THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART ANNUAL REPORT 2002
Transcription
THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART ANNUAL REPORT 2002
AN N UA L R E P O R T 2 0 0 2 T H E C L E V E LA N D M U S E U M O F A R T THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART ANNUAL REPORT 2002 0-Cover.p65 1 6/10/2003, 4:08 PM T H E C L E V E LA N D M U S E U M O F A R T AN N UA L R E P O R T 2 0 0 2 1-Welcome-A.p65 1 6/10/2003, 4:16 PM The Cleveland Museum of Art 11150 East Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio 44106–1797 Copyright © 2003 The Cleveland Museum of Art All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be reproduced in any form whatsoever without the prior written permission of the Cleveland Museum of Art. Feathered Panel. Peru, Far South Coast, Pampa Ocoña; AD 600–900; Papagayo macaw feathers knotted onto string and stitched to cotton plainweave cloth, camelid fiber plain-weave upper tape; 81.3 x 223.5 cm; Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings Fund 2002.93 Front cover and frontispiece: As the sun went down, the lights came up: on September 11, the facade was illuminated with colored lights to remember the terrorist attacks in 2001. The Annual Report was produced by the Publications Department of the Cleveland Museum of Art. Back cover: Early Learning Initiative program preschool children on their way to classrooms to create a work of art inspired by American masterpieces 1-Welcome-A.p65 2 Narrative: Gregory M. Donley Editing: Barbara J. Bradley and Kathleen Mills Design: Thomas H. Barnard III Production: Charles Szabla Printing: Great Lakes Lithograph The type is Adobe Palatino and Bitstream Futura adapted for this publication. Composed with Adobe PC PageMaker 6.5. Photography credits: Works of art in the collection were photographed by museum photographers Howard Agriesti and Gary Kirchenbauer and are copyright by the Cleveland Museum of Art. The works of art themselves may also be protected by copyright in the United States of America or abroad and may not be reproduced in any form or medium without the permission of the copyright holders. The following photographers are acknowledged: Howard Agriesti: frontispiece, pp. 8 (left), 10, 11 (left), 29, 36 (right), 38, 42, 44, 73 (both), 80; David 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM Brichford: pp. 7 (left, both), 9 (top), 11 (bottom), 34 (left), 39 (top), 61, 63, 64, 68, 79, 88 (left), 92; Rodney L. Brown: p. 82 (left) © 2002; Philip Brutz: pp. 9 (left), 88 (top), 89 (all), 96; Gregory M. Donley: front cover, pp. 4, 6 (both), 7 (bottom), 8 (bottom), 13 (both), 31, 32, 34 (bottom), 36 (bottom), 41, 45 (top), 60, 62, 71, 77, 83 (left), 85 (right, center), 91; Alicia Hudson Garr: p. 85 (right, top); Diane Hansson: pp. 12, 78, back cover; Robert Mueller: p. 87; Randall Von Ryan: p. 45 (bottom); Deirdre Vodanoff: p. 84 (both); Kelly Williams: p. 82 (bottom); Shamar Young: p. 83 (top). 4 Board of Trustees 5 Trustee Committees 6 Director 10 Chairman 11 President 15 Collections 33 Exhibitions 43 Community Support 78 Education, Public Programs, and Outreach 93 Staff 97 Financial Report 98 Treasurer 1-Welcome-A.p65 3 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM BOARD OF TRUSTEES Officers Trustees Life Trustees Honorary Trustees James T. Bartlett, President James T. Bartlett Charles P. Bolton Ruth Swetland Eppig Quentin Alexander Mrs. Quentin Alexander Leigh Carter Muriel S. Butkin Ellen Wade Chinn Jeannette Dempsey Robert W. Gillespie George Gund III Michael J. Horvitz James H. Dempsey Jr. Mrs. Edward A. Kilroy Jr. Morton L. Mandel Joseph M. Erdelac Maxeen Flower Frances Gale George M. Humphrey II Anne Hollis Ireland Adrienne L. Jones George Oliva Jr. Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin Edwin M. Roth Robert D. Gries Mrs. John Hildt Hayward Kendall Kelley Jr. Robert M. Kaye Nancy F. Keithley Peter B. Lewis Frances P. Taft Dr. Paul J. Vignos Jr. Alton W. Whitehouse Sherman E. Lee Eleanor Bonnie McCoy Mary Schiller Myers Jon A. Lindseth William P. Madar Ellen Stirn Mavec Dr. Norman W. Zaworski Elizabeth Norweb Larry J. B. Robinson+ Viktor Schreckengost Michael J. Horvitz, Chairman Ellen Stirn Mavec, Vice President William R. Robertson, Vice President Katharine Lee Reid, Director, CEO, and Secretary Janet G. Ashe, Treasurer S. Sterling McMillan III Stephen E. Meyer Rev. Dr. Otis Moss Jr. Evan H. Turner Alfred M. Rankin Jr. James A. Ratner Donna S. Reid William R. Robertson Elliott L. Schlang Michael Sherwin Eugene R. Stevens Richard T. Watson Ex Officio Daniel F. Austin Betsey Bell Helen Cherry Katharine Lee Reid Visitors are enthralled by an exhibition of photographs given to the museum over the past 10 years. + deceased 4 1-Welcome-A.p65 4 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM TRUSTEE COMMITTEES Accessions Advancement Elliott L. Schlang, Chair Donna S. Reid, Chair Quentin Alexander Mrs. Quentin Alexander Robert W. Gillespie George Gund III Robert M. Kaye Katherine Bolton Muriel S. Butkin Jean and Walter Caldwell Mrs. John Hildt Jon A. Lindseth Rev. Dr. Otis Moss Jr. Elliott L. Schlang Helen Forbes Fields Marguerite B. Humphrey Robert H. Jackson Mrs. Edward A. Kilroy Jr. Mary S. Myers Sharon Patton James T. Bartlett, ex officio Michael J. Horvitz, ex officio Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio African American Advisory Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin Edwin M. Roth Adrienne L. Jones, Chair Montrie Rucker Adams Mark Schwartz Eugene R. Stevens Frances P. Taft June S. Antoine Emma Benning Al Bright Dr. Paul J. Vignos Dr. Norman W. Zaworski Margot James Copeland James Crosby James T. Bartlett, ex officio Helen Forbes Fields Giesele Greene, M.D. Mrs. Bert Laurelle G. Holt Bracy Lewis Michael J. Horvitz, ex officio Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio Building Oversight Michael J. Horvitz, Chair James T. Bartlett Alfred M. Rankin Jr. Donna S. Reid Elliott L. Schlang Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio Capital Campaign Planning Ellen Stirn Mavec, Chair James T. Bartlett Robert W. Gillespie Education Finance Adrienne L. Jones, Chair William P. Madar, Chair Virginia Barbato Jeannette Grasselli Brown James Karman Robert M. Kaye Nancy F. Keithley Leigh Carter Sr. Maureen Doyle Ruth Swetland Eppig Jeffrey D. Kelly Jon Outcalt Donna S. Reid Debra Guren Mrs. Bert Laurelle G. Holt George M. Humphrey II William R. Robertson James T. Bartlett, ex officio Susan W. MacDonald James L. Mason Rev. Dr. Otis Moss Jr. Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio Michael J. Horvitz Anne Hollis Ireland William P. Madar Michael Sherwin Frances P. Taft Susan H. Turban Alfred M. Rankin Jr. Donna S. Reid Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio Dr. Paul J. Vignos Jr. Susan H. Wertheim James T. Bartlett, ex officio Michael J. Horvitz, ex officio Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio Collections Elliott L. Schlang, Chair Charles P. Bolton George Gund III Robert M. Kaye Nancy F. Keithley Jon A. Lindseth Executive James T. Bartlett, Chair Ellen Stirn Mavec Alfred M. Rankin Jr. Donna S. Reid Alfred M. Rankin Jr., Chair Anne Hollis Ireland Mrs. Edward A. Kilroy Jr. Eugene R. Stevens James T. Bartlett, ex officio Sharon Patton Greg Reese Lawrence Simpson Michael J. Horvitz, ex officio William R. Robertson Michael J. Horvitz, ex officio Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio William P. Madar William R. Robertson Andrew Rayburn James T. Bartlett, ex officio Michael J. Horvitz, ex officio Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio A. Grace Lee Mims Steven A. Minter Rev. Dr. Otis Moss Jr. James T. Bartlett, Chair Michael J. Horvitz Jeffrey E. Christian Dr. Delos M. Cosgrove III Jennie S. Hwang Trevor Jones Joseph P. Keithley Anne Hollis Ireland Jon A. Lindseth William P. Madar Ellen Stirn Mavec Alfred M. Rankin Jr. Donna S. Reid Compensation Information Technology Bruce V. Mavec, Chair Franklin Martin Reverend Marvin McMickle Andrew Venable Michael J. Horvitz, ex officio Legislative Affairs Jon A. Lindseth, Chair Charles P. Bolton George M. Humphrey II William P. Madar Ellen Stirn Mavec Rev. Dr. Otis Moss Jr. Donna S. Reid Elliott L. Schlang Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio Trustees William R. Robertson, Chair Robert W. Gillespie Adrienne L. Jones Jon A. Lindseth Ellen Stirn Mavec Michael Sherwin Richard T. Watson James T. Bartlett, ex officio Michael J. Horvitz, ex officio Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio Investment S. Sterling McMillan III James A. Ratner Robert S. Reitman William R. Robertson Elliott L. Schlang Richard T. Watson James T. Bartlett, ex officio Michael J. Horvitz, ex officio Katharine Lee Reid, ex officio 5 1-Welcome-A.p65 5 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM DIRECTOR The museum’s original marble building emerged from scaffolding in 2002, cleaned to a gorgeous soft white. At night the building glows. This first stage of the effort to renew and add to our facilities also included relandscaping the terraces and walkways around the museum and, in collaboration with the Fine Arts Garden Commission, restoring the fountain, walkways, and stairs of the city-owned lagoon and gardens—a complex long known as Wade Park that was designed by the firm of the great l9thcentury landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted. An evening ceremony in late May inaugurating the new exterior lighting scheme reminded us of the elegance of our most remarkable setting and how the generosity of our “It’s exhilarating—and also humbling—to be making the transition from this long period during which we gathered so much information and opinion from so many in our community, into this new phase of actually getting ready to break ground and start building.” –Katharine Lee Reid founders and today’s donors has contributed to the high standards of this region’s great cultural treasures. The restoration of the 1916 building and Fine Arts Garden is only one element in our vision for the future. The priorities identified in the strategic plan of 1996—to clarify the gallery structure, to expand and improve spaces for the display, storage, and conservation of works of art, and to enhance public circulation areas both inside and outside the museum—were used to create a facilities master plan in 1999, which identified the approximate Director Katharine Lee Reid and museum curators review expansion plan design proposals. 6 1-Welcome-A.p65 6 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM amount of new space needed to meet our objectives and suggested efficient spatial adjacencies. In 2001, we took the next step with the appointment of Rafael Viñoly as the architect of a museum expansion project. He won the job because he was able to reconcile two motivations—to preserve and restore cherished architecture while questioning and redefining essential functional arrangements—in a coherent vision for the future with a renewed museum complex. In 2002, the architect’s vision gained form and nuance as he and the museum worked together to gather opinions from many important communities: the public, art educators and students, University Circle neighbors, civic leaders, architects and planners, and museum members, staff, and trustees. A pivotal event in that process was the fourth in a yearlong series of free public forums, organized by Cleveland Public Art, in which Rafael Viñoly shared his concepts with about 1,000 attendees. The City of Cleveland’s Spirit Weekend drew diverse crowds to cultural institutions all over town. That effort has paid off in significant and tangible ways. The plan clarifies the gallery structure while allowing visitors more freedom to define how they choose to experience the various parts of the Docent Gail Calfee leads a highlights tour. 7 1-Welcome-A.p65 7 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM collection. A number of new “interpretation galleries” allow the presentation of special topics in a concise, in-depth manner. The gallery settings for all are improved and better connected. A grand new courtyard provides a much-needed central point of orientation as well as dramatic and gracious convening space. Outside the museum, the effect of the expansion on the surrounding neighborhood will be dramatic. The design treats the southern facade as a focal point, celebrating the iconic position that the view across the Fine Arts In September, the museum welcomed Dr. Charles L. Venable as deputy director for collections and programs. In his distinguished career at the Dallas Museum of Art, he was deputy director and chief curator as well as interim director. Lagoon has come to enjoy over the years. The museum will open itself to the west, facing the city of Cleveland with banks of windows looking out from the galleries and restaurant above the wooded hillside. The 1971 Marcel Breuer building, also preserved in the expansion plan, is alluded to by striped motifs in the materials of the new construction. The new construction makes ample use of glass, giving the structure a quality museum architecture has often lacked: openness. Visitors inside the museum will be able to see out, and passersby outside will be able to see in. This transcendence of barriers between “inside” and “outside” is symbolic of the strengthening bond between the museum and its community. The museum is not only a major civic asset to its neighborhood and to northern Ohio, it is also part of a broader arts and cultural community that brings more than a billion dollars into the regional economy each year and adds in Henry H. Hawley, the man most responsible for building the museum’s remarkable collection of decorative arts and sculpture, retired in December after 42 years of stellar service. 8 1-Welcome-A.p65 8 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM A Community Arts character struts its stuff at the 2002 Chalk Festival in September. immeasurable ways to the quality of life in Cleveland. Regardless of economic status, race, national orgin, or age, the museum adds value to the lives of all. The museum has for decades played a leadership role in the community. In our new vision, the museum aspires to an even higher level, where the goal is not only to improve an already great museum, but to play a key role in forging a great future for this city. This annual report documents the museum’s activity in a year during which we faced significant challenges even as we welcomed extraordinary opportunities. As always, the museum staff and its supporters responded Cleveland Mayor Jane L. Campbell (right) joined James T. Bartlett, Laurie D’Angelo, and Susan Stevens Jaros (left to right) in the directors ensemble for Parade the Circle Celebration 2002. with inspired efforts that have made it possible for us to keep our eye on the bright and colorful future before us. I invite all to join us as we work to make our vision for Cleveland—the museum and the place—the vibrant reality it deserves to be. Katharine Lee Reid Director 9 1-Welcome-A.p65 9 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM CHAIRMAN The initial phase of the museum’s renovation and expansion project was the three-year restoration of the 1916 building and the surrounding terraces. The first time the sun shone on the newly cleaned facade, the effect was dazzling. As the work progressed and the terraces were rebuilt with new marble stonework (over a comprehensive underground drainage system), that effect grew even more dramatic. Finally, the construction fence came down and everyone could once again enjoy this lovely space—now fully accessible to the disabled. The many sculptures that had spent much of the past three years being cleaned and restored in the conservation labs were reinstalled in improved outdoor settings. The addition of a number of marble benches encourages those strolling through to pause for a bit and enjoy the idyllic environment. During the summer and fall, the final elements of a beautifully conceived landscaping plan were put in place, and the restoration was complete. The wonderful results of this undertaking have been extremely gratifying to everyone involved. We now move on to the next phase: preparing to build. While the grand vision of Rafael Viñoly’s design is inspiring to us all, I wish to point out that not only the big things create success at this museum. The year 2002 was remarkable for the cumulative effect of many smaller things done by museum supporters and staff members. Even in difficult economic circumstances in our region and in the world, the museum finished the year with its budget slightly in the black. This was possible thanks to the conscientious effort of the entire staff to find ways to do more with less, and to the continued generosity of our supporters, who despite the financial uncertainty found ways to help guarantee the museum’s continued strength. I believe this kind of collective commitment to the museum and its community will fuel our success tomorrow. Our deepest thanks go to all who have contributed in ways great and small to the life of this museum over the years. The legacy of this commitment will truly be a treasure for future generations to enjoy. Michael J. Horvitz Chairman 10 1-Welcome-A.p65 10 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM PRESIDENT Katharine and Michael in their remarks provide an overview of 2002 and comment on the exciting plans unfolding for the transformation of our physical space. I can add little to their observations other than to re-emphasize the quality and depth of the support we have received from so many quarters. Our trustees have unanimously endorsed each step of our building project from—the selection of Rafael Viñoly right through the conceptual design phase, our current status. Katharine Reid and her excellent staff have provided vital insights and suggestions about such important matters as the positioning and sequencing of gallery space, the nature and location of visitor amenities, and so much more, all the while maintaining tight controls over operations. Rafael and his team have been resourceful and responsive to our needs, working tirelessly with our staff to get the details right, details that ultimately must be worked through correctly in order to translate a grand concept into physical reality. And last but not least, the community has responded wonderfully to our invitation to include everyone in an open process of designing Cleveland’s new museum. This outpouring of support and solid professional input is critically important, as is the continuing support of our treasured donors and friends of the museum. We are embarked on nothing less than a complete transformation of one of the world’s great art museums and one of Cleveland’s most important civic and cultural assets. Without a broad base of support, it would be an extremely difficult if not impossible task. We are deeply committed to the success of this enterprise, for we believe the future Cleveland Museum of Art that Katharine describes so eloquently will have a lasting positive—if not electrifying—impact on the city’s future. This is a project that must succeed in order to signal that Elizabeth Catlett: Prints and Sculpture proved to be a broadly engaging exhibition. 11 1-Welcome-A.p65 11 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM Kate Hoffmeyer elicits questions from preschool students enrolled in our Early Learning Initiative program. During this yearlong session, children visit the museum’s galleries to view paintings and then create their own works of art. Cleveland’s immense cultural heritage is being preserved, presented, and honored to the highest standards. Properly executed, we believe our plan for a new museum offers the prospect of leading this community into a new era of cultural expression and fulfillment that will have a profound effect on how this city is viewed by the world. Much hard work lies ahead. So far, we have generated excitement and support that is heartening and thrilling. As we go forward, we will be asking for still more support and commitment to ensure we have the resources to realize our goal. We are confident it will be there. James T. Bartlett President 12 1-Welcome-A.p65 12 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM Ideas from the Community The museum expansion project attempts to do two things at once: provide the best possible setting for works of art and contribute to the most engaging and comfortable environment for our visitors. The process of shaping these intertwined objectives has entailed speaking with many people who offer a wealth of different perspectives on the role of this museum. Rafael Viñoly discussed his thoughts about the museum expansion in public forums that were subsequently available in their entirety on the museum’s Web site. The museum also helped arrange a number of small focus groups to gather ideas from the community. These groups were asked to participate so that the architects and museum planners could gain a deeper understanding of Rafael Viñoly points out details of an architectural model to museum curators. Students participate in a focus group designed to gather ideas about the museum experience that can be incorporated into the expansion plan. how different segments of the museum’s audience view the museum and the expansion plan. Between January and July, formally convened focus groups included tourism industry representatives, University School students (first to fifth graders), staff members of University Circle Incorporated, students from the Cleveland School of the Arts, educators from the museum’s Teacher Resource Center, students from the Museum Ambassadors youth program, the Board of Trustees African American Advisory Committee, representatives of Art House (a community arts facility in Cleveland’s Archwood-Dennison neighborhood) and the Artists’ Advisory Council, and members of the Cleveland Restoration Society, which concerns itself with architectural preservation. The thoughtful commentary offered by these volunteers was invaluable in refining many aspects of the design. A strong theme was a desire for hands-on family-oriented programming that would allow visitors an active involvement in a creative process while helping them to better understand the materials and processes that have gone into creating the works on view. Considering the relationship between the museum and its immediate surroundings, the value of strengthening the museum’s engagement with its residential and institutional neighborhood was noted by many. The ideals of openness to the community—both visually and metaphorically—were reinforced by the focus group participants, supporting the architect’s plans to incorporate glass in carefully chosen portions of the outer walls so that people outside the museum can see inside, and strongly affirming the idea of the museum as a convening place for a broad community. 13 1-Welcome-A.p65 13 6/10/2003, 4:17 PM Grant Wood (American, 1892– 1942). January, 1940; oil on Masonite panel; 45.7 x 60.1 cm; Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 2002.2 14 2-Collections.p65 14 6/10/2003, 4:28 PM Collections The museum acquired 193 objects in 2002. Each adds unique quality to the collection, but even among them a few stand out as extraordinary. Grant Wood completed fewer than 40 paintings in his mature style, and the opportunities to acquire them have been rare ever since the artist first came to prominence after the exhibition of his instantly iconic American Gothic. The museum has owned major prints by Wood, but not a painting—until this year, when, miraculously, the great 1940 composition January became available. Not only is this a stunning work in its own right, and one of Wood’s last completed works (he died in 1942), it also relates to a Grant Wood lithograph in the collection. Other major painting acquisitions included Oedipus at Colonus, the masterpiece of Fulchran-Jean Harriet, a leading figure at the time of the French Revolution whose career was stunted by his early death before the age of 30; Éva Meurier in a Green Dress, by the Symbolist Maurice Denis; and the Surrealist parody Le Déjeuner sur l’Herbre by Max Ernst. The decorative arts and sculpture collections were enriched by a late 18th-century marble, Figure of a Young Girl by François-Nicolas Delaistre, and a striking Limoges vase designed by Georges de Feure in about 1903. A small, elegant 18th-century sword from Switzerland joined the arms and armor collection. Louise Bourgeois’s 1984 white marble sculpture Blind Man’s Buff adds a new dimension to the contemporary collection, and Martin Puyear’s red cedar and pine sculpture Alien Huddle, 1993–95, familiar to many because it was on loan to the museum for a number of years, was officially welcomed as an acquisition, thanks to the generosity of Agnes Gund and Daniel 15 2-Collections.p65 15 6/10/2003, 4:28 PM Max Ernst (German, 1891–1976). Le Déjeuner sur l’Herbre, 1944; oil on canvas; 68 x 150 cm; Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund 2002.55 Shapiro. This addition simultaneously enhances the contemporary sculpture collection and strengthens the museum’s holdings of works by African-American artists. Another sculpture visitors will notice is Tony Smith’s Source, from 1967, a large-scale sculpture of geometric forms now on view on the southeast lawn. The museum received the sculpture as a gift from the Metropolitan Bank & Trust in 2001 but postponed its installation until the 1916 building renovation was completed. Jacques-Louis David’s 1813 sketch Cupid and Psyche provides an interesting foil for the large painting of the same title that has been a visitor favorite for decades. Jan van Goyen’s drawing Landscape with a Wainwright Mending Wheels by a Village Road from 1651 enriches the collection of Dutch works on paper. And Richard Serra’s Khora from 2000 does the same for the contemporary collection. 16 2-Collections.p65 16 6/10/2003, 4:29 PM Louise Bourgeois (American, b. France, 1911). Blind Man’s Buff, 1984; white marble on wood base; 92.7 x 88.9 x 63.5 cm; Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund 2002.29 17 2-Collections.p65 17 6/10/2003, 4:29 PM Anonymous (German). Pietà, 1435–50; woodcut, colored by hand with watercolor; 38.7 x 28.8 cm; Severance Millikin Trust 2002.4 An impressive group of prints included an anonymous German handcolored woodcut Pietà from 1435–50, now the earliest print in the collection. Also important are a gift from the Print Club of Cleveland, a double portrait lithograph by Johann Anton Ramboux, and an especially beautiful impression of Rembrandt’s etching and drypoint The Blindness of Tobit. A wonderful array of photographs joined the collection, with a notable group coming in a single purchase: The Charles Isaacs and Carol Nigro Collection of American Photography is a spectacular group of early American photographs whose acquisition provides a stronger cornerstone for the American photography holdings than could ever have been built through individual acquisitions, bringing it onto a par with the museum’s fine hold- 18 2-Collections.p65 18 6/10/2003, 4:29 PM Vessel with Deity Mask. Central Mexico, Olmec style; 1200–900 BC; darkware ceramic, traces of pigment; 17.9 x 16.5 x 15.3 cm; Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 2002.67 ings in early French and British photography. Twentieth-century photographs included works by Eugène Atget, Alfred Stieglitz, Gordon Parks, Female Worshiper. Crete, Middle Minoan III–Late Minoan I, c. 1600–1500 BC; bronze; h. 14 cm; Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 2002.89 Carl Chiarenza, Jayne Hinds Bidaut, and Abelardo Morell. The collection of art of the ancient Americas was particularly enriched by the addition of Vessel with Deity Mask, an Olmec-style ceramic, from between 1200 and 900 BC. This haunting ceramic embodies the remarkable inventiveness of Mexico’s first great art style. Several centuries earlier, across the Atlantic, a statue of a female worshiper was made in Crete. The small bronze is a fine and exceedingly rare example of the Middle Minoan III–Late Minoan I production between about 1600 and 1500 BC, and makes a wonderful addition to the museum’s notable holdings of small bronzes from antiquity. From Asia, notable additions included two 18th-century Indian miniatures, a 15th-century storage jar and a contemporary incense burner from Japan, and Mirror with Jade Disk Inset, made in China 2,000 to 2,500 years ago. Finally, the magnificent Feathered Panel, made in Peru between AD 600 and 900, joined the textiles collection. The conservation department, charged with preserving the works of art in the collection so that future generations may enjoy them, undertook a number of major projects in addition to its ongoing activity. The major focus in the paper conservation lab was on the research of past conservation treatment of the Cleveland impression of Pollaiuolo’s Battle of the Nudes in conjunction with the related exhibition. The research helped the curator 19 2-Collections.p65 19 6/10/2003, 4:29 PM Fulchran-Jean Harriet (French, 1778–1805). Oedipus at Colonus, 1798; oil on canvas; 157 x 134 cm; Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund 2002.3 20 2-Collections.p65 20 6/10/2003, 4:29 PM better understand the image and enlightened the conservation field with the nature of past treatments. The results of the research were placed on the museum’s Web site—the equivalent of 60 pages of text and 84 images, including magnifications of each. The department encountered unusual challenges in preparing for Into the Light, with its array of vintage (1960s–70s) film projection and video equipment and various experimental multimedia fabrications. Major paintings treatments included works by Gros, Titian, Girodet, and Rembrandt. During the year, the museum also loaned works from its collection to special exhibitions in about 50 other institutions in all corners of the globe, among them many of the world’s major museums, from the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia and the Kyoto National Museum in Japan, to the Musée des Beaux Arts in Lyon, France and the Royal Academy of Arts in London, to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. The collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art is a resource that is renowned and in demand the world over. But it resides here in Cleveland, so that anyone can walk in, free of charge, and stand face-to-face with some of the greatest creative achievements of all time. Mirror with Jade Disk Inset. Late Warring States (475–221 BC) to Early Western Han (206 BC–AD 8) periods; bronze with nephrite and turquoise; diam. 15.3 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Chinese Art (by exchange) 2002.5 21 2-Collections.p65 21 6/10/2003, 4:29 PM ACQUISITIONS Art of the Ancient Americas Vessel with Deity Mask. Central Mexico, Olmec style; 1200–900 BC; darkware ceramic, traces of pigment; 17.9 x 16.5 x 15.3 cm; Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 2002.67 Double-Spouted Vessel. Peru, Wari style; 500– 900; ceramic, slip; h. 20.3 cm, diam. 16.5 cm; James Parmelee Fund 2002.94 Chinese Art Mirror with Jade Disk Inset. Late Warring States (475–221 BC) to Early Western Han (206 BC– AD 8) periods; bronze with nephrite and turquoise; diam. 15.3 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Chinese Art (by exchange) 2002.5 Contemporary Art Louise Bourgeois (American, b. France, 1911). Blind Man’s Buff, 1984; white marble on wood base; 92.7 x 88.9 x 63.5 cm; Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund 2002.29 François-Nicolas Delaistre (French, 1746–1832). Figure of a Young Girl, 1787–93; marble; 170 x 85.4 x 49.5 cm; The Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund 2002.53 Allan McCollum (American, b. 1944). More Visible Markers in Twelve Exciting Colors, 2000; painted Hydrocal; 12 sculptures, each 4.5 x 10.3 cm; Dorothea Wright Hamilton Fund 2002.95.1–12 Martin Puryear (American, b. 1941). Alien Huddle, 1993–95; red cedar and pine; 134.6 x 162.5 x 134.6 cm; Gift of Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro 2002.65 Tony Smith (American, 1912–1980). Source, 1967; painted steel; 335.2 x 899.1 x 1036.3 cm; Gift of the Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company 2001.256 Decorative Arts and Sculpture Box in the Form of a Book. France; about 1865– 80; wooden box covered in leather with gilt metal enameled mounts; 8 x 58.5 x 47 cm; Gift of the Trideca Society in honor of Henry Hawley 2002.104 Chair. Designed by Jens Risom (American, b. Denmark, 1916–1977) about 1942; modified by Knoll Associates Inc. about 1946; birch, cotton webbing; 78.7 x 44.5 x 50.8 cm; Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Loughrey 2002.109 Sauceboat. England, Chelsea; about 1755–56; porcelain; 10.2 x 16.2 x 10.8 cm; Gift of the Foster Family Foundation 2002.73 Vase. Designed by Georges de Feure (French, 1868–1943); made by Gérard, Dufraissex, and Abbot, Limoges, about 1903; porcelain with color glazes and gilding; 25.1 x 14 x 10.9 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.15 François-Nicolas Delaistre (French, 1746–1832). Figure of a Young Girl, 1787–93; marble; 170 x 85.4 x 49.5 cm; The Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund 2002.53 22 2-Collections.p65 22 6/10/2003, 4:30 PM Carl Grossberg (German, 1894–1940). Berlin Power Plant under Construction, 1930; graphite, framing lines in graphite; 37.5 x 51.9 cm; Anne Elizabeth Wilson Memorial Fund 2002.7 Grace Hartigan (American, b. 1922). Untitled, 1959; oil with collage; 57.5 x 72.4 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.80 Friedrich Preller (German, 1804–1878). SelfPortrait, 1838; graphite; 21.2 x 17.1 cm; Gift of the Helen Greene Perry Charitable Trust and John L. Severance Fund 2002.56 Richard Serra (American, b. 1939). Khora, 2000; melted paintstick; 78 x 102.4 cm; Delia E. Holden Fund 2002.96 Drawings William Bailey (American, b. 1930). Untitled (Still Life), 2000; graphite; 33.8 x 48.2 cm; Gift of The Print Club of Cleveland 2002.117 Jacques-Louis David (French, 1748–1825). Cupid and Psyche, 1813; gray wash and pen and black ink with white paint and traces of black chalk; 16.7 x 22.4 cm; Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings Fund 2002.91 Till Freiwald (German, b. Peru, 1963). Untitled, 2001; watercolor over graphite; 76.8 x 54 cm; Gift of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery 2002.13. Untitled, 2001; watercolor over graphite; 228.4 x 154.8 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.16 Paul Gauguin (French, 1848–1903). Mother and Child (recto), 1870s; black chalk; Profile Bust of a Man (verso); graphite; 26.8 x 20.4 cm; Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hickox 2002.110a–b Jan van Goyen (Dutch, 1596–1656). Landscape with a Wainwright Mending Wheels by a Village Road, 1651; black chalk and brown wash; 17.4 x 27.6 cm; Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings Fund 2002.90 Ernest David Roth (American, b. Germany, 1879–1964). Gift of Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt. Fécamp; graphite; 20.5 x 20.1 cm; 2002.115. Plaza de Ponce de Leon, Sevilla; black crayon; 26.6 x 36.5 cm; 2002.113. Rouen Courtyard; graphite; 24.3 x 24.3 cm; 2002.114 Sevilla, 1920; pen and black ink with pen and blue ink; 35.7 x 26.6 cm; 2002.112. Street in Siena; graphite; 32 x 21.3 cm; 2002.111 Charlotte Salomon (German, 1917–1943). Dinner Party (recto), 1940–42; gouache; Dinner Party with Presumed Portrait Study of Paula Lindberg (verso), 1940–42; graphite; 29.3 x 19.9 cm; Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Whitehill Art Purchase Endowment Fund 2002.8.a–b Richard Serra (American, b. 1939). Khora, 2000; melted paintstick; 78 x 102.4 cm; Delia E. Holden Fund 2002.96 Greek and Roman Art Female Worshiper. Crete, Middle Minoan III– Late Minoan I, c. 1600–1500 BC; bronze; h. 14 cm; Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 2002.89 Indian and Southeast Asian Art Raga Suramananda, from a “Ragamala” series. India, Bilaspur, about 1750; ink and color on paper; 23.8 x 19.1 cm; Gift of Dr. Norman Zaworski 2002.116 Rama and Sita Being Taken to the Priest to Fix the Wedding Date, from the Ramayana. India, Pahari Hills, Kulu, Shangri Style IV, c. 1700– 1710; ink and color on paper; 18.5 x 28.7 cm; Norman O. Stone and Ella A. Stone Memorial Fund 2002.6 Rama and Sita Being Taken to the Priest to Fix the Wedding Date, from the Ramayana. India, Pahari Hills, Kulu, Shangri Style IV, c. 1700–1710; ink and color on paper; 18.5 x 28.7 cm; Norman O. Stone and Ella A. Stone Memorial Fund 2002.6 23 2-Collections.p65 23 6/10/2003, 4:30 PM Japanese and Korean Art Photography Storage Jar: Tamba Ware. Muromachi period (1392–1573), 1400s; stoneware with natural ash glaze; h. 45 cm, diam. 39 cm, The Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund 2002.66 Ken Matsuzaki (Japanese, b. 1950). Incense Burner; stoneware with applied and natural ash glaze; 20 (with lid) x 14.5 x 9 cm; Gift of Bernie and Sue Pucker in honor of Gerald P. Bonder 2002.61a–b Eugène Atget (French, 1857–1927). The Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund. Nymphéa, 1922–23, from Atget numbering series Landscape Documents #1196; albumen print, gold-toned; 22.2 x 17.6 cm; 2002.69. The Park at Sceaux (April 1925, 7 a.m.) (Parc de Sceaux [Avril 1925, 7 h. matin]), 1925, from Atget numbering series Sceaux #37; arrowroot print, gold-toned; 22.9 x 17.6 cm; 2002.68 William H. Bell (American, 1830–1910). Looking South into the Grand Canyon, Colorado River, Sheavwitz, 1872; albumen print from wet collodion negative; 27.5 x 20.3 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.48 Medieval Art Small Sword. Switzerland, Geneva(?) (blade: Germany, Solingen), around 1790–1800; hilt: gold with translucent enamel, blade: blued and gilded steel; l. 97 cm; Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 2002.1 Simon Bening (Flemish, 1483–1561). Single Leaf with Scenes from the Last Supper, about 1525–30; tempera with liquid gold and silver on vellum; wooden board; 17 x 12.5 cm; Gift of Bruce Ferrini, Pamela Ferrini, associates, and friends in memory of Matthew Ferrini 2002.52 Paintings Storage Jar: Tamba Ware. Japan, Muromachi period (1392–1573), 1400s; stoneware with natural ash glaze; h. 45 cm, diam. 39 cm; The Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund 2002.66 Georges Daniel de Monfreid (French 1856– 1929). Mater Dolorosa (The Virgin Mary Mourning), 1897; painted plaster, wood; 73.7 x 59.1 x 17.8 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.54 Maurice Denis (French, 1870–1943). Éva Meurier in a Green Dress, 1891; oil on canvas; 55 x 38 cm; Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund 2002.92 Max Ernst (German, 1891–1976). Le Déjeuner sur l’Herbre, 1944; oil on canvas; 68 x 150 cm; Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund 2002.55 Anne-Louis Girodet de Roucy Trioson (French, 1767–1824). Aurora and Cephalus, about 1810; oil on canvas; 22.8 x 16.8 cm; Gift of the Painting and Drawing Society of The Cleveland Museum of Art 2002.101 Fulchran-Jean Harriet (French, 1778–1805). Oedipus at Colonus, 1798; oil on canvas; 157 x 134 cm; Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund 2002.3 Grant Wood (American, 1892–1942). January, 1940; oil on Masonite panel; 45.7 x 60.1 cm; Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 2002.2 Georges Daniel de Monfreid (French 1856–1929). Mater Dolorosa (The Virgin Mary Mourning), 1897; painted plaster, wood; 73.7 x 59.1 x 17.8 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.54 Jayne Hinds Bidaut (American, b. 1965). Oriental Goliath Beetle (Goliathus orientalis), 1998 (printed 2002); tintype; ed. 5/13; 25.5 x 20.3 cm; Gift of Jayne Hinds Bidaut and Ricco/ Maresca Gallery, NYC 2002.146 