www.huntington.org Image from Green Flag Song, Joni Mitchell, courtesy Lev Moross Gallery LEV MOROSS GALLERY 962 N. LA BREA AVENUE LOS ANGELES 323-512-0151 WWW.LEVMOROSSGALLERY.COM The following cultural organizations and businesses are current members of the Pasadena Arts Council Thanks for your support! 10 Members Angels School Supply Anglican Chorale Armory Center for the Arts Arroyo Singers Art Center College of Design Baldwin Park Unified School District Blair IB Magnet High School Brehm Center for Worship, Theology & the Arts Brenart Café Gallery Caltech Jazz & Concert Bands Caltech-Occidental Symphony Caltech Public Events Chick Russell Communications Collenette School of Dancing Conservatory of Puppetry Arts Crown City Chamber Players Danielak Art Fine Art Digitography Fine Artists Factory Folk Tree Foothill Academy of Dance Foothill Creative Arts Group Fremont Centre Theatre Friends of Music at Pasadena Presbyterian Church Huntington Advertising Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens Intimate Opera Company John Moran Auctioneers John Muir High School Lanterman Historical Museum Le Studio Levitt Pavilion for the Performing Arts Marshall Fundamental School Metropolitan Associates Monrovia Arts Festival Association John Moran Auctioneers Nancy Hytone Leb Arts Management Consulting Norton Simon Museum Old Mill Foundation Pacific Asia Museum Pacific Serenades Parsons Nose Family Theater Pasadena Art Alliance Pasadena Arts League Pasadena Ballroom Dance Association Pasadena Center Operating Company Pasadena City College Pasadena Community Orchestra Pasadena Conservatory of Music Pasadena Heritage Pasadena Junior Theatre Pasadena Living Magazine Pasadena Museum of History Pasadena Opera Guild Pasadena POPS Orchestra Pasadena Presbyterian Church/Friends of Music Pasadena Pro Musica Pasadena Public Library Pasadena Senior Center Pasadena Shakespeare Company Pasadena Showcase House for the Arts Pasadena Society of Artists Pasadena Suzuki Music Program Pasadena Symphony Playhouse District Association Restoration Concerts-Friends of South Pasadena Public Library Sacatar Foundation San Gabriel Fine Arts Association San Marino League SAPPA Shakespeare League Shumei Arts Council of America Side Street Projects Sierra Madre School Shumei Arts Council Southwest Chamber Music Sue B Dance Company The Bunny Museum The Music Circle The Next Step Tuesday Musicale Waverly School Westridge School Xiem Clay Center Board of Trustees Dianne Magee, President Gillian Bagwell Kimberly Gonzalez Suzanna Guzmán Barbara Harvey Lena L. Kennedy Stephen Nowlin Steve Roden Kathy Soulek David Spiro Leisa B. Vander Velde Advisory Board Elizabeth Loucks Samson, President Rosemary Barbus Richard L. Barr Roman Andrew Borek JoAnne Brosi John C. Crowley Evelyn English Peg Palmer Brett Perkins C. Anthony Phillips Edith Roberts John D. F. Tarr Mildred Menefee Wardlow Lyla L. White Robert W.Winter Executive Director Terry LeMoncheck Pasadena Arts Council Non-profit Org. U.S. Postage 65 So. Grand Avenue, Pasadena, CA 91105 phone: 626.793.8171 • fax: 626.793.5521 web: www.pasadenaartscouncil.org PAID Pasadena, CA Permit #146 Address Service Requested Mission Statement The mission of the Pasadena Arts Council shall be achieved by: • Encouraging the appreciation of and participation in the arts among community members and organizations. • Facilitating and coordinating communication among arts organizations and the community at large. • Recognizing community members who show outstanding promise or make significant contributions to the arts. • Advocating for financial support for the arts from public and private funding sources. FOLIO Editor: Terry LeMoncheck Editorial Assistant: Megan MacDonald Designer: Jenny K. Somerville Pasadena Arts Council Facilitating, Empowering and Advocating for the Arts Vroman’s Gives Back Vroman’s Bookstore generously supports many agencies in Pasadena, including the Pasadena Arts Council. Next time you’re in Vroman’s, fill out a Vroman’s Gives Back card and circle #21—the Pasadena Arts Council. Then, everytime you make a purchase at Vroman’s, one percent of the total will help support the Council’s programs and activities. Remember to visit us online and check out the Arts & Culture Calendar at www.pasadenaartscouncil.org click on “arts and culture calendar” on the left-side navigation bar