Keith Carter (American, b. 1948). Atlas Moth, 1990; gelatin silver print, toned; 3/50; 37.1 x 37.2 cm; Gift of William S. Lipscomb in memory of his father, James S. Lipscomb 2002.147 Carl Chiarenza (American, b. 1935). Noumenon 503/401, 1984–85; gelatin silver prints (diptych); 50.5 x 79.3 cm (overall); Gift of Alisa Luxenberg in honor of her parents, Herbert and Marianna Luxenberg 2002.84.a–b Alvin Langdon Coburn (American, 1882– 1966). Grand Canyon, 1912; platinum print; 41 x 31.4 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.51 Thomas Eakins (American, 1844–1916). Crowell Children at Avondale, 1885–90; platinum print; 9 x 11.2 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.49 Emmet Gowin (American, b. 1941). Edith, Newton, Pennsylvania, 1999; gelatin silver print; 12.9 x 12.8 cm; Gift of Friends of Photography 2002.102 William Henry Jackson (American, 1843–1942). Mystic Lake, M.T., about 1870; albumen print from wet collodion negative; 23.3 x 50.7 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.47 Thomas H. Johnson (American, active 1860s– 1870s). Inclined Plane F, Delaware and Hudson Canal Co., about 1860; albumen print from wet collodion negative; 30.5 x 38.5 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.42 John R. Johnston (American, 1820–1872). Salted paper prints from wet collodion negatives; John L. Severance Fund. John R. Johnston with Painting; 20 x 14.8 cm; 2002.39. Mrs. John R. Johnston, before 1857; 18.8 x 15.1 cm; 2002.38 Judith K. McMillan (American, b. 1945). Optic Exploration: Poppy and Columbine (Papaver and Aquilegia), 1998 (printed 1999); gelatin silver print, toned, from x-ray film; 47.2 x 37.1 cm; Gift of Linda Butler 2002.83 Abelardo Morell (American, b. Cuba, 1948). Book with Wavy Pages, 2001; gelatin silver print, ed. 10/30; 61 x 50.8 cm; Judith K. and S. Sterling McMillan III Photography Purchase Fund 2002.12 Karen Ollis (American, b. 1958). Viktor Schreckengost, 2000 (printed 2002); color process print (Cibachrome); 50.8 x 40.6 cm; In memory of Janet Delaware Ollis 2002.85 Timothy H. O’Sullivan (American, 1840–1882). Albumen prints from wet collodion negatives; John L. Severance Fund. Iceberg Canyon, Colorado River Looking Above, about 1871; 20.2 x 24 2-Collections.p65 24 6/10/2003, 4:30 PM 27.3 cm; 2002.46. Sand Dunes, Carson Desert, Nevada, 1867; 19.7 x 27 cm; 2002.45 Gordon Parks (American, b. 1912). Gelatin silver prints; Norman O. Stone and Ella A. Stone Memorial Fund by exchange. Untitled (Malcolm X), 1963; 21.8 x 32.5 cm; 2002.72. Untitled (Muhammad Ali with Children), about 1970; 22.9 x 33.7 cm; 2002.71. Young Gang Leader, Harlem, about 1948; 22.1 x 33.4 cm; 2002.70 William H. Rau (American, 1855–1920). Hemlock Forest, Lehigh Valley Railroad, about 1895; albumen print from wet collodion negative; 43.2 x 51.8 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.50 Frederick DeBourg Richards (American, 1822– 1903). First Bank of the United States, Philadelphia, 1859; salted paper print from wet collodion negative; 20.4 x 15.5 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.41 H. N. Roberts (American). Francis Wayland Sherman at the Age of 2 Years 10 Months, 1862; albumen print from wet collodion negative; 18.6 x 13.3 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.34 Arthur Rothstein (American, 1915–1985). Gelatin silver prints (printed 1981) from Arthur Rothstein portfolio; Gift of Alan and Monah L. Gettner. Dust Storm Cimarron County, Oklahoma, 1936; 22.8 x 22.6 cm; 2002.82.1. Gamblers, Las Vegas, Nevada, 1947; 23.2 x 22.5 cm; 2002.82.6. Hotel de Paris, Interior, Georgetown, Colorado, 1939; 30.5 x 22.5 cm; 2002.82.4. John Dudeck, Dalton, New York, 1937; 30.5 x 20.5 cm; 2002.82.2. Mississippi River Flood, St. Louis, Missouri, 1943; 23 x 30.5 cm; 2002.82.3. Shoeshine Man, New York City, 1937; 30.8 x 22.8 cm; 2002.82.5 Fazal Sheikh (American, b. 1965). Rohgul, Afghan Refugee Village, Nasirbagh, Northwestern Frontier Province, Pakistan, 1996; gelatin silver print (printed 1997); 27.5 x 21.2 cm; Gift of Friends of Photography 2002.103 Albert Sands Southworth (American, 1811– 1894) and Josiah Johnson Hawes (American, 1808–1901). Medallion Portrait of a Woman, about 1850; daguerreotype, whole-plate; 20 x 15 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.30 Albert Sands Southworth (American, 1811–1894) and Josiah Johnson Hawes (American, 1808–1901). Medallion Portrait of a Woman, about 1850; daguerreotype, wholeplate; 20 x 15 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.30 Alfred Stieglitz (American, 1864–1946). Poplars, Lake George, 1934; gelatin silver print; 24.2 x 19.1 cm; Bequest of Dorothy Norman 2002.81 Unidentified photographer (American). Artist with His Palette and Brushes, about 1850s; daguerreotype, sixth-plate; 8.3 x 7 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.36 Unidentified photographer (American). Child with Drum, 1850s; daguerreotype, quarterplate; 8.3 x 7 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.33 Unidentified photographer (American). Dead Child on a Sofa, about 1855; daguerreotype, quarter-plate; 6.3 x 8.7 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.35 Unidentified photographer (American). Mother and Child, about 1855; daguerreotype, sixthplate; 8.3 x 7 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.31 Unidentified photographer (American). The Music Teacher and His Wife, about 1850s; daguerreotype; quarter-plate; 10.8 x 8.3 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.37 Unidentified photographer (American). St. Anthony’s Falls from across the River, about 1850s; daguerreotype, half-plate; 10.8 x 16.5 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.40 Unidentified photographer (American). Two Children with Toys, about 1855; daguerreotype, quarter-plate; 10.8 x 8.3 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.32 Céline van Balen (Dutch, b. 1965). Muazez, 1998; chromogenic process color print; 33.2 x 26.3 cm; Gift of Friends of Photography 2002.11 Carleton E. Watkins (American, 1829–1916). The Domes, from the Sentinel Domes, Yosemite, about 1865–66; mammoth albumen print from wet collodion negative; 39.6 x 52.4 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.44 Charles Leander Weed (American, 1824–1903). Yosemite Valley from Mariposa Trail, about 1865; mammoth albumen print from wet collodion negative; 39.7 x 51.7 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.43 Timothy H. O’Sullivan (American, 1840– 1882). Sand Dunes, Carson Desert, Nevada, 1867; albumen print from wet collodion negative; 19.7 x 27 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.45 25 2-Collections.p65 25 6/10/2003, 4:30 PM Prints Anonymous (German, 15th century). Pietà, 1435–50; woodcut, colored by hand with watercolor; 38.7 x 28.8 cm; Severance Millikin Trust 2002.4 Clinton Adams (American, 1918–2002). Color lithographs from Venus in Cíbola; 16 x 19 cm; Gift of Bob Stana in memory of Susan and Joseph Stana. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola I), 1968; Tamarind 2519; 2002.88.1. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola II), 1968–69; Tamarind 2521; 2002.88.2. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola III), 1969; Tamarind 2526; 2002.88.3. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola IV), 1968; Tamarind 2518; 2002.88.4. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola V), 1967–68; Tamarind 1731; 2002.88.5. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola VI), 1968–69; Tamarind 2516; 2002.88.6. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola VII), 1968–69; Tamarind 2520; 2002.88.7. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola VIII), 1967; Tamarind 1730; 2002.88.8. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola IX), 1968; Tamarind 2517; 2002.88.9. Untitled (Venus in Cíbola X), 1969; Tamarind 2522; 2002.88.10 Sybil Andrews (Canadian, b. England, 1898– 1992). Red Cedars, about 1975; color woodcut; 56 x 38.5 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.57 William Bailey (American, b. 1930). The Print Club of Cleveland Publication No. 80, 2002. Gift of The Print Club of Cleveland. Untitled (Still Life), 2001; 27.7 x 37.7 cm; etching, aquatint, and softground etching; 2002.118. BAT, 2002.119. State proof 1, etching, 2002.120.1. State proof 7, etching, 2002.120.2. State proof 9, etching and aquatint, 2002.120.3. State proof 14, etching and aquatint, with pencil additions, 2002.120.4. State proof 15, etching and aquatint, 2002.120.5. State proof 28, etching and aquatint with blue pencil corrections, 2002.120.6 Leonard Baskin (American, 1922–2000). Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre, 1998; woodcut; 27.5 x 18.5 cm; Gift of 21st: The Journal of Contemporary Photography 2002.145 Domenico Beccafumi (Italian, 1484–1551). Saint Peter, about 1547; chiaroscuro woodcut printed in four shades of brown; 41.2 x 21.4 cm; Bartsch 14; Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund 2002.9 Fred Becker (American, b. 1913). Brown Forest, 1965; color woodcut; 76.2 x 60.9 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.76 Norbertine Bresslern-Roth (American, b. Austria, 1891–1978). Blue Throated Warbler; color woodcut; 12.9 x 12.4 cm; Gift of Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt 2002.133 Remigio Cantagallina (Italian, 1582/3–1656). Naval Combat Represented on the Arno River in Florence, for the Marriage of Cosimo di Medici Prince of Tuscany, and Maria Maddalena of Austria, in 1608 (after Jacopo Ligozzi), 1608; two etchings; John L. Severance Fund. Periclemene (Lobster); 17.4 x 27.1 cm; Bartsch 36; 2002.21. Evrito Echione E Etalide (Evrito, Echione, and Etalide), 19.7 x 26.9 cm; Bartsch 37; 2002.22 Elizabeth Catlett (Mexican, b. USA, 1919). Magic People, 2002; color linocut; 25.7 x 24.4 cm; Gift of the artist 2002.64 Ada Gilmore Chaffee (American, 1883–1955). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: Sandpipers, 1935; linocut; 18.5 x 11 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77.k Oliver Chaffee (American, 1881–1944). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: 3 Central, 1935; linocut; 7.5 x 14.7 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77.d Edgar Chahine (French, 1874–1947). Gift of Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt. The Poor Ones (Les Pauvresses), 1902; etchings and drypoint; 11 x 22.1 cm; Tabanelli 83, state I/IV; 2002.131. State III/IV; 2002.132. Venice: The Gossips (Venise: Le Ciacolone [Les Bavardes]), 1922; drypoint and chine collé; 31.8 x 21.7 cm; Tabanelli 348, state III/III; 2002.130 Jacques-Louis David (French, 1748–1825). Cupid and Psyche, 1813; gray wash and pen and black ink with white paint and traces of black chalk; 16.7 x 22.4 cm; Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings Fund 2002.91 26 2-Collections.p65 26 6/10/2003, 4:30 PM Jean Baptiste Camille Corot (French, 1796– 1875). Willows and Poplars (Saules et peupliers blancs), 1871; lithograph with chine collé; 25.7 x 39.4 cm; Delteil 30, state II/II; Gift of Robert M. Light in honor of Louise S. Richards 2002.14 Robert Cottingham (American, b. 1935). Rolling Stock #42, 1993; color lithograph; 45.4 x 34 cm; Gift of Elizabeth Carroll Shearer in memory of Fred Schmidt 2002.143 Stuart Davis (American, 1892–1964). Two Figures and El (Sixth Avenue El, No. 2), 1931; lithograph; 28 x 38.1 cm; Cole and Myers 17; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.97 Albert Christoph Dies (Austrian, 1755–1822). St. Rocco Waterfall and Bridge at Tivoli (Cascata e Ponte di St. Rocco a Tivoli), 1795; etching in brown ink; 36.8 x 27.5 cm; Andresen 27; Gift of Susan Schulman in memory of Fred Schmidt 2002.105 Burgoyne Diller (American, 1906–1965). Untitled, 1932; linocut; 15.1 x 20.2 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.17 Edwin Reeves Euler (American, b. 1896). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: Provincetown Studio, 1935; linocut; 12.7 x 10.2 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77. j Paolo Farinati (Italian, 1522–1606). The Magdalen; etching; 20.4 x 14.5 cm; Bartsch 2; John L. Severance Fund 2002.18 Paul Gachet (French, 1828–1909). Six Etchings (Six Eaux-Fortes), 1895; Gift of Elizabeth Carroll Shearer in memory of Robert Lundie Shearer. Frontispiece; etching; 21 x 17.1 cm; 2002.142.1. Head of a Kitten (Tête de jeune chat); etching and drypoint; 13 x 10 cm; 2002.142.2. Notre Dame, Pontoise (Notre Dame de Pontoise); etching; 21 x 17 cm; 2002.142.6. Notre Dame Street, Pontoise (Rue Notre Dame, Pontoise); etching; 15.5 x 12.7 cm; 2002.142.7. The Thatched Bakery, Auvers (Les Chaumes de Four, Auvers); etching; 12 x 16.9 cm; 2002.142.3. Tréport (Le Tréport); etching, roulette, and drypoint; 8.7 x 15.6 cm; 2002.142.4. Vesnots, Auvers on the Oise (Les Vesnots, Auvers sur Oise); etching; 12 x 17 cm; 2002.142.5 William Giles (British, 1872–1939). Swans and Cygnets, 1911; color woodcut; 30.9 x 38.7 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.79 John Grillo (American, b. 1917). Untitled Abstraction, 1955; woodcut; 26.6 x 17.7 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.27 Katsunori Hamanishi (Japanese, b. 1949). Division-Work No. 100, 2002; mezzotint with gold leaf; 59.7 x 45.1 cm (left); 59.6 x 44.7 cm (center); 59.7 x 45.1 cm (right); Gift of Gloria and Leon Plevin in memory of Fred Schmidt 2002.106.a–c Yosuke Imai (Japanese, b. 1965). A Boat for the East “Mebaru, Port,” 2000; color etching, aquatint, and chine collé; 19.9 x 20 cm (plate 1); 8 x 8.1 cm (plate 2); Mr. and Mrs. William E. Ward Collection Fund 2002.98 Charles Kaeselau (American, b. Sweden, 1889). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: Wellfleet Oysterman, 1935; linocut; 13.2 x 9.5 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77.c Daniel Kelly (American, b. 1947). Nene, 2002; woodcut, colored by hand with white paint; 77.5 x 94 cm; Gift of Gloria and Leon Plevin in memory of Fred Schmidt 2002.107 Otto Karl Knaths (American, 1891–1971). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: Gathering Quahogs, 1935; linocut; 14.2 x 8.9 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77.b Blanche Lazzell (American, 1878–1956). Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings. Four Petunias, 1945; color monotype; 20.3 x 15 cm; 2002.59. A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: My Studio, 1935; linocut; 13.7 x 10.1 cm; 2002.77.e Tod Lindenmuth (American, 1855–1976). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: Fisherman, 1935; linocut; 13.7 x 9.7 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77. a El Lissitzky (Eleazar Markovich Lissitzky) (Russian, 1890–1941). For the Voice (Dlia golosa), 1923; book containing 61 pages with letterpress designs printed in red and black ink, cover printed in red and black ink on orange paper; 18.5 x 13 cm (pages), 18.7 x 13.4 cm (cover); Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.60 Charles Wheeler Locke (American, 1899–1983). Tramp Steamer, 1939; lithograph; 23.6 x 31.2 cm; Gift of Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt 2002.129 Nat Lowell (American, b. Latvia, 1880–1956). Untitled (New York) etching; 30.3 x 21.3 cm; Gift of Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt 2002.128 Reginald Marsh (American, b. France, 1898– 1954). Locos, 1948; engraving; 20 x 24.9 cm; Sasowsky 232, state II/II; Gift of Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt 2002.126 Hiroshi Maruyama (Japanese, b. 1953). Blue Shadow-Lattice, 2000; color woodcut; 40.6 x 50.6 cm (irregular); Mr. and Mrs. William E. Ward Collection Fund 2002.99 Robert McChesney (American, b. 1913). Untitled Abstraction S-2, 1951; color screenprint; 33.6 x 59 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.28 Mildred McMillen (American, 1884–about 1940). The Outskirts or The Fisherman’s Quarter, 1919; woodcut; 35 x 41.8 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.78 John Hamilton Mortimer (British, 1740–1779). Richard II, 1775; etching in brown ink; 39.9 x 32.4 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.58 Kyoko Murakami (Japanese, b. 1972). A-19 Door, 2000; color aquatint; 55.4 x 49.9 cm; Mr. and Mrs. William E. Ward Collection Fund 2002.100 Karl Ochman (undocumented). Times Square; etching; 27.3 x 19.6 cm; Gift of Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt 2002.127 José Clemente Orozco (Mexican, 1883–1949). Leaders (Zapatistas), 1936; lithograph; 32.2 x 41.3 cm; Hopkins 29; John L. Severance Fund 2002.25 Gabor Peterdi (American, b. Hungary, 1915– 2001). Arctic Night IV, 1965; color etching; 61.2 x 90.7 cm; Gift of Janet and Donald Fribourg in memory of Arthur Fribourg 2002.62. Muana Loa, 1969; color etching and aquatint; 109.9 x 80 cm; Gift of Janet and Donald Fribourg in memory of Marion Neumark 2002.87 Charles Adams Platt (American, 1861–1933). Cape Ann Farm, 1890; drypoint; 22.7 x 30.7 cm; Rice 113; Gift of Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt 2002.125 Gloria Plevin (American, b. 1934). Meadow Overlook II, 2001; color monotype; 24.6 x 24.8 cm; Gift of Michael Verne 2002.108 Johann Anton Ramboux (German, 1790–1866). Double Portrait of the Brothers Konrad and Franz Eberhard, Painter and Sculptor in Munich, 1822; lithograph printed in black and gray; 31.7 x 34.2 cm; Winkler 2; Gift of The Print Club of Cleveland 2002.63 V. B. Rann (American, 1897–1956). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: Low Tide, 1935; linocut; 12.9 x 10.2 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77.g Rembrandt van Rijn (Dutch, 1606–1669). The Blindness of Tobit: The Large Plate, 1651; etching and drypoint; 15.8 x 12.9 cm; White and Boon 42, state I/II; Severance and Greta Millikin Fund 2002.10 Ernest David Roth (American, b. Germany, 1879–1964). Etchings; Gift of Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt. Campo San Boldo, Venice, 1924; 23.7 x 26.8 cm; Whitmore 79; 2002.139. The Buttress, Ponte Vecchio, Florence, 1907; 22.9 x 20 cm; Whitmore 17; 2002.135. Doorway, Or San Michele, Florence, 1912; 30.2 x 20 cm; Whitmore 34; 2002.136. Pont Neuf Paris, 1914; 20.8 x 31.4 cm; Whitmore 58; 2002.138. Street in Assisi, 1935; 25.2 x 18.8 cm; not in Whitmore; 2002.134. Venice from the “Redentore,” 1913; 20.1 x 27.7 cm; Whitmore 45; 2002.137. Veterans, 1936; 30.2 x 25.1 cm; not in Whitmore; 2002.140 Jan Saenredam (Dutch, 1565–1607). The Annunciation to the Shepherds (after Abraham Bloemaert), 1599; engraving; 55.1 x 39.6 cm; Hollstein 24, state I/IV, John L. Severance Fund 2002.20 Jean-Claude-Richard de Saint-Non (French, 1727–1791). View of the Rotunda with Stairs on the Tiber (Vue de la Rotonde avec escaliers sur la Tibre) (after Hubert Robert), 1766; aquatint and etching printed in brown; 30.9 x 30.3 cm; not in Le Blanc; John L. Severance Fund 2002.23 Anthonis Sallaert (Belgian, about 1590–1658). A Scene from Classical Mythology; monotype; 12.4 x 9.7 cm; not in Hollstein; John L. Severance Fund 2002.19 Shelby Shackelford (American, 1899–1987). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: Winter, 1935; linocut; 10 x 15 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77.i Phyllis Sloane (American, b. 1921). The Steinbergs, 1970; linocut; 31.7 x 36.8 cm; Gift of Phyllis Sloane in memory of Lillian and Henry Steinberg 2002.124 Harumi Sonoyama (Japanese, b. 1950). d’encres m (Ink Cans m), 1979; color lithograph; 86.5 x 62.7 cm; Gift of the Cunningham family in memory of Peggy Cunningham 2002.141 27 2-Collections.p65 27 6/10/2003, 4:30 PM Rufino Tamayo (Mexican, 1899–1991). Butterflies (Mariposa), 1974; embossed lithograph; 56.2 x 76 cm; Gift of William E. Ward in memory of his wife, Evelyn Svec Ward 2002.86 Rosemarie Trockel (German, b. 1952). White Carrot, 1991. Gift of members of the Print Club of Cleveland and other friends in memory of Fred Schmidt. Portfolio containing porcelain icicle, 52.4 x 6.5 cm; 2002.144.1; photograph; 23.8 x 17.7 cm; 2002.144.2. Ten photoetching, aquatint, and embossing: Sandstorm near Hoover Dam; 18.5 x 19.3 cm; 2002.144.3. 19thcentury Photograph Depicting March Wind; 20.2 x 18.4 cm; 2002.144.4. London Fog; 18.9 x 20.7 cm; 2002.144.5. Man with Lantern Guiding Bus in London Fog; 22.6 x 16.9 cm; 2002.144.6. Clouds above Landscape; 21.4 x 19.4 cm; 2002.144.7. Eclipse; 16.3 x 14.7 cm; 2002.144.8. Clouds; 17 x 17 cm; 2002.144.9. Clouds; 23.3 x 17 cm; 2002.144.10. Two Men in Snowstorm; 21.5 x 17.1 cm; 2002.144.11. Nighttime Sky with Moon through Clouds; 24.7 x 19.5 cm; 2002.144.12 Charles Turzak (American, 1899–1985). Man with Drill, about 1935; woodcut; 30.6 x 23.5 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.24 Claire Van Vliet (American, b. Canada, 1933). Gift of M. Lindsay Kaplan and Norman Eisen. Before Rain, 1973; color lithograph; 43 x 51.4 cm; 2002.122. Grey Cloud, 1974; lithograph printed in black and gray; 42.4 x 59.3 cm; 2002.123. Untitled, about 1980; paper pulp; 45.5 x 62 cm; 2002.121 Johann Anton Ramboux (German, 1790–1866). Double Portrait of the Brothers Konrad and Franz Eberhard, Painter and Sculptor in Munich, 1822; lithograph printed in black and gray; 31.7 x 34.2 cm; Winkler 2; Gift of The Print Club of Cleveland 2002.63 Agnes Weinrich (American, 1873–1946). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: Fish Shacks, 1935; linocut; 14.2 x 9.1 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77.f Neil Welliver (American, b. 1929). Stump, 2000; color woodcut; 76.2 x 76.4 cm; Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt Endowment Fund 2002.74 John von Wicht (American, 1888–1970). White Lines on Black, about 1955; lithograph with collage; 37.9 x 27 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.26 Grant Wood (American, 1892–1942). February, 1940; lithograph; 22.6 x 30 cm; Cole 17; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.75 Saul Yalkert (undocumented). A Modern Pilgrim’s Print Book: House in the Hollow, 1935; linocut; 12.6 x 10.2 cm; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.77.h Textiles and Islamic Art Feathered Panel. Peru, Far South Coast, Pampa Ocoña; AD 600–900; Papagayo macaw feathers knotted onto string and stitched to cotton plain-weave cloth, camelid fiber plain-weave upper tape; 81.3 x 223.5 cm; Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings Fund 2002.93 Rembrandt van Rijn (Dutch, 1606–1669). The Blindness of Tobit: The Large Plate,1651; etching and drypoint; 15.8 x 12.9 cm; White and Boon 42, state I/II; Severance and Greta Millikin Fund 2002.10 28 2-Collections.p65 28 6/10/2003, 4:30 PM The Return of the Thinker Rodin’s The Thinker eases onto a new perch on the south terrace. Aside from the sparkling gleam of the cleaned and restored south facade of the museum’s 1916 building, the clearest signal that the restoration of the original building’s exterior and terraces was nearing completion was the reappearance in May of Rodin’s familiar Thinker on a pedestal in front of the south steps. A close examination reveals a few improvements in the Thinker’s circumstances. First, the black marble pedestal that had been installed in the early 1970s is gone, replaced by white granite to match the stonework of the terraces. A bomb detonated in 1970 shattered the original concrete base, and the new base was designed to complement the statue, which was returned to its place with the bomb’s damage intact, evident in shards of shredded bronze where the figure’s feet once had been. When the museum was considering whether to keep the black granite base or build a new one, another issue that had been debated in the aftermath of the bombing came up again. The Rodin estate had indicated in 1971 that the museum could commission a new cast of the Thinker from the same mold as the original, provided the existing sculpture was destroyed. In 2002, as in 1970, the decision was made to forgo this option, however. Rodin’s philosophy was that a sculpture changes with time, and that everything that happens to it becomes a part of the work of art. The new base is a 15,000-pound block of solid marble. “It took a special crane to lower it into place and our entire installation crew of 15 to level it,” recalls Randall Von Ryan, associate director of architecture and construction. “A monolithic block holds up much better against the elements than something constructed out of pieces of stone. Everything out there was built to last a couple hundred years.” The sculpture was cleaned and treated by museum conservators, as were all the other outdoor pieces that populate the south terrace. Some made brief public appearances during the restoration project as part of the exhibition Conserving the Past for the Future and in an Object in Focus show. One improvement shows up only after the sun goes down: unobtrusive lights installed flush with the paving stones shine up on the Thinker, making his inspiring figure visible from across the Fine Arts Lagoon, day or night. 29 2-Collections.p65 29 6/10/2003, 4:30 PM LOANS TO OTHER INSTITUTIONS Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth; Los Angeles County Museum of Art Modigliani and the Artists of Montparnasse Japan Society Gallery, New York; The British Museum, London Kazari: Decoration and Display in Japan, 15th– 19th Centuries American Federation of Arts, New York and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington; Dallas Museum of Art; The Cleveland Museum of Art The Sensuous and the Sacred: Chola Bronzes from South India Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth; Los Angeles County Museum of Art Bartolomé Esteban Murillo: Paintings from American Collections Antikensammlung Berlin; Martin-GropiusBau, Berlin Die Griechische Klassik: Idee oder Wirklichkeit The Baltimore Museum of Art; Saint Louis Art Museum Painted Prints: The Revelation of Color in Northern Renaissance and Baroque Engravings, Etchings, and Woodcuts Centre National d’Art et de Culture Georges Pompidou, Paris La Révolution Surréaliste China Institute Gallery, New York Circles of Reflection: The Carter Collection of Chinese Bronze Mirrors Dallas Museum of Art; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago Thomas Struth Kyoto National Museum, Japan; Stäelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt am Main Rembrandt Rembrandt Kyoto National Museum; Tokyo National Museum (organizing institution) Sesshþ, Master of Ink and Brush: 500th Anniversary Exhibition The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Los Angeles County Museum of Art The Legacy of Genghis Khan: Courtly Art and Culture in Western Asia 1256–1353 Musée Fabré, Montpellier, France; Musée des Beaux-Arts, Rouen; Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lyon; Musée des Beaux-Arts, Rennes; Minneapolis Institute of Arts (organizing institution) Sacred Symbols: Four Thousand Years of Native American Art Musea Antwerpen, Rubens House, Antwerp Marvels of Delight: Early Netherlandish Drawings from Jan van Eyck to Hieronymus Bosch Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University Art Museums, Cambridge Poussin and 17th-Century French Painting Fondation de l’Hermitage, Lausanne L’Impressionisme Américain 1880–1915 Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia On the Edge of Your Seat: Popular Theatre and Film in Early 20th-Century American Art Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington; Brooklyn Museum of Art; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Museum Rietberg, Zurich The Adventures of Hamza The Frick Collection, New York; J. Paul Getty Museum of Art, Los Angeles Greuze, The Draftsman Fundacion Juan March, Madrid Georgia O’Keeffe: Naturalezas Intimas Museé des Beaux-Arts, Lyon L’Ecole de Barbizon Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; National Gallery of Art, Washington Willem de Kooning: Tracing the Figure Naples Museum of Art, Florida; Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven Frankenthaler: The Woodcuts National Gallery of Art, Washington The Flowering of Florence: Botanical Art for the Medici, 1550–1750 National Gallery of Art, Washington; Dallas Museum of Art (organizing institution); The Frick Collection, New York; Centre de la Vielle de Charité, Marseille, France Anne Vallayer-Coster: Still-Life Painting in the Age of Marie Antoinette Nationalmuseum, Stockholm; Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, and the Nordic Countries The Governor’s Residence Foundation, Columbus, Ohio Long-term loan to governor’s mansion Groeningemuseum, Bruges, Belgium Jan van Eyck, Early Netherlandish Painting and the South of Europe Hallie Ford Museum of Art, Salem, Oregon; Boise Art Museum, Idaho In the Fullness of Time: Masterpieces of Egyptian Art from American Collections Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art, Japan Vincent and Theo van Gogh Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston Cosmè Tura and Ferrara: Painting and Design in Renaissance Ferrara National Palace Museum, Taipei, Taiwan, China Art under Emperor Ch’ien-lung Palais des Beaux-Arts, Lille, France; Fondation Pierre Gianadda, Martigny, Switzerland Rétrospective Berthe Morisot Palazzo dei Diamante, Galleria d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Ferrara, Italy; Los Angeles County Museum of Art (coorganizers); Denver Art Museum Sargent and Italy Palazzo Grassi, Venice I Faraoni 30 2-Collections.p65 30 6/10/2003, 4:30 PM The Phillips Collection, Washington; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Over the Line: The Art and Life of Jacob Lawrence Royal Academy of Arts, London The Aztecs French Regional & American Museums Exchange San Diego Museum of Art; El Paso Museum of Art, Texas Idol of the Moderns: Pierre-Auguste Renoir and American Painting Mayor Jane L. Campbell presents an official proclamation from the City of Cleveland to Elizabeth Rohatyn in recognition of the FRAME program. San Diego Museum of Art; Hood Museum of Art, Hanover, New Hampshire (organizing institution) José Clemente Orozco in the United States, 1927– 1934 Shimane Art Museum, Japan; The Museum of Fine Arts, Gifu, Japan (organizing institution) Odilon Redon—Le souci de l’absolu (Search for the Absolute) Sociedad Estetal para la Accion Cultural Exterior, Madrid; Universidad de Salamanca, Escuelas Menores, Salamanca Erasmus in Spain: Humanism in Spanish Early Renaissance Tate Britain, London Lucien Freud Tate Britain, London; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Minneapolis Institute of Arts American Sublime The Textile Museum, Washington The Classical Tradition in Anatolian Carpets Timken Museum of Art, San Diego The Portraits of Bartolomeo Veneto University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor; Davis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley, Massachusetts Women Who Ruled: Queens, Goddesses, Amazons, 1500–1650 The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore The Book of Kings: Art, War, and the Morgan Library’s Medieval Picture Bible Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland Jefferson in Paris: Fashion on the Eve of the French Revolution University of Salamanca, Spain Erasmus in Spain: Humanism in Spanish Early Renaissance In August, the museum was pleased to be the first and only U.S. venue for Raphael and His Age: Drawings from the Palais des Beaux-Arts, Lille, which was on view August 25 to November 3. The show featured renowned drawings by Raphael, borrowed from one of the major collections of drawings by the Italian Renaissance master. This exhibition was the result of the French Regional & American Museums Exchange (F R A M E ), an initiative of Elizabeth Rohatyn, wife of former U.S. ambassador to France Felix G. Rohatyn, and Françoise Cachin, former director of French Museums. Founded in 1999, this consortium of nine American and nine French museums was created to generate cooperative projects and open their outstanding collections to a wider public in the United States and Europe. Raphael and His Age was the first F R A M E exhibition at the Cleveland Museum of Art; it will open at the Palais des BeauxArts in May 2003. The American F R A M E museums are the Cleveland Museum of Art, Dallas Museum of Art, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Portland Art Museum, Saint Louis Art Museum, Sterling & Francine Clark Art Institute, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, and Yale University Art Gallery. French F R A M E museums are the Fine Arts Museums of Bordeaux, Grenoble, Lille, Lyon, Rennes, Rouen, and Strasbourg, plus the Augustins Museum, Toulouse, and the Fabre Museum, Montpellier. In September, Cleveland Mayor Jane L. Campbell presided over a ceremony honoring the F R A M E program. Attendees included Elizabeth Rohatyn and representatives of French museums as well as museum staff and members of the media. During the last week in October, the museum played host to representatives from all the French and American museums and F R A M E director Françoise Cachin for a four-day conference. 31 2-Collections.p65 31 6/10/2003, 4:31 PM 32 3-Exhibitions.p65 32 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM RIGHT: THE AL-SABAH COLLECTION, PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRUCE M. WHITE Exhibitions The most visible of the activities the museum undertakes to bring people into contact with works of art is the exhibition program. These presentations fall into two broad categories: touring shows of works from other institutions, some of which are organized by our curatorial staff, and exhibitions built from works in our own collection. Loan exhibitions covered a lot of ground. Photography Transformed: Selections from the Metropolitan Bank & Trust Collection, February 17–April 28, featured 55 highlights of the bank’s distinguished collection of contemporary photography from the past 25 years. Treasury of the World: Jeweled Arts of India in the Age of the Mughals, February 24–May 19, featured approximately 325 opulent objects from the Mughal empire. Ram Rahman Photographs: Visions of India, March 2–May 8, complemented that exhibition with astute observations of street life in urban India. Jane Hinds Bidaut Tintypes, May 11–July 17, featured enchanting photographs of skeletons and insects drawn from the artist’s large collection and from pictures of taxidermic animals at Yale University’s Peabody Museum of Natural History. From Paris to Provincetown: Blanche Lazzell and This exquisite imperial Indian turban ornament, featuring emeralds and diamonds set with gold, from the Kuwait National Museum was a special attraction in Treasury of the World: Jeweled Arts of India in the Age of the Mughals. the Color Woodcut, May 19–July 28, brought 121 single-block color woodcuts that are among the most inventive prints produced in the first decades of the 20th century. Into the Light: The Projected Image in American Art, 1964–1977, June 30– September 8, reconstructed classic works in film, video, and slide installation from the mid 1960s to the mid 1970s, a decade that produced some of the most significant moving-image environments in the history of modern art. House Hunting: Photographs by Todd Hido, July 20–September 25, examined the prosaic qualities of suburban domestic architecture in luminous color photographs. Battle of the Nudes: Pollaiuolo’s Renaissance Masterpiece, August 25–October 27, featured the museum’s world-famous, unique, firststate impression of Antonio Pollaiuolo’s 15th-century engraving, Battle of The young and young-at-heart found much to enjoy in the summer exhibition, Into the Light, which recreated pioneering art installations from the 1960s and 1970s. the Nudes. The print was exhibited alongside multiple impressions of the second state and rare drawings, prints, and works in other media by Pollaiuolo and his contemporaries, borrowed from American and European collections. Early Italian Engraving: 1460s–1530s, on view at the same time as the Pollaiuolo show, offered the opportunity to compare other early Italian 33 3-Exhibitions.p65 33 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM prints from the collection with that masterpiece. Raphael and His Age: Drawings from the Palais des Beaux-Arts, Lille, August 25–November 3, featured 57 drawings, including 25 by Raphael, plus works by Botticelli, Jacopo da Pontormo, Filippino Lippi, and Fra Bartolommeo. Elizabeth Catlett: Prints and Sculpture, September 15, 2002–January 5, 2003, gathered 50 black-andwhite and color prints plus 11 sculptures spanning Catlett’s 70-year career. Girl Culture: Photographs by Lauren Greenfield, September 28–December 4, Youth of Cleveland meet Youth of Agrigento: the Magna Graecia exhibition brought rare treasures from South Italy and Sicily to America for the first time. brought 15 photographs to investigate the relationships of girls and young women to the material world of popular culture. Challenging Structure: Frank Gehry’s Peter B. Lewis Building, October 6, 2002–February 24, 2003, traced the evolution of the CWRU building project from conception to completion through more than 40 models and studies, plus a demonstration of CATIA, the computer software that allows Gehry’s unorthodox designs to be built. Magna Graecia: Greek Art from South Italy and Sicily, October 27, 2002–January 5, 2003, brought together for the first time 80 masterworks of Greek art from the rich museum collections of South Italy and Sicily. Many of these rare and high-quality works of art had never left Italy, nor been seen by American audiences. A City Seen: Photographs from The George Gund Foundation Collection, November 17, 2002–January 26, 2003, featured highlights from portfolios commissioned by the George Gund Foundation to illustrate its annual reports. In celebration of the foundation’s 50th anniversary, the collection was given to the museum following the exhibition (in honor of retiring director David Bergholtz). Land in Light: John Szarkowski Photographs, December 7, 2002–February 12, 2003, presented Members of the media enjoy the press opening for Elizabeth Catlett: Prints and Sculpture. 34 3-Exhibitions.p65 34 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM nuanced views of the countryside near the artist’s home in East Chatham, New York, and Arizona landscapes taken in 1992 while he was visiting Tucson. John Szarkowski and many of the photographers in A City Seen came to the museum for a remarkable weekend symposium in November. Three shows of photographs from the permanent collection were displayed in galleries 103/104. Travel Photography: Early Images of India, March 2–July 17, surveyed the pioneering work by British photographers active primarily in the 1850s and 1860s, bringing together eight black-and-white photographs and a paper negative that reveal India’s landscape. Looking at Children: Photographs from the Permanent Collection, July 20–December 4, gathered 15 photographs that capture children in imaginative ways. Gifts from the CMA Friends of Photography, December 7, 2002–April 23, 2003 highRaphael was an expert and highly inventive portraitist, as this black chalk head of a young man shows. It was among the 25 works by the master on view in Raphael and His Age: Drawings from the Palais des BeauxArts, Lille. lighted 16 works, featuring nine photographers new to the collection and six new images by artists already represented. The museum also presented Object in Focus installations spotlighting works in the collection, including Malvina Hoffman’s Bacchanale, a South German medieval Bridal Couple, a vase attributed to Pierre Philippe Thomire, a 19th-century Scroll Box with Dragon and Phoenix Design from Korea, a Mother-and-Child Figure from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and an Italian Group of Crèche Figures: Adoration of the Magi. Two gallery renovation projects were conceived to engage visitors in a new way. First, the medieval manuscripts collection was beautifully reinstalled behind the Armor Court. Second, an innovative research process was developed to guide the reinstallation of the sub-Saharan African art gallery. A museum staff interpretation committee worked with the Institute for Learning Innovations of Annapolis, Maryland, to develop a set of visitor evaluation research instruments through which more than 200 museum visitors responded to the gallery with candor and intelligence. This reinstallation is a wonderful opportunity to shape the design of interpretive strategies for this area and others as planning for the new building evolves. The Cleveland Foundation funded these studies to advance the interpretive plans at the museum. The common thread running through these exhibitions and projects is the notion that simply hanging art on the walls and opening the front door is not enough. The means by which art is presented—its intellectual and thematic organization, the quality of its display, the kinds of information provided to aid in understanding the cultural context in which it was made, and the materials and techniques used to do so—can make the difference between a passing glance and lasting, deep engagement with art. 35 3-Exhibitions.p65 35 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM A City Seen Since 1952, the George Gund Foundation has been a major philanthropic force in Cleveland and northeast Ohio, quietly supporting a wide range of worthy causes. Beginning in 1990, each of the Foundation’s annual reports has incorporated a photographic essay commissioned from a noted contemporary photographer. The Foundation engaged Mark Schwartz of the design firm Nesnadny + Schwartz to act as liaison to the photographers, coordinate the projects, and design the annual reports. The result has been a remarkably consistent and coherent presentation over the course of 12 years. The focus was on people—at work, in school, in real places at real times— and on defining aspects of the regional landscape, from the vast expanse of Lake Erie to the intimate spaces of urban gardens. The photographers, Michael Book, Lois Conner, Judith Joy Ross, Dawoud Bey, Linda Butler, Lee Friedlander, Gregory Conniff, Frank Golhke, Larry Fink, Douglas Lucak, Nicholas Nixon, and Barbara Bosworth, were given free rein to approach their projects as they saw fit, and they created a dozen highly individual portfolios. In honor of the Foundation’s 50th anniversary, the museum presented the exhibition, A City Seen, featuring all 12 portfolios. In November, most of the photographers, along with moderator John Szarkowski, visited the museum in person for a dynamic symposium. But perhaps the most memorable in-person appearance occurred a few days earlier, when Yusma Kasmi, subject of a 1992 portrait for Judith Joy Ross’s portfolio about the Cleveland public schools, came to see the exhibition. She had heard through friends and family that her image was in the exhibition—and on the cover of the November issue of the museum’s Members Magazine. In 1992, Judith Joy Ross photographed a young student named Yusma Kasmi (left) for a George Gund Foundation Annual Report. Ten years later, that image wound up on the cover of the museum’s Members Magazine, and when word-of-mouth reached Yusma, she and a friend visited the museum to see the exhibition A City Seen. The distinctive colors used in the installation of A City Seen required that the graphics be screen-printed directly onto the walls. 36 3-Exhibitions.p65 36 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM LOAN EXHIBITIONS Photography Transformed: Selections from the Metropolitan Bank & Trust Collection February 17–April 28, 2002 Metropolitan Bank & Trust has been a local leader in the effort to make the visual arts an integral part of corporate culture, building one of the rare corporate collections devoted to photo-based works of art. The exhibition featured 49 highlights from the collection; the works created by artists working globally chronicled the striking innovations in conceptual approaches and artistic styles, subject matter and narrative content, and photographic processes and technological advances that distinguished contemporary photography during the past 25 years. Curated by Tom Hinson. Blanche Lazzell’s vibrant The Monongahela, 1919 (printed 1936), acquired by the Newark Museum in 1943, was one of 121 color woodcuts in From Paris to Provincetown: Blanche Lazzell and the Color Woodcut. Treasury of the World: Jeweled Arts of India in the Age of the Mughals February 24–May 19, 2002 The Mughal emperors of the 17th century, including Shah Jahan (who commissioned the famous Taj Mahal) and contemporary Indian monarchs, were often called history’s greatest patrons of the jeweled arts. This exhibition of approximately 320 works included a brilliant balas ruby weighing 249.31 carats, inscribed with the names of five emperors. Most of the polished gemstones displayed were gracefully arranged as floral designs, birds, and animals on items of royal and princely adornment, ceremonial weapons, and elegantly carved utilitarian objects such as jade bowls, enameled fly-whisk handles, and jade book bindings. Organized by The al-Sabah Collection, Kuwait National Museum; also on view at The British Museum, London; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and Saint Louis Art Museum. Curated by Manuel Keene of The al-Sabah Collection, with the assistance of Salam Kaoukui; curated in Cleveland by Louise W. Mackie. Sponsor: The exhibition was presented with the generous support of Sheikh Nasser Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah and Sheikha Hussah Sabah al-Salim al-Sabah and The National Council for Culture, Arts and Letters, Kuwait. An indemnity was granted by the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. Cleveland promotional support: The Plain Dealer and Soft Rock 102.1 WDOK FM. Ram Rahman Photographs: Visions of India March 2–May 8, 2002 Born in India and educated in the United States, Ram Rahman divides his time between New Delhi and New York, working as a photographer, graphic designer, and cultural activist. Taken between 1983 and 2001, his gelatin silver prints created a diary generously layered with references to politics, economics, religion, and popular culture. Given his status as both an insider and an outsider in India, Rahman tightly balanced the subjective and objective in compelling images of this intensely visual country. Curated by Tom Hinson. Jayne Hinds Bidaut Tintypes May 11–July 17, 2002 As part of a growing number of contemporary artists employing 19th-century photographic techniques, Jayne Hinds Bidaut relies on the tintype process to create images with creamy tones, raised surfaces, and a distressed appearance. This exhibition featured photographs of skeletons and insects drawn from her large collection and from pictures of taxidermic animals at Yale University’s Peabody Museum of Natural History. Bidaut’s portraits are filled with references to collecting and history, intricacy and beauty, decay and preservation. Curated by Tom Hinson. From Paris to Provincetown: Blanche Lazzell and the Color Woodcut May 19–July 28, 2002 From 1915, many American artists who had been living in Paris gathered in Provincetown, Massachusetts. There B. J. O. Nordfeldt developed a method to print color woodcuts from only one block. Using that technique, Blanche Lazzell and her colleagues produced beautiful, inventive prints through the 1950s. The exhibition included 121 of these color woodcuts, along with some of the blocks from which they were printed. Organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; also on view at the Elvehjem Museum of Art, University of Wisconsin, Madison. Curated in Cleveland by Jane Glaubinger. 37 3-Exhibitions.p65 37 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM Into the Light: The Projected Image in American Art, 1964–1977 June 30–September 8, 2002 The first museum exhibition to explore the incorporation of large-scale moving images into installations, Into the Light featured reconstructions of classic works in film, video, and slide installation. The show included pieces by the pioneers: Vito Acconci, Peter Campus, Simone Forti, Dan Graham, Joan Jonas, Anthony McCall, Robert Morris, Bruce Nauman, Yoko Ono, Dennis Oppenheim, Paul Sharits, Andy Warhol, and Robert Whitman. Organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Curated by Chrissie Iles, Curator of Film and Video, Whitney Museum of American Art; curated in Cleveland by Jeffrey Grove. House Hunting: Photographs by Todd Hido July 20–September 25, 2002 A native of Kent, Ohio, Todd Hido examines the prosaic qualities of suburban domestic architecture in highly detailed and luminous color photographs. Traveling extensively over the past five years, Hido recorded—at night and in varying climatic conditions—houses whose glowing windows were the only indication of habitation. The 16 images in the exhibition juxtaposed such pictures with shots of rooms in recently foreclosed properties that the evicted tenants had to leave quickly. Devoid of people, his photographs deal with issues of absence and abandonment and isolation and anonymity. Curated by Tom Hinson. Battle of the Nudes: Pollaiuolo’s Renaissance Masterpiece August 25–October 27, 2002 Featuring the museum’s world-famous, unique, first-state impression of Antonio Pollaiuolo’s 15th-century print Battle of the Nudes, this exhibition addressed issues of connoisseurship as well as the historical framework in which the print was conceived. For the first time, the print was exhibited alongside multiple impressions of the second state, allowing direct comparison of changes in the engraving plate and quality of impression. Rare drawings, prints, and works in other media by Pollaiuolo and his contemporaries further enhanced the viewer’s understanding of the context in which the print was made. Curated by Shelley Langdale. Sponsor: The exhibition was made possible in part by a gift from Malcolm E. Kenney and the generous support of the Malcolm E. Kenney Special Exhibitions Endowment Fund. Exhibition curator Shelley Langdale poses in the Battle of the Nudes show with Malcolm E. Kenney, whose generous support helped make the exhibition possible. Raphael and His Age: Drawings from the Palais des Beaux-Arts, Lille August 25–November 3, 2002 The Palais des Beaux-Arts in Lille has one of the important collections of drawings by Raphael, who worked in Urbino, Florence, and Rome. The exhibition featured 57 drawings, including 25 by Raphael and others by Botticelli, Jacopo da Pontormo, Filippino Lippi, and Fra Bartolommeo. Nearly all the Raphael drawings dated from the first half of his 20-year career, from 1503 to approximately 1513. This exhibition was the result of the recently established French Regional & American Museums Exchange (FRAME), an initiative of Elizabeth Rohatyn, wife of former U.S. Ambassador to France Felix G. Rohatyn, and Françoise Cachin, former Director of French Museums. Curated in Cleveland by Carter Foster. French FRAME partners are: Musée de Grenoble; Musée des Augustins de Toulouse; Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux; Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lille; Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon; Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rennes; Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen; Musée des BeauxArts de Strasbourg; Musée Fabre de Montpellier. The American partners are: The Cleveland Museum of Art; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond; Dallas Museum of Art; The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; The Minneapolis Institute of Arts; Portland Art Museum, Oregon; Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts; The Saint Louis Art Museum; Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven. Sponsor: Raphael and His Age: Drawings from the Palais des Beaux-Arts, Lille is a result of the French Regional & American Museums Exchange—FRAME. Elizabeth Catlett: Prints and Sculpture September 15, 2002–January 5, 2003 Elizabeth Catlett has said that her purpose is to “present black people in their beauty and dignity for ourselves and others to understand and enjoy and to exhibit my work where black people can visit and find art to which they can relate.” This exhibition of 50 black-and-white and color prints plus 11 sculptures spanned Catlett’s 70-year career. Both a printmaker and a sculptor, Catlett is concerned with justice, freedom, and compassion for the oppressed. Organized by the Hampton University Museum, Hampton, Virginia (prints), and the Cleveland Museum of Art (sculpture). Curated in Cleveland by Jane Glaubinger. Cleveland showing sponsor: Promotional support is from 93.1 FM WZAK. Girl Culture: Photographs by Lauren Greenfield September 28–December 4, 2002 Through 15 photographs of daily life and ritual, Girl Culture investigated the relationships of girls and young women to their bodies, to their inner lives and emotional development, and to the material world of popular culture. Documenting grooming, makeup, fashion, social lives, schools, and cliques, Greenfield’s color photographs stress the exhibitionist nature of modern femininity, allowing the viewer to ponder the consequences. Curated by Tom Hinson. Challenging Structure: Frank Gehry’s Peter B. Lewis Building October 6, 2002–February 24, 2003 Frank Gehry’s Peter B. Lewis Building, new headquarters of the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University, is located a block from the Cleveland Museum of Art. The exhibition traced the evolution of this project from conception to completion. More than 40 models and studies borrowed from Gehry’s Santa Monica studio were included, plus the original photograph of an Arizona canyon that inspired the structure’s interior and a demonstration of CATIA, the computer software that allows Gehry’s unorthodox designs to be built. Curated by Jeffrey Grove. 38 3-Exhibitions.p65 38 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM In the Challenging Structure exhibition, a model shows how a Frank Gehry design fits into its neighborhood. Magna Graecia: Greek Art from South Italy and Sicily October 27, 2002–January 5, 2003 The exhibition brought together for the first time 80 masterworks of Greek art from the rich collections of the archaeological museums of Paestum, Reggio Calabria, Sybaris, Syracuse, Gela, Agrigento, Palermo, and Taranto. Through masterpieces of Greek vase painting and Greek sculpture in terracotta, stone, and bronze, the exhibition presented a vivid picture of the art and culture of the Greeks who colonized South Italy and Sicily beginning in the 8th century BC. Organized by the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Tampa Museum of Art. Curated by Michael Bennett and Aaron J. Paul in collaboration with Mario Iozzo. Cleveland showing sponsor: The Cleveland showing was sponsored by National City. The exhibition and catalogue also received generous support from the National Endowment for the Arts, James E. and Elizabeth J. Ferrell, The Hellenic Preservation Society of Northeastern Ohio, Adelphia Communications, and Shelby White and Leon Levy. The exhibition was supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. Promotional support was provided by The Plain Dealer and City Visitor. A City Seen: Photographs from The George Gund Foundation Collection November 17, 2002–January 26, 2003 Since 1990, the George Gund Foundation has commissioned fine art photographers to create portfolios to reflect the foundation’s areas of philanthropic interest in northeast Ohio and to illustrate its annual reports. In celebration of the foundation’s 50th anniversary, the collection was given to the museum at the close of the show (in honor of David Bergholtz). The 12 artists featured were Michael Book, Lois Conner, Judith Joy Ross, Dawoud Bey, Linda Butler, Lee Friedlander, Gregory Conniff, Frank Gohlke, Larry Fink, Douglas Lucak, Nicholas Nixon, and Barbara Bosworth. The 148 black-and-white photographs explored Cleveland neighborhoods, the Cuyahoga River, Lake Erie, the children of Cleveland’s public schools, patients at the Cleveland Free Clinic, and the world of work in the city. Curated by Tom Hinson. Sponsor: The exhibition, publication, and public programs were supported by The George Gund Foundation. Land in Light: John Szarkowski Photographs December 7, 2002–February 12, 2003 Director of the Department of Photography at the Museum of Modern Art in New York from 1962 to 1991, John Szarkowski made unparalleled contributions to the fields of photographic criticism, history, and theory. Before working at the Modern, he was a distinguished photographer and since his retirement has returned to creating his straightforward black-and-white photographs. Curated by Tom Hinson. PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRUCE M. WHITE The Youth of Agrigento, c. 480 BC, on view in the Magna Graecia exhibition, demonstrates the great refinement of Western Greek art (Museo Archeologico Regionale di Agrigento). 39 3-Exhibitions.p65 39 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM PERMANENT COLLECTION EXHIBITIONS OBJECT IN FOCUS EXHIBITIONS Cleveland Builds an Art Museum, 1884–1916 Early Italian Engraving: 1460s–1530s Opened January 21, 2000 In light of the restoration of the south facade and plaza of the 1916 building, this installation featured a selection of prints of the original site plans, working drawings, and construction photographs from the archives. Curated by Jeffrey Strean and Randy Von Ryan. August 25–October 27, 2002 To complement the exhibition Battle of the Nudes: Pollaiuolo’s Renaissance Masterpiece, 45 engravings on view in an adjoining gallery demonstrated the high level of printmaking at the time. Examples by Andrea Mantegna, Francesco Rosselli, Jacopo de’Barbari, and Marcantonio Raimondi explored a wide range of secular, mythological, allegorical, and humanistic themes. Curated by Shelley R. Langdale. Travel Photography: Early Images of India March 2–July 17, 2002 This survey of the pioneering work by British photographers active primarily in the 1850s and 1860s brought together seven mid 19thcentury black-and-white photographs and a paper negative that reveal India’s landscape. These Victorian photographers, including Samuel Bourne, Linnaeus Tripe, and Richard Banner Oakeley, overcame seemingly insurmountable technical, physical, and logistical problems to produce varied and intriguing views of India. Curated by Tom Hinson. Looking at Children: Photographs from the Permanent Collection July 20–December 4, 2002 The typical family photograph album chronicles the lives of children with birthday parties, holiday gatherings, summer vacations, and first days of school. The portfolios of professional photographers often include the same events. The 14 prints in this exhibition by contemporary photographers Emmet Gowin, Nicholas Nixon, Lauren Greenfield, Beverly Conley, and Manuel Alvarez Bravo, among others, capture children in imaginative ways, exploring the world alone or interacting candidly with family and friends. Curated by Patricia Burke. Gifts from the CMA Friends of Photography December 7, 2002–April 23, 2003 The Friends of Photography (FOP), a support group of museum members, has presented 29 outstanding contemporary photographs to the museum, significantly enhancing the presentation of the art of our time. This exhibition of 16 photographs celebrated the tenth anniversary of the FOP. Photographers featured include Zeke Berman, Barbara Bosworth, Lois Conner, Larry Fink, Lee Friedlander, Douglas Lucak, Sally Mann, Richard Misrach, Abelardo Morell, Bert Teunissen, Ruth Thorne-Thompson, and Céline van Balen. Curated by Tom Hinson. January 8–March 10, 2002 Malvina Hoffman (American, 1887–1966). Bacchanale, 1917. Bronze. Gift in memory of Julia K. Dalton by her nephews, George S. Kendrick and Harry D. Kendrick 1943.384. Also on view was another bronze by Hoffman: Pavlova Dancing the Gavotte, 1915, Gift of Mrs. Henry A. Everett for the Dorothy Burnham Everett Memorial Collection 1923.725. Organized by Katherine Solender. March 12–May 12, 2002 A Bridal Couple, about 1470. Southern Germany. Oil on wood. Delia E. Holden and L. E. Holden Funds 1932.179. Also on view were two engravings by Albrecht Dürer (German, 1471–1528): The Promenade, c. 1497, John L. Severance Fund 1953.139; and The Ravisher, c. 1495, Dudley P. Allen Fund 1968.36. Organized by Kenneth Bé. May 14–July 14, 2002 Attributed to Pierre Philippe Thomire (French, 1751–1843). Vase, about 1800. Bronze, partially gilt, marble base. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Buchanan in memory of Dorothy Tucker Draper 1993.175. Organized by Henry H. Hawley. July 16–September 15, 2002 Scroll Box with Dragon and Phoenix Design, 1800s. Korea, Chosºn period (1392–1910). Lacquered wood with mother-of-pearl and twisted brass and copper wire. Severance and Greta Millikin Collection 1990.15. Organized by Michael R. Cunningham. September 17–November 24, 2002 Mother-and-Child Figure, 1800s–early 1900s. Democratic Republic of the Congo, probably Western Pende people. Wood, glass beads, brass tacks, bark-wood powder. Gift of the African Art Sponsors of Karamu House 1931.426. Organized by Constantine Petridis. November 26, 2002–January 5, 2003 Group of Crèche Figures: Adoration of the Magi, 1780–1830. Italy, Naples. Painted wood and terracotta with various textiles. Gift of the Womens Council of the Cleveland Museum of Art 1972.368.2–22. Organized by Henry H. Hawley. This Korean scroll box was on view as an object in focus during the summer. 40 3-Exhibitions.p65 40 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM Free Audio Tours of the Permanent Collection The museum’s Sight & Sound Audio Tour, first presented in 1998, not only underwent a major upgrade in 2002, it also began to be offered free of charge. The audio tour consists of a portable electronic device that contains more than 300 recorded messages about key works in the collection, as well as complementary audio features such as music composed during the period of a particular work on view. The original unit, though portable, was relatively heavy, and even with a shoulder strap to help support it, its weight made using the first-generation Sight & Sound uncomfortable for some visitors. Nevertheless, it served very well for a number of years, doing double duty as the audio tour device used in certain special exhibitions. The new Acoustiguide Mini 2000 hand-held devices were introduced in 2002, concurrent with the Jeweled Arts of India exhibition. Aside from being much more compact and lighter—each unit weighs about 4 ounces—the new device’s data storage system allows modifications to the recorded information to be made here rather than by an outside service. During the first few years of Sight & Sound, the museum charged a modest fee for use of the audio tour. This policy helped to recoup some of the cost of the service, but it also discouraged many people from using it. This seemed at odds with the museum’s mission to bring the pleasure and meaning of art to the broadest possible audience, so shortly before the new equipment was introduced, the fee was eliminated. The museum’s electronic audio tour of the collection is now both easier to use and free of charge. 41 3-Exhibitions.p65 41 6/10/2003, 4:37 PM The terrace renovations complete, the south doors to the 1916 building officially opened in September. A small ceremony celebrated the return of this most gracious entry to the museum. 42 4-CommSupport.p65 42 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM Community Support The museum and this community are fortunate that the museum’s past benefactors established a financial foundation that allows this institution to continue serving the public regardless of the economic climate. Because the museum’s budget is funded almost entirely by private contributions, the recent strain on federal and state budgets has been less of a blow than they would have been had the museum been heavily dependent on those sources. Even though the museum is a private institution, it operates in the public interest. Its existence in this community makes living in Cleveland a rare and special experience—fewer than a dozen cities in the world have art collections of this caliber in their midst, and only a few open their doors to all citizens free of charge. The museum therefore sees its fundraising and financial management efforts as critical to the successful pursuit of its community mission. These contributions, literally, are an investment in Cleveland. Despite a difficult economic climate and global uncertainties, 2002 was a successful fundraising year. Overall, the museum raised $5,901,560 in annual giving versus $5,585,993 in 2001, a 6% overall increase. Donor Circles gifts in 2002 totaled $1,500,710 versus $1,431,287 in 2001, and 26 new donors joined the Circles program. We thank our trustees for their enormous generosity this year. Trustees contributed $452,768 in unrestricted gifts, a 21% increase. Honorary trustees contributed $114,585 in 2002, a 36% increase over the previous year. The museum reactivated the Curators Circle, a group of younger donors who are the next generation of museum stewards. Also launched was an annual fund effort for gifts under $1,000. Corporate annual gifts reached $411,785 in 2002 compared to $464,404 in 2001. Even with the poor economy, 16 new companies joined the program, and we are grateful to those members who were able to increase their contributions. In the fall, the museum initiated a corporate annual fund campaign, targeted to smaller companies and companies that have had no previous relationship with the museum. This was a difficult year for securing corporate exhibition support. Our thanks are due to National City for sponsoring Magna Graecia and making 43 4-CommSupport.p65 43 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM such a significant contribution in uncertain economic times. The museum continued to have success obtaining program sponsorships for Parade the Circle, Art to Go, and Summer Evenings. A $20,000 grant from the Womens Council allowed thousands of students, whose schools would not otherwise have been able to afford bus transportation, to visit the museum. The museum received $2,383,812 in grant funding, exceeding its goals in all areas except Ohio Arts Council support. Council support was reduced as a result of cuts in the state operating budget; additional cuts will reduce the 2003 funding level. Lobbying and advocacy efforts at the state level resulted in a $5 million commitment from the State of Ohio capital budget, the single largest capital grant to Cuyahoga County and 31% of the county’s total allocation of $16.3 million. The planned giving effort was successful as annuities exceeded 2001 levels. New endowments created included the endowment from Judith and James A. Saks for purchasing art from emerging artists. The museum welcomed 41 new Legacy Society members, bringing the total to 268. The Legacy Society is the group of members who have included the museum in a will or estate plan. Membership revenue totaled $1,075,647, and the museum ended 2002 with 27,216 membership households. Ohio Governor Bob Taft (center) at a luncheon celebrating the collaboration between Cleveland State University’s College of Education and the museum’s Teacher Research Center. At the right is James McLoughlin, dean of the college. Planning of a capital campaign to support the museum expansion and future operations was a primary focus during 2002. Campaign co-chairs Ellen Stirn Mavec, James T. Bartlett, and Alfred M. Rankin Jr. and an honorary chair, Michael Horvitz, were named in March; by September, the committee had evolved into the expanded Campaign Cabinet. A team of consultants was engaged to assist in the long-term effort to develop an integrated communications plan to support the expansion project. Dix & Eaton completed a media benchmarking study in April. With New York advertising agency LaPlaca Cohen as the branding consultant, Jan Krukowski working on a case statement, and Ruder Finn advising on public relations, work began in March on the development of the integrated communications plan. The Volunteer Initiatives program expanded to nearly 1,100 volunteers, with 32,000 volunteer hours valued at approximately $512,000. A small army of 54 interns contributed 3,890 hours of work in art education. In addition, the department collaborated with the Weatherhead School of Management’s docent program to lead tours of the new Peter B. Lewis building. A group of volunteers including museum staff members collaborated on a project to conduct research on the African galleries, providing 44 4-CommSupport.p65 44 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM A December ceremony honored the museum’s star volunteers, all the way up to James T. Bartlett, president of the board of trustees. useful direction for a reinstallation in 2003. The museum strengthened its bonds with two important volunteer groups: Young Friends programs and the Womens Council. All those who contribute so generously of their time and money understand implicitly that the museum is central to the quality of life in Cleveland, and that their contributions essentially flow through the museum to benefit the community at large. The future of the museum and the future of Cleveland lie along a single path toward enhancing the quality of life, both for the benefit of those who already live here and as a means of attracting talented, culturally interested, and intellectually engaged new residents to settle in this place and further enrich our shared future. The renovations made the terraces around the 1916 building completely wheelchair accessible for the first time. 45 4-CommSupport.p65 45 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM Circles Leadership Committee Nicki and Bob Gudbranson, Co-Chairs James T. Bartlett, Founders Society Chair Planned Giving Council Richard B. Ainsworth Jr. Thomas S. Allen Gordon A. Anhold James S. Aussem P. Thomas Austin Naomi Singer, President’s Circle Chair Donald M. Jack, Director’s Circle Chair Laurence A. Bartell Richard E. Beeman Jeffrey M. Biggar Richard Beeman McKey Berkman William R. Calfee Herbert L. Braverman Gary B. Bilchik Terry L. Bork Patricia L. Boyarko Mark A. Kikta Stephen J. Knerly Jr. Roy A. Krall Neil Kurit Donald W. Laubacher Robert K. Lease Herbert B. Levine Museum Council Daniel F. Austin, Chair, McDonald Investments Inc. John D. Andrica, A. T. Kearney, Inc. Elizabeth L. Armington Michele Beyer James M. Dickey, Accenture LLP Vincent J. Massa Wayne D. Minich M. Elizabeth Monihan Patrick S. Mullin Joseph V. Pease Jr. Chris Fisher, Royal Appliance Manufacturing Company Celso R. Gilberti, Gilberti Studio International, LLC Andrew I. Press Charles Ratner Richard C. Renkert Beth H. Hallisy, Marcus Thomas LLC Kim and Sam Hartwell David J. Brown Nancy A. Burgess J. Donald Cairns Adrienne L. Jones Nancy Keithley Betty Kemper Peter H. Calfee Peter J. Chudyk Charles M. Ciuni Morton Levin Jon A. Lindseth Kathy Moroscak Ronald B. Cohen David E. Cook Hedy T. Demsey Michael Peterman Francine Pilloff Leon M. Plevin Rebecca H. Dent Carina S. Diamond Gary J. Dietsch Florence KZ Pollack Donna S. Reid Larry J. B. Robinson+ Elliott L. Schlang Kevin Goldsmith Gary L. Dinner Emily A. Drake Heather Ettinger David L. Selman Naomi Singer William W. Taft Robert R. Galloway Stephen H. Gariepy James A. Goldsmith Robert A. Valente Missia H. Vaselaney Catherine G. Veres Helen N. Tomlinson Lee Warshawsky Joyce Weidenkopf Sally Gries Ronald G. Gymer Ellen E. Halfon Gloria A. Walas Richard T. Watson Jeffry L. Weiler Hannah S. Weil Trudy Wiesenberger David P. Handke Jr. Oliver C. Henkel Jr. Kenneth G. Hochman Gregory T. Holtz Marcia J. Wexberg Drew E. Wright Alan E. Yanowitz William J. Hyde Brian J. Jereb Corporate Council Frank M. Rizzo Sara K. Robechek James D. Roseman Patrick Saccogna Bradley J. Schlang Paul J. Schlather Walter S. Schwartz Gary S. Shamis John F. Shelley Roger L. Shumaker Mark A. Skvoretz John E. Smeltz Karen W. Spero Richard T. Spotz Jr. Mark F. Swary Gary A. Zwick William Hamann, Charter One Financial Oliver C. Henkel, Thompson Hine LLP Conway G. Ivy, The SherwinWilliams Company Robert H. Jackson, Kohrman Jackson & Krantz John Kane, MBNA Marketing Systems Joseph P. Keithley, Keithley Instruments, Inc. Roy E. Klein, Bank One, NA Gregory L. Kosch, Fifth Third Bank John C. Morley, Evergreen Ventures Patrick S. Mullin, Deloitte & Touche Brad Norrick, Marsh USA, Inc. Robert A. Rieger, Ferro Corporation Larry J. B. Robinson+, Robinson Investment Company Elliott L. Schlang, LJR Great Lakes Review Richey Smith, Richey Industries, Inc. Richard Stovsky, PricewaterhouseCoopers Albert Borowitz Mrs. Albert Borowitz Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Brentlinger Dr. Harvey Buchanan Mrs. Noah L. Butkin Mrs. Austin B. Chinn Paul L. Day Mrs. John B. Dempsey Joseph Erdelac Maxeen Flower Mrs. George Foley Frannie Gale Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Gratry Mrs. Richard C. Gridley Robert D. Gries Sally Gries Agnes Gund Debra Guren Mary Louise Hahn Dr. Shattuck Wellman Hartwell Jr. Mrs. John Hildt Arlene Holden Jennie Jones Mr.+ and Mrs. David Kangesser Robert M. Kaye Hayward Kendall Kelley Jr. Mr. and Mrs.+ G. Robert Klein John Switzer, KPMG LLP Stephen M. Todd, Ernst & Young LLP + deceased 46 4-CommSupport.p65 46 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM Charlotte R. Kramer Mrs. Jack Lampl Toby Devan Lewis Alex Machaskee Thomas A. Mann Nancy-Clay Marsteller Eleanor Bonnie McCoy Mr. and Mrs. Lester T. Miller Lindsay Morgenthaler Mrs. Louis Myers Lucia Nash Libby Norweb Frank H. Porter + Mr. and Mrs. Albert B. Ratner Betty Ratner Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Reinberger Mr. and Mrs. William Reinberger Barbara Robinson Larry J. B. Robinson+ Mr. and Mrs. Leighton A. Rosenthal Phyllis Seltzer Phyllis Sloane Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Smith Eugene Stevens Cara Stirn Mary Wasmer Lucy Ireland Weller Mrs. Lewis C. Williams Odette Wurzburger Donors of Works of Art 21st: The Journal of Contemporary Photography Jayne Hinds Bidaut and Ricco/Maresca Gallery, NYC Linda Butler Janet and Donald Fribourg in memory of Marion Neumark Friends of Photography Alan and Monah L. Gettner Elizabeth Catlett Cunningham Family in memory of Peggy Cunningham Bruce Ferrini, Pamela Ferrini, associates, and friends in memory of Matthew Ferrini Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro Foster Family Foundation William S. Lipscomb in memory of his father, James S. Lipscomb Mr. and Mrs. Peter Loughrey Till Freiwald and Jack Shainman Gallery Janet and Donald Fribourg in memory of Arthur Fribourg Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hickox M. Lindsay Kaplan and Norman Eisen Robert M. Light in honor of Louise S. Richards Alisa Luxenberg in honor of her parents, Herbert and Marianna Luxenberg Judith K. and S. Sterling MacMillan III Photography Purchase Fund Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company Bequest of Dorothy Norman Karen Ollis in memory of Janet Delaware Ollis Painting and Drawing Society of the Cleveland Museum of Art Helen Greene Perry Charitable Trust Gloria and Leon Plevin in memory of Fred Schmidt The Print Club of Cleveland Members of the Print Club of Cleveland and other friends in memory of Fred Schmidt Bernie and Sue Pucker in honor of Gerald P. Bonder Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt Susan Schulman in memory of Fred Schmidt Elizabeth Carroll Shearer in memory of Fred Schmidt Elizabeth Carroll Shearer in memory of Robert Lundie Shearer Phyllis Sloane in memory of Lillian and Henry Steinberg Bob Stana in memory of Susan and Joseph Stana Trideca Society in honor of Henry Hawley Various donors to the department of Chinese Art Various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings Michael Verne William E. Ward in memory of his wife, Evelyn Svec Ward Dr. Norman Zaworski Martin Puryear (American, b. 1941). Alien Huddle, 1993– 95; red cedar and pine; 134.6 x 162.5 x 134.6 cm; Gift of Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro 2002.65 47 4-CommSupport.p65 47 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM B E N E FA C T O R S The Cleveland Museum of Art recognizes the cumulative giving of individuals, corporations, and organizations. Patron Benefactor ($1,000,000 or more) The Mildred Andrews Fund Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. George P. Bickford Helen E. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Noah L. Butkin The Cleveland Foundation Vase. Designed by Georges de Feure (French, 1868–1943); made by Gérard, Dufraissex, and Abbot, Limoges, about 1903; porcelain with color glazes and gilding; 25.1 x 14 x 10.9 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.15 Thomas L. Fawick Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Fleischman Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Gartner Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Ginn Helen Wade Greene Mr. and Mrs. James C. Gruener Agnes Gund Dorothea Wright Hamilton Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Stanley Hess Mrs. Liberty E. Holden Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Horvitz HRH Family Foundation Virginia Hubbell David S. Ingalls and Family Institute of Museum and Library Services Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings Lila Wallace– Reader’s Digest Fund Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Severance A. Millikin National City National Endowment for the Arts Ohio Arts Council Georgia O’Keeffe The F. J. O’Neill Charitable Corporation Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin Peter and Peggy Horvitz Grace Rainey Rogers SBC Communications Inc. Mr. and Mrs. A. Dean Perry Mr. and Mrs. Ellery Sedgwick Jr. Elisabeth Severance Prentiss Mr. and Mrs. James S. Reid Jr. The Reinberger Foundation John L. Severance Carol and Michael Sherwin Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin Smith The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation State of Ohio The Sherwick Fund Elizabeth M. Skala United Technologies Corporation Dr. and Mrs. Paul J. Vignos Jr. Mrs. J. H. Wade The Womens Council of the Cleveland Museum of Art Mr. and Mrs. James D. Ireland III The Kresge Foundation Helen A. and Fredrick S. Lamb Mr. and Mrs. Jon A. Lindseth Rosemarie and Leighton R. Longhi Lockwood Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Richard Whitehill Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Wurzburger Justin and Silvia Zverina Foundation Benefactor ($500,000 to $999,999) Anonymous BP America Hon. Joseph P. Carroll and Mrs. Carroll Ellen Wade Chinn Nelson Goodman The George Gund Foundation Lois U. Horvitz Frances S. Ingalls Mr. and Mrs. William Powell Jones Lillian M. Kern KeyBank Alma Kroeger Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Mann William G. Mather Mr. and Mrs. Bruce V. Mavec National Endowment for the Humanities Mr. and Mrs. R. Henry Norweb Francis F. Prentiss The Print Club of Cleveland Dr. Norman W. Zaworski Benefactor Fellow ($250,000 to $499,999) Mr. and Mrs. Quentin Alexander Anonymous Raymond Q. and Elizabeth R. Armington Pamela Pratt Auchincloss and Garner Tullis Hanna H. and James T. Bartlett Louis Dudley Beaumont The Louis D. Beaumont Foundation Mike and Annie Belkin Emma R. Berne Emily E. and Dudley S. Blossom Jr. Leigh and Mary Carter Martha and Thomas Carter Mr. and Mrs. Warren H. Corning CVJ Corporation Robert H. Ellsworth Josephine P. and Dorothy Burnham Everett The J. Paul Getty Trust Morton Glaser Gladys B. Goetz George Gund III and Iara Lee Mr. and Mrs. Graham Gund Hahn Loeser & Parks LLP 48 4-CommSupport.p65 48 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM Robert A. Mann MBNA America Systems Metropolitan Savings Bank Thomas P. Miller India E. Minshall NACCO Industries, Inc. Lucia S. Nash Ohio SchoolNet Commission Leonna Prasse PTS Foundation Mildred Andrews Putnam Peter Putnam David Rollins Alexandre P. Rosenberg Sarah and Edwin Roth Mr. and Mrs. James N. Sherwin John and Frances M. Sherwin Nancy Baxter Skallerup Kathleen E. Smith Squire Sanders & Dempsey Katherine Holden Thayer Mrs. Chester D. Tripp U.S. Department of Commerce William E. Ward Katherine C. White Mr. and Mrs. Lewis C. Williams Endowment Benefactor ($100,000 to $249,999) Dudley P. Allen American Greetings Corporation Anonymous AT&T Foundation Bank One, N.A. Maxeen and John Flower Hollis French Robert and Ann Friedman Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Gale Jr. Malcolm E. Kenney Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Kilroy Jr. Ralph Thrall King Fred W. Koehler Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Lampl Jr. Harley C. Lee Jeanne Miles Blackburn Elizabeth B. Blossom The GAR Foundation William J. Gordon The Florence Gould Foundation Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation Edward B. Greene Lucile and Robert H. Gries Charity Fund Musa Gustan Carl E. Haas Mrs. Benjamin P. Bole The Hadden Foundation Mrs. Malcolm McBride Ronald and Isabelle Brown Mr. and Mrs. Willard Brown Ella Brummer Mr. and Mrs. John Hadden Sr. Mrs. Salmon P. Halle Margaret H. S. McCarthy Mrs. Norman F. McDonough Mrs. P. J. McMyler Vernon W. Baxter Maud K. Bell Mildred K. Bickel The Family of Mrs. Robert H. Bishop E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation The Chubb Corporation Mr. and Mrs. Newman T. Halvorson Mrs. Leonard C. Hanna Mrs. Charles W. Harkness Dr. and Mrs. Sherman E. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Leisy Peter B. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. John D. MacDonald Caroline Macnaughton Stephan Mazoh Moselle Taylor Meals The Mellen Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Merrin Mrs. Harold T. Clark Cleveland Society for Contemporary Art The George W. Codrington Charitable Foundation Edward S. Harkness Henry Hawley Rudolf J. Heinemann Samuel Merrin William Mathewson Milliken The Hershey Family Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hitchcock Helen C. Cole Mildred Constantine Mr. and Mrs. Benedict Crowell Henry G. Dalton Dorothy Dehner Michael Hoffman Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Holden Mr. and Mrs. James Horner David and Lindsay Morgenthaler Sally S. and John C. Morley Barrie Morrison Dr. Gergrude Hornung The John P. Murphy Foundation Mr. and Mrs. James H. Dempsey Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George M. Humphrey II George M. and Pamela S. Humphrey Fund Louis S. and Mary Schiller Myers Mr. and Mrs. George Oliva Jr. Lillian and Derek Ostergard Park-Ohio Holdings James Parmelee Mrs. John B. Dempsey Edna H. Doller Dominion East Ohio Mr. and Mrs. John D. Drinko Louise Rorimer Dushkin Eaton Corporation Edith Virginia Enkler Ernst & Young LLP Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Evans Eleanor and Morris Everett Marie and Hubert Fairchild Jane Iglauer Fallon Mrs. Albert S. Ingalls International Business Machines Corp. Mr. and Mrs. James D. Ireland Virginia Jones Louis D. Kacalieff, M.D. Susan Kaesgen The Kangesser Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Keithley George S. Kendrick Bruce Ferrini FirstEnergy Gordon K. Mott The Murch Foundation Maurice Denis (French, 1870–1943). Éva Meurier in a Green Dress, 1891; oil on canvas; 55 x 38 cm; Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund 2002.92 Robert deSteacy Paxton Payne Fund, Inc. Mrs. Rudolph J. Pepke Mary Witt Perkins Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Porter Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Max Ratner Sarah P. and William R. Robertson 49 4-CommSupport.p65 49 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM Larry and Barbara S. Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Taplin Jr. Carole and Charles Rosenblatt Mr. and Mrs. Albrecht Saalfield Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Sampliner Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert P. Schafer Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Schmitt Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Tullis Charlotte Vander Veer G. Garretson Wade The Sears-Swetland Foundation Evelyn S. and William E. Ward Ethelyne Seligman Dr. Gerard and Phyllis Seltzer Worcester R. Warner The Raymond John Wean Foundation Mrs. John L. Severance Mr. and Mrs. Alton W. Whitehouse Jr. John and Frances W. Sherwin Rabbi Daniel and Adele Silver Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Stevens Louise Hawley Stone Norman W. and Ella A. Stone Mitsuru Tajima Mr. and Mrs. Lewis B. Williams Mary Jo Wise George Garretson Wade Charitable Trust #2 Mr. and Mrs. Jeptha H. Wade III Janette Wright Benefactor ($50,000 to $99,999) 1525 Foundation Charles Abel Shuree Abrams Accenture LLP Frances Almirall Amica Insurance Mrs. and Mrs. Matthew Andrews Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Arnold S. Askin Lester P. and Marjorie W. Aurbach Mrs. S. Prentiss Baldwin Bank Leu AG Mr. and Mrs. Randall J. Barbato Theodore S. and Marcella M. Bard Dr. Ronald and Diane Bell Milena M. Benesovsky BF Goodrich Company/Tremco Foundation Ruth Blumka Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Bolton Dr. and Mrs. Warren C. Fargo Marguerite B. Humphrey Mrs. Chester C. Bolton Kathryn G. Bondy Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Feldman Ferro Corporation Helen Humphreys Jarmila Hyncik David S. Ingalls Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert S. Brewer Pamela Humphrey Firman Carol Brewster The Britton Fund Dr. and Mrs. Jerald S. Brodkey Jeanette Grasselli Brown and Glenn R. Brown Louise Ingalls Brown The Ford Foundation Mrs. James Albert Ford Kate Ireland Mr. and Mrs. R. Livingston Ireland Edith Burrous Margaret Uhl Burrows Julius Cahen Mrs. Henry White Cannon Central National Bank Charter One Bank Mr. and Mrs. M. Roger Clapp Mr. and Mrs. Harold Terry Clark Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc. The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Coe Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Colin Stella M. Collins Mrs. John Lyon Collyer Daniel S. Connelly George B. Coombe Mrs. James W. Corrigan Alan Covell and K. Pak-Covell Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur A. Cowett Mr. and Mrs Robert R. Cull David E. and Bernice Sapirstein Davis Dr. and Mrs. Richard C. Distad William Dove Zoann and Warren Dusenbury Dr. and Mrs. Paul G. Ecker Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Eells Jr. Natasha Eilenberg Double-Spouted Vessel. Peru, Wari style; 500–900; ceramic, slip; h. 20.3 cm, diam. 16.5 cm; James Parmelee Fund 2002.94 A. W. Ellenberger Sr. Heinz Eppler Mr. and Mrs. Giuseppe Eskanazi Ford Motor Company Forest City Enterprises, Inc. Mrs. Robert J. Frackelton The Family of Elizabeth Ege Freudenheim 50 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond T. Jackson Barbara Jacobs The Japan Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Homer H. Johnson Jones Day The Giant Eagle Foundation Marian Sheidler Gilbert Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Gillespie Lucille F. Goldsmith (Lady) Marie Louise Gollan Joseph T. Gorman Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kaminsky Mr. and Mrs. Richard I. Goss Josephine Grasselli Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Klejman Kotecki Monuments, Inc. KPMG LLP William Krause Ann and Richard Gridley Thomas M. Hague Robert M. Kaye Harry D. Kendrick Mrs. Ralph Thrall King Irene Kissell R. B. Kitaj Mr. and Mrs. G. Robert Klein Edgar A. Hahn Janice Hammond and Edward Hemmelgarn Mrs. Howard M. Hanna Mrs. Edward S. Harkness Mr. and Mrs. Osborne Hauge Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hauge The Samuel H. Kress Foundation Ruth C. Heede Hiroshi Hirota Liberty E. Holden Linden Trust Jack B. List Testamentary Trust Dr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Hollander Mr. and Mrs. Herbert M. Litton Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hord Dr. and Mrs. Roger Y. K. Hsu Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin S. Hubbell Jr. LTV Steel Company Henry Luce Foundation, Inc. The Gilbert W. and Louise Ireland Humphrey Foundation 50 4-CommSupport.p65 Charles Isaacs and Carol Nigro 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM Mr. and Mrs. Dennis W. LaBarre Rogerio Lam Mr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Lange The Laub Foundation Mrs. Raymond E. Lawrence Mary B. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Theodore M. Luntz Amanda and William P. Madar Brian and Florence Mahony Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mallon Jack and Lilyan Mandel Raga Suramananda, from a “Ragamala” series. India, Bilaspur, about 1750; ink and color on paper; 23.8 x 19.1 cm; Gift of Dr. Norman Zaworski 2002.116 Joseph and Florence Mandel Morton and Barbara Mandel Elizabeth Ring Mather and William Gwinn Mather Fund The S. Livingston Mather Charitable Trust Samuel Mather Mrs. William G. Mather Virginia Hosford Mathis Kathryn Arns May Eleanor Bonnie McCoy McDonald Investments Aline McDowell Judith K. and S. Sterling McMillan III Mrs. Myron E. Merry Dr. and Mrs. Ruben F. Mettler Dr. Leo Mildenberg Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Miles Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Milne Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Minoff Mrs. Paul Moore John D. Rockefeller Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James J. Rorimer Isosuke Setsu Takako and Iwao Setsu Nellie W. Morris Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Munro The David and Inez Myers Foundation Milton C. Rose Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Roseman Rosenberg and Stiebel Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Sherwin Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Myers Mr. and Mrs. J. King Rosendale Asa and Patricia Shiverick Mr. and Mrs. Alvin A. Siegal Morris Siegel Klaus F. Naumann Mr. and Mrs. James A. Nelson The Samuel Rosenthal Foundation Gloria Ross Dr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Ross RPM, Inc. Arthur Sachs Mrs. Aye Simon Phyllis Sloane Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Spring Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Strang Lillian and Henry Steinberg Mr. and Mrs. James A. Saks Mr. and Mrs. Oscar H. Steiner Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Saltzman Martha Bell Sanders Frank Stella Ester R. Stern Mr. and Mrs. Howard F. Stirn Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Strang Mr. and Mrs. Seth C. Taft Nordson Corporation David Z. Norton Laurence H. Norton The Norton-WhiteGale Trust Mrs. R. Henry Norweb Jr. Earle W. Oglebay Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. C. Perry Hobson L. Pittman John and Mary Preston Louise S. Richards RJF International Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller III William B. Sanders Dr. and Mrs. Robert Schermer Mr. and Mrs. Elliott L. Schlang Florence B. Selden Boake and Marian Sells Mr. and Mrs. Nelson S. Talbott Textile Arts Club Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Victor Thaw The Timken Company Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tishman Toshiba International Foundation Mr. and Mrs. William C. Treuhaft TRW Foundation Mr. and Mrs. John F. Turben Brenda and Evan Turner Mrs. Windsor T. White Mr. and Mrs. Hugh R. Whiting Edward L. Whittemore Doris and Ed Wiener Ralph L. Wilson John Wise Helen B. Zink Tessim Zorach Anton and Rose Zverina Fund Frances S. Zverina Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V. H. Vail Mrs. Jacob W. Vanderwerf Gertrude L. Vrana Mildred E. Walker Helen B. Warner Mrs. Worcester R. Warner Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Watson The Weatherhead Foundation The S. K. Wellman Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Fred White Jr. 51 4-CommSupport.p65 51 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM Legacy Society 2002 The Cleveland Museum of Art thanks the many members of the Legacy Society, including those who wish to remain anonymous, for their generosity, kindness, and support. Legacy Society members have created endowments or included the museum in a will, trust, or as a beneficiary of a life insurance policy, IRA, or other retirement plan. These gifts help insure the museum’s future for generations to come. Shuree Abrams Carolyn Adelstein Norman W. and Helen T. Allison Herbert Ascherman Jr. Marjorie Weil Aurbach+ Frances and Andrew Babinsky Doris Govan Ballengee+ Laurence and Nancy Bartell James T. and Hanna H. Bartlett Charitable Trust Norma E. Battes Mrs. Matthew A. Baxter+ Mr. and Mrs. Behm Carolyn H. Bemis Nancy Harris Beresford Dorothy A. and Don A. Berlincourt Mildred K. Bickel+ Dr. Harold and Lillian Bilsky Catherine F. Paris Biskind Flora Blumenthal Alfred C. Body John C. Bonebrake Helen and Albert Borowitz Ruth Gedeon Boza Gracey Bradley Louise Bradley Mrs. Wilbert S. Brewer+ Helen E. Jeanette Grasselli Brown and Glenn R. Brown Ronald and Isabelle+ Brown Pauline+ and Clark Evans Bruner Dr. and Mrs. Harvey Buchanan Rita Whearty Buchanan Fred and Linda Buchler Alexander W. Budden Sally M. Buesch cm; Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Whitehill Art Purchase Endowment Fund 2002.8.a–b Betsy Nebel Cohen Karen M. and Kenneth L. Conley Martine V. Conway and Gerald A. Conway Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cooley George B. Coombe+ Mrs. John (Louise) Cooper Vincent R. Crew Ran K. Datta Bernice M. and David E.+ Davis E. Barbara Davis Helen and Al DeGulis Mrs. John B. Dempsey Edna H. Doller+ Mark Dreger in memory of Kelly Dreger Elizabeth Drinko Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duvin Bernard and Sheila Eckstein Caroline Emeny+ Elaine S. Engeln Edith Virginia Enkler+ Dr. and Mrs. Michael D. Eppig Heather Ettinger Brown+ Charlotte Salomon (German, 1917– 1943). Dinner Party (recto), 1940–42; gouache; 29.3 x 19.9 Pauline Bushman Milan and Jeanne Busta Ellen Wade Chinn Ray W. Clarke Honnie and Stanley Busch Eleanor Everett Arline C. Failor+ Hubert L. Fairchild Jane Iglauer Fallon+ Elizabeth Ludwig Fennell S. Jay Ferrari Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Fiordalis Marilyn L. Fisher Maxeen and John Flower Virginia Foley Edward L. Franke+ Mrs. Ralph I. Fried+ Mrs. Carl H. Ganzenmueller Phyllis Asquith Gary Dr. James E. Gibbs Gifford+ + deceased James W. F. David Gill Rocco Gioia 52 4-CommSupport.p65 52 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM Gladys B. Goetz+ Leonard C. Gradeck Ruth Thompson Grandin Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Gridley Anne Groves Mr.+ and Mrs. David L. Grund Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro Graham Gund Joseph E. Guttman+ Mr. and Mrs. James C. Hageman Edward Halbe Marvin G. Halber+ Virginia Halvorson+ James J. Hamilton David A. Hardie and Howard John Link+ Jane Hanson Harris+ Thomas and Joan Hartshorne D. J. Hassler Masumi Hayashi Mr. and Mrs. Wade Farley Helms Dorothy P. Herron Rice Hershey Mary C. Hill Tom Hinson and Diana Tittle Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Holden Jr. Dr.+ and Mrs. Ralph F. Hollander Dr. Gertrude Seymour Hornung+ Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Horvitz Patience Cameron Hoskins Elizabeth A. Hosmer Virginia Hubbell+ Mr. and Mrs. George M. Humphrey II Carola B. Hunt Grace Ellen Huntley+ Mary E. Huth+ Jarmila Hyncik+ Dr. and Mrs. Scott R. Inkley B. Scott Isquick Donald M. Jack Jr. Karen L. Jackson Sharon Faith Jacobs Robert J. Jergens Tom L. Johnson+ Adrienne L. Jones, M.D., and L. Morris Jones, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. E. Bradley Jones Marguerite H. McGrath Virginia Jones+ Louis D. Kacalieff, M.D.+ Etole and Julian Kahan Judith and Ted McMillan William W. and Pamela M. McMillan Ivan Mezi Andrew Kahane Audrey Regan Kardos+ Mr.+ and Mrs. Joseph F. Keithley Aurelie A. Sabol Mr. and Mrs. James A. Saks Elliott L. and Gail C. Schlang Josephine and Nelson Talbott A. Benedict Schneider, M.D. Fred+ and Betty Toguchi Edith and Ted Miller Lynn Underwood Minnich Bryan K. Schwegler Elizabeth Wade Sedgwick Ralph and Roslyn Seed Patricia Kelley John Kelly Malcolm E. Kenney Alice Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. William A. Mitchell Beryl and Irv Moore Geraldine M. Moose Mrs. William C. Treuhaft+ Mr.+ and Mrs. Richard B. Tullis Dorothy Ann Turick Patricia Kenney Lillian M. Kern+ Nancy H. Kiefer Bessie Corso Morgan+ Gordon K. Mott+ Mrs. William H. Shackleton Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Kilroy Jr. Mary F. King G. Mr. and Robert Klein Mrs.+ Jay Robert Klein Thea Klestadt Gina and Richard Klym Margery A. Kowalski Mrs. Arthur Kozlow Helen A. and Fredrick S. Lamb Carolyn C. Lampl Mrs. Samuel H. Lamport Mildred Lerch+ Ellen Levine Jon and Virginia Lindseth Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Lobe Mary Luetkemeyer and Alfred Cahen Nancy and Byron Lutman Carolyn White MacNaughton+ Alice D. Malone Jack N. Mandel Robert A. Mann Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Mann Karen Lee Marano Wilbur J. Markstrom Dr. and Mrs. Sanford E. Marovitz Miss Isabel Marting+ Mr. and Mrs. Bruce V. Mavec Kathryn Arns May+ Malcolm L. McBride+ Mary W. and William K. McClung Eleanor Bonnie McCoy Mower+ J. P. Margaret and Werner+ Mueller Anthony C. Nassif, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. George Oliva III George Oliva Jr. Marilyn B. Opatrny Mrs. James M. Osborne+ Aurel F. Ostendorf+ Frederick Woodworth Pattison Robert De Steacy Paxton+ Mrs. Rudolph J. Pepke+ Mrs. A. Dean Perry+ Mr. and Mrs. Peter Pfouts Emily M. Phillips Florence KZ Pollack Jean C. Price+ Lois S.+ and Stanley M. Proctor Dr. and Mrs. Frank Rack M. Neal Rains Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin Donna and James Reid Robert S. and Sylvia K. Reitman David Rollins+ James J. Roop Audra L. and George M. Rose Jackie and Norton Rose Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt Dr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Ross Kate M. Sellers Dr. Gerard and Phyllis Seltzer Larry and Margaret Shaffer Dr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Shapiro Elizabeth Carroll Shearer Dr. Walter Sheppe Kathleen Burke Sherwin+ Michael and Carol Sherwin Patricia and Asa+ Shiverick Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Shrier Miriam, Stanley, and Kenneth Shuler Rosalind and Sidney H. Silber Adele Z. and Daniel+ Silver Dr. and Mrs. John A. Sims Naomi G. Singer Alden and Ellen D. Smith Kathleen E. Smith+ Katherine Solender and Dr. William E. Katzin Rochelle A. Solomon Barbara J. Stanford Lois C. and Thomas G. Stauffer Dr. Willard D. Steck Susan and Andrew Talton Charles H. Teare Brenda and Evan Turner Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Urban Mary Louise Vail+ Marshall A. Veigel Nicholas J. Velloney Catherine G. Veres Dr. and Mrs. Paul J. Vignos Jr. William E. Ward Mr. and Mrs. John C. Wasmer Jr. Mrs. Daniel T. Weidenthal Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Weizman Dr. Joyce West Marcia J. Wexberg and Kenneth D. Singer Marilyn J. White Mr. and Mrs. Alton W. Whitehouse Jr. Hugh and Sherry Whiting Douglas Wick Burt T. Williams Mrs. Lewis C. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Williams Mary Jo Wise+ Lenora R. Wolf+ Small Sword. Switzerland, Geneva(?) (blade: Germany, Solingen), around 1790–1800; hilt: gold with translucent enamel, blade: blued and gilded steel; l. 97 cm; Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 2002.1 Mrs. Paul Wurzburger Dr. William F. Zornow Saundra K. Stemen Ester R. Stern+ Dr. Myron B. and Helene Stern Eleanor E. Stone+ Lois and Stanley M. Stone Zenta Sulcs+ The Irving Sunshine Family Frances P. and Seth Taft 53 4-CommSupport.p65 53 6/10/2003, 4:44 PM Named Endowment Funds for Art Purchase, Specific Purpose, and Operations The following list salutes the individuals, families, and organizations whose named endowment funds for art purchase, specific purpose, and operations provide an assured source of income for the museum and serve as a lasting legacy to their generosity and foresight. Based on market value as of December 31, 2002 **new fund or activity in 2002 Endowment Funds Art Purchase $10,000,000 and more Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Bequest Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund Severance A. and Greta Millikin Chair. Designed by Jens Risom (American, b. Denmark, 1916– 1977) about 1942; modified by Knoll Associates Inc. about 1946; birch, cotton webbing; 78.7 x 44.5 x 50.8 cm; Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Loughrey 2002.109 $1,000,000 to $5,999,999 Dorothea Wright Hamilton Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings $100,000 to $249,999 Hershey Family Fund Louis Severance Higgins L. E. Holden Louis D. Kacalieff, M.D. James A. Parmelee Carole W. and Charles B. Rosenblatt** Jane B. Tripp Up to $99,999 John Cook Memorial Fund Charlotte Ekker and Charlotte Vanderveer A. W. Ellenberger Sr. Ruthe and Heinz Eppler Julius L. Greenfield Lawrence Hitchcock Tom L. Johnson Mary Spedding Milliken Memorial Alma and Robert Milne Judith and James A. Saks in memory of Lynn and Dr. Joseph Tomarkin** Dr. Gerard and Phyllis Seltzer Endowment Funds Specific Purpose $1,000,000 and more Robert P. Bergman, Curatorial Chair for Medieval Art** Robert P. Bergman Memorial Fund** George P. Bickford, Curatorial Chair for Indian and Southeast Asian Art Ernest L. and Louise M. Gartner Fund Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Reinberger Foundation John and Frances Sherwin Fine Arts Garden $500,000 to $999,999 Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Publications Research and Publications The Paul J. and Edith Ingalls Vignos Jr. Curator of European Painting** $250,000 to $499,999 Elizabeth Carroll Shearer The Noah L. Butkin Fund Nicholas J. Velloney Mr. and Mrs. William E. Ward** Ellen Wade Chinn Harold T. Clark Educational Extension Fund Rufus M. Ullman** Anne Elizabeth Wilson Fund Delia H. White Anton and Rose Zverina Music Fund** Rose E. Zverina $400,000 to $999,999 Delia E. Holden Alma Kroeger Edwin R. and Harriet Pelton Perkins $250,000 to $399,999 Lillian M. Kern Memorial Fund Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Whitehill Edward L. Whittemore $100,000 to $249,999 Mildred K. Bickel Marie K. and Hubert L. Fairchild Fund** The FUNd at the Cleveland Museum of Art Marianne Millikin Hadden Fund L. E. Holden Gertrude S. Hornung Zane Bland Odenkirk and Magdalena Maillard Odenkirk F. J. O’Neill 54 4-CommSupport.p65 54 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Up to $99,999 Lydia May Ames Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Andrews Robert Blank Art Scholarship Fund Arthur, Asenath, and Walter H. Blodgett Memorial Fund Louise M. Dunn Fund Endowment Funds Operating $10,000,000 and more Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Bequest Membership Endowment Netta Faris Fine Arts Garden The Gallery Group $1,000,000 to $5,999,999 Gilpin Scholarship Fund of Karamu House Mr. and Mrs. James C. Hageman in memory of Mrs. Elta Albaugh Schleiff Charlotte L. Halas Flora E. Hard Memorial Fund Guerdon Stearns Holden Dorothy Humel Hovorka Musical Arts Fund Frank and Margaret Hyncik Memorial Fund Benjamin S. Hubbell Family Fund Albertha T. Jennings Musical Arts Malcolm E. Kenney Special Exhibitions** Ellen Bonnie Mandel Children’s Education Fund Robert A. Mann Herman R. Marshall Memorial Malcolm Martin Ethel Cable McCabe Thomas Munro Memorial Fund S. Louise Pattison Preservation and Conservation of Asian Paintings Mr. and Mrs. Edd A. Ruggles Memorial Fund Adolph Benedict and Ila Roberts Schneider Memorial Music Fund Charles Frederick Schweinfurth Scholarship Charlotte F. J. Vanderveer H. E. Weeks Memorial for Art and Architecture Mary H. White Womens Council Flower Fund** Dorothy H. Zak Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings William G. Mather Katherine Holden Thayer $500,000 to $999,999 Charles R. and Emma M. Berne Memorial Fund Roberta Holden Bole Alison Loren and Leslie Burt Fund in memory of Albert and Doris Glaser Dorothea Wright Hamilton Louise H. and David S. Ingalls Mr. and Mrs. James S. Reid Jr.** Silvia and Justin Zverina Fund in memory of Lillie and Adolph Wunderlich $250,000 to $499,999 Julia Cobb and Benedict Crowell Memorial Fund Josephine P. and Dorothy B. Everett Charles W. Harkness Margaret Huntington Smith McCarthy F. J. O’Neill Richard B. and Chaille H. Tullis Anna L. Vanderwerf Memorial Fund G. Garretson Wade Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Whitehill Lewis C. and Lydia Williams $100,000 to $249,999 Mr. and Mrs. George Oliva Jr. Quentin and Elisabeth Alexander Elizabeth G. Drinko Rudolph J. Pepke Memorial Helen G. and A. Dean Perry Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rorimer Memorial William B. Sanders Glenn C. Sheidler Frances W. and David S. Ingalls Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Kilroy Jr.** Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund Estate of Malcolm L. McBride** Laurence H. Norton Alton and Helen Whitehouse Up to $99,999 George P. Bickford Arthur, Asenath, and Walter H. Blodgett Memorial Fund Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert S. Brewer Noah and Muriel Butkin Julius Cahan Mrs. Harold T. Clark Memorial Mary Elder Crawford Nancy W. Danford Julia and James Dempsey Bernard and Sheila Eckstein Francis M. and Margaret Halle Sherwin James N. and Kathleen B. Sherwin Jane B. Tripp Paul J. and Edith Ingalls Vignos George Garretson Wade Memorial Worcester Reed and Cornelia Blakemore Warner Memorial Lewis B. and Helen C. Williams Paul D. and Odette V. Wurzburger Till Freiwald (German, b. Peru, 1963). Untitled, 2001; watercolor over graphite; 228.4 x 154.8 cm; John L. Severance Fund 2002.16 Adele C. and Howard P. Eells Jr. Eleanor and Morris Everett Elsa C. and Warren C. Fargo Robert I. Gale Jr. and Frances W. Gale Newman T. and Virginia M. Halvorson** Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Holden Jr. Ralph and Mildred Hollander Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Horvitz James D. and Cornelia W. Ireland James Endowment** Ada E. Koehler Memorial Caroline MacNaughton Ruth K. McDonough Mr. and Mrs. Severance A. Millikin David and Dorothy Morris Memorial 55 4-CommSupport.p65 55 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Individual and Contributing Membership Endowments for General Operations The following list salutes the individuals, families, and organizations whose named membership endowment funds for operations provide an assured source of income for the museum and serve as a lasting legacy to their generosity and foresight. Based on cumulative giving as of December 31, 2002 **new fund or activity in 2002 Allan McCollum (American, b. 1944). More Visible Markers in Twelve Exciting Colors, 2000; painted Hydrocal; 12 sculptures, each 4.5 x 10.3 cm; Dorothea Wright Hamilton Fund 2002.95.1–12 $25,000 to $49,999 $10,000 to $24,999 Marie N. Agee Anonymous #5 Arthur, Asenath, and Walter Blodgett Memorial Anonymous #3 Anonymous #9 Raymond Q. and Elizabeth Riely Armington Myrta Jones Cannon Howard Melville Hanna III Memorial Barbara J. and Matthew A. Baxter** Virginia R. Billinghurst Memorial Lawrence Hitchcock Memorial David H. Jacobs Franny Tewksbury and Ralph T. King Memorial G. Robert and Mary Elizabeth Klein Jack and Carolyn Lampl Patricia C. LeMaster Memorial Eleanor and Sevier Bonnie Aline McDowell Memorial Harold T. Clark Cleveland-Cliffs Foundation Phyllis G. and Jacob D. Cox Jr. Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Miles Ralph J. Mueller Memorial Carl L. and Florence B. Selden John and Frances W. Sherwin Mr. and Mrs. Nelson S. Talbott Fund in memory of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Kirk Large Frank E. and Edith S. Taplin Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V. H. Vail Dr. William F. Zornow** Frances Kelleher Bradner Linda Bole Brooks Memorial Louise Brown Katherine Ward Burrell The Champney Fund Estelle M. and Alton C. Dustin Memorial Pamela Humphrey Firman Mr. and Mrs. J. Harrington Glidden Edgar A. Hahn Robert L. and Lois M. Hays Mr. and Mrs. George M. Humphrey II George M. and Pamela S. Humphrey Albert S. Ingalls Jr. Memorial David S. Ingalls Jr. Ann J. and E. Bradley Jones Ruthalia Keim Richard and Gina Klym** Harley C. and Elizabeth K. Lee Helen S. Leisy Memorial Up to $9,999 Robert Arthur Mann Samuel and Grace Mann Judith K. and S. Sterling McMillan III** Donna and Ruben Mettler Marilyn B. Opatrny Aurel F. Ostendorf Anonymous #8 Anonymous #10 Stella Minor Arntisdale Eva M. Baker Memorial** S. Prentiss Baldwin Memorial Mr. and Mrs. A. Beverly Barksdale S. V. Palda Memorial Franklin and Helen Elizabeth Rockefeller Memorial Daniel and Adele Z. Silver Chester D. Tripp Esther K. and Elmer G. Beamer Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Bellowe W. Dominick Benes Memorial Atheline M. and John S. Wilbur Womens Council of The Cleveland Museum of Art George P. and Clara G. Bickford Susan Barber Woodhill Memorial Dr. and Mrs. E. K. Zaworski Memorial Frances Adams and Mary E. Adams Memorial Walter S. and Mabel Croston Adams Alfred S. and Estelle G. Andrews Anonymous #1 Anonymous #2 George T. Bishop Memorial Roberta Holden Bole Memorial Alfred M. and Palmyre C. Bonhard Memorial Helen and Albert Borowitz Alva Bradley Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Morris A. Bradley Emma G. Brassington Memorial Arthur L. and Virginia Brockway Arthur D. and Marion W. Brooks Memorial The Oliver and Harriet G. Brooks Memorial Glenn and Jenny Brown 56 Alvah Stone and Adele Corning Chisolm Memorial Kenneth L. and Karen M. Conley Charles E. Cooper Delos and Anita Cosgrove Tina V. Cowgill Mrs. Harry J. Crawford Harris Creech Mary Elizabeth Crawford Croxton Nathan L. Dauby Memorial Bernice and David E. Davis Elaine Davis Memorial Helen and Albert DeGulis Elizabeth Brainard Thomson Denison Memorial Edwin A. Dodd Mr. and Mrs. John R. Donnell Daniel W. Dority Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Duvin William Joseph Eastman Memorial Ella C. Edison Maud Stager Eells and Howard Parmelee Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Emeny Sam W. and Florence Taylor Emerson Dr. and Mrs. Michael D. Eppig Alwin C. and Charlotte F. Ernst Memorial Neil and Marian Evans Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fallon Helen C. Brown Erza and Rose Brudno Memorial Adolph J. and Esther S. Farber Memorial Paul Louis and Edith Lehman Feiss Memorial Polly S. and Clark E. Bruner James Edward Ferris Memorial Laura Merryweather Burgess Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Burton Alice Carothers Memorial C. J. and Elizabeth Fiordalis Royal and Pamela H. Firman Jr. Flesheim Foundation 56 4-CommSupport.p65 Katherine Hodell Chilcote Memorial 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Flory Eugène Atget (French, 1857–1927). The Park at Sceaux (April 1925, 7 a.m.), 1925, from Atget numbering series Sceaux #37; arrowroot print, goldtoned; 22.9 x 17.6 cm; The Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund 2002.68 Mary Eileen Fogarty Kate L. Fontius Memorial Dr. and Mrs. Finley M. K. Foster I. T. Frary Memorial Karen Freeman Miriam and Harry M. Friedman Edward M. Fritz Memorial W. Yost Fulton Frederick William Gehring Memorial Hulda B. Gehring Myron E. and Rose B. Glass Mary G. and Frances K. Glidden Memorial George C. Gordon Mr. and Mrs. Herbert G. Goulder Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Gary Graffman C. A. Grasselli Memorial Edward Grasselli Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Gratry John Adam Green Martina D. Grenwis Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Gridley Mr. and Mrs. Frank K. Greisinger Frank J. and Anastasia M. Grossman Memorial** Mrs. Ray J. Groves Mr. and Mrs. David L. Grund Agnes Gund Memorial George Gund III, Agnes Gund, Gordon Gund, Graham de C. Gund, Geoffrey de C. Gund, and Louise L. Gund Mr. and Mrs. James C. Hageman Georgia S. Haggerty Bertha Halber Eugene S. and Blanche R. Halle Memorial Helen C. Halle Salmon P. Halle Memorial Harold A. and Claribel B. Hallstein Florence A. Hamilton Colburn Haskell Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Robert Heller Birdie B. Herzog Memorial Laurence A. and Margarete S. Higgins Eleanor Hilliard Memorial Mrs. J. Howard Holan Elinor Irwin Holden Memorial Allen C. and Louise Q. Holmes Helen Chisholm Hord Mr. and Mrs. Bird W. Housum Memorial Mrs. Gene C. Hutchinson Albert S. Ingalls Jane Taft Ingalls Richard Inglis Memorial Dr. and Mrs. Scott R. Inkley Ireland Foundation Ella Konigslow Paul F. and Lucretia B. Ireland Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Jackson Issac and Jennie B. Joseph Memorial Louis D. Kacalieff, M.D. I. Theodore Kahn Mrs. I. Theodore Kahn Samuel S. and Dorothy D. Kates Marie and John Kern Memorial Elroy J. Kulas Memorial Dr. and Mrs. Victor C. Laughlin Caral Gimbel Lebworth Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Lindseth Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Lobe Charles G. King III Memorial Marilyn Lurie Memorial Mr. and Mrs. W. Griffin King Jr. Louise Delaney Kiphuth Memorial Jessie Effler Kneisel Charlmer F. Lutz Memorial Hilda B. Lyman Memorial Isabel Marting William A. Lowry Mr. and Mrs. George C. Lucas Memorial Mr. and Mrs. John S. Lucas 57 4-CommSupport.p65 57 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Grace Harman Mather Memorial Mary and Louis S. Myers Foundation Katherine L. Mather Memorial William G. and Elizabeth R. Mather Mike Matsko Memorial Ruth A. Matson Kathryn Arns May Robert C. Norton Harry D. and Blanche E. Norvell Clara Mayer Memorial William M. O’Neill Marion A. and Amelia G. Parsons Memorial G. G. G. Peckham Memorial Mrs. Heaton Pennington Drake T. Perry Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Pierce Mary B. S. Pollock William B. McAllister Memorial Malcolm L. and Lucia McCurdy McBride Ellen E. and Lewis A. McCreary Memorial Mr. and Mrs. S. Sterling McMillan Moselle Taylor Meals Dr. and Mrs. Harvey J. Mendelsohn Frederick Metcalf Memorial H. Oothout Milliken Memorial Hugh K. Milliken Memorial Julia Severance Millikin Thomas S. and Marie E. Milliken Memorial Anna Willett Miter and Harry Fancher Memorial Fanny Hanna Moore Mrs. J. E. Morley Mrs. Cox Morrill Gordon K. Mott Mr. and Mrs. Werner D. Mueller Jeanie C. Murray John O’Connor Crispin and Kate Oglebay Memorial Mr. and Mrs. George Oliva III Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Pope Eda Sherwin Prescott John B. Putnam Memorial Frank J. and Rita M. Rack Lucille Ralls Memorial Robert S. and Sylvia K. Reitman James McElroy Richardson Memorial Lillian Rosenbaum Memorial Dr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Ross Walter Ross Walter D. Sayle Mrs. William Cramp Scheetz Jr. Else Schmelzer Heinz Schneider Ellen Schultz Charles P. and Ella R. Scovill Memorial The Sears-Swetland Foundation Elizabeth and Ellery Sedgwick Mary H. Severance Memorial Samuel Paisley Shane Memorial Perin Shirley Memorial Vladimir G. and Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch Memorial Allard and Margaret E. Smith James A. and Elizabeth B. D. Smith Memorial Nathalie C. Spence Memorial Marion H. Spiller Louis Stearn Avery L. Sterner Memorial Nathalie B. Steuer Memorial Judith Helen and Martha A. Stewart Memorial Mr. and Mrs. John M. Stickney Morris and Maxeen Stone Brenda and Evan Turner Boris Witzer Memorial Estate of Grace Ellen Huntley Joseph and Edwin Upson Memorial Mary Southworth Upson Samuel H. and Bessie Shaw Urdang Memorial Elbert C. and Henrietta S. Wixom Memorial J. D. Wright Clara Gordon York Jack Family Foundation Jane Frankel Interiors Mr. and Mrs. Stanley T. Jaros Mr. and Mrs. Norman S. Jeavons Estate of Virginia L. Jones Dorothy T. Van Loozen Memorial Visible Language George Garretson Wade Memorial Whitney and Florence S. Warner Memorial Mr. and Mrs. John C. Wasmer Jr. Sada D. Watters Memorial Mrs. Daniel T. Weidenthal Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Weston Roy M. Wheeler Memorial Kathleen F. Whidden Memorial Martha W. White Miriam Norton White Roland W. White Memorial Walter C. White Memorial Selina J. Sullivan Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Hugh R. Whiting Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Wick R. C. Williams Seth and Frances Taft Mr. and Mrs. Charles Farrand Taplin Captain and Mrs. Thomas Wilson Memorial Wilbur H. and Robert L. Zink William H. and Bertha S. Zink Memorial General Operating Endowment Contributors Dr. and Mrs. Webb Chamberlain Cohen & Company Ralph M. and Rosalie K. Della Ratta Mr. and Mrs. Scribner Fauver The Figgie Family Charitable Foundation, Inc. Virginia Q. Foley Estate of Edward L. Franke Dr. and Mrs. Laurence K. Groves Robert A. Hahn, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Shattuck Wellman Hartwell Jr. Schuyler Schenck Haskell Morrie E. and Edith F. Hirsch Elizabeth A. Holan Dr. and Mrs. William L. Huffman Stan Thomas Gordon Parks (American, b. 1912). Untitled (Muhammad Ali with Children), about 1970; gelatin silver print; 22.9 x 33.7 cm; Norman O. Stone and Ella A. Stone Memorial Fund by exchange 2002.71 58 4-CommSupport.p65 58 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Katz Mr. and Mrs. Ewald Kundtz Mr. and Mrs. George S. Lockwood Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Randall D. Luke Richard A. Manuel Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Mecaskey Frank T. and Suzanne M. Murray Mr. and Mrs. Edward Oberndorf Mr. and Mrs. William M. Osborne Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David F. Reid Mr. and Mrs. John P. Reinartz Estate of David J. Rollins Mr. and Mrs. Elliott L. Schlang Mr. and Mrs. David M. Schneider Mr. and Mrs. John P. Schneider Mr. and Mrs. Carlton B. Schnell Stuart Davis (American, 1892– 1964). Two Figures and El (Sixth Avenue El, No. 2), 1931; lithograph; 28 x 38.1 cm; Cole and Myers 17; Gift of various donors to the department of Prints and Drawings 2002.97 Estate of Kathleen Burke Sherwin Estate of Eleanore E. Stone Mr. and Mrs. William W. Taft Mr. and Mrs. Marshall H. Ulf Vixseboxse Art Galleries, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred C. Woodcock Building Endowment Contributors Estate of Edith Virginia Enkler Estate of Kathryn Arns May Morris Siegel Trust Fund Income for Art Purchase, Specific Purpose, and Operations The following list acknowledges the individuals and families whose trusts provided income to the museum in 2002. Art Purchase Dudley P. Allen Karl B. Goldfield Severance and Greta Millikin John L. Severance Norman O. Stone and Ella A. Stone Memorial J. H. Wade Specific Purpose Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Hermon A. Kelley Art Library P. J. McMyler Musical Endowment Operating Capital Projects Harry F. and Edna J. Burmester Edith Virginia Enkler The Garden Club of Cleveland Holden Parks Trust Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Horvitz The HRH Family Foundations The Louise H. and David S. Ingalls Foundation Susan Kaesgen Caroline E. Coit Henry G. Dalton General Endowment Guerdon S. Holden John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust Hinman B. Hurlbut Horace Kelley Art Foundation William Curtis Morton, Maud Morton, and Kathleen Morton Elisabeth Severance Prentiss Katherine Holden Thayer Fund #3 John Mason Walter and Jeanne M. Walter Memorial William E. Ward Restricted Operating Gifts (Special Projects, Programs, and Exhibitions) Ms. Shelby White and Mr. Leon Levy Young Audiences of Greater Cleveland, Inc. $100,000 or more $2,500 to $9,999 The Freeman Foundation Hexiad International Consultancy Group The George Gund Foundation National City Corp. The Laub Foundation Nancy F. and Joseph P. Keithley Foundation Elizabeth Ring Mather and William Gwinn Mather Fund Kathryn Arns May Ohio SchoolNet Commission The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Mr. and Mrs. James S. Reid Jr. The Sears-Swetland Family Foundation Morris Siegel The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation Metropolitan Bank & Trust State of Ohio, Capital Appropriations $25,000 to $99,999 Hellenic Preservation Society SBC Toshiba International Foundation V. V. Cooke Foundation $1,000 to $2,499 Sharon S. Divell National Film Preservation Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Williams The Wipper Family Fund United States Department of Commerce Womens Council of The Cleveland Museum of Art Under $1,000 $10,000 to $24,999 Gallery Group, Inc. Great Lakes Brewing Company Mr. Hero Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rose Wild Oats Adelphia Communications Eaton Corporation The J. Paul Getty Trust The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Chipotle DanDee Mr. and Mrs. Burton Deutsch Donatos 59 4-CommSupport.p65 59 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM ANNUAL GIVING Annual Giving includes all gifts to support the museum’s annual operating budget. We wish to thank members of our donors circles and corporate membership programs, patron and contributing members, and the many others who contributed to the annual giving program in 2002. $25,000 or more Mr. and Mrs. Jon A. Lindseth Mrs. John B. Dempsey Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. James T. Bartlett George Gund III and Iara Lee Janice Hammond and Edward Hemmelgarn Mr. and Mrs. William P. Madar Mr. and Mrs. Milton Maltz Mr. and Mrs. Morton L. Mandel Mr. and Mrs. William C. McCoy Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David T. Morgenthaler Dr. and Mrs. Michael D. Eppig Mr. and Mrs. Giuseppe Eskenazi Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Friedman Mrs. Robert I. Gale Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Gridley Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Horvitz Mr. and Mrs. John C. Morley Mr. and Mrs. James B. Griswold Robert M. Kaye Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Keithley Mary Schiller Myers Mr. and Mrs. Stephen E. Myers Mr. and Mrs. Bruce V. Mavec Lucia S. Nash Mrs. R. Henry Norweb Jr. Alison and Roger F. Rankin Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Gudbranson Mrs. Harry Richard Horvitz Joan Horvitz Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Carter Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James Ratner Mr. and Mrs. James S. Reid Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Sherwin Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Stevens $10,000 to $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Randall J. Barbato Dr. Ronald and Diane Bell Mrs. William H. Bemis Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Bolton Mrs. Noah L. Butkin Mrs. Austin B. Chinn Helen C. Cole Mrs. Warren Dusenbury Joseph M. Erdelac Dr. and Mrs. John Flower Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Gillespie Joseph T. Gorman Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Gries Mr. and Mrs. John Hildt Lillian L. Hudimac Mr. and Mrs. James D. Ireland III Barbara Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Kilroy Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis W. LaBarre Two would-be knights gaze at a two-handed sword. Sarah P. and William R. Robertson Larry J. B.+ and Barbara S. Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Roth Mr. and Mrs. Elliott L. Schlang Dr. and Mrs. Gerard Seltzer Ruth Shugart Mr. and Mrs. Alvin A. Siegal Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Steven Spilman Mr. and Mrs. John F. Turben Dr. and Mrs. Paul J. Vignos Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Watson $5,000 to $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Quentin Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Austin James and McKey Berkman Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Brentlinger Anne M. Clapp Mr. and Mrs. Morton Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Gerald A. Conway Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Morris II Donald W. Morrison Mr. and Mrs. Eric T. Nord Mr. and Mrs. William J. O’Neill Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Leon M. Plevin Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Reitman Mr. and Mrs. Leighton A. Rosenthal Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Cull Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. DeGulis Mark Schwartz and Dr. Bettina Katz 60 60 Toby Devan Lewis Kathryn Arns May+ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Milgram Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Minoff Mr. and Mrs. William A. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Rutledge Mr. and Mrs. David M. Schneider Leonard S. Schwartz and Charlotte R. Kramer + deceased 4-CommSupport.p65 Marguerite B. Humphrey Patience and George M. Humphrey II Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Jackson Helen Kangesser Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Kern Mr. and Mrs. Stuart F. Kline Mr. and Mrs. John D. Koch Mrs. Jack W. Lampl Jr. 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Mr. and Mrs. Boake A. Sells Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Frost Dr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Howard F. Stirn Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Strang Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Seth C. Taft Mr. and Mrs. Nelson S. Talbott Judith Gerson Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Goodman Professor Alan Miles Ruben and Judge Betty Willis Ruben Mr. and Mrs. James A. Saks Mr. and Mrs. David Haber Warshawsky Mr. and Mrs. George F. Wasmer Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Weller Mrs. Paul Wurzburger Dr. Norman W. Zaworski $2,500 to $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Abbey Mr. and Mrs. A. Chace Anderson Elizabeth L. Armington Agnes M. Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Barratt Mr. and Mrs. Myron Belkin Richard J. Blum and Harriet L. Warm Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Brandon Mr. and Mrs. William R. Calfee Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Callahan George N. Chandler II Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Clark Dr. and Mrs. John Collis Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Conley Mr. and Mrs. Robert Conrad Mr. and Mrs. William H. Coquillette Mr. and Mrs. George Daniels Right Reverend and Mrs. J. Clark Grew Mary C. Hill Elizabeth A. Holan Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Holden Jr. Dr. and Mrs. William L. Huffman Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Jack Jr. James R. Janetz Drs. Morris and Adrienne Jones Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Kalberer Mr. and Mrs. John E. Katzenmeyer Ralph and Terry Kovel Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Lader Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Liljedahl Mr. and Mrs. David P. Locke Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Lozick Mr. and Mrs. Randall D. Luke Elizabeth McBride Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Messerman Mr. and Mrs. Lester Theodore Miller Steve and Dolly Minter Mr. and Mrs. David Moreno Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Morris Dr. and Mrs. Roland W. Moskowitz Mr. and Mrs. William M. Osborne Jr. Henry Ott-Hansen Francine and Benson Pilloff Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Price Tamara M. Durn and Rick Doody Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Duvin Mrs. Morris Everett Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Quintrell Dr. and Mrs. Louis Rakita Mr. and Mrs. Albert B. Ratner Katharine and Bryan S. Reid Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Rieger Mr. and Mrs. Allen H. Ford Mr. and Mrs. Norton W. Rose Dr. and Mrs. Richard C. Distad Mr. and Mrs. William J. Schlageter Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Schlather Mr. and Mrs. David L. Selman John L. Selman Dennis Sherwin Kim Sherwin Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Z. Singer Mr. and Mrs. David W. Sloan Phyllis Sloane Mr. and Mrs. John E. Smeltz Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Smith Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Smythe Richard A. Statesir and Georganne Vartorella Brit and Kate Stenson Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Storey Mr. and Mrs. Neil Thompson Mr. and Mrs. William K. Wamelink Mr. and Mrs. Alton W. Whitehouse Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Steven R. Wiesenberger Mrs. Lewis C. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Bertram L. Wolstein Mr. and Mrs. David L. Zoeller $1,000 to $2,499 Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Adams Stanley and Hope Adelstein Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Ainsworth Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore M. Alfred Mr. and Mrs. Norman W. Allison Mr. and Mrs. B. Charles Ames William R. Anderson Janet G. and Gregory J. Ashe Graham G. Ashmead, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Harvey Buchanan Alexander W. Budden Mr. and Mrs. Keith A. Ashmus John F. Burke Jr. and Nancy A. Fuerst Mr. and Mrs. George Barry Mr. and Mrs. Laurence A. Bartell Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bayman Mrs. Patrick H. Beall Russell John Bechkowiak Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Beeman Mr. and Mrs. Jules Belkin Linda R. Butler and Steven E. Nissen, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Butler Dr. Robert B. Benyo Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Biggar Ted and Catherine Biskind Kimberly and George B. Chapman III Mr. and Mrs. Donald Cherry Drs. William A. Chilcote Jr. and Barbara S. Kaplan Corning Chisholm William P. Blair III Mrs. Lawrence Blumenthal Mrs. Jerome Boron Helen and Albert Borowitz Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Borstein Mrs. Morris A. Bradley II James J. Branagan Mr. and Mrs. John R. Brandt Mr. and Mrs. John G. Breen Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bruml Anthony Canova’s Terpsichore presides as visitors enjoy gallery 229. Mrs. Sumner Canary Mrs. Arthur F. Carey Mr. and Mrs. Harry Carlson Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Carr Mr. and Mrs. George B. Chapman Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey E. Christian Mrs. Ralph A. Colbert Mr. and Mrs. Brian Cook Mr. and Mrs. David E. Cook Mr. and Mrs. Evan R. Corns Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Corrado Dr. and Mrs. Dale H. Cowan Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Cristal Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Curtiss 61 4-CommSupport.p65 61 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Mrs. S. L. Dancyger Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Daroff Mrs. David E. Davis Shirley B. Dawson Lauren and Scott Fine Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Hahn Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hyams Mr. and Mrs. Chester J. Lis Mr. and Mrs. Francis Wynne Neville Mrs. Seth M. Fitchet Mr. and Mrs. John Fletcher Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Dobbins Marian Drost Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Floyd Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Halpern Mr. and Mrs. Samuel S. Hartwell Dr. and Mrs. Shattuck Wellman Hartwell Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Immerman Mr. and Mrs. E. Dale Inkley Dr. and Mrs. Scott R. Inkley Mr. and Mrs. Fred Isenstadt B. Scott Isquick Mr. and Mrs. Stanley T. Jaros Mr. and Mrs. Edwin T. Jeffery Mr. and Mrs. Brooks M. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Little Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Lobe Dr. Floyd D. Loop and Dr. Bernadine P. Healy Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Neye Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Nock Jr. Daurine Noll Mr. and Mrs. George J. Dunn Gertrude A. Dyson Dr. and Mrs. Robert M. Eiben Dr. and Mrs. Henry Eisenberg Mrs. George Foley Charles D. and Charlotte A. Fowler Mr. and Mrs. Peter L. Galvin Mrs. Richard N. Ganger Stephen H. Gariepy Dr. and Mrs. R. Bennett Eppes Mr. and Mrs. Donald Esarove Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Ettinger Mrs. William H. Evans Mr. and Mrs. Warren W. Farr Jr. Alison W. Gee Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Giller Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Ginn Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Felder Mrs. Jerome Grover Mr. and Mrs. David H. Gunning Mr. and Mrs. Peter Guren Dr. and Mrs. Aaron E. Feldman Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Feldman Dr. and Mrs. Victor M. Goldberg Sally A. Good Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Gretter Elaine Grasselli Hadden Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Hastings Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Hatch III Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Healey Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. Hegyes Bettyann and Wade Farley Helms Mr. and Mrs. Oliver C. Henkel Mrs. Charles Hickox Edith F. and Morrie E. Hirsch Mrs. Ralph F. Hollander Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Hollington Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Q. Holmes Dorothy Humel Hovorka Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T. Jones Trevor and Jennie Jones Dr. and Mrs. Donald W. Junglas Henri Pell Junod Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dieter Kaesgen Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fisher Kahn Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kaplan Patricia Keating Mr. and Mrs. James Kendis Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Kendis Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Kichler Dr. and Mrs. William S. Kiser Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Knerly Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Kohl Lawrence and Helen Korach Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Lafave Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wade Laisy Dr. and Mrs. Michael E. Lamm Mr. and Mrs. Samuel H. Lamport Mr. and Mrs. Robert Larson Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Lauer Mr. and Mrs. David Lazar Mr. and Mrs. Jamie R. Lebovitz A field trip from the Cain Park School for the Arts, a summer day camp in Cleveland Heights, visits the Asian galleries. Dr. and Mrs. L. Douglas Lenkoski Albert Leonetti and Ruth Anna Carlson Mr. and Mrs. Morton Q. Levin Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Lowe Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Lundin William Estes MacDonald Jr. Dr. Alvin and Lorrie Magid Mr. and Mrs. J. Grant Margrett Alan Markowitz, M.D., and Cathy Pollard Dr. Harold and Suzanne Mars Mrs. Walter A. Marting Mr. and Mrs. Alexander McAfee Mr. and Mrs. Sean McAvoy Dr. and Mrs. Patrick M. McCarthy Mrs. Frederick S. McConnell Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley A. Meisel 62 Mr. and Mrs. Tod Oliva Mrs. F. J. O’Neill Mrs. Donald C. Opatrny Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Oppmann Mr. and Mrs. Jon H. Outcalt Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Eliot Paine Mr. and Mrs. David Paris Bob and Trisha Pavey Mr. and Mrs. E. Lee Perry Dr. and Mrs. Harlan R. Peterjohn Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Peterman Florence KZ Pollack Mr. and Mrs. Anthony R. Michel Mr. and Mrs. Larry I. Pollock Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Porter Jr. Stanley M. Proctor Dr. and Mrs. Beno Michel Mrs. Alex Miller Sylvia Profenna Cynthia E. Rallis Cathy Randall John M. Mino and Nancy Bowdring Bruce T. Rankin Andrew K. Rayburn and Heather Guess Mr. and Mrs. A. Malachi Mixon III Rita Montlack and Howard J. Freedman Mr. and Mrs. Richard Keith Morgan Shirley O. Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Moroscak Mr. and Mrs. William J. Morse Jeffrey Mostade and Eric Nilson Mr. and Mrs. Patrick S. Mullin Creighton B. Murch and Janice A. Smith Susan B. Murphy Helen M. Murway Mrs. David N. Myers Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Neary Mrs. James Nelson 62 4-CommSupport.p65 Mr. and Mrs. Brad Norrick George Oliva Jr. 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Reid Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Rosenblatt Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Roth Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn P. Rubin Florence Brewster Rutter Marjorie Bell Sachs Clarine Saks Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Sawyer Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Scanlon Robert J. Schneider Marcia R. Schreibman Mr. and Mrs. Oliver E. Seikel Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Seitz Barbara K. Sheffler Mr. and Mrs. Gary M. Siegel Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence N. Siegler Mrs. Daniel J. Silver Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Straffon Mr. and Mrs. John K. Sullivan Mary E. Suzor Dr. Steven Ward and Dr. Barbara Brown Mr. and Mrs. William Weber Mr. and Mrs. David W. Weidenkopf Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Weil Mr. and Mrs. Jerome A. Weinberger Susan N. Silverberg Mr. and Mrs. David L. Simon Mr. and Mrs. William W. Taft Mr. and Mrs. William H. West Mr. and Mrs. Richey Smith Helen N. Tomlinson Mr. and Mrs. Leonard K. Tower Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey H. Smythe Katherine Solender and Dr. William E. Katzin Mrs. George S. Traub Mrs. Richard Barclay Tullis Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Vail Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John D. Wheeler Mrs. McKinley Whittlesey Edward Wilkof Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Spitz Dr. Willard D. Steck Mr. and Mrs. Charles Steigerwald Robert A. Valente Mr. and Mrs. Peter van Dijk Tinkham Veale II Charles L. Venable and Martin K. Webb Mrs. Daniel Verne Mr. and Mrs. John H. Vinton Mrs. Myron Viny Mr. and Mrs. William H. Steinbrink Mr. and Mrs. Eric D. Wald Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Shrier Dr. and Mrs. Gottfried K. Spring Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Spring R. Thomas Stanton Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Stein-Sapir Dr. Timothy Stephens and Dr. Consuelo M. Sousa Mr. and Mrs. Loyal W. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Ivan J. Winfield Mrs. James A. Winton Ambassador Milton A. Wolf John Michael Zayac and Dr. Marie Simon Mr. and Mrs. Scott Zeilinger Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Zeisler Frances R. Zverina $500 to $999 Leon W. Blazey Jr. Rabbi and Mrs. Richard A. Block Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Blumer Ruth M. Anderson Barbara J. Arison Mrs. Foster D. Armstrong Joseph Babin Dale A. Bacik Dr. Nejad Behzadi Jane E. Betz Robert and Nancy Bostwick Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Boyatzis Carol Boyd Maureen A. Brennan Mr. and Mrs. David M. Briggs Ronald Brown Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Butler Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Carreras Rita and Tim Carroll Elizabeth Chapman and Roy Knipper Mary E. Chilcote Mr. and Mrs. Homer D. W. Chisholm Mr. and Mrs. Kevin C. Conway American paintings are the focus of contemplation in gallery 239. Bruce B. Dayton Mr. and Mrs. James V. Debevec Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. deConingh Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Demeter Mr. and Mrs. David L. Deming Dr. Robert J. de Swart Mr. and Mrs. Martin James Drabik Jane Frankel Mr. and Mrs. Earl R. Franklin Dr. and Mrs. Richard B. Fratianne Robert Friedman and Elizabeth R. MacGowan Donald W. Ganzhorn Marjorie K. Garson 63 4-CommSupport.p65 63 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Five thousand years in one room: visitors in 2002 view art from ancient Egypt in gallery 203. The Honorable Leonard Goldstein Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence I. Gould Dr. and Mrs. Laurence K. Groves Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Harris Mrs. Clint E. Hart Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hartford III Charles Duane Hartman Dr. Roberta K. Helfgott Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Herschman Mr. and Mrs. Conway G. Ivy Mr. and Mrs. Norbert R. Jaworowski Carl M. Jenks Candace M. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Julian Kahan Janet G. Kimball Marian and Eric Klieber Greg Krivchenia Mr. and Mrs. Gregory G. Kruszka Rose Mary Kubik Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. LaFond Anne M. Landefeld Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Laub Mr. and Mrs. John N. Lauer Alice D. Malone Patrick T. Manion Dr. and Mrs. Sanford E. Marovitz Sarah T. Yoshiko Murakami Murlan Jerry Murphy Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Dieter H. Myers Marcia K. Petchers Graham A. Peters Thomas F. Peterson Jr. Mrs. Charles E. Petot Dr. and Mrs. James S. Marshall Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Masterson James A. and Marsha P. Mateyka Mr. and Mrs. Julien L. McCall Mr. and Mrs. William K. McClung Jean Z. Piety Robert W. Price Mr. and Mrs. John Prim Mr. and Mrs. David Ricanati Mr. and Mrs. John S. Rodewig Judith Mittleman Mr. and Mrs. Dan T. Moore III Andrea A. Morris Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Moskal Reverend Dr. and Mrs. Otis Moss Jr. Bert W. Moyar Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Muller Mrs. Martin Rosskamm Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rozgonyi Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Ruhl James L. Ryhal Jr. Dr. Gary Saltus Mr. and Mrs. George M. Rose Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Schenkelberg Adrian L. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Alexander C. Scovil Michael J. Sherwin and M. Michelle Thomas Carsten W. Sierck and W. Allen Shapard The Honorable and Mrs. William F. B. Vodrey Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Sihler Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Walton Doris H. and Russell J. Warren Mr. and Mrs. David D. Watson Mr. and Mrs. John C. Wells Robert M. Wolff and Dr. Paula Silverman Mrs. C. N. Sinclair Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence J. Singerman Carol A. Skoglund Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Skola Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Sobol Patrick T. Soltis Mrs. Richard W. Spurney Mr. and Mrs. John M. Stickney Lanie Strassburger Debra G. Strassman Mr. and Mrs. John W. Sweeney Mr. and Mrs. Andrew P. Talton Jennifer Thomas and Stephen Washington Mr. and Mrs. W. Hayden Thompson 64 4-CommSupport.p65 64 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Volpe Eileen J. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Walsh $250 to $499 Mr. and Mrs. William J. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Barring Coughlin Mr. and Mrs. Donald K. Fribourg Dr. and Mrs. Norman R. Hertzer Dr. and Mrs. Sam E. Kinney Dr. and Mrs. William E. Bruner II Dr. Bonnie Burman Mrs. J. Kenneth Cozier John P. Craig Mr. and Mrs. John Burns Mr. and Mrs. Chester F. Crone Janet R. Burnside Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Calfee Susan M. Weir Ancker John A. Anderson Esther Cameron Mr. and Mrs. Steve Carnes Mr. and Mrs. David J. Carpenter Dr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Cross Mr. and Mrs. Albert L. Culbertson Mr. and Mrs. Earl M. Curry Jr. Kathryn Curtis Mr. and Mrs. David A. Daberko Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Dakin Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Danford Ranajit K. Datta Margie Knight Davis David J. Hessler Edward D. Hester Mr. and Mrs. John J. Hetzer Mr. and Mrs. James R. Hicks Mr. and Mrs. David G. Hill Mr. and Mrs. James T. Kitson G. Robert Klein M. Stacey Alatis Sawsan T. Alhaddad and Dr. Ali Alhaddad James M. Anastos Dr. Joseph Frolkis and Dr. Beth A. Overmoyer Mr. and Mrs. David Fullmer Tom E. Hinson and Diana S. Tittle Mrs. B. M. Holdstein Grace Jackie Holley Dr. John D. Holm and Dr. Njeri NuruHolm Linda K. Koki Mrs. Arthur Kozlow Janet L. Kramer and Robert N. Trombly Dr. Ronald H. Krasney Franklin and Marlene G. Krause Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Krohn Dr. and Mrs. Keith A. Hoover Mr. and Mrs. Leo M. Krulitz Jackie Hudson Dr. Randy Huff Brooks G. Hull Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Kuhn Mr. and Mrs. David A. Kutik Mr. and Mrs. J. Jerome Lackamp Mr. and Mrs. William Lafave Dr. and Mrs. Frederic W. Lafferty Sandra J. and Charles Abookire Jr. Frank K. Ackard Sylvia K. Adler Oakley V. Andrews Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Aron Patricia M. Ashton Will Austin Edward B. Baker and Anna M. Van Heeckeren Richard M. Banozic Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Barnes Dennis Barrie and Kathleen H. Coakley Eric B. Baud Arthur W. Bayer Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William Beck Mr. and Mrs. Josh Bell Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd W. W. Bell III Claudia Bennett Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Bercaw Eduardo A. Bigornia and Dr. Lina A. Bigornia Dr. and Mrs. Frederic C. Bishko Georgette B. Bohr Lynn Boukalik Mr. and Mrs. John M. Bourne Renee Boykin Dr. Christopher P. Brandt and Dr. Beth Brandt Sersig Mary Ann Crowther Brennan Lorry J. Brenner Mr. and Mrs. Ben Brick Deborah Brindza Sara Britting Mrs. Charles S. Britton II Dr. and Mrs. Ben H. Brouhard Kathleen M. Brown Richard H. Brown Shirley T. Brown Willie Glenn Carter Sammy Catania and Roberta Rocco Emilie Cathry Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Cavano Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Cebular Mrs. William B. Chamberlin Mrs. Robert C. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Chris Deibel Rose K. Chang Dr. Altagracia M. Chavez Sara J. Cheheyl Joe Chernosky and Audrey Wahl Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Chinnici Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Chudyk Mr. and Mrs. Allen Deutsch Verlie P. Ciriello Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Clark Joseph Domiano Thomas A. Duke Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Eells Debra L. Eger Mr. and Mrs. George E. Emmons Jr. Denise Enderlein Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Clark Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Clark William M. Cleber Eleanor and Tim Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Victor J. Cohn Mr. and Mrs. Richard Collier Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Colquhoun Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Comerford Joy L. Comey Mr. and Mrs. Sanford A. Cone Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel K. Cooke Peter Devos and Julia Whiteside-Michel Neil A. and Bonnie N. Dick Wanda H. Dickey Lee Diedrick Dr. Claire M. Doerschuk Mr. and Mrs. John M. Farley Mr. and Mrs. Herbert J. Farr Dr. and Mrs. Victor W. Fazio Judi A. Feniger Mary Lou Ferbert Mr. and Mrs. John Ferchill Scott A. Foerster and Barbara M. Kasperski Michael S. Folkman Dr. and Mrs. Ronald G. Fountain Mrs. Alfred R. Cooper Dr. and Mrs. Sanford A. Fox Helen Way France Johnnie D. Cooper Mrs. William M. Correll John H. Franklin Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John R. Fraylick Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Furry Kim Gamellia Dr. and Mrs. John H. Gardner III Mr. and Mrs. John H. Gerber Christopher L. Gibbons Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Giffels Mr. and Mrs. Donald Glaser David J. Golden Mr. and Mrs. Lowell K. Good Mr. and Mrs. Randall J. Gordon Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Goulder Dr. and Mrs. Francis A. Greicius Jr. Dr. Kathleen S. Grieser Mr. and Mrs. Fred Griffith Mr. and Mrs. James C. Griffith Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Gilbert Gross Marsha Gross Susan M. Hale Mr. and Mrs. David P. Handke Jr. Mrs. John D. Hansen Maia Hansen Mr. and Mrs. Frank I. Harding III Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Hardis Paula A. Harvan Nancy H. Harvey Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hastings Ray C. Hauck Eloise Haugh Mr. and Mrs. Terry W. Hebert Mr. and Mrs. Craig Heberton III Elizabeth A. Hecht Dr. Thomas S. Heines Dr. and Mrs. John H. Hemann Fredrec Thompson Henkel and Joseph R. Wensco Mr. and Mrs. John F. Herrick Andrew Hisey Mr. and Mrs. D. Peter Hochberg Mr. and Mrs. Brian K. Humphrey John Brewster Hunter III Mr. and Mrs. Steven J. Hupp Terence Isakov, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Izant Robert B. Jensen Mr. and Mrs. David E. Jerome Mr. and Mrs. John L. Jirus Mr. and Mrs. William M. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Dwight S. Jordan Nina W. Josephs Dr. Hermann A. Kahle Mrs. William J. Kall Mr. and Mrs. Lowell L. Kampfe Mr. and Mrs. Dave Kaplan Richard E. and Judith Karberg Drs. Barbara and Benjamin Kaufman Dr. and Mrs. Michael W. Keith Mrs. Joseph H. Keller Linda and John Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Kendrick Mary Ann Khouri Mr. and Mrs. William S. Kilroy II Mr. and Mrs. Allan D. Kleinman Mr. and Mrs. Grant Kloppman Dr. Vilma L. Kohn Ellen and Howard Landau Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Lang Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Lann Mr. and Mrs. Timothy C. LaRiche Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Lau Louann R. Lauer Ann Olsen Lavelle Dr. Michael B. and Pamela Barron Leach Deborah A. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey R. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Bertram H. Lefkowich Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Liskay Mr. and Mrs. James J. Livingston Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Lobo Mr. and Mrs. David Logsdon Robert Lucak and Gabrielle Alicia Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. Alex Machaskee Douglas L. MacTaggart 65 4-CommSupport.p65 65 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Mrs. James I. Mahler Dr. Stephen A. and Mary Ann Gregg Mahoney Mrs. Arthur D. Maine Dr. and Mrs. Carlos A. Maldonado Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Manuel Arnold L. Marcus and Barbara T. Campbell Dr. and Mrs. Martin A. Markowitz Kay S. Marshall Marilyn Mason Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Matts Jr. Peter M. Petretich Mr. and Mrs. Peter Pfouts Robert W. Phinney Dr. and Mrs. Franklin H. Plotkin Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Pollock Elinor G. Polster Mr. and Mrs. Alan G. Poorman Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas S. Potter Mr. and Mrs. Lute A. Quintrell Gaye G. Ramstrom Mrs. Donald M. Rebar Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Redman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Seabright Mr. and Mrs. David Seidenfeld Mr. and Mrs. Larry M. Shane Dr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Sherman Mr. and Mrs. Jonah Sherman Mrs. John Sherwin Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Newson H. Shewitz Mr. and Mrs. John A. Shields Mr. and Mrs. David B. Shifrin Laura Tanski Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Targett Ronald E. Teare Mr. and Mrs. Lee Tenenbaum Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Todd Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Treadway Martin and Gail Trembly Scott Truhan Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence C. Turnock Dr. Robert W. Reynolds Judith Simon Dr. Michael V. Sivak Jr. Walter Sloboda Allan Slovenkay James H. McInerney Jr. and Jenifer Neils Mr. and Mrs. Jerome McKeever Mr. and Mrs. F. Rush McKnight Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Melzer Dr. and Mrs. Hermann Menges Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Rice Jane N. Richmond Mr. and Mrs. George R. Snider Jr. Valeria J. Sobecki Margaret Ann Richmond Mr. and Mrs. William E. Spatz Marjorie B. Ritchie E. Bruce Robertson and Thomas J. Kren Dr. and Mrs. Carl A. Robson Linda J. Voloshen Spencer Dr. and Mrs. Michael D. Springer Omer F. Spurlock Mr. and Mrs. Harvey O. Mierke Jr. Roy B. and Diane Mogren Lloyd D. Moore Franklyn W. Roesch Mr. and Mrs. Barry Rosenbaum Dr. and Mrs. George A. Staley Edward A. Stanczak Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Wach Lewis E. Wallner II J. K. Kota Rossi Michael P. Rowan Iris Rubinfield Mr. and Mrs. Bill F. Stansberry Dr. and Mrs. William P. Steffee Josephine L. Sterle Mrs. James L. Wamsley Jr. William B. Watterson and Melissa K. Richmond Dr. and Mrs. Mark J. Stillman Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Stockton Albert Stratton Jeffrey Weidenthal Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weigel Yair and Carol Weinstock Rose Strauss Bob Strickland Dorothy M. Strohm Mr. and Mrs. Hugh L. Whitehouse Cornelius E. McCole, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. McCreery Gloria B. McDowell Marie Morelli Mr. and Mrs. Warren L. Morris Richard J. Murway Mark Myers and Barbara A. Hanselman Philip C. Narten Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Neubecker Fred S. Norful and Faye Seggelink Terry Novak Linda Novick Mr. and Mrs. Eric M. Oakley Mr. and Mrs. Edward Oberndorf Gerald Palay Dr. and Mrs. Chanho Park Mr. and Mrs. William K. Patterson Rita Pearlman Judith M. Pendergast Mr. and Mrs. Julian Perry Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Peter Mr. and Mrs. H. William Ruf Mr. and Mrs. Jon R. Ruhlman Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Rust Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Sabroff Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Saccany Mr. and Mrs. John M. Saganich Barbara J. Samolis Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Santa-Emma Dorothy M. Sawyer Mr. and Mrs. Victor J. Scaravilli Margaret Schloss Mr. and Mrs. Stuart M. Schreiber Mr. and Mrs. John B. Schulze Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schwartz Dr. Susan W. Schwartz Joanne L. Student Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Stupay Mr. and Mrs. John E. Sulak Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Sullivan Sr. Mr. and Mrs. David P. Sunderhaft Rose Sustersic Mrs. Benjamin Taber Paul G. Tait Mrs. Anselm Talalay Sandi Knell Tamny Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Tanaka Dr. and Mrs. Stephen F. Tytko Mr. and Mrs. James R. Underwood Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Unger Fred R. Unwin Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Vagi Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V. H. Vail Karen J. Van Linge J. Weyman Vogel Mr. and Mrs. Dale A. Vonderau Drs. Mark D. and Eve P. Whitmore Mr. and Mrs. H. Robert Wismar Jr. Lois S. Wolf Gail Chin Wong Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Young Matching Gift Companies Merrill Lynch & Co. Foundation Inc. American Express Foundation Arkwright Foundation, Inc. Barnes Group Foundation, Inc. The BFGoodrich Foundation BP Employee Matching Fund Program Caterpillar Foundation The Cigna Foundation Computer Associates International Inc. Moen, Incorporated NACCO Industries, Inc. Corning Incorporated Foundation Davey Tree Expert Company Dominion Foundation The Prudential Foundation Matching Gifts Program Eaton Corporation Eli Lilly and Company Foundation Emerson Electric Company Exxon Mobil Foundation F M Global Foundation Robert S. Young Ruth G. ZanderSindelar Amy Zeldenrust Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Zellner Mr. and Mrs. William L. Zeuch 66 The Perkins Charitable Foundation PPG Industries Foundation Reuters America Inc. Rockwell International Corporation Trust SBC Foundation SmithKline Beecham Foundation The Stanley Works Foundation Trust The Stocker Foundation Thrivent Financial for Lutherans Tomkins Corporation Foundation The George W. Codrington Charitable Foundation The Glenmede Trust Company NA The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company The H. J. Heinz Company Foundation IBM Corporation TRW Foundation Verizon Foundation W. W. Grainger Inc. John Hancock Life Insurance Company The J. Paul Getty Trust Key Foundation Lamson & Sessions LexisNexis Group The Lubrizol Foundation The May Department Stores Company Foundation Mellon Financial Corporation Foundation 66 4-CommSupport.p65 Norton Company Foundation FirstEnergy Foundation The Kresge Foundation Mr. and Mrs. James G. Young National Starch and Chemical Foundation Inc. The Nord Family Foundation Nordson Corporation 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Foundations, Other Organizations $100,000 or more Ohio Arts Council The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation $25,000 to $99,999 The Helen Wade Greene Charitable Trust The Institute of Museum and Library Services The Payne Fund, Inc. $10,000 to $24,999 The Britton Fund The George W. Codrington Charitable Foundation The S. Livingston Mather Charitable Trust The Norweb Foundation The Smith Charitable Lead Trust Jane B. Tripp Charitable Lead Annuity Trust The S. K. Wellman Foundation $2,500 to $9,999 The Collacott Foundation The Hankins Foundation The George M. and Pamela S. Humphrey Fund The Katherine Kenyon Lippitt Foundation The Murch Foundation The John P. Murphy Foundation The Perkins Charitable Foundation SCH Foundation The Sedgwick Fund Sherwick Fund The Lois C. and Thomas G. Stauffer Foundation The George Garretson Wade Charitable Trust #2 $1,000 to $2,499 The Mary C. Hanes Charitable Lead Trust Thomas Hoyt and Katharine Brooks Jones Foundation The Kresge Foundation The Victor C. Laughlin, M.D., Memorial Trust The David and Inez Myers Foundation The Murphy Family Foundation The Charles J. and Patricia Perry Nock Fund The Sears-Swetland Family Foundation Under $1,000 The Boston Foundation The Ronald and Isabelle Brown Philanthropic Fund The J. Paul Getty Trust The Henfield Foundation The Frances Shoolroy Family Foundation Karen Skunta & Company Honor Gifts Ted Andelman, 75th birthday Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Frank James T. Bartlett, President of the Board of Trustees of the Cleveland Museum of Art Primus Venture Partners Edward J. Bergman, 60th birthday Annette Williams Jaffee and John O. Florence Anne L. Berk, highlights tour Barbara A. Feldman Dr. Meyer R. Bonchek, milestone birthday Dr. Alvin and Lorrie Magid Joan and John A. Brickley, Thank you for your hospitality Dr. Alvin and Lorrie Magid Mrs. Louis Emsheimer The Rosengard Family Mell Glaser, birthday Nancy and Norm Hyams Jane Glaubinger Mr. and Mrs. Gary Kaufman Ray Glaubinger, important birthday Helen W. Ross Marsha Gross, milestone birthday Barbara and Irwin M. Feldman Henry H. Hawley Jack Perry Brown College Club West Betsy and Kenneth Hegyes, Thank you for your hospitality Dr. Alvin and Lorrie Magid Michael J. Horvitz Henry Breck Bess Kaplan, milestone birthday Elaine and Joel Axelrod Thea Klestadt, 90th birthday Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Frank Helen A. and Fredrick Lamb, 60th anniversary Stanley M. Proctor Bunny Lindenbaum and Colly Shulman, marriage Dr. and Mrs. Roland W. Moskowitz Naomi Singer, milestone birthday Sally A. Good; Marv and Nancy Whitman Matthew Sloan, marriage Linda and Bernie Friedman Barbara Smeltz, Merry Christmas Jay, Julie, Hannah, and Andrew Marilyn Marks, milestone birthday Ruth and Irv Schoenberg Speakers Bureau Eliza Backus Guild, St. Paul’s Church United Methodist Women Edith Miller, 75th birthday Ann and Robert Friedman Suzy and Donald Spitz Amy M. Nelson Constantine Petridis, Assistant Curator of African Art Cleveland Council on World Affairs Carole and Chuck Rosenblatt Luke Richner, Bar Mitzvah Carole D. and Charles B. Rosenblatt, 50th anniversary Marsha and Len Frauenthal Mr. and Mrs. Howard Schneider, 50th anniversary Ruth and Bill Neides Barbara and Arnold Schreibman Saundy Stemen and Jean Graves Joyce H. Wald, Women’s Association of Temple Tifereth Israel Lauren Blattner and Keith Unke, marriage Marjory Klein and Paul Gellman Joy Weinberger, birthday Dr. and Mrs. Roland W. Moskowitz Joan and Larry Weiss, milestone birthdays Lorrie and Alvin Magid Richard Long’s Cornwall Circle rises up from a corner of the contemporary art galleries. 67 4-CommSupport.p65 67 6/10/2003, 4:45 PM Memorial Gifts Dr. Robert P. Bergman Annette Williams Jaffee and John O. Florence Robert L. Krulak Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Ritzenberg James Anthony Birch Kathleen A. Colquhoun Herbert A. Cahn Jo and Helmut Dehn Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bennett Carolyn Bullard Fine Prints & Drawings Lloyd E. Cotsen, Cotsen Management Corporation Euro-Hair Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Fliegel Harry Fogg Sam Fogg Patricia Carter Lydia E. Williams Francesca Galloway Heritage Book Shop, Inc. Mary Sanders Clark, Marie Odenkirk Clark, and Harold Terry Clark William Sanders Clark Thomas J. Kren La Scala Autographs, Inc. Les Enluminures, Ltd. Jane Iglauer Fallon Jane and Shad Hartwell Jon A. Lindseth Lisa Cox Music James H. Marrow Matthew P. Ferrini Jonathan J. G. Alexander Antiquariat Bibermuhle AG Mr. and Mrs. Carmelo Bellia Hiroshi Masaki Kathy and Bernie Michals and James and Douglas Michals Nicholson Foundation, Mary and John Wasmer Mr. and Mrs. Ian Roper and Michael Dennis O’Hara Martin Schoyen Dorothy Gray Shinn Yushodo Co., Ltd. Mary Lee Fink Margaret L. DeWolf Norma J. Farley Pat Slattery Margaret L. Fonda Allan L. Cohn Willa C. Dobbs Frani and Michael Shagrin Arthur Geoffrion Holly and Fred Glock Marvin Magid Donna G. Moss and Alex Kraut Jan, Ron, Darren, and Brittany Silverman John L. Marlais Laura and Jay Bagdasarian and Zuleima and Pierre Marlais Dr. Mary Petrelli and Mike Vasilakes Mr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Samborn Katharine Newcomer Jean LaChance Stone Anne B. Ott-Hansen Elizabeth N. Chamberlain Donna Beth Haddock Rita S. Hubar Cohen & Company Rosalie and Ralph Della Ratta Gay Keiter Richard A. Keiter Mr. and Mrs. Scribner Fauver Louis Kerr Ann and Robert Friedman Virginia Q. Foley Dr. and Mrs. Laurence K. Groves Bill Kiefer Mr. and Mrs. John H. Gerber Robert A. Hahn, M.D. Jane and Shad Hartwell Schuyler S. Haskell Mr. and Mrs. Morrie E. Hirsch Elizabeth A. Holan Dr. and Mrs. William L. Huffman Jack Family Foundation Jane Frankel Interiors Sally C. Reinartz Gail and Elliott L. Schlang David M. Schneider Mr. and Mrs. John P. Schneider Mr. and Mrs. Carlton B. Schnell Mr. and Mrs. William W. Taft Susan and Stanley Jaros Mr. and Mrs. Marshall H. Ulf Mr. and Mrs. Norman S. Jeavons Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Katz Patricia P. Kundtz; Lee and George S. Lockwood Jr. Vixseboxse Art Galleries Womens Council of the Cleveland Museum of Art Mr. and Mrs. Randall D. Luke Richard A. Manuel Alvina Pepke Ruth Shugart Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Mecaskey Suzanne and Frank Murray Mr. and Mrs. Edward Oberndorf Harry K. Smith Jan Silverman Mr. and Mrs. William M. Osborne Jr. Susan H. Reid Gallery 235 encapsulates Picasso’s artistic development with paintings from every major phase of the artist’s career. 68 4-CommSupport.p65 68 Mr. and Mrs. Alfred C. Woodcock 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM Rita Rashkind Mr. and Mrs. Arnold J. Dahm Janice Smuda Cheryl L. Wires Unrestricted Giving, Corporations $25,000 or more The Sage Cleveland Foundation MBNA Marketing Systems $15,000 to $24,999 The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Hahn Loeser & Parks LLP NACCO Industries, Inc. $10,000 to $14,999 American Greetings Corporation Bank One, NA Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc. Forest City Enterprises, Inc. Giant Eagle, Inc. McDonald Investments, Inc. Primus Venture Partners Shaker Investments, Inc. $5,000 to $9,999 Accenture LLP Argus Partners, LLC Brush Engineered Materials, Inc. Charter One Financial Christie’s Cintas Corporation Continental Airlines, Inc. Dominion East Ohio Ferro Corporation Fifth Third Bank General Electric Lighting The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company GSI Architects, Inc. Jones Day Keithley Instruments, Inc. KPMG LLP Richey Industries, Inc. Great Lakes Publishing Company SIFCO Industries, Inc. RPM, Inc. Strang Corporation Thompson Hine LLP IBM Corporation ICI Paints North America McMaster-Carr Supply Company Medical Mutual of Ohio Mid-West Forge Corporation MTD Products Inc. Myers Industries, Inc. Panzica Construction Company Performance Enterprises, Inc. Prince & Izant Company TRW, Inc. Wellington Management Company, LLP International Management Group $1,000 to $2,999 John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company Kaufmann’s, A Division of the May Department Stores Company Kinetico Incorporated Sotheby’s STERIS Corporation TD Waterhouse Investor Services Trust Company West Turner Construction Company Watson Wyatt Worldwide Weston, Hurd, Fallon, Paisley & Howley LLP Reich & Tang Asset Management LP RJF International Corporation Rockwell Automation The SherwinWilliams Company Squire Sanders & Dempsey LLP Target Stores $3,000 to $4,999 Adelphia Communications A. T. Kearney, Inc. Baker & Hostetler LLP Ernst & Young LLP Great Lakes Lithograph Company Institutional Capital Corporation Kohrman Jackson & Krantz The Lamson & Sessions Company The Lincoln Electric Company MAR-BAL, Incorporated Marsh USA, Inc. Northern Haserot Co. Oatey Company Plain Dealer Publishing Co. Alliance Capital Management Corporation Amec Construction Management, Inc. Anderson-DuBose Company Applied Industrial Technologies Argo-Tech Corporation Arter & Hadden LLP Bard Endoscopic Technologies Blue Point Capital Partners The Bonfoey Company Bonne Bell Booz, Allen & Hamilton Inc. Chubb Group of Insurance Companies Cohen & Company Cole National Corporation Collins Gordon Bostwick Architects The Corning Group Cuyahoga Community College Degussa Construction Chemicals, Inc. Deloitte & Touche Dingus and Daga Inc. Dix & Eaton, Inc. Dollar Bank Eaton Corporation EWR Foundation The Fedeli Group Invacare Corporation J. M. Smucker Company Under $1,000 Linsalata Capital Partners The Astrup Company Behnke & Associates City Architecture The Lubrizol Corporation Luce, Smith & Scott, Inc. Marcus Thomas LLC Donley’s, Inc. Euclid Office Supply, Inc. Gerow Equipment Company Margaret W. Wong & Associates, Co., LPA The Millcraft Group Ohio Envelope Manufacturing Co. Mutual of America Nabih Youssef & Associates Nordstrom Nottingham-Spirk Design Associates, Inc. Nurenberg, Plevin, Heller & McCarthy Co., LPA Ohio Machinery Co. Reliable Runners United Parcel Service Van Dorn Demag Corporation Oglebay Norton Company Ohio Savings Bank Orlando Baking Company Parker Hannifin Corporation Ralph C. Tyler P.E., P.S., Inc. Richard Fleischman Architects, Inc. Robert P. Madison International, Inc. Royal Appliance Manufacturing Company Findley Davies Inc. FirstEnergy Corp. Ford Motor Company The Gebauer Company Gorman-Lavelle Corporation 69 4-CommSupport.p65 69 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM Donors to Ingalls Library Ann B. Abid Abigail Furey Acme Fine Art and Design Henry Adams Adelson Galleries A.I.R. Gallery Alan Cristea Gallery Alexandre Gallery Philippe Alexandre Alfonso Dipinti Antichi Allan Stone Gallery American Antiquarian Society American Assembly American Federation of Arts Ameringer Yohe Fine Art Anna Maria Rossi and Fabio Rossi Annely Juda Fine Art Anonymous Ariadne Galleries Arnoldi-Livie Art Focus Art Gallery, University of California, Irvine Artax Kunsthandel KG Artemis Fine Arts Ltd. Artemis Greenberg Van Doren Gallery Artists Archives of the Western Reserve Artpix August Laube [Gallery] Aux Amateurs de Livres Avon Lake Public Library Axel Raben Gallery Barakat Gallery Bill Hodges Gallery Blue Sky Gallery Blumka Gallery Bonfoey Company Boston Athenæum Betty Boulez-Cuykx Barbara J. Bradley Brandt Oriental Art Brock & Co. Jack Perry Brown Bruce Silverstein Gallery Antoine Cahen, Galerie Terrades C G Boerner C&M Arts C. Wahren Fine Photographs Patrick Cable David Carrier Catherine Edelman Gallery Bruno Cattani Charles Janoray, LLC Cheim & Read Thomas L. Cheney Childs Gallery Chinese Porcelain Company Chon-Gyong-Gak Library Chris Beetles Ltd. Christopher Grimes Gallery Cleveland Institute of Art, Jessica Gund Memorial Library Cohen & Cohen Consulate General of Sweden, New York Consulate General of Switzerland Cristinerose Gallery Michael and Carin Cunningham D C Moore Gallery D. Wigmore, Fine Art Ariane Dandois Barry Friedman Gallery Beadleston Gallery Daniel Katz Limited Daniel Malingue Gallery Beaux Arts Sylvain Bellenger Ben Janssens Oriental Art Susan Bergh David Findlay Jr., Inc. John Bernhard Berry-Hill Galleries Berwald Oriental Art Debra Force Fine Art, Inc. Biblioteca Leonardiana W. P. Bidelman Davis & Langdale Company, Inc. Dexter Davis Julie Decker Denis Ozanne Dorsky Gallery Dundee Contemporary Arts Sheila Eckstein Elizabeth Harris Gallery Carl and Marilyn Ely Emmanuel Moatti Eskenazi Ltd. FAI—Fondo per l’Ambiente Italiano F.R.A.M.E. Hubert L. Fairchild Federal Reserve Board The Fine Art Society PLC Fine Arts Trader Flanders Contemporary Art Flying Cranes Antiques Ltd. Fondation Beyeler Fondazione Antonio Ratti Fortuna Fine Arts, Ltd. Forum Gallery Forum Gallery [Los Angeles] Fraenkel Gallery Michael and Jacqueline Franses Francesca Galloway Fundacj Vox-Artis Promocja Polskiej Sztuki Wspolczesnej Galeria Baró Senna Galerie 1900-2000 Galerie BlondeelDeroyan Galerie Brusberg Berlin Galerie Eric Coatalem Galerie Henze & Ketterer Galerie Iris Wazzau Galerie Jean François Baroni Galerie Jean-François Heim Galerie Lelong Galerie Lutz & Thalmann Galerie Maurice Garnier Galerie Pixi—Marie Victoire Poliakoff Galerie Romain Larivière Galerie Sanct Lucas Galerie Vidal-Saint Phalle Galerie Walu Gallery in Cork Street Alicia Hudson Garr Garry Atkins George Gund Foundation Gerald Peters Gallery Gerard Hawthorn Ltd. Catherine Gfeller Gisèle Croës Goedhuis Contemporary Guarisco Gallery Ltd. Gui Rochat H. Blairman & Sons H. P. Kraus Habatat Galleries Hackett-Freedman Gallery Haim Chanin Fine Arts Haines Gallery Hall & Knight (USA) Ltd. Christopher Handy Robin Hanson Harmon-Meek Gallery Henry Hawley Haystack Mountain School of Crafts Hazlitt, Gooden & Fox Hazlitt HollandHibbert Headfooters Outsider Art Gallery Kappy Hendricks Léon Herschtritt Hill Gallery Hirschl & Adler Galleries Hirschl & Adler Modern Hirschl Contemporary Art Hollis Taggart Galleries James Cohan Gallery Jan Kesner Gallery Robert Kornstein Jan Krugier Gallery Janos Gat Gallery Jean Albano Gallery Jean-Luc Baroni Ltd. Joan T. Washburn John Berggruen Gallery John Mitchell & Son John Stevenson Gallery Joseph Bellows Gallery Julius Böhler June Kelly Gallery William Kennedy Keogh & Riehlman Fine Art Christine Kermaire Klaber & Klaber Vera Klement Klotz/Sirmon Gallery Jim Knipe Korea Foundation Kouros Gallery Kunsthandel Wolfgang Werner KG 70 Menconi & Schoelkopf Fine Art, LLC Mrs. Charles J. Meyer Michael GrahamStewart Michael Rosenfeld Gallery Mildred Cox Gallery Garry Fabian Miller Milne Henderson Fine Art Mita Arts Co., Ltd. Mitchell-Innes & Nash Modernism, Inc. Moritani & Co., Ltd. Museum Loan Network Les Enluminures, Ltd. Lisson Gallery Peter Nagy Nancy Wiener Gallery Little Art Gallery Locks Gallery The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Lowell Libson Ltd. Barbara Nanning National Collage Society, Inc. Nevill Keating Pictures Ltd. Lüder H. Niemeyer M. J. L. Multimédia M. Knoedler & Co. Nicholas Grindley Nickel Development Institute Nohra Haime Gallery Maas Gallery Mallett and Son [Antiques] Ltd. Hosfelt Gallery Hey-Tae Huh Alison C. Hulsinger Marc Antoine du Ry Marcel Nies Oriental Art Hurst Gallery Mr. Hüseyin and Filiz Özturk Marlborough Fine Art (London) Ltd. Marlborough Chelsea Marlborough Gallery Marlborough Graphics Ltd. Marvin Sadik Fine Arts Inc. Mary Ryan Gallery 70 4-CommSupport.p65 Max Protetch Maxwell Davidson Gallery Barbara L. McLarty McKee Gallery Kunstkabinett Lefevre Gallery R. John Leigh, M.D. Michael Philip Manheim J. Johnson Gallery Matthiesen Fine Art Ltd. Anne Mavor Museum of New Mexico, Museum of Fine Arts Museums Association Houldsworth Fine Art I-20 Gallery Ilaria Quadrani Henry R. Immerwahr J. J. Lally & Co. Matthew Marks Gallery 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM Noname Galerie The Norton Family Otto Harrassowitz, Buchhandlung Antiquariat Otto Naumann, Ltd. Pace/MacGill Gallery PaceWildenstein PaceWildenstein II Els de Palmenaer Panmun Book Company Partridge Fine Arts plc Paul Champkins Paul Kasmin Gallery Paul Rodgers/9W Chris Paulocik Michael Pellettieri Peter Findlay Gallery Peter Marks Gallery Constantijn Petridis Philadelphia Museum of Art Library Marianetta Porter Mikey Price Progressive Corporation R. E. Lewis & Daughter R. S. Johnson Fine Art Radio House Gallery Redfern Gallery Regional Furniture Society Katharine Lee Reid Rena Bransten Gallery Ricco Maresca Gallery Richard Deutsch Studio Richard Gray Gallery Richard Norton Gallery Richard York Gallery Riva Yares Gallery Robert Bowman Ltd. Robert Henry Adams Fine Art Robert Koch Gallery Roger Keverne Barbara Roux Roy Lichtenstein Foundation Royal-Athena Galleries S. J. Shrubsole, Corp. Morris Sachs Salander-O’Reilly Galleries, Inc. Salomon Lilian Magda Salvesen Satani Gallery Schatz Ornstein Studio Peri Schwartz Sebastian Izzard LLC Senior & Shopmaker Gallery Seraphin Gallery Shelley Holzemer Gallery Shepherd & Derom Galleries Adele Z. Silver Sladmore Gallery Smart Art Press SPACES Spanierman Gallery, LLC Sperone Westwater Docent Library Fund Donors Spike Gallery Stephen Daiter Gallery Kim Chapman Mary Ann Clymer Michael Cunningham Joellen DeOreo Beth Desberg Hou-Mei Sung TK Incorporated Talabardon & Gautier Tasende Gallery Tessai-Do Bert Teunissen Theresa McCullough Ltd. Thomas Le Claire Kunsthandel Thomas McCormick Gallery Joann Broadbooks Grace Bynum Gail Calfee Susie Deutsch Joan Fletcher Kermit Greeneisen Marsha Gross Joyce Hackbarth Jay Jackson Gwen Johnson Barbara Kathman Franz Rohr Thomas R. Riley Galleries Throckmorton Fine Art Tibor de Nagy Gallery Diana Tittle Tobey C. Moss Gallery Towarzystwo Opieki Nad Zabytkami Valerie Carberry Gallery Liana Van der Bellen Vance Jordan Fine Art Inc. Charles L. Venable Charles L. Venable and Martin K. Webb Charlotte Vignon Laszlo Vince Vose Galleries of Boston Waddington Galleries Walter Wickiser Gallery Claire Wang-Lee Lee Warshawsky Sen`en Watanabe Weisbrod Chinese Art Ltd. Sylvia White The Ingalls Library gives art history students and faculty access to a worldclass research facility. William Fagan & Co. William Reese Company Hiroshi and Harumi Yanagi Yves Mikaeloff Zabriskie Gallery Zen Oriental Art Gallery 71 4-CommSupport.p65 71 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM A F F I L I AT E D O R G A N I Z AT I O N S The Contemporary Art Society The Print Club of Cleveland The Trideca Society Board of Trustees Board of Trustees Dian Disantis, Secretary Albert Albano Virginia Benade Belveal Shattuck W. Hartwell Jr., Advisory Trustee Samuel E. Henes Dorothy Ceruti, President Harriet Gould, Vice President Henry Ott-Hansen, Treasurer Ruth Dancyger, Secretary Diane Bell Richard Cowan Tim Homan, President Cindy Marx, Vice President Mark Bassett, Treasurer Ralph Drake, Secretary Barry Bradley Joanne Calkins Robert Bostwick Brenda Brown Nancy Casper Walter Holtkamp Eleanor Bonnie McCoy Mary Dyke Leigh Fabens Phyllis Gary Helene Love Judith Simon Dean Zimmerman Rosalie Cohen Sanford Fox Lila Held Toni S. Miller Rev. David A. Novak Karel Paukert Robert Getscher Jane Glaubinger Dale Hilton Young Friends Peter Galvin Harriet Goldberg Gerald Herschman Thomas F. Peterson Jr. William Martin Jean Lisa Kimmel Irving Kushner Board of Trustees Robert H. Jackson, President Barbara Robinson, Vice President Helen Moss, Treasurer Robert Kiwi Dennis Sobol Friends of Photography Board of Trustees Mark Schwartz, President Charles King, Vice President Musart Society Board of Trustees Carolyn F. Wipper, President A. Chace Anderson, Treasurer James Dickinson, Secretary Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin, Advisory Trustee Dr. A. Benedict Schneider Robert Schneider Beverly Simmons Charles Teare The Painting and Drawing Society Bob Herbst, Treasurer Eli Becker, Secretary Governing Board Herbert Ascherman Jr. Sally Henkel, Vice President Doug Barr, Treasurer Jonathan Buchter Annie Holden Geraldine Kiefer Katherine H. Bolton, President Carol Michel, Secretary Abbie Klein Judith McMillan Robert Mosher Ann Ames Donald Barney Helen DeGulis Dennis Sobol Tom Hinson, ex officio Joseph Keithley Viki Rankin Board of Directors Anne Landefeld Neal Rains Cathy Randall Katharine Lee Reid Betsey Bell, President Dave Gottesman, Vice President Susan Silverberg, Treasurer Candace Jones, Secretary Katherine Agle Joseph Russell Judy Sogg Mary Lane Sullivan Beth Badzik Christie Croissant Charles Getz JoAn Vernon Allie Wallace Trudy Wiesenberger Becky Gruss Noel Harris Harry Holt Textile Art Alliance Lisa Kaltenberger Deborah Koerwitz Aggie Nagy Board of Trustees Ann Plevin Rosenbluth, President Robyn Pretzloff Steve Rackas Laura Schmidt Sharon Markovic, Vice President Sonja Tugend, Vice President Louise W. Mackie, Treasurer Jane Abbott, Assistant Treasurer Lana Lowenkamp, Recording Secretary Jan Burgwinkle, Corresponding Secretary Linda Damiani Steve Shabino Johnna Walter Laura Weidenthal Shannon Wood Dianna Foley Uarda Taylor 72 4-CommSupport.p65 72 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM Lighting Ceremony Giant puppets from the museum’s Community Arts Department lend a magical quality to the May 30 lighting ceremony. At twilight on May 30, 2002, a lively crowd witnessed the relighting of the 1916 building and south terrace. “This event marks the beginning of what will be one of the most exciting periods in our history,” said Director Katharine Lee Reid. “The relighting heralds our expansion project—which will be the largest undertaken by a cultural institution in Cleveland’s history. It particularly illuminates the jewel of the museum’s refreshed buildings, and so not only welcomes the entire community to enjoy the Fine Arts Garden but invites everyone to enter the museum and experience one of the world’s cultural treasures.” The $12.4 million restoration was made possible by generous funding from The HRH Family Foundations, The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation, and the State of Ohio, with additional support from The Sears-Swetland Family Foundation and Mr. and Mrs. Quentin Alexander. The “community fence” and its 65 colorful panels created by Cleveland organizations and individuals was removed from the construction site on May 1, but many of the panels will be on display at venues throughout the city, including Karamu House, Miles Park Elementary School, the Cuyahoga County Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, and Art on Wheels. On April 29, Rodin’s Thinker was replaced in front of the building on a new pedestal. A vandal’s bomb damaged the Thinker in 1970. Except for a brief convalescence after that senseless assault, Cleveland’s Thinker has overlooked the Fine Arts Garden for more than 80 years. Assembled crowds and media applaud as the facade begins to glow in the twilight. 73 4-CommSupport.p65 73 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM Convening the Community Advisory Council Anita Brindza, Executive Director, Cudell Improvement, Inc., Co-Chair Adrienne L. Jones, Trustee, Co-Chair Into the Light Exhibition Community Advisory Committee Betsey Bell Alan Boesger Helen Cherry Jurgen Faust Dave Gottesman Womens Council of the Cleveland Museum of Art Officers and Committee Chairs Helen Cherry, Chair Janet Coquillette, First Vice Chair Kate Stenson, Second Vice Chair Sue Grant, Third Vice Chair June Antoine, Corresponding Secretary Mary Bounds, Chief of Police, Cleveland Police Department Christina M. Bruch, Outreach and Retention Coordinator, Cuyahoga Community College Joseph A. Calabrese, General Manager & CEO, RTA Paul Cassidy, Magistrate, City of Parma Heights Marsha Hall Edward Parker Robert Thurmer Karen Bourquin Carolyn Batcheller, Assistant Corresponding Secretary Rooney Moy, Recording Secretary Cathy Randall, Assistant Recording Secretary Jeri Chaikin, Chief Administrative Officer, City of Shaker Heights James Cody, Councilman, Bedford Heights Ruth Boza William Busta Helen Collis Edith Taft, Treasurer Christy Bittenbender, Assistant Treasurer Blake Cook Lydia Fotia Ralph Fotia Sari Feldman, Deputy Director, Cleveland Public Library Vicki Hartzell, Branch Regional Services Director, Cuyahoga County Public Library Betsy Hegyes Pauline Latkovic Bea Meros Maureen Morley Margie Moskovitz and Roz Sukenik, Advocacy Dottie Schnell, Archivist Kate Stenson and Ryn Clarke, Benefit Nancy Newman Bill Ott John Perry Candy Weil, Circle Development Donna Walsh and Nina Pettersson, Community Arts George M. Humphrey II, Trustee Margaret Lyons, Associate Superintendent, Diocese of Cleveland Franklin Martin, President, The F Martin Company Jo Ann Mason, Director of Government Affairs, Cox Cable Paloma McGregor, The Plain Dealer Greg Reese, Director, East Cleveland Public Library Donna S. Reid, Trustee William R. Robertson, Trustee Janus Small, Director of Cultural Arts, Cuyahoga Community College Butler Reid Carole Rosenblatt Andrea Surovi Gail Schlang and Linda McGinty, Convening the Community Liaisons Winifred Watts Michael Weil Magna Graecia:: Greek Art from South Italy and Sicily Exhibition Community Advisory Committee Joy Sweeney Lori Whittington JoAnne Lake, Computer Coordinator Chris Norman and Jane Thomas, Flower Fund JoAn Vernon and Mary Dyke, Hospitality Sabrina Inkley and Betsy Hegyes, Information Desk Janet Coquillette, Membership Linda McGinty and Rosemary Deioma, Newsletter Margie Sachs and Judy Bourne, Nominating Sue Spring, Photographer Janet Coquillette, Policy and Rules Dinny Bell, Prints and Drawings Joan Fountain and Naomi Singer, Programs Louinia Mae Whittlesey, Carolyn Horn, and Joan Fitchet, Ready Volunteers Ginger Ratcliffe, Roster Cathy Miller, Special Decorations Mary Ann Katzenmeyer and Ann Hunter, Study Groups Lois Bialosky and Lorelei Stein-Sapir, Trips Diane DeBevec, Museum Liaison Museum Associates Docent Association Mr. and Mrs. David Adler Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Ames Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Biggar Richard Blum and Harriet Warm Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Gudbranson Officers and Committee Chairs George McCann, President Kate Stenson, Vice President Pete Dobbins, Second Vice President Gwen Johnson, Recording Secretary Sabrina Spangler, Corresponding Secretary Dr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Hahn Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hoke Mr. and Mrs. John Hoover Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Jaros Mr. and Mrs. Dieter Kaesgen Malcolm E. Kenney Mr. and Mrs. John D. Koch Laura Maciag Timothy S. Mueller and Susie Frazier Mr. and Mrs. Patrick S. Mullin Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Nance Mr. and Mrs. Brad Norrick Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Porter Jr. Cynthia Rallis Mr. and Mrs. Roger Rankin Andrew K. Rayburn and Heather Guess Mr. and Mrs. Rob Reynolds Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Rieger Chris Ronayne and Natalie Saikaly W. Allen Shapard and Carsten Sierck Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. John Switzer 74 4-CommSupport.p65 74 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM Linda Friedman, Treasurer Mary McClung and Mary Ann Liljedahl, Class of 2000 Representatives Nancy Mino and Susan Schloss, Class of 2002 Representatives Docent Corps James Jackson Gwendolyn Johnson Pamela Juergens Volunteers Stephen Badman Erva Barton Sharon Bell Anne Berk Arlene Bialic Joan Kohn Julie Kurtock Joann Lafferty Carolyn Adelstein Adrienne Alaimo Antoinette Alaimo Jean Bingay Christina Black Jane Bondi Mary Anne Liljedahl Sandra Littman Diane Maher Catherine Alfred Sarah Alhaddad Sawsan Alhaddad Karen Bourquin Joann Broadbooks Claire Brugnoletti Marina Markelov Patricia Markey Maguy Mavissakalian George McCann Peggy Allen Amy Anderson Bill Anderson Gail Calfee Kimberly Chapman Mary Ann Clymer Ranajit Datta Marie Dellas Sandy Dennis Beth Desberg Susan Deutsch Pete Dobbins Zoann Dusenbury Erwin Edelman Jack Farkas Joan Fletcher Caroline Folkman Anne Frank Mary Kate Fredriksen Linda Friedman Gail Garon Carol Godes Lowell Good Kermit Greeneisen Marsha Gross Joyce Hackbarth Karen Hahn Thomas Harder Maya Hercbergs Ingrid Hoegner Frank Isphording Mary McClung Dorothy McIntyre Mary Merkel Nancy Mino Helene Morse Kimberly Oas William Ott Anne Owens Robin Ritz Catherine Rose Betty Ruben Lourdes Sanchez Susan Schloss Sally Schwartz Delayne Shah Patricia Simpfendorfer Margaret Sloan Sabrina Spangler Jackie Spieler Shirley Steigman Kathleen Stenson Mary Ann StepkaWarner Kathy Vilas Ann Walling Margaret Walton Mary Abbott Lillian Abel Bob Anderson Lorraine Anderson Carolyn Anthony June Antoine Cleo Anton Carol Arnold Lois Bluhm Flora Blumenthal Mary Ann and Chris Boesel Jane Bondi Loretta Borstein Judy Bourne Karen Bourquin Doris Boxerbaum Sue Boyce Ruth Boza Barbara J. Bradley Emily Brasfield Stephen Britcher Joann Broadbooks Ann Brown Lesley Brown Dawn Cook Hallie Cook Patricia Coppedge Zoann Dusenbury Mary Dyke Linda Easton Janet Coquillette Kris Coral Inez Corrado Erwin Edelman Betsy Eells Dorothy Elliott Rachel Costanzo Andrea Coster Mary Kay Covington Marian and Alan Englander Joanne Cowan Sylvia Cowan Ina Cox Eloise A. Coxe Lois Crawford Kevin Cronin Victoria Erjavec Elinore Evans Mary Louise Falkner Tom Falls Jack Farkas Dorothy Farley Bonnie Femec Karen Ferguson Karlyn Ferrari Mebby Brown John Bruce Claire Brugnoletti Colleen Cross Minnie Cruce Shirley and Al Culbertson Daniel Cunningham Rita Buchanan Linda Buchler Lynne Bufford Margaret Cutter Faye D’Amore Susan Dahm Ruth Fisher Joan Fitchet Doreen Flash Lynda Bumpus Sally Burton Pat Butler Martha Dalton Ruth Dancyger Leslie Darling Joan Fletcher Marcia Floyd Deborah Foise Ruth Butler Daphne Button Gail Calfee Jesse Dandy Barbara Darragh Ranajit Datta Marianne Foley Mary Lou Foley Stephanie Folger Larry Baum Aerielle Bedell Nick Bedell Jeremy Callahan Cassandra Caraffi Helen Carbon JoAnn Carr Barbara Davis Lois Davis Diane DeBevec Frances DeBevec Caroline Folkman Suzanna Foster Joan Fountain Tricia Beeman Alice Bell Betsey Bell Dana Carson Vicki Catozza Ryan Chamberlin Helen DeGulis Rosemary Deioma Marie Dellas Dinny Bell Sharon Bell Lori Bellman Amy Chang Kimberly Chapman Helen Cherry Cindy Denney Rett Dennis Sandy Dennis Mary Kate Fredriksen Susan and Leonard Freed Ann Friedman Janer Belson Karen Bennett Emma Benning Karen and Joseph Chinnici Margaret Dennison Louise Denny Ninna Denny Linda Friedman Jean Gaede Frannie Gale Joellen DeOreo Beth Desberg Susan Deutsch Barbara Galvin Mary Gardner Gail Garon Christine Dewees Ashley Dezember Diane Dick Alicia and Mike Garr Marge Garrett Nina Freedlander Gibans Anne Ginn Mell Glaser Ann Austin John Baburek Stephen Badman Beth Badzik Margot Baldwin Brian Barbuto Jean Barth Erva Barton Catherine Bartzis Rita Basler Ann Bassett+ Gerry Bastaich Jacqueline Berger Anne Berk Marianne Bernadotte Arlene Bialic Lois Bialosky Margie Biggar Joanne Billiar Jean Bingay Catherine Biskind Christy Bittenbender Mary Bittenbender Dorothy Blaha Phyllis Blau Joanne Blazek Gert Bleisch + deceased Nancy Cimballa Ashley Clark Thomasine and Eric Clark Kathryn Clarke Lou Clay Phyllis Cleary Sue Clegg Mary Ann Clymer Margaret and Pete Dobbins Mark Fikaris Jamie and Ronald Fish Anne Frank Jane Frankel Barbara Franklin Shirley Cohen Casandra Coin Mary Coleman Ann Dobelstein Patricia Dolak Eleanor Donley Meg Collings Esther Collins Marsha Collins Greg Donley Betty Downie Molly Downing Larry Glover Linda and Manuel Glynias Carol and Ronald Godes Dr. John and Helen Collis Katherine Drews Valerie Drews Justin Duggett Marianne Gogolick Lois Goldberg Nancy Goldberg Duane Condon Marty Conway 75 4-CommSupport.p65 75 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM Adele Goldhamer Sarajane Goldstein Lowell Good James Jackson Joy Jacobs Laurie Jacobs Barbara Langlotz Jennifer Langston Bonnie Lau Johanna Mike Sally Milgram Betty Miller Charlene Powers Elizabeth Powers Lisa Powers Delayne Shah Susan Shah Carolyn Shanklin Katharine Goss David Gottesman Fran Grambo Bertha Jaffee Lori Janusko Dustin Jerla Nancy Lavelle David Lawrence Sara Ledsky Catherine Miller Nancy Mino Dolly Minter Joan Query Ella Quintrell Lynn Quintrell Jane Shapard Marian Shaughnessy Elizabeth Shearer Ann and Kermit Greeneisen Kathryn Jewett Jewish Unity Chorus Gwendolyn Johnson Alice Lefkowich Maribeth Lekas Anne Lemon Chris Mis Rita Moore Marie Morelli Myra Rachow Cathy Randall Beth Rankin Laura Shields Irene Shinkle Dorothy Shrier Peggy Johnson Andrea Joki Annette Jones Ginny Leonard Kathleen LePrevost Carol Levy Caroline Morgan June Morgan Florence Moritz Adrienne Rasmus Ginger Ratcliffe Susie Rathbone Beverly Grace Jones Diane Jones Amelia Joynes Pamela Lewis Christine Ligas Mary Anne Liljedahl Kathy Moroscak Andrea Morris Betsi Morris Howard Reinmuth Shirley Ricketts Susan Rieger Jeremy Shubrook Patricia Simpfendorfer Naomi Singer Marguerite Skorepa Claudia Gruen Graham Grund Lois Guren Pamela Juergens Ann Kahn Dorothy and George Kappos Carolyn Karch Sandra Littman Isabelle Lobe Anne Lockhart Helene Morse Marjorie Moskovitz Peta Moskowitz Robin Ritz Joan Roach Georgianna Roberts Joyce Hackbarth Karen Hahn Haidi Haiss Katherine and Andrew Kartalis William Kassen Joyce Logan Nan Lowerre Sharon LoweyBerman Ingrid Lüders Mary Jo Mudgett Emily Mueller Kay Muller Vince Robinson Kathy Rockman Dr. Themistocles and Rose Rodis Claire Lee Rogers Nola Haiss Maryellen Hammer Dyane Hanslik Blanche and Dudley Katz Mary Logan Greenwood Karen Gregg Dustin Grella Wendy Grew Carolyn Griffen Alan Gronet Marsha Gross Terry Gruber Katie Harbage Thomas Harder Deborah Harper Margit Harris Bill Hartshorn Ellen Heberton Daniel Katz Deanna Katz Linda Katz Mary Ann Katzenmeyer Yoko Kawai Vicki Luschek Susan MacDonald Peg MacNaughton Lorrie Magid Diane Maher Carole Majewski Simin Naraghipour Janet Neary Elise Newman Margaret Sloan Barbara Smeltz Kathleen Smetana Chuck Smick Alice Smith Billie Smith Janice Smith Linda SmithRichardson Martha Rogers Monica Rogers Thomas Rohweder Becky Smythe Eleanor Snyder Judy Sogg Vivian Rokfalusi Catherine Rose Carole Rosenblatt Sabrina Spangler Diane Spelic Daryle Spero Lisa O’Brien Katherine Ohl Victoria O’Neill LaShonda Ross Phyllis Ross Tom Ross Mary Rossi Jackie Spieler Toula Spirtos Sue Spring Gail Newman Nancy Newman Christine Norman June Nosan Alyce Nunn Kimberly Oas Diane Kawolics Margaret Kelleher Patricia Kelley Pamela Maloney Marvin Mandel Janet Maranciak Teri Markel Linda Kendall Eleanor Kendrick Jane Kern Marina Markelov Patricia Markey Teddy Marks Sue O’Reilly Helen Orton William Ott Lillian Routman Carly Rowse Betty Ruben Paul Heller Bettyann Helms Ian Henderson Evelyn Kiefer Nancy Kiefer Anne Kilroy Barbara Martien Jessie Martin Shannon Masterson Ann Ott-Hansen+ Barb Ottinger Anne Owens Gene Rucker Sandra Rueb Monica Rust David Hennel Maya Hercbergs Pauline Hermann Dicc Klann Lois Koeckert Joan Kohn Maguy Mavissakalian Denese Pappas Rita Pearlman Ethel Pearson Aurelie Sabol Marjorie Sachs Marily Sampson Lorelei Stein-Sapir Kathleen Stenson Mary Ann StepkaWarner Ruthe Stone Martha Hickox Kathryn Hiendlmayr Edith Hirsch Phyllis Koons Arline Koplow Elaine Koskie Ellen Peoples Willa Percival Colleen Perzel-Timm Phyllis San Antonio Lourdes Sanchez Mitzi Sands Diane Stupay Ericka Stutler Rosalyn Sukenik Ingrid Hoegner Norma Hoffman Cissy Holmes Laura Kovach Lori Kozlowski Georgene Kravitz Maria Peskar Constantine Petridis Ron Petrie Phyllis Saul John Sawicki Debbie Schechtman Mary Lane Sullivan Mary Lou Sullivan Joy Sweeney Melinda Holmes Jann Holzman Carolyn Horn Andrea Krist Universe Krist Peggy Kundtz Peg and Bill Petrovic Nina Pettersson Libby Pfancuff Ellen Schermer Gail Schlang Susan Schloss Nancy Swizynski Jean Sylak Edith Taft Rita Hubar Jim Hubert Denise Huck Julie Kurtock Ruth Kyman Sally Lacombe Susan Pim Margaret Plumpton Elinor Polster Laura Schmidt Megan Schmidt-Sane Nancy Schneider Susan Talton May Targett Sarah Taylor Ann Hunter Sabrina Inkley Vicki Isphording Joann Lafferty Karen LaFond Charlotte and Jim LaJoe JoAnne Lake Frances Polster Mary Ann Popovich Melissa Porcelli Dorothy Schnell Barbara Schreibman Sally Schwartz Fran Porter Mary Porter Linda Sebok Marian Sells Max Teets Sho Terada Irene and Ted Theodore Betsy Hegyes Lee Heinen Hellenic Preservation Society of Northeastern Ohio Marta Jack Melissa McAvoy George McCann Peggy McCann Lenore McClelland Mary McClung Eveline McElroy Linda McGinty Patricia McIlraith Dorothy McIntyre Jacklynn McKenney Judith McMillan Cathy Mecaskey Zach Melas Ann Melville Mary Merkel Danielle Merriman Carol Michel Lorna Mierke 76 4-CommSupport.p65 76 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM Rosemarie Stangel Julie Stanger Rosemary StanitzSkove Michael Starinsky Shirley Steigman Volunteers from KeyBank work in the Fine Arts Garden as part of their annual volunteer clean-up day. Crystal and Gary Thomas Jane Thomas Martha Thompson Julia Thornton Jean Thorrat Rosalind Tolen Ruth Toth Nina Traub Nancy Treadway Gail and Marty Trembly Rob Trembly Mary Trevor Patricia Triggs Susan Trilling John Trout Linda Turner Sammie Tyree-Cox Joanna VanOosterhout Alison Verba JoAn Vernon Jonathan Ward Minerva Ward Rafeeq Washington Interns Winifred Watts Hanna Weil Lois Weiss Caroline Barnes, Cleveland Heights High School Ellen Bortel, Case Western Reserve University Karen Chahal, Case Western Reserve University Karen Wellman Suzanne Westbrook Sandy White Helen Whitehouse Lori Whittington Louinia Mae Whittlesey Ann Wieland Marjorie Williams Joan Wilson Margaret Wilson Monica Wilson Lorita Winfield Maya Witt Nancy Wolpe Sarah Alhaddad Mark Bahn Taliesin Reid-Haugh Story Rhinehart, Wesleyan University Denise Kozlowski David Lawrence Stanley Lemanski Alec Leshy, Oberlin College Matt MacEwan Mandy McGee Martha McLaughlin Marissa Mehall Lesley DiFransico Ryan DiVita Carli Dottore Whitney Meredith Dianna Metzler Tim Milligan, John Carroll University John Misheff Bettina Smith, Oberlin College Jennifer Smith, Case Western Reserve University Cara Morkert, Denison University Alexandra Nicholis, Case Western Reserve University Frank Spicer, Case Western Reserve University Katie Steiner, Case Western Reserve University Sarah Stilgenbauer Mary Wymer Beatrice Kay Wyse Dean Yoder Kristen Gall Anja Garn, Freie Universität Berlin Becky Goede, John Carroll University Melissa Wallace Ann Walling Jane Walls Kawai Yoko YouthAbility Lula and Xenophon Zapos Renate Zeissler Donna Walsh Justin Walters Margaret Walton Susan Ziegler Judith Zubizarreta Betty Zweig Colleen Hill Marcie Hocking, Case Western Reserve University Marie Walzer William Klima Karl Knauer Gale Koritansky Matthew Charboneau Andrea Coster, The Andrews School Nicole Cuenot, Case Western Reserve University Justyna Drozdek, Case Western Reserve University Hector Esquilin Joseph Fungsang Annie Wainwright Joan Waite Dinah Walker Shannon Price Lisa Pursell, New York University Brooke Randolph Jessica Rea Abbey Richlovsky, Case Western Reserve University Peter Rollenhagen Emily Schuchardt, Trinity College Brynn Seiden Aude Semat, École du Louvre Michelle Shaland Maggy Woodcock David Woods Mary Woodward Kathy Vilas Judy Vogt Dan Volper Chris Ireland Lindsey Jerdonek, Magnificat High School Meredith Jorgensen Victor Gotinjan Donald Hellerman Theodore Hellmuth Miriam Norris Dana Novotny, Case Western Reserve University Mary O’Connel Maria Ortiz Julia Pankhurst Meredith Petrov, Amherst College Christine Wolken, John Carroll University Charles Yannopoulos, Case Western Reserve University Julia Zettl, Beaumont School Megan Strobel Zahir Sutarwala Rachel Tag Jocelyn Tullao Erika Walsh Scott Westover Maya Witt 77 4-CommSupport.p65 77 6/10/2003, 4:46 PM Education, Public Programs, and Outreach The museum’s role in the community has many dimensions. Lectures, gallery talks, workshops, and classes help visitors get the most out of their experiences. Special programs all around Cleveland help introduce the museum’s neighbors—next door and across town—to the riches of art and the museum. Concerts, performances, and films add an important dimension to the presentation of the world’s greatest art, moving beyond the visual to musical and temporal forms of creative expression. Collaborations with other institutions provide opportunities to pool resources and share expertise in collective efforts to serve the community. Public festivals attract tens of thousands of citizens to University Circle, while, inside the building, museum facilities provide important convening places for community groups. All in all, the museum is an increasingly central resource for the community on many levels. It was a banner year for educational programs at the museum and at other community locations, as about 427,500 people attended museum- Area preschoolers create their own mosaics based on examples from the collection. This studio program is part of the Early Learning Initiative. sponsored events. These efforts were recognized as staff garnered recognition for leadership through a number of awards. Robin VanLear, artistic director of Community Arts and mastermind of Parade the Circle Celebration in collaboration with University Circle Incorporated, received the inaugural Joseph D. Pigott University Circle Leadership Award. Mary Ann Popovich, assistant director of the Teacher Resource Center, was named 2002 Ohio Museum Art Educator of the year by the Ohio Art Education Association. The entire Education Department was acknowledged by the Ohio Arts Education Association as the “Distinguished Organization for Art Education” in northern Ohio. VIVA! festival director Massoud Saidpour was nominated for an Award of Achievement by Northern Ohio Live in the area of dance. Karel Paukert and Paul Cox of the Department of Musical Arts Right: Participants at the annual Chalk Festival enjoy the return of that event to the museum’s elegant south side. received the 2002 ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers) Adventurous Programming Award for the Aki Festival of New Music (held in 2001). The Egyptomania publication won the “Gold Award” at the Ohio Museum Conference and, by unanimous vote, “Best of the Show” in the graphic design competition for museum publications. 78 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 78 6/10/2003, 4:54 PM 79 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 79 6/10/2003, 4:54 PM Critic Jeffrey Kipnis, Progressive Corporation head Peter B. Lewis, and architect Frank Gehry (left to right) share thoughts at Severance Hall in a June forum on creativity in management. Exhibition-related programs featured international conferences and outstanding lecturers: four symposia were held, complementing Into the Light: The Projected Image in American Art, 1964–1977; Magna Graecia: Greek Art from South Italy and Sicily; Battle of the Nudes: Pollaiuolo’s Renaissance Masterpiece; and A City Seen: Photographs from The George Gund Foundation Collection. Lecturers for the year included scholars Malcolm Miller (Chartres Cathedral), Manuel Keene (Victoria and Albert Museum), R. Ross Holloway (Brown University), and Robert Lubar (NYU). The programming for Jeweled Arts of India and Magna Graecia embraced community organizations in presentations of Indian and Greek culture and talents at well-attended community days. In collaboration with the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University, the museum presented three forums, Art and Management: What Can We Learn from Each Other?, each featuring an architect and a business CEO. The most popular was the Peter B. Lewis/Frank O. Gehry discussion held at Severance Hall in June, attracting 2,000 people. Also notable this year was the ten-week lecture series Art and Faith: Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam, celebrating the diversity of art and culture within the museum’s galleries. Lifelong Learning in the Arts, a collaborative program of Education and Information Technology, funded by the Technology Opportunities Program of the U.S. Department of Commerce, had an extremely successful year. This project provided more than 150 studio art, art history, and cultural interactive full-screen video broadcasts to seniors and persons with disabilities in select sites in the greater Cleveland area. The Distance Learning videoconferencing classes increased their attendance by 50%, serving more than 14,000 students and teachers. The Education Department received a 80 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 80 6/10/2003, 4:54 PM $722,457 three-year grant from the Freeman Foundation for the development of a national K–12 curriculum featuring the Japanese and Chinese collection. The exhibition A City Seen: Photographs from The George Gund Foundation Collection inspired collaborations with the Cleveland School of the Arts and the Cleveland Institute of Art in which guest photographers Douglas Lucak and Barbara Bosworth worked with students during the course. Thirty-two new docents completed their training program for weekend and evening volunteer work. They will lead tours for adults and for children’s groups who visit the museum outside the regular school program. During 2002, the 60 active docents volunteered approximately 9,600 hours teaching in the school, highlights, and weekend tour programs. The Teacher Resource Center provided services for 4,811 teachers from 1,080 schools and 263 Ohio school districts, a 57% increase over 2001. In its third year of programming, the Art to Go program reached more than 5,500 students throughout the greater Cleveland area. In the museum, more than 8,500 young people participated in the Museum Art Classes in spring, summer, and fall sessions. Parade the Circle Celebration honored Cuban festival traditions, with four Cuban artists and a new artist from Tobago joining returning artists to create ensembles, serve as technical specialists, and work in outreach programs with community organizations throughout the area. More than 100 parade ensembles participated, and the event was enjoyed by some 50,000 spectators. For the first time, Cleveland’s mayor participated in the parade, as Jane L. Campbell joined leaders from University Circle institutions in the directors ensemble. The 13th annual Chalk Festival, coinciding with the city’s Free Spirit weekend, was dampened by inclement weather, but still attracted some 9,000 visitors with many first-time viewers. The Winter Lights Lantern Festival culminated in the Holiday CircleFest lantern procession with 1,000 participants, and 11,000 total attendance for the festival. The Department of Performing Arts presented 26 concerts and attracted 19,116 patrons to often sold-out houses. The critically acclaimed VIVA! Festival of Performing Arts and Carnevale World Music and Dance Series served as a premier venue in the region for the presentation of some of the finest masters of world music and dance. One of the highlights of the year was a concert by the Masters of Persian Classical Music, for which patrons from five states traveled to attend. The museum was also host to four Jazz on the 81 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 81 6/10/2003, 4:54 PM Circle concerts, in an ongoing collaboration with the Cleveland Orchestra, Cuyahoga Community College, and the Northeast Ohio Jazz Society. The museum presented 110 feature films (26 Cleveland premieres) and 35 shorts in 117 separate film screenings. The year’s news-making high point was a special October premiere engagement of a new Spike Lee documentary, Jim Brown: All-American, with Jim Brown and Spike Lee attending the screenings. A unique feature of Gartner Auditorium is film projection Director Spike Lee and former Cleveland Browns football star Jim Brown talk in Gartner Auditorium after a special screening of Lee’s new documentary, Jim Brown: All-American. equipment with variable-speed motors able to show silent films at the proper speed. In June, David Drazin of the Gene Siskel Film Center in Chicago played piano for two silent comedies. In August, ensembles Schtick and the Pointless Orchestra accompanied five avant-garde silent short films during the late-night party “Into the Light After Dark.” And in October, Boston’s celebrated Alloy Orchestra returned to the museum to accompany a program of Buster Keaton/Fatty Arbuckle comedy shorts. The Department of Musical Arts produced 76 concerts and lectures attended by 14,300 listeners. Highlights included a three-concert Bach festival in observance of the 250th anniversary of J. S. Bach’s death. Also, there were several performances by some of the world’s most respected early music soloists and ensembles this year, including Baroque violinist Andrew Manze; the Clerks’ Group (a vocal ensemble from England) performing an all-Josquin program; Camerata Köln, an instrumental ensemble from Germany; and Piffaro: The Renaissance Band, which offered a program in conjunction with the exhibition Raphael and His Age. The department also hosted the debut concert of a new Cleveland ensemble called Red {an orchestra}, which featured a puppet show by master puppeteer Basil Twist and Company, who played to a sold-out crowd. As in the past, the department presented a wide range of repertoire—from the early Renaissance wind music of the Medici court to a recent work by Thomas Adès. Budding artists in the Museum Art Classes explore line, space, and color by combining the art of Piet Mondrian and Jackson Pollock. 82 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 82 6/10/2003, 4:54 PM Artist Sarah Curry (center) works with children at Thurgood Marshall Recreation Center during the Nia in the Neighborhood Festival in Hough. The Development and External Affairs Division’s Outreach and Audience Development Department collaborated with Education and Public Programs staff on many initiatives. A number of events welcomed members from Cleveland’s richly diverse community to the museum for events related to the Elizabeth Catlett exhibition, the screening of the new Spike Lee movie, a meeting of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the distribution through Cleveland public schools of the Wynton Marsalis video. In September, the museum announced plans to form a new affiliate group, the Friends of African and African-American Art (officially chartered in January 2003). The Greek community turned out impressively to an event cosponsored by the Hellenic Preservation Society of Northeastern Ohio in conjunction with the Magna Graecia exhibition. The new Museum Ambassadors program engaged high school students from all around greater Cleveland in the life of the museum, then sent them out to share their enthusiasm with their communities. Finally, to facilitate future outreach efforts, the museum has re-established its Convening the Community initiative, originally funded by a Lila Wallace–Reader’s Digest Foundation grant that expired in 2001. With its Winners of a WZAKsponsored art contest pose in the garden court. collections and exhibitions representing the breadth of history and a bewildering array of cultures, the museum is the perfect institution to lead this community’s efforts to bring people of diverse backgrounds together in the common cause of enhancing the quality of life we all share. 83 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 83 6/10/2003, 4:54 PM Museum Ambassadors in Workshop with Elizabeth Catlett In the fall of 2001, the Outreach and Audience Development Department created Museum Ambassadors, a oneyear pilot program that invited students from schools all over the Cleveland area—public, private, parochial, city, and suburban—to come to the museum, learn about art, and take their new knowledge and enthusiasm back to their communities. The program concluded in May 2002, with the students leading workshops for third-grade students and presenting a special community day for area high schoolers, an event that attracted more than 500 students. The students who participated were so enthusiastic about coming back that Museum Ambassadors was continued in the 2002–03 school year, and is fast becoming an important permanent program. Elizabeth Catlett (Mexican, b. USA, 1919). Magic People, 2002; color linocut; 25.7 x 24.4 cm; Gift of the artist 2002.64 Museum Ambassador Ernest Bluford, from Shaw High School in East Cleveland, wipes off a plate in a printmaking workshop given by Curlee Raven Holton. Elizabeth Catlett chats with Museum Ambassadors students in September. A memorable highlight of the second year was in September 2002, when master printmakers Elizabeth Catlett and Curlee Raven Holton led a hands-on workshop for the students. Catlett, a revered elder stateswoman among African-American artists, was in Cleveland to celebrate the exhibition of her work, Elizabeth Catlett: Prints and Sculpture, that was on view at the museum in the fall. She graciously agreed to speak to the Museum Ambassadors group as the lead-in to a workshop led by Holton, whose own prints were featured in the museum’s 75th anniversary Invitational exhibition in 1991. Ms. Catlett’s visit left another wonderful legacy: she donated to the museum a 2002 color linocut print Magic People, expressly for use by the Museum Ambassadors program. So far the design has been adapted for use on letterhead, a brochure, and T-shirts. 84 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 84 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM School and Teacher Services Art to Go Teacher’s Advisory Committee: Emilie AmerGannon, Julie Anderson, Ellen Battle, Carole Brown, Vincetta Dooner, Nancy Dvorak, Sue Foley, Cindy Guertin, Kathy Heidleberg, Christina Holtier, Kitty Rose, Betty Jo Scurei, Sister Mary Francismarie Seiler, Jean Sommers, Jayne Sylvester, Sue Wilson. Suitcase Topics: Ancient Americas: Art from Mesoamerica; The Art of Writing: The Origin of the Alphabet; Classical Art: Ancient Greece and Rome; Cool Knights: Armor from the European Middle Ages and Renaissance; Diego Rivera: A Mexican Hero and His Culture; Journey to Africa: Art from Central and West Africa; Journey to Asia; Journey to Japan: A Passport to Japanese Art; Let’s Discover Egypt; Masks: Let’s Face It; Materials and Techniques of the Artist; The Museum Zoo: Animals in Art; Native American Art: Clues from the Past; Problem Solving: What in the World? Cleveland Municipal Schools receiving scholarships: Louis Agassiz Elementary, Newton D. Baker Elementary–School of Arts, Alexander Graham Bell Elementary, Mary Bethune Elementary, Bolton Elementary, Brooklawn Elementary, Cleveland School of the Arts, Robert Fulton Elementary, Stephen Howe Elementary, Iowa-Maple Elementary, John F. Kennedy High School, Kentucky Elementary, Lincoln West High School, John Marshall High School, McKinley Elementary, Marion Seltzer Elementary, Tremont Elementary, Walton Elementary, Waverly Elementary. School participants outside Cleveland: Big Creek Elementary; Chagrin Falls Intermediate; Citizen’s Academy; Cleveland HeightsUniversity Heights Schools: Coventry Elementary, Roxboro Elementary; Direction for Tomorrow Home School; Hathaway Brown; Hawken; Holy Trinity; Holy Redeemer; Lake Erie College; Lakewood Lutheran; Laurel; Lutheran West High; Mayfield High; Parma Heights Christian Academy; Parma High Able Learners; Peaceful Children Montessori; Ratner School; Raymond Elementary; Revere High School; Shaker Heights Schools: Onaway Elementary, Shaker Heights High; St. Angela Merici; St. Ann’s; St. Gregory the Great; St. Robert Bellarmine; St. Terese; University School. Distance Learning Class topics: African Art: Secular and Supernatural; African Masks; Ancient American Art: The Aztec and Their Ancestors; America’s Story through Art (3-part series): America Emerging—1700s, America Expanding—1801–1861, America Transforming —1861–1918; The Art of Adornment; Aztec, Maya, and More!; The Chemistry of Art (4-part series): Examining the Authenticity of Museum Objects, Extending the Senses— Using the Electromagnetic Spectrum to Probe Works of Art, Restoring Works of Art— Chemistry to the Rescue, Paper Chemistry and Conservation—Contemporary Art; Egyptomania (4-part series): Daily Life, Hieroglyphics, Mummification, Animals in Art; Harlem Renaissance; Impressionism; Knights, Castles, and Kings; L’Art de L’Afrique; Medieval Masterpieces; Modernism: Early 20th Century Art; Museum Careers; Native Americans and Settlers: Encounters in Early Ohio History; “Race” Is a Four-Letter Word; Renaissance Painting: An Overview; Spanish Art. Participants from Ohio communities: Akron, Alliance, Aurora, Avon, Baltimore, Barberton, Bealsville, Beavercreek, Bellbrook, Bellevue, Bellfontaine, Bellville, Belpre, Boardman, Brecksville, Brooklyn, Byesville, Cambridge, Canfield, Canton, Celina, Centerville, Chagrin Falls, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Delta, Dover, Dresden, Edwardsville, Fairborn, Fairview, Fostoria, Franklin, Gahanna, Garfield Heights, Gnadenhutten, Hamilton, Hilliard, Huron, Ironton, Jamestown, Jefferson, Lakewood, Leroy, Lisbon, Litchfield, Lorain, Massillon, Medina, Mentor, Metamora, Middletown, Montpelier, Mt. Orab, Muskingum, New Philadelphia, New Richmond, New Riegel, Newark, North Canton, North Ridgeville, Oberlin, Parma, Pepper Pike, Perry, Portage, Revere, Rock Creek, Rocky River, Rootstown, Shelby, Sidney, Springfield, Steubenville, Strongsville, Tiffin, Thornville, Troy, Uhrichsville, University Heights, Wadsworth, Warren, Waterford, West Carrollton, West Milton, West Muskinghum, Westerville, Wickcliffe, Woodsfield, Wooster, Yellow Springs. Participants from other communities: Chicago, Illinois; Winchester, Kentucky; Attica, AuGres, Bay City, Benton Harbor, Clinton Township, Marquette, Muskegon, Novi, Shelby Township, and Sterling Heights, Michigan; Valley Park, Missouri; Absecon, Bridgeton, Galloway, Lincroft, Lindon, Littlestown, Mays Landing, Neptune, Wall, and Waterford, New Jersey; Absegami, Albany, Bayport, Bellmore, Carle Place, East Chester, Franklin Square, Glen Falls, Massapequa, Merrick, Mount Morris, Pennfield, Syosset, Troy, and West Hampstead, New York; Albion, Erie, Fawn Creek, Harrisburg, Media, Milford, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Paint Rock and San Antonio, Texas; Mantua, Virginia; Kennewick, Washington. School Tour Program Students from the following Ohio counties and school districts: Ashland Co.: Ashland, Loudonville-Perrysville; Ashtabula Co.: Ashtabula Area, Buckeye Local, Conneaut Area, Grand Valley Local, Jefferson Area Local, Pymatuming Valley; Columbiana Co.: Columbiana Exempted, Crestview Local, Leetonia Exempted; Coshocton Co.: Coshocton City; Crawford Co.: Buckeye Central, Bucyrus City, Galion City; Cuyahoga Co.: Bay Village, Beachwood, Bedford, Berea, BrecksvilleBroadview Heights, Brooklyn, Chagrin Falls, Cleveland, Cleveland Heights-University Heights, East Cleveland, Euclid, Fairview Park, Garfield Heights, Independence, Lakewood, Maple Heights, Mayfield, N. Olmsted, N. Royalton, Olmsted Falls, Orange, Parma, Richmond Heights, Rocky River, Shaker Heights, Solon, S. Euclid, Strongsville, Warrensville Heights, Westlake; Erie Co.: Berlin-Milan Local, Huron City, Perkins Local, Sandusky City, Vermilion Local; Fayette Co.: Hamilton; Geauga Co.: Beavercreek; Hancock Co.: Findlay, Van Buren; Holmes Co.: West Holmes; Huron Co.: Bellevue, Norwalk, Western Reserve; Jefferson Co.: Buckeye Local, Steubenville; Lake Co.: Fairport Harbor, Kirtland, Madison, Mentor, Painesville, Perry, Wickliffe, Willoughby-Eastlake; Lorain Co.: Amherst, Avon Lake, Clearview, Columbia, Top: A second grader holds a medieval key fob from “Problem Solving: What in the World?” an Art to Go presentation at McKinley Elementary School, Cleveland. Here yet there: The museum’s Dale Hilton demonstrates a distance learning project for attendees at a special University Circle meeting at the Western Reserve Historical Society. Elyria, Firelands, Keystone, Lorain, Midview, N. Ridgeville, Oberlin, Sheffield-Sheffield Lake, Wellington; Lucas Co.: Springfield; Mahoning Co.: Boardman, West Branch; Medina Co.: Black River, Brunswick, Buckeye, Cloverleaf, Highland, Medina, Wadsworth; Muskingum Co.: Tri-Valley, Zanesville; Portage Co.: Aurora, Crestwood, Field Local, James A. Garfield, Kent, Ravenna, Rootstown, Southeast, Streetsboro, Waterloo, Windham; Richland Co.: Lucas, Madison, Mansfield, Shelby; Seneca Co.: Fostoria; Stark Co.: Canton, Fairless, Jackson, Massillon, Minerva, N. Canton, Perry Local, Sandy Valley, Tuslaw; Summit Co.: Akron, Barberton, Copley-Fairlawn, Coventry, Cuyahoga Falls, Mogadore, Nordonia Hills, Revere, Springfield, Stow, Tallmadge, Twinsburg, Woodridge; Tuscarawas Co.: Dover, Indian Valley, New Philadelphia, StrasburgFranklin, Tuscarawas Valley; Wayne Co.: Orrville, Rittman, Southeast, Triway, Wooster; Wood Co.: Bowling Green; Wyandot Co.: Upper Sandusky. 85 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 85 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Teacher Resource Center Participants from Ashland, Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton, Crawford, Cuyahoga, Delaware, Erie, Franklin, Geauga, Holmes, Huron, Lake, Lorain, Lucas, Mahoning, Medina, Muskingum, Portage, Richland, Seneca, Summit, Stark, Trumbull, Tuscarwaras, and Wayne counties in Ohio, as well as communities in Michigan and Pennsylvania. Participants from area public and private schools: Jane Addams High, Audubon Intermediate, Newton D. Baker Elementary– School of Arts, A. G. Bell Elementary, Mary Bethune Elementary, Case Elementary, Moses Cleaveland Elementary, Cleveland School of the Arts, Collinwood High, Harry E. Davis Elementary, Charles Dickens Elementary, Dike Montessori, East Clark, James Gallagher Elementary, Eleanor Gerson School, Glenville High, Alexander Hamiliton Middle, Patrick Henry Elementary, Hicks Montessori, Margaret Ireland Elementary, R. G. Jones, J. F. Kennedy High, M. L. King High, Lafayette, Lincoln Middle, Charles Mooney Elementary, Daniel Morgan Middle, Garrett Morgan Elementary, Mound Elementary, Mt. Auburn Elementary, Old Brooklyn Montessori, John W. Raper Elementary, J. F. Rhodes High, Harvey Rice Elementary, Marion Seitzer Elementary, South High, Miles Standish Elementary, Sunbeam Elementary, Urban Community, Villa-Angela/St. Joseph, Walton Elementary, Warner Elementary, Watterson-Lake Elementary, and Willow Elementary. Docent Program, School Tour Topics All Creatures Great and Small: Animals in Art; American Art; Arts of the African Continent; Arts of the Americas; Arts of the Renaissance and Baroque Eras; Children in Art; Line, Shape, and Color; Castles and Knights: An Introduction to Life in the Middle Ages; Discover a World of Great Art; Dressed for Success; Egypt, Greek, and Rome; Face to Face; From Anubis to Zeus: Myths and Stories in Art; In the Footsteps of Buddha; Journey to Asia; Landscape Escapes; Materials of the Artist: How Do They Do That; Modern and Contemporary Art; Speak to the Arts; Sports in Art. Family and Youth Programs Nia Arts Alliance Collaborators: African American Museum, Art on Wheels, Case Western Reserve University, Bruno Casiano Gallery, Cleveland Poetry Center at Cleveland State University, Communidades Unidas Para la Salud (CUPS), Creative Writers’ Workshop Project, Kilolo Arts Media Lab, Thurgood Marshall Recreation Center, Northeast Ohio Jazz Society, Office of Minority Affairs and the Women’s Comprehensive Program, and PRYME (Regional Partnership for Youth Media Empowerment). Nia Coffee House events: musical performances by Eddie Baccus Jr. Trio, Eddie Baccus Sr. Trio, El Franky Lopez Quinteto, Horns and Things, Jack My Dog, Nueva Trova y Troubadores, Mwatabu Okantah and Eric Gould, Vince Robinson and the Jazz Poets, the Judy Strauss Trio, Curtis Taylor Quintet, Vernacular. Guest poets included Kelly Harris, Sara Holbrook, Ray McNiece, Mwatabu Okantah, Joseph Primes, Terry Provost, Q-Nice, Vince Robinson, Michael Salinger, Michelle R. Smith, R. A. Washington, Mary Weems, Ph.D. Visual artists included Lori Bellman, Cavana Faithwalker, Eric Gould, Kate Hoffmeyer, Joe Iona, Scott Lawson, Seema Rao, Irene Shinkle. Museum Art Classes Instructors: Sarah Curry, Jeanna Forhan, Laurie Garrett, Susan Greenwald, Kate Hoffmeyer, Connie Hozvicka, Arielle Levine, Aileen McKimm, Cliff Novak, Sreshta Premnath, Andrea Serafino, Nathan Wasserbauer, Kelly Williams, Jaymi Zents. Supervisors: Grace Bynum, Dyane Hronek Hanslik, Nancy Prudic. Early Learning Initiative Cultural institutions: The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland Botanical Garden, Cleveland Institute of Music, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, The Cleveland Orchestra, Cleveland Play House, The Children’s Museum of Cleveland, Nature Center at Shaker Lakes, Western Reserve Historical Society, University Circle Incorporated. Day care centers: Church of the Covenant, The Cleveland Music School Settlement, Cleveland Sight Center, Daniel Morgan, Karamu House, University Hospitals Kindercare, Wade Day Care Center. Instructor: Kate Hoffmeyer. Future Connections Cultural institutions: Case Western Reserve University, The Children’s Museum of Cleveland, Cleveland Botanical Garden, Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art (now Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland), The Cleveland Institute of Art, The Cleveland Institute of Music, The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland Play House, Western Reserve Historical Society, University Circle Incorporated. Business partners: Allen Bradley Company, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, General Electric, Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue, Judson Park Retirement Community, Ohio Savings Bank. Mentors: Elliott Edmunds, Dyane Hronek Hanslik. Circle Sampler Camp Cultural institutions: African American Museum, The Children’s Museum of Cleveland, Cleveland Botanical Garden, Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art (now Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland), The Cleveland Institute of Art, The Cleveland Institute of Music, The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, The Health Museum of Cleveland, Western Reserve Historical Society. Instructor: Debbie Apple-Presser. Family Express Instructors: Laura Feranndo, Arielle Levine, Julie Hoover Mailey. Assistants: Joan Hanslik, Andrea Harchar, Victoria Slonaker, Jenny Zito. Exhibitions and Adult Programs Symposia and Lectures Picasso: The Artist’s Studio Lectures: “Posing in the Studio: Models in Paris, 1860–1920,” Marie Lathers, Case Western Reserve University; “The Sum of Destructions: Picasso’s Cultures and the Creation of Cubism,” Natasha Stahler, Amherst College. The Stamp of Impulse: Abstract Expressionist Prints. Lectures: “Abstract Expressionism: The Painters Behind the Prints,” Jeffrey Grove; “Jackson Pollock Revisited,” Evert Ellin, organizer of 1964 Pollock retrospective. Photography Transformed: Selections from the Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company Collection Lecture: “Photography in a New Light,” Klaus Kertess, catalogue author. Treasury of the World: Jeweled Arts of India in the Age of the Mughals Lectures: “Mughal Architecture and the Taj Mahal,” Catherine Asher, University of Minnesota; “History of Kashmir Shawls and Contemporary Kashmir Shawls,” Arlene Cooper and Jenny Housego, textile specialists; “Miniature Paintings as Documents of the Jeweled Art,” Joseph Dye, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts; “Paradise in Mughal Gardens,” Elizabeth Moynihan, independent scholar; “Splendid Culmination: The Classic Phase of Jeweled Arts of the Mughal Period,” Manuel Keene, exhibition curator; “Luxury Crafts at the Court of the Great Mughal,” Robert Skelton, Victoria & Albert Museum; “Jeweled Thrones,” Susan Stronge, Victoria & Albert Museum. From Paris to Provincetown: Blanche Lazzell and the Color Woodcut Lecture: “Blanche Lazzell and the Color Woodcut,” Barbara Stern Shapiro, Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Into the Light: Projected Images from 1964–1977 Symposium: artists Simone Forti, Dan Graham, Anthony McCall, and Dennis Oppenheim; Jeffrey Grove, The Cleveland Museum of Art; Anne Rorimer, independent scholar and art historian; Chrissie Iles, Whitney Museum of Art, exhibition curator. Workshop and dance: “Simone Forti in Performance,” Simone Forti and area students. Battle of the Nudes: Pollaiuolo’s Renaissance Masterpiece Symposium: “1475 and After: Dating the Mantegna Prints,” Suzanne Boorsch, Yale University Art Gallery; “Antonio Pollaiuolo and the Goldsmith’s Art,” Evelyn Lincoln, Brown University; “Finiguerra and Pollaiuolo’s Drawings: Style, Technique and Function,” Lorenza Melli, Kunsthistorishes Institut in Florenz; “Antonio Pollaiuolo and the Interpretation of the Arts,” Alison Wright, University College, London. 86 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 86 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Gallery talk: “A City Seen,” Mark Schwartz, guest curator, and Tom Hinson, The Cleveland Museum of Art. Student workshop: Barbara Bosworth and Douglas Lucak, artists. Additional Lectures “Ghost Stories: Pentimenti, or Hidden Artistic Changes in Paintings in the Museum’s Collection,” Kenneth Bé, The Cleveland Museum of Art; “Appreciating the Surfaces of Paintings,” Kenneth Bé; “Medieval Stained Glass and Sculpture of Chartres Cathedral,” Malcolm Miller, scholar; “Turning Heads: The Architecture of Frank Gehry,” Michael St. Clair, The Cleveland Museum of Art. Elizabeth Catlett: Prints and Sculpture Lectures: “My Own Work,” Elizabeth Catlett; “Elizabeth Catlett and Her Contemporaries,” Jane Glaubinger, The Cleveland Museum of Art. Lecture and presentation: “In Honor of Margaret Walker,” Regennia N. Williams, Cleveland State University; theatrical production, Prester Pickett, poet. Artist Simone Forti performs in the garden court in a special event complementing Into the Light. Drawings from the Palais des Beaux-Arts, Lille Lecture: “Raphael and the Reinvention of Drawing,” Martin Clayton, Royal Library, Windsor Castle. Challenging Structure: Frank Gehry’s Peter B. Lewis Building Lecture: “Frank Gehry’s Peter B. Lewis Building: A Critical Response,” Robert Bostwick, architecture critic. Art and Management: What Can We Learn from Each Other? Dialogues: Frank O. Gehry, Weatherhead School of Management architect, and Peter B. Lewis, Progressive Corporation; Cesar Pelli, Toledo Owens Corning corporate headquarters architect, and Glen Hiner, Owens Corning; David M. Schwarz, Severance Hall renovation architect, and Thomas W. Morris, The Cleveland Orchestra. Moderator Jeffrey Kipnis, Wexner Center, The Ohio State University. Archaeological Institute of America “Greek Military History,” Robert Gaebel, University of Akron; “Current Archaeology in Turkey,” Timothy Matney, University of Akron; “Mediterranean Seafaring in the Bronze Age (3000–1200 BC),” Shelly Wachsmann, Texas A & M University. Harvey Buchanan Lecture “The Meaning of the Cloth: The Tapestry and the Loincloth,” Arthur Danto, Columbia University. Textile Arts Alliance Lecture “Art Cloth,” artist Jane Dunnewald; “From the Woods,” artist Dorothy Gill Barnes. Girl Culture: Photographs by Lauren Greenfield Lecture: “Girl Culture,” Lauren Greenfield. Magna Graecia: Greek Art from South Italy and Sicily Lecture: Rosalba Panvini, Museo Archeologico, Gela and excavator of the Gela Altars. Symposium: “The Place of Italy and Sicily in Greek Art,” R. Ross Holloway, Brown University; “Black Figure Pottery in Magna Graecia: Style and Iconography,” Mario Iozzo, Centro di Restauro, Florence, and Museo Archeologico Nazionale, Chiusi; “Magna Graecia Rediscovered: A Grand Tour,” Aaron J. Paul, Tampa Museum of Art; “From Eleusis to Syracuse: Demeter and Persephone in Western Greece,” H. Alan Shapiro, The Johns Hopkins University. A City Seen Dialogue: “Views of Cleveland: Dialogues in a City Seen,” Michael Book, Linda Butler, Gregory Conniff, Lois Conner, Larry Fink, Lee Friedlander, Frank Gohlke, Douglas Lucak, Nicholas Nixon, and Judith Joy Ross, artists. Lectures: “History of Photography Lecture Series,” Saundy Stemen; “Photographing the City,” John Szarkowski, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Continuing Education Courses “Art and Faith: Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam,” Alison Benders, John Carroll and Case Western Reserve Universities; James Dobbins, Oberlin College; Peter Hass, Case Western Reserve University; Imam Ramez Islambouli, Lakeland and Cuyahoga Community Colleges, and chaplain for the Cleveland Clinic Foundation and University Hospitals; Fr. George Smiga, STD, St. Mary Seminary and Graduate School of Theology, and Pastor of St. Noel Parish. “Magna Graecia: Art, Life, and Culture,” Barbara A. Kathman, The Cleveland Museum of Art. “Amercan Landscape Art,” Geraldine Kiefer, University of Notre Dame. “Modern and Contemporary Art,” Lisa Robertson, Cleveland State University. 87 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 87 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Artist Wendy Mahon created this illuminated gateway for the Environment of Lights installation in Wade Oval at the 2002 Lantern Festival. Festivals Chalk Festival Featured chalk artists: Anna Arnold, Bruno Casiano, Kester Jerry, Wendy Mahon, A. D. Peters, Jesse Rhinehart, Robin VanLear. Musicians: Blues DeVille, Roberto Ocasio Latin Jazz Project. Outreach workshop: Buhrer Elementary (Cleveland). Participating groups: Buhrer Elementary (Cleveland) in collaboration with the Case Western Reserve University Office of Multicultural Affairs; Girl Scouts (troops from Huron, Ohio and Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania); Jack and Jill (Akron chapter); Lake Center Christian School (Hartville); Riverside High (Painesville); Teen Start; Unitarian Universalist Society of Cleveland. Winter Lights Lantern Festival Environment of Lights installation artists: Michael Guy-James, Wendy Mahon, Mark Sugiuchi, Robin VanLear. Original music: Carl Johnson. Dancers: Bill Wade (choreography and lead), Hannah Anthony, Nick Carlisle, Micheal Costello, James Holloway, Jennifer Lott, Margret Ludlow, Amy Notley-Guy-James, Young Park, Leila Pelhan, Lizzie Roche, Neil Weeks, Chris Whitney. Featured artist Anna Arnold creates her street painting “Sisters” for the 13th annual Chalk Festival. Guest lantern artists: Hector Castellanos, Micheal Costello, Matt Fehrmann, Angelica Pozo, Nancy Prudic, Story Rhinehart, Lizzie Roche, Kristin Wade, Kevin Williams, Murphy Winters. Musicians: CWRU Early Music Singers and Baroque Orchestra, The Madrigal Singers, Karel Paukert. Outreach workshop: Cleveland Sight Center, YouthAbility Volunteers from Eleanor Gerson School. Community Arts Appearances Art on Wheels; The Avenue at Tower City; Blossom Music Center Summerfest; Bruno Casiano Gallery; Cleveland Arts Summit; Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, Boo at the Zoo (6 days); Cleveland Public Theatre (display); Glenville Festival; Mather Gallery, Case Western Reserve University; National City Bank Building; Playhouse Square Foundation Centerfest; The Thinker reinstallation; Tremont Arts and Cultural Festival; WinterFest at the Old Arcade (2 days). Parade the Circle Celebration Guest artists: Amy Ballestad (Minnesota), Roaidi Cartaya Carvajal (Cuba), Andres Cabrera Garcia (Cuba), Brad Harley (Canada), Kester Jerry (Trinidad and Tobago), Alejandro Calzada Miranda (Cuba), Mary Jo Nikolai (Minnesota), Michael Lee Poy (Canada, Trinidad and Tobago), Zaida del Rio (Cuba), Rick Simon (Canada), Rudolph Murphy Winters (Trinidad and Tobago). Artists and support staff: Debbie ApplePresser, Abby Baumgartner, Sue Berry, Philip Brutz, Hector Castellanos, Kathy Colquhoun, Michael Crouch, Félix Diaz, Nan Eisenberg, Liza Goodell, Michael Guy-James, Dyane Hronek Hanslik, Scott Heiser, Ezra Houser, Mark Jenks, Carl Johnson, Buff Jozsa, Sheila Keller, Wendy Mahon, Abby Maier, Vanessa North, Amy Notley-Guy-James, Pat O’Malley, Young Park, Jesse Rhinehart, Lizzie Roche, SAFMOD, Jan Stickney, Chuck Supinski, Vivian Vail, Robin VanLear, Jill VanOrden, Bill Wade, Kristin Wade, Kelly Williams, Craig Woodson. 2002 poster: A. D. Peters. University Circle Incorporated member institution groups: Abington Arms, African American Museum, Case Western Reserve University, The Children’s Museum of Cleveland, Cleveland Cultural Gardens Federation, Cleveland Hearing & Speech Center, Cleveland Institute of Art, The Cleveland Museum of Art (and Womens Council, Young Friends, Docents), Cleveland Museum of Natural History (and Nature League), The Cleveland Music School Settlement, The Cleveland Public Library, Cleveland Sight Center, Dunham Tavern Museum, Fairhill Center, The Health Museum of Cleveland, Judson Retirement Community, Karamu House Incorporated, The Lake View Cemetery Association, Magnolia Clubhouse of Bridgeway, Inc., Nature Center at Shaker Lakes, University Circle Incorporated, Young Audiences of Greater Cleveland. Schools and education groups: Bedford Schools: Carylwood Elementary; Berea Schools: Fairwood Elementary; Brecksville- 88 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 88 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Parade 2002 guest artists Mary Jo Nikolai and Amy Ballestad created this ensemble: Bird Brained Ornithologists. Broadview Heights High; Case Western Reserve University Department of Modern Languages and Literatures; Citizens Academy; Cleveland Heights-University Heights Schools: Coventry Elementary and Fairfax Elementary; Cleveland Institute of Art; Cleveland Learning Co-op; Cleveland Municipal School District: Audubon Middle, Alexander Graham Bell Elementary, Buhrer Elementary, Kenneth W. Clement Elementary, Cleveland School of the Arts, Charles Dickens Elementary, Harry E. Davis Middle, Margaret A. Ireland Contemporary Academy, Kentucky Elementary, Sunbeam Elementary; Cleveland Music School Settlement, Early Childhood Department; Gilmour Academy; Hathaway Brown School; Hawken School; Laurel School; North Ridgeville Schools: Elizabeth Wilcox Elementary; Our Lady of Peace School; Pardes School; Positive Education Program; Shaker Heights High; Strongsville Schools: Chapman Elementary; University School; Westlake Schools: Hilliard Elementary. Community groups: Abington Arms Art Therapy Program, Catholic Charities/Hispanic Senior Center, City of Cleveland: Division of Waste Collection and Disposal, Cleveland Public Theatre Brick City Youth Theatre Project, Cuyahoga County Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, El Barrio, Fairhill Intergenerational Resource Center, Families with Children from China, Hessler Street and Harmony Park, Karamu House Cultural Arts and Education Department, Metropolitan Bank & Trust, Mount Pleasant Boys and Girls Club, New Song Church of the Heights, Nigerian Community of Greater Cleveland, ParkWorks, Playhouse Square Foundation Teatro Popular Project, Queen Bee Productions, St. Philip’s Episcopal Church, Silver Apples of the Moon Project (sponsored by Shaker Heights Public Library and Cleveland Public Library), Southwest Arts Partnership, Thea Bownman Center, Trinity Cathedral, Unity of Greater Cleveland, Youth Challenge. The final touches being added to Mount Pleasant Boys and Girls Club’s ensemble for Parade 2002: The Phantom Eleven Music and dance groups: Matt Apanius All Star Steel Band; Aquarella do Mundo Samba de Escola; BareBones Productions; Chicks on Sticks; Cleveland Contemporary Dance; Consort; Dance Afrika Dance; East 185th St. Drum Circle Dancers (Hareem Sharem, Yashara’s Dance Troupe, Dahmia’s Dance Troupe); Hathaway Brown Moving Company; In·let Dance Theatre; Jerry Keller, Norm Tishler, Mal Barron and Friends; Mellow Harps Steel Drum Band; The Repertory Project; SAFMOD; Shaker Heights High Senior Ensemble; The Wind and Sand Dance Company; The YARD (Cleveland School of the Arts). Circle Village activities presenters: African American Museum, The Children’s Museum of Cleveland, Cleveland Botanical Garden, Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art (now Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland), Cleveland Hearing & Speech Center, The Cleveland Institute of Art, The Cleveland Institute of Music, The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, The Cleveland Music School Settlement, The Cleveland Orchestra, The Cleveland Public Library, Cleveland Sight Center, Dunham Tavern Museum, The Free Clinic of Greater Cleveland, The Health Museum of Cleveland, Judson Retirement Community, Karamu House Incorporated, The Lake View Cemetery Association, Metropolitan Bank & Trust, Nature Center at Shaker Lakes, Ohio College of Podiatric Medicine/Cleveland Food & Ankle Clinic, Puppetry Guild of Northeastern Ohio, Ronald McDonald House of Cleveland, The Sculpture Center, University Circle Incorporated, University Hospitals KinderCare, Western Reserve Association for the Preservation and Perpetuation of Storytelling (WRAPPS), Western Reserve Historical Society, Young Audiences of Greater Cleveland. Pole banner artists: Cleveland Hearing & Speech Center; The Cleveland Museum of Art staff, docents, and volunteers: Anne Berke, Becky Bristol, Anne Cimballa, Gretchen Denaro, Marsha Gross, Kate Hoffmeyer, Joe Ionna, Vicki Isphording, Dicc Klann, Cathy Lewis-Wright, Holly Pierson, Seema Rao, Anita Silverstein, Larry Sisson; The Cleveland Museum of Art Ambassadors Program; Dunham Tavern Museum; Judson Retirement Community. Sponsors: Metropolitan Bank & Trust with generous support from The George Gund Foundation and additional support from the Ohio Arts Council; City of Cleveland, Jane L. Campbell, Mayor; Cleveland City Council members Patricia J. Britt, Ward 6, Sabra Pierce Scott, Ward 8, and Kevin Conwell, Ward 9; and the Cleveland Coca-Cola Bottling Company. Promotional support was provided by The Plain Dealer, 89.7 WKSU, and Mix 106.5. Special thanks to Charlie’s Fabrics and Distillata. Circle of Masks Artists: Wendy Mahon, Angelica Pozo, Mark Sugiuchi. Movement Performers: In·let Dance Theatre with the YARD (Cleveland School of the Arts), Mark Jenks, Leilani Barrett. 89 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 89 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Performing Arts Film VIVA! Festival of Performing Arts Bop Til You Drop: The Beat Era on Film The Bauls of India; Cleveland Jazz Orchestra featuring Humberto Ramírez, “Big Band Latin Jazz”; Cristina Branco; Frula, “Music and Dance of the Balkans”; Marcel Khalife, “The Music of Lebanon”; Kandia Kouyate, “Songs of Mali”; Baaba Maal, “Music of Senegal”; Masters of Persian Music; Nrityagram Dance Ensemble of India; Paco Pena Flamenco Dance Company; Radio Tarifa; Emil Zrihan, “Jewish Music of Morocco.” Carnevale World Music and Dance Series Hossein Alizadeh, “Master of Persian Lutes”; “Dervish: Music of Ireland”; Lila Downs; The Klezmatics; Mísia, “The Passion Songs of Portugal”; Compañía María Pagé, “Flamenco Republic”; Mônica Salmaso; The Tango Bar. Jazz on the Circle Ron Carter Quartet, Contemporary Piano Ensemble, Eliane Elias Trio, Slide Hampton & The World of Trombones. MLK Jr. Day Celebration Greater Cleveland Choral Chapter, Robert Lockwood Jr. Seven features and 20 shorts about American bohemians of the forties, fifties, and early sixties. Jewish/Israeli Film Festival Eight features and one short, most Cleveland premieres, from five different countries. The Postmodern Movie Musical Eight groundbreaking musicals from around the world. India Film Series Four India-themed movies that complemented the exhibition Jeweled Arts of India. New Nonfiction Four recent documentary features and one short. Cinema without Borders: The Films of Joris Ivens Six features and ten shorts by the late, great Dutch documentarian. The Magnificent “7” Jazz Poet on Broadway. A wide-ranging salute to cinema, “the seventh art,” consisting of 27 classic films with the number “7” in their titles. Workshops Further Into the Light Tri-C JazzFest Tibetan Sand Mandala Painting, instructor, Ven. Tenzin Yignyen. Five shorts and one feature by artists represented in the Into the Light exhibition. Summer Evenings Songs of the Ukraine: The Films of Alexander Dovzhenko Courtyard Music Afro-Rican Ensemble, The Eddie Baccus Quartet, The Greg Bandy Quartet, Blue Lunch, Blues DeVille, The Bob Buschow Octet, Charged Particles, The Jesse Dandy Jazz Ensemble, DBC, The Skip Gibson Quartet, The Eric Gould Quartet, The Cliff Habian Quartet, The Susan Hesse Quartet, The KingBees, Ernie Krivda and the Swingtown Sextet, The Mercurys, The Ed Michaels Quartet, Mr. Downchild and The House Rockers, The New Harp Experience, The Trisha O’Brien Quintet, The Paradise Jazz Band, The Mike Petrone Quartet, The John Richmond Swingtet. Nine features by one of the giants of Soviet cinema. After the War, Before the Wall: German Cinema, 1945–60 Seven eye-opening movies from a neglected era of film history. Greek Adventurers Five films spotlighting the contributions to world cinema of Greek-born film artists. Alexander Sokurov: Recent Video Work Six full-length videos from the contemporary Russian master. Wilder at Heart A free series of five features by the great American writer-director Billy Wilder, who died in 2002. Special Film Events In October, filmmaker Spike Lee and former Cleveland Browns running back Jim Brown attended two special screenings of Lee’s new documentary, Jim Brown: All-American. Both men answered questions from members of the audience after each show. In November, Richard Myers, the dean of Ohio filmmakers, attended the Cleveland premiere showing of his latest feature, Marjory’s Diary, based on a journal his mother kept while growing up in Massillon during the 1920s and 1930s. A free screening of the gospel music documentary Say Amen, Somebody! presented as part of the museum’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration. 90 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 90 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Musical Arts Lectures Outreach and Audience Development Ross Duffin, Rebecca Fischer, Stephen E. Hefling, Steven Plank, Richard Rodda. Speakers Bureau Gala Music Series American Baroque; The Clerks’ Group, Edward Wickham, director, “The Original Josquin”; Czech Nonet; The Endellion String Quartet; Andrew Manze, Baroque violin with Richard Egarr, harpsichord; Piffaro: The Renaissance Band; Ewa Podle«, contralto with Ania Marchwinska, piano; Dang Thai Son, piano. Musart Matinee Series Karel Paukert playing the Viennese fortepiano by Philip Belt. Free slide lectures were presented about works in the permanent collection and special exhibitions. Volunteers appeared at 32 venues for a total of 1,520 listeners. Presentation sites included retirement facilities, sorority groups, women’s & men’s clubs, public and private schools, Rotary Clubs, senior centers, churches, and professional groups. Special lectures were presented to the members of the Southwest Arts Partnership and staff of the West Side branches of the Cuyahoga County Public Library. Baldwin-Wallace Conservatory of Music; David Breitman, fortepiano, “The Dedication of the Clifford K. Kern Memorial Fortepiano”; students of Janina Ceaser (CIM), “An Afternoon of Harpsichord Music”; James David Christie, organ; Concorditas; Paul Cox, percussion, “Gehry Variations”; Ross Duffin, CWRU Early Music Singers and Baroque Orchestra; Michal George, guitar; David Leisner, guitar; Marilyn Nonken, piano, “Morton Feldman’s ‘Triadic Memories’ ”; Oberlin Contemporary Ensemble with Ursula Oppens, piano, Timothy Weiss, director; Robert Parkins, organ; Karel Paukert, organ and harpsichord with Janina Ceaser, harpsichord, “Homage to J. S. Bach Part I: The Organ Mass” and “Homage to J. S. Bach Part II: The Art of Fugue”; Judith Overcash Rubin, soprano, with Vivian Montgomery, fortepiano, “Songs from a London Piano”; St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Choir, “From Lent to Easter”; St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Choir, Handbell and Children’s Choir, soloists, and instrumental ensemble, Karel Paukert, Steven Plank, Cordetta Valthauser, and Richard and Beth Nelson, directors, “Holiday Christmas Concert”; Daniel Shapiro, piano/lecture and recital; Solaris Wind Quintet; Fabian Emil Toledo, organ; Jaroslav Tÿma, harpsichord; The University Circle Wind Ensemble, Gary Ciepluch, director (2 concerts); Viola Section of the Cleveland Orchestra. Art Crew Musart Mondial Series Outreach Activities, Offsite The Brahms Trio; Camerata Köln, “Virtuoso Baroque Music from Germany”; Red {an orchestra}; Vermeer String Quartet. Summer Evenings Concerts Laurent Boukobza, piano; Janina Ceaser, harpsichord with Karel Paukert, harpsichord and celesta; Jack Sutte, trumpet with Karel Paukert, organ, “Organ Plus”; “Splendid Varietie: Three Centuries of the Lute,“ featuring lutenists Robert Barto, Andrea Damiani, Ronn McFarlane, Nigel North, Paul O’Dette, The Venere Quartet and sopranos Julianne Baird and Ellen Hargis; The Cleveland Chamber Collective; The Cavani String Quartet with Philip Setzer, viola; The Kent/Blossom Chamber Orchestra, Steven Smith, conductor, “35th Anniversary Concert”; ENCORE School for Strings Intensive Quartet Seminar; Lyric Opera Cleveland Apprentice Concert; “Organ Plus: Music for Organ and Instruments,” Lenora-Marya Anop, violin; Nicole Divall, viola; Steven Witser, trombone; Karel Paukert, organ. Curator’s Organ and Keyboard Recitals Karel Paukert, 22 recitals and 10 demonstrations. The Art Crew gives the museum a living presence and vitality in the community. Performers in costumes based on works in the collection work with a “handler” who fields questions and supplies educational information along with a free Polaroid picture of participants posing with the characters. Venues included: African American Family Festival (Luke Easter Park), Bedford Heights Fall Fest, Brookpark Library Holiday Party, Citizen’s Academy Family, City of Cleveland Cultural Arts Summit, City of Cleveland National Night Out against Crime, Case Western Reserve University Homecoming Parade, East Cleveland Neighborhood Festival Parade, GE Employees Art & Cultural Program, Glenville Neighborhood Festival Parade, Hunger Network: Walk for Hunger, Jacobs Field—Tribe Tots, Laurel School’s Medieval Festival, Literacy Night, MLK Day at CMA, Puritas Park—Building Peace through Art Festival, Shaker Heights Memorial Day Parade, Shaker Heights Public Library Project, Strongsville Elementary Arts Festival, UrbanLeague of Greater Cleveland Do the Right Thing Parade, USPS Multicultural Celebration at NASA Glenn, Western Reserve Historical Society Heritage & Cultural Festival, Young Audiences Benefit: “The Edge.” The Art of Sports Night at Gund Arena Baycrafters Renaissance Fantasy Fayre FraserNet Power Networking Conference Chautauqua Arts Festival in Berea The Cleveland Home & Garden Show Rotunda at Tower City RTA Station West Side Market Summer Arts Festival Outreach Activities, at the Museum 100 Black Men of Greater Cleveland membership pinning ceremony Community Fence Celebration Community Lighting Celebration Lecture, Regennia N. Williams, Cleveland State University, and Helen Turner Thompson, gospel music pioneer President’s Reception, SCLC National Conference State of Ward 8 Address, City Council Representative Sabre Pierce Scott USPS Stamp Unveiling, Andy Warhol’s SelfPortrait, 1964 91 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 91 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Summary of Attendance Total attendance, museum 505,585 Community Arts Chalk Festival Circle of Masks Community Arts (offsite events) Community Days outreach events Parade the Circle Celebration Winter Lights Lantern Festival Total 9,000 1,500 84,550 250 50,000 11,000 156,300 School and Teacher Services Art to Go Distance Learning Docent-guided groups of children School Studio programs Self-guided groups of children Staff-guided groups of children Teacher Resource Center Teacher Resource Center Offsite Total 5,584 14,336 29,789 1,520 22,769 36,388 2,361 2,782 115,529 Family and Youth Programs Community outreach Family workshops High school programs Oriental Odyssey 540 Future Connections 130 Theater Arts Camp 168 World of Difference 180 Museum Art Classes Special days Martin Luther King Jr. Day 3,515 Greek Festival Day 1,200 Indian Festival Day 835 Special youth programs ELI 655 Afternoon with the Arts 42 Circle Sampler Camp 100 Math Connections 416 Storytelling Total 6,157* 2,130 1,018* 8,847* 5,550 Film Image Library Book Library Slides borrowed CMA staff 8,551 CWRU 16,023 Public 8,329 Acquisitions Books ordered Books received Gifts received Exchanges received 4,770 4,907 1,520 1,394 Cataloging Cataloged 6,823 titles in 8,196 items (includes books, serials, electronic resources, microforms, scores, and video and audio recordings, in Roman and CJK scripts) Volume count as of December 31, 2002 294,531 titles in 371,848 volumes Book repairs 690 Headings added to ArtNACO 221 Public Services Staff use (February–December) Nonstaff users registered Book circulation CMA staff 26,902 CWRU 9,081 Members 918 Other researchers 2,349 Books shelved Reference questions answered (including 254 email questions) Books handled via courier run Interlibrary loans (408 as borrower, 930 as lender) 2,986 4,757 39,250 30,929 2,356 6,940 1,338 Serials 1,213* 170 25,085 For Adults Adult guided groups (staff/docents) Adult self-guided groups Adult Studio classes CWRU audit classes for members CWRU classes Gallery talks Highlights tours by docents Lifelong Learning Program Public lectures Recorded tours Jeweled Arts of India 8,782 Magna Graecia 5,146 Sight and Sound 4,222 Total Ingalls Library 7,252 1,957 3,720* 2,184* 13,618* 5,332 2,707 2,714* 11,955 18,150 Serial titles Active titles Serials checked in Titles cataloged Sales catalogs received Volumes bound (Sales Catalog Index Project Input Online) Records added Recon records added as of December 31, 2002 Total records in online system 2,888 1,571 4,301 84 1,882 3,626 Slide borrowers CMA staff 340 CWRU 469 Public 259 1,068 Slides filed Videos borrowed Videos watched Videos owned 40,896 28 30 1,042 Acquisitions Slides Digital images photographed Digital images purchased 1,345 5,204 1,001 Digital Processing Slides scanned Images attached to database Slides printed CDs burned for staff 3,770 7,214 4,146 8 Cataloging Entered Cataloged 3,821 5,401 Records online in Re:Discovery Images online in Re:Discovery Records accessioned 244.5 cubic feet Records processed 173 cubic feet Total holdings as of December 31, 2002 2,405 cubic feet Finding aids/box lists prepared 14 Records sent to offsite storage 196 cubic feet File titles added to database 4,394 Reference requests 181 Staff 43 Public 38 SCIPIO 1,882 14,733 78,239 69,589 14,329 Performing Arts Jazz on the Circle Other concerts, festivals, and workshops Summer Evenings (Wednesdays and Fridays) (door count) Carnevale World Music and Dance VIVA! Festival of Performing Arts Total Grand Total 2002 2,106 3,915 25,577 5,642 7,453 39,051 427,434 * reflects multi-attendance 92 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 92 154,590 18,000 Archives 7,551 Musical Arts 32,903 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM A fledgling chalk artist works on the museum’s south terrace at the 2002 Chalk Festival. S TA F F Director’s Office Katharine Lee Reid, Director and Chief Executive Officer Roberto Prcela, Assistant Secretary to the Board Lynn Williams, Executive Assistant Barbara Kasperski, Administrative Assistant Jo Ann Marron, Assistant* Administration Janet G. Ashe, Deputy Director of Administration and Treasurer Design and Architecture Division Jeffrey Strean, Director of Design and Architecture Elizabeth Freer, Project Coordinator, Building Project Elisa Meadows, Administrative Assistant* Design Jeffrey Baxter, Head of Exhibition Design and Production JoAnn Dickey, Graphic Designer Terra Keskemety, Production Designer* Laura Probola, Production Designer* Mary Thomas, Production Designer* Chris Tyler, Lighting Designer Randall Von Ryan, Associate Director, Architecture and Construction Exhibition Production Howard Oliver, Museum Technician/ Painter Gerald L. Smith, Carpenter/Museum Technician Harold Borgman, Carpenter/Museum Technician Installation Jeff Falsgraf, Installation Supervisor Joseph R. Blaser Jr., Lead Technician, Permanent Collection Robin Roth, Graphics Technician Tim Gaewsky, Installation Technician Joe Ionna, Installation Technician Carlo Maggiora, Installation Technician Mark McClintock, Installation Technician Andrea Joki, Installation Technician* Barbara Konrad, Installation Technician* Operations Division Ian Herron, Director of Operations Facilities Thomas Catalioti, Facilities Manager Diane Kawolics, Assistant to the Facilities Manager Richard Jeric, Mechanical Maintenance Technician* James F. Rudisille, Electrician Joseph Sedlak, Electrician Robin Presley, Facilities Painter Construction Services Mark Unick, Foreman Dominique Halley, Technician Alton Avery, General Helper Engineering Joseph Z. Jamrus, Supervisor Anthony Lee, Facilities Technician Frank Babudar, 3rd Shift Engineer Thomas J. Cari, Engineer Anthony Ceo, Engineer Richard Friend, 3rd Shift Engineer Pete Joksimovich, 2nd Shift Engineer Mel Matowitz, 2nd Shift Engineer Fred E. Sanders, Engineer Building Services David Blom, Supervisor Artice (Joe) Savage, Group Leader/ General Cleaner Shawn Burns, General Cleaner LaTonya Cozart, General Cleaner Susan Evan, General Cleaner Brian Ferguson, General Cleaner Brian Fields, General Cleaner Deanna Miller, General Cleaner Hercules Riley, General Cleaner Ibn Taylor, General Cleaner John Weems, General Cleaner Avila Winston, General Cleaner Rebecca Harrison, General Cleaner* Cynthia Wiggins, General Cleaner* Monica Wiggins, General Cleaner* Protection Services Brad Clark, Chief Carol Camloh, Coordinator Paul Bouley, Manager Jeff Cahill, Manager Salvador Gonzalez, Manager Carolyn M. Ivanye, Manager Jaime Juarez, Manager Frederick D. Martin Jr., Manager Steven Witalis, Manager Ilya Elnatanov, Guard* Carolyn Ernst, Guard* Michael Evans, Guard Terence Fetchet, Guard* Stacy Foreman, Guard* Ted Frisco, Guard* Gabe Gaskins, Guard* Leonard Gipson Jr., Guard Adrienne Grady, Guard* William McGee, Electronic Security Coordinator Ben Broco, Alarm Technician Thomas Graven, Guard Robert Andrews, Supervisor Charmane Harris, Guard* James Donovan, Supervisor Ken Haffner, Supervisor Eugene Irwin, Supervisor Carol Meyers, Supervisor David Setny, Supervisor Clifford Hicks, Guard Abdullah Ibrahim, Guard* Patricia Jagodnik, Guard* Kenneth Jones, Guard* Verla Jones, Guard* Gerald Karecki, Guard Walter Karoly, Guard* Kamilia Abadier, Guard Soad Al Rashidy, Guard* Marcus Altus, Guard* Maria Aras, Guard Guan Barnes, Guard* Alexander Gulkin, Guard* Tim Harriet, Guard* Jon Keppel, Guard* Dwayne Kirkland, Guard Marilyn Kraska, Guard* Kenneth Burington, Guard* Anne Laperriere, Guard* Grounds Thomas Hornberger, Supervisor Ronald L. Crosby, Group Leader/ Groundskeeper Allen C. Jesunas, Grounds Assistant Lott Crosby, Groundskeeper William Foster, Groundskeeper Frank Cacciacarro, Guard Ed Cade, Guard* Andrea Libertini, Guard* Emmil Makram, Guard* Louris Malaty, Guard Joseph L. Hrovat, Groundskeeper Dexter Davis, Guard Jonah De Rivera, Guard* Connie Devadoss, Guard* John Sawicki, Groundskeeper Anthony Calabretta, Groundskeeper* Richard Korosi, Groundskeeper* David Carter, Guard* Adam Clark, Guard* Mervin Clary, Guard Margarita Claudio, Guard Clint Clore, Guard Leroy Coston, Guard* Rachel Duszynski, Guard* James Earl, Guard* Charles Ellis, Guard * part-time David McElhaney, Guard* Felice McLin, Guard James McNamara, Guard Salwa Melek, Guard George Meluch, Guard* Valentine Mihalek, Guard* Christopher Mis, Guard Teresa Najarro, Guard Adam Noble, Guard* Dezso Novota, Guard 93 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 93 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Paul Pfeifer, Guard* Robert Pruitt, Guard* Vladimir Rasshivkin, Guard James Rauchfleisch, Guard* Timothy Roach, Guard Gene Roelke, Guard* Jason Rudolf, Guard* Abram Shneyder, Guard Zachary Solotko, Guard* Bion St. Bernard, Guard* Nathan Steffens, Guard* Alec Stewart, Guard* Reginald Sturdivant, Guard Marti Thomas, Guard Martin Tkac Jr., Guard Matthew Valerius, Guard* Alexander Verni, Guard Janet Voss, Guard Lauren Voss, Guard* Paul Walker Jr., Guard* Seretha Walker, Guard* Michael Weiss, Guard* Taqueina Wilkins, Guard* John Williams, Guard George Youssef, Guard Richard Archacki, Night Watch Person Vincent D’Amico, Night Watch Person Anthony Dudley, Night Watch Person* Derrick Fields, Night Watch Person* Lawrence Fitch, Night Watch Person Lee Hebebrand, Night Watch Person Leonard Kile, Night Watch Person David Robbins, Night Watch Person John Somogyi, Night Watch Person Carey Yancey, Night Watch Person Museum Stores Amy Garner, Manager of Retail Stores and Support Services John Baburek, Buyer Mary St. John, Buyer Jabari Sims, Sales Assistant* Julie Verdon, Buyer Martha Lattie, Product Development Coordinator Jay Miller, Operations and Warehousing Manager Marvin Bell, Museum Receiver Renee Suich, Warehouse Supervisor Diana Borcz, Product Developer/Visual Merchandise Coordinator Dedeja Tsiranany, Office Coordinator Nancy Vasse-Hansel, Wholesale Coordinator Andrew Cari, Store Training Manager Hedvig Novota, Senior Assistant Manager Carolyn Guy, Selling Supervisor Peter Berke, Sales Assistant* Margaret Brewster, Sales Assistant* Patrick Cassidy, Sales Assistant* Rachel Coon, Sales Assistant* Robert Jaffe, Sales Assistant* Saul Kammen, Sales Assistant* Joan Larson, Sales Assistant* Richard Napoli, Sales Assistant* Tony Shields, Sales Assistant* Charlotte Stein, Sales Assistant* Barbara Wayne, Sales Assistant* Dawn Wilson, Sales Assistant* Airport Store Sheree Stephan, Store Manager Kristen Potoczak, Assistant Store Manager Jimmy Tecco, Selling Supervisor Nichole Bahrt, Sales Assistant* Barbara Kaplysh, Sales Assistant* Kathleen Pollack, Sales Assistant* Candace Vickroy, Sales Assistant* Operations and Warehousing Michael Meredith, Warehouse Assistant Supervisor Michael Jones, Warehouse Assistant* Distribution Services Wanda Ankrom, Distribution Services Supervisor Kimberly Grice, Distribution Services Associate Alberta Daniels, Delivery Person Food Service Andrew Herberger, Food Service Manager Venus Martin, Food Service Supervisor Denise Cooper, Food Service Representative* Charlene Davis, Food Service Representative* Anthony Dudley, Food Service Representative* Teya Easterling, Food Service Representative* Derrick Fields, Food Service Representative* Patricia Folds, Food Service Representative* Tonya Pearl, Food Service Representative* Diondra Penland, Food Service Representative* Jermaine Ross, Food Service Representative* Yvonne Somerville, Food Service Representative* Michael Stephens, Food Service Representative* Laura Swopes, Food Service Representative* Jacqueline Tucker, Food Service Representative* Collections and Programs Darryl Wesley, Food Service Representative* Maketa White, Food Service Representative* Conservation Division Finance Division Connie Pomeroy, Finance Associate Analyst Kenneth Bé, Associate Conservator of Paintings Stanislaw J. Czuma, George P. Bickford Curator of Indian and Southeast Asian Art Nancy Grossman, Curatorial Assistant Beth Sandersblevans, Senior Assistant Anita Chung, Andrew W. Mellon Research Fellow Accounting Ed Bauer, Controller Russ Klimczuk, Manager of Financial Planning Robin Hanson, Assistant Conservator of Textiles Beth Wolfe, Textile Preparator Moyna Stanton, Associate Paper Conservator Contemporary Art Jeffrey Grove, Associate Curator Cathleen Chaffee, Curatorial Assistant Amy Georger, Assistant* Kimberly Cerar, Assistant Controller Amy Banko, Construction/ Development Accountant Christine Hoge, Endowment Accountant Patricia Hunter, Payroll Coordinator Melady McCartney, Accounts Payable Specialist Karen Pinson, Accounts Receivable Specialist Human Resources Division Barbara Pitrone, Senior Human Resources Representative Sara Hodgson, Human Resources Administrator Heather Weisenseel, Human Resources Administrator Carla Petersen, Benefits Specialist Charles L. Venable, Deputy Director for Collections and Programs Lynn Cameron, Executive Assistant D. Bruce Christman, Chief Conservator Marcia C. Steele, Conservator of Paintings Lawrence Sisson, Assistant Conservator of Objects James George, Preparator Joan Neubecker, Preparator Charles Eiben, Preparator for Prints and Drawings Maurizio Michelozzi, Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in Paper Conservation Linnaea Saunders, Kress Fellow Judith DeVere, Senior Assistant Curatorial Division African Art Constantine Petridis, Assistant Curator of African Art Carol A. Ciulla, Senior Assistant Art of the Ancient Americas Susan E. Bergh, Associate Curator of Art of the Americas Carol A. Ciulla, Senior Assistant 94 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 94 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Asian Art Ju-hsi Chou, Curator of Chinese Art Michael R. Cunningham, Curator of Japanese and Korean Art Decorative Arts and Sculpture Henry H. Hawley, Curator of Baroque and Later Decorative Arts and Sculpture Carol A. Ciulla, Senior Assistant Charlotte Vignon, Andrew W. Mellon Research Fellow Egyptian and Ancient Near Eastern Art Kenneth Boha©, Curatorial Assistant Rachel Rosenzweig, Curatorial Assistant Greek and Roman Art Michael Bennett, Curator Kenneth Boha©, Curatorial Assistant Rachel Rosenzweig, Curatorial Assistant David Smart, Andrew W. Mellon Research Fellow Medieval Art Stephen N. Fliegel, Associate Curator of Medieval Art Rachel Rosenzweig, Curatorial Assistant Painting Sylvain Bellenger, Curator of Painting Henry Adams, Curator of American Painting William H. Robinson, Curator of Modern European Art Stanton Thomas, Assistant Curator Kathleen McKeever, Curatorial Assistant Guillaume Nicoud, Gould Fellow Margaret Burgess, Andrew W. Mellon Curatorial Fellow June de Phillips, Assistant Photography Tom E. Hinson, Curator of Photography Patricia M. Burke, Curatorial Assistant Amy Georger, Assistant* Prints and Drawings Jane Glaubinger, Curator of Prints Carter E. Foster, Curator of Drawings Patrick Shaw Cable, Assistant Curator of Drawings Shelley R. Langdale, Assistant Curator of Prints (until March) Heather Lemonedes, Assistant Curator of Prints Joan Brickley, Senior Assistant Textiles and Islamic Art Louise W. Mackie, Curator of Textiles and Islamic Art Chris Ujcich, Senior Assistant Collections Care Division Ingalls Library and Archives Exhibition Office Heidi Domine, Head of Exhibitions Ann B. Abid, Head Librarian Louis Adrean, Associate Librarian for Public Services Marlene Haas, Exhibitions Coordinator Jane Panza, Label Editor Photographic and Digital Imaging Services Howard T. Agriesti, Chief Photographer Gary Kirchenbauer, Associate Photographer David Brichford, Darkroom and Imaging Technician Janet Burke, Imaging Technician and Assistant Photographer Bruce Shewitz, Assistant Manager Registrar’s Office Mary E. Suzor, Chief Registrar Carolyn T. Thum, Associate Registrar Gretchen Shie Miller, Associate Registrar for Loans Beth A. Gresham, Associate Registrar for Exhibitions* Jennifer Qualiotto, Assistant Registrar Jeanette Saunders, Assistant Registrar* Bridget Weber, Assistant Registrar Andrea S. Bour, Assistant Registrar for Collections Information* Monica Wolf, Rights and Reproduction Coordinator Jinai Amos, Department Assistant Andrew Rock, Packing Specialist Jeff Witt, Art Handler/Packing Assistant Elizabeth Lantz, Assistant Librarian for Acquisitions* Frederick FriedmanRomell, Systems Librarian Maria C. Downey, Serials Librarian Yunah Sung, Asian Bibliographer Lori Ann Thorrat, Head Cataloger Christopher Handy, Cataloger Christine Edmonson, Interlibrary Loan Librarian Helen Platten, Reference Librarian* Georgina Gy Toth, Assistant Librarian for Book Selection* Melanie Seal, Acquisitions Assistant Patrick Coleman, Acquisitions Assistant* Stacie A. Murry, Cataloging Assistant Alison Hulsinger, Gifts and Exchanges Assistant Michael Becroft, Serials Assistant Barbara Billings, Circulation Assistant Jennifer Vickers, Circulation Assistant Marsha Morrow, Administrative Assistant Nichole Bahrt, Library Assistant* Maureen Cowan, Library Assistant* Sara Jane Pearman, Image Librarian William Kennedy, Slide Cataloger Becky Bristol, Slide Circulation Assistant Jennifer Petriches, Slide Cataloger* Holly Pierson, Slide Processor* Leslie Cade, Archivist Hillary Bober, Assistant Archivist Education and Public Programs Division Marjorie Williams, Director Kathleen Colquhoun, Executive Assistant Joellen DeOreo, Associate Director, Exhibitions and Adult Programs Kelly Williams, Special Programs Coordinator Shannon Masterson, Department Head, Education Programs Debbie ApplePresser, Instructor* Pat Ashton, Instructor* Jean Graves, Instructor* Kate Hoffmeyer, Instructor* Karen Levinsky, Instructor* Anita Peeples, Instructor* Nancy Prudic, Instructor* Saundy Stemen, Instructor* Cavana I. O. Faithwalker, Assistant Director, Community Outreach Dyane Hanslik, Assistant Director, Family and Youth Programs Dale Hilton, Assistant Director, Distance Learning Program David Shaw, Distance Learning Technical Support Manager Susan Martis, Distance Learning Assistant Frank Isphording, Distance Learning Project Coordinator* Mary Ryan, Distance Learning Scheduler* Barbara A. Kathman, Assistant Director, Docent Program Michael Starinsky, Associate Director, Art to Go Alicia Hudson Garr, Assistant Director, Art to Go MaryAnn Popovich, Assistant Director, Teacher Resource Center Claire Lee Rogers, Associate Director, Education Massoud Saidpour, Artistic Director, Performing Arts Jeremy Shubrook, Production Coordinator John Ewing, Department Head, Film* Michael St. Clair, Department Head, Audio Visual Services Tim Harry, AV Assistant* Laszlo Vince, AV Assistant Robin VanLear, Artistic Director, Community Arts Mary Woodward, Education Coordinator* Grace Bynum, Programs Administrator Nan Eisenberg, Coordinator, Community Arts Seema Rao, Coordinator, Special Programs Karen Gregg, Scheduling Assistant Penelope D. Buchanan, Consultant Christine BizayVuyancih, Assistant* Karen Bourquin, Assistant* Katherine Klann, Assistant* Anne Kowalski, Assistant* Roberta Laster, Assistant, Docent Program* Gail Trembly, Assistant, Community Arts* Musical Arts Karel Paukert, Curator Paul Cox, Assistant Curator Michael McKay, Assistant* Development and External Affairs Susan Stevens Jaros, Deputy Director of Development and External Affairs Jacqueline Kelling, Campaign Coordinator and Division Manager Linda Goldstein, Executive Assistant Development Division Cynthia E. Rallis, Director Bruce Carr, Major Gifts Officer Connie Breth, Administrative Assistant Kim McCarty, Associate Director, Corporate Relations Kari Phillips, Corporate Relations Program Manager Laura Maciag, Associate Director, Individual Giving Programs Danielle Roberston, Donor Circles Manager Amy Cronauer, Annual Fund and Special Gifts Manager Biserka Mikleus, Development Assistant Karen Jackson, Associate Director, Planned Giving Doreen Abdullovski, Planned Giving Specialist Rebecca Greene, Planned Giving Assistant Cindy Hoover, Associate Director, Development Services Patricia J. Butler, Support Services Administrator Racheal Seibert, Research Associate Maggie Delaney, Development Assistant Jack Stinedurf, Associate Director, Grants and Government Relations 95 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 95 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Joan Toner, Assistant Director, Grants and Government Relations Membership Andrea Krist, Associate Director, Membership Bill Davenport, Membership Assistant Rob Sikora, Membership Assistant Christine Wright, Membership Assistant Maureen Kelly, Membership Sales* Lori Magid, Membership Sales* External Affairs Division Donna Brock, Director of External Affairs Ros Mason, Administrative Assistant Gregory M. Donley, Senior Writer/ Designer, External Affairs Communications Denise Horstman, Associate Director Julie Limpach, Media Relations Coordinator The opening ensemble for Parade the Circle Celebration 2002: Island Spirit Marketing and Visitor Services Karen Ferguson, Associate Director Nina Arrowood, Marketing Associate Elizabeth Berke, Visitor Services Coordinator Margaret Day, Group Sales Coordinator Dale Smith, Ticket Center Manager Beverly Essinger, Ticket Center Assistant Supervisor Karen Wellman, Ticket Center Assistant Supervisor Lucy Abadier, Ticket Agent* Emily Austin-Rose, Ticket Agent* Patricia Dolak, Ticket Agent* Sharon Jacobs, Ticket Agent* Martha Jacoby, Ticket Agent* Andre Jones, Ticket Agent* John Misheff, Ticket Agent* Bernardine O’Neill, Switchboard Operator Faye Grinage, Switchboard Operator* Outreach and Audience Development Cathy Lewis-Wright, Associate Director Thomasine Clark, Outreach Manager Deirdre Vodanoff, Outreach Assistant Publications and Printing Laurence Channing, Head of Publications Barbara J. Bradley, Editor Thomas H. Barnard III, Graphic Designer Charles Szabla, Production Manager Mel Horvath, Printer Blaine Stojkov, Press Operator Constituent Relations Division Karen Carr, Director of Constituent Relations, Protocol, and Events Special Events Craig Thompson, Associate Director, Conference and Special Events Ann Koslow, Assistant Manager, Special Events Eliza Parkin, Special Events Coordinator Gretchen Denaro, Department Administrator Hunter Walter, Administrative Assistant Noel Bliss, Ticket Agent* 96 5-EducationOutreach1a.p65 96 6/10/2003, 4:55 PM Volunteer Initiatives Diane De Bevec, Associate Director, Volunteer Initiatives Liz Pim, Coordinator Information Technology Leonard Steinbach, Chief Information Officer Judy Fredrichs, Department Administrator Information Services Douglas Hiwiller, Information Services Manager Robert Hlad, Systems Coordinator Margo Frey, User Support Specialist Marvin Richardson, User Support Specialist New Media Initiatives Holly Witchey, Manager, New Media Initiatives Michael Hilliard, Assistant Manager Network Services Tom Hood, Network Manager Robert Nuhn, Assistant Network Manager Department Support Dave Andrews, Department Support Specialist, Administration Mike Brugnoni, Department Support Specialist, Digital Imaging Linda Wetzel, Department Support Specialist, Development and External Affairs/ Education * part-time FINANCIAL REPORT 2002 97 6-Finance.p65 97 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM TREASURER As expected, the year 2002 was difficult for nonprofit institutions. Despite extreme external pressures, the museum managed a balanced budget for 2002 by reducing costs and emphasizing fundraising activities. The financial markets continued the slide that began in early 2000, resulting in sustained losses in the endowment, although we continued to outperform major market indices. With the continued uncertainty in the markets and the decline in the endowment, the museum has implemented reductions in its cost structure for 2003. Further reductions will be required in 2004 as the spending rule revenue continues to decline due to reduced investment balances. The director and museum staff are preparing to meet the challenges in the upcoming years by proactively reviewing expenses that can be pared now. The museum continues to be dedicated to a balanced budget as it maintains a welcoming environment to all visitors and remains free. Janet G. Ashe Deputy Director of Administration and Treasurer 98 6-Finance.p65 98 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM Revenues Investments—general and specific purpose 67.7% Individual, corporate, and government gifts and grants 24.7% Programs and miscellaneous 6.4% Retail and fee income (net) 1.2% Expenses Curatorial, conservation, and programs 37.6% Design, building, and depreciation 28.8% Administrative and retirees 18.8% Membership and development 14.8% Summary of Key Financial Data Years Ended December 31 (in thousands) Investments Charitable perpetual trusts 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 $ 316,259.8 249,369.2 $ 384,347.8 295,188.1 $ 408,479.2 325,558.7 $ 406,350.5 351,752.1 $ 366,398.1 321,486.7 565,629.0 679,535.9 734,037.9 758,102.6 687,884.8 14,003.0 33,678.9 33,658.4 13,990.0 31,535.6 31,531.4 5,472.7 31,039.9 30,922.6 16,892.1 27,712.6 28,446.0 7,252.1 28,466.9 27,987.3 20.5 4.2 117.3 Total Art purchases Unrestricted revenue and support Operating expenses Excess (deficiency) of operating revenue and support over operating expenses Five-year average $ (733.4) A 479.6 (22.4) A. Includes a one-time, post-employment benefit expense of $944.2 99 6-Finance.p65 99 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM Report of Independent Auditors Board of Trustees The Cleveland Museum of Art We have audited the accompanying statements of financial position of the Cleveland Museum of Art as of December 31, 2002 and 2001, and the related statements of activities and cash flows for the years then ended. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Cleveland Museum of Art’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion. In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Cleveland Museum of Art as of December 31, 2002 and 2001, and the changes in its net assets and its cash flows for the years then ended in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States. May 22, 2003 Cleveland, Ohio 100 6-Finance.p65 100 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM Statements of Financial Position December 31, 2002 Assets Cash and cash equivalents Accounts receivable Inventories Prepaid expenses and other current assets $ Investments (Note 6) 5,948,314 395,719 822,970 1,297,292 December 31, 2001 $ 3,737,220 472,693 992,157 2,267,637 316,259,812 384,347,812 29,158,493 12,658,051 14,714,546 28,889,829 12,307,437 6,638,960 Less accumulated depreciation 56,531,090 31,544,956 47,836,226 29,495,735 Total buildings and equipment—net 24,986,134 18,340,491 249,369,196 11,879,660 892,084 295,188,170 13,965,697 1,035,426 $ 611,851,181 $ 720,347,303 December 31, 2002 December 31, 2001 Buildings and equipment: Buildings and improvements Equipment Construction in progress Other assets: Charitable perpetual trusts Pledges receivable Other Total assets Liabilities and net assets Liabilities: Accounts payable Accrued expenses Short-term borrowings Deferred revenue Other liabilities $ Total liabilities 5,244,345 892,337 7,440,000 300,759 6,391,562 $ 6,616,893 1,027,903 3,000,000 392,024 6,397,983 20,269,003 17,434,803 Net assets: Unrestricted Temporarily restricted Permanently restricted 153,919,509 168,549,216 269,113,453 193,455,801 194,524,272 314,932,427 Total net assets 591,582,178 702,912,500 $ 611,851,181 $ 720,347,303 Total liabilities and net assets See notes to financial statements. 101 6-Finance.p65 101 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM Statement of Activities Year Ended December 31, 2002 Unrestricted Revenues and support Contributions and memberships Trust fund revenues Gifts from independent dedicated trusts: John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust Horace Kelley Art Foundation Grants Program revenues Special events Other Stores, café, parking, and products Grants and gifts for specific capital expenditures Investment return designated for current operations (Note 6) Net assets released from restrictions used for operations (Note 5) Total revenues and support Expenses Curatorial, conservation, and registrar Design and security expenses Education, library, and extensions Publications, printing, and photography Membership services Development, special events, and visitor services Administration Specific building repairs and maintenance Stores, café, parking, and products Depreciation Total expenses Excess of revenues and support over expenses before other changes in net assets Other changes in net assets Endowment and trust income for art purchases Net assets released from restrictions used to fund acquisition of art objects (Note 5) Expenditures for the acquisition of art objects Gifts, contributions, and other changes Investment return (loss) after amounts designated (Note 6) Net assets released from restrictions used for capital (Note 5) Change in fair value of charitable perpetual trusts Reclassification of net assets (Note 2) Decrease in net assets Net assets at January 1, 2002 $ 3,597,861 3,106,425 4,900,000 365,000 821,303 1,431,865 688,333 69,310 3,389,756 13,409,884 182,221 3,597,861 3,288,646 2,059,605 343,840 13,753,724 1,178,102 422,810 (1,899,183) 33,678,920 2,287,395 35,966,315 6,668,645 6,584,738 4,236,387 630,003 660,425 3,870,990 5,745,327 186,507 3,026,136 2,049,221 6,668,645 6,584,738 4,236,387 630,003 660,425 3,870,990 5,745,327 186,507 3,026,136 2,049,221 33,658,379 33,658,379 20,541 2,287,395 2,307,936 12,928,128 12,928,128 14,003,047 (14,003,047) 688,720 (40,097,387) (14,003,047) 2,930,995 (2,930,995) (3,079,161) 3,079,161 $ 153,919,509 (14,003,047) 1,293,722 (68,038,087) 605,002 (27,940,700) (25,975,056) 194,524,272 $ 168,549,216 102 102 Total 4,900,000 365,000 1,999,405 1,431,865 688,333 492,120 3,389,756 2,059,605 See notes to financial statements. 6-Finance.p65 Permanently Restricted $ $ 1,899,183 (39,536,292) 193,455,801 Net assets at December 31, 2002 Temporarily Restricted 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM $ (45,818,974) (45,818,974) (45,818,974) 314,932,427 (111,330,322) 702,912,500 $ 269,113,453 $ 591,582,178 Statement of Activities Year Ended December 31, 2001 Unrestricted Revenues and support Contributions and memberships Trust fund revenues Gifts from independent dedicated trusts: John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust Horace Kelley Art Foundation Grants Program revenues Special events Other Stores, café, parking, and products Grants and gifts for specific capital expenditures Investment return designated for current operations (Note 6) Net assets released from restrictions used for operations (Note 5) Total revenues and support Expenses Curatorial, conservation, and registrar Design and security expenses Education, library, and extensions Publications, printing, and photography Membership services Development, special events, and visitor services Administration Specific building repairs and maintenance Stores, café, parking, and products Depreciation Total expenses Excess of revenues and support over expenses before other changes in net assets Other changes in net assets Endowment and trust income for art purchases Net assets released from restrictions used to fund acquisition of art objects (Note 5) Expenditures for the acquisition of art objects Gifts, contributions, and other changes Investment return (loss) after amounts designated (Note 6) Net assets released from restrictions used for capital (Note 5) Change in fair value of charitable perpetual trusts Reclassification of net assets (Note 2) Adjustment for post-retirement medical benefits (Note 8) Decrease in net assets Net assets at January 1, 2001 $ 3,582,190 3,708,789 4,750,000 250,000 1,611,187 1,420,127 669,105 167,081 3,354,672 10,330,829 Permanently Restricted Total $ $ 197,176 3,582,190 3,905,965 6,785,864 4,750,000 250,000 1,922,227 1,420,127 669,105 567,268 3,354,672 6,785,864 366,683 10,697,512 311,040 400,187 1,691,626 (1,691,626) 31,535,606 6,369,324 37,904,930 6,458,637 6,683,718 4,241,553 537,418 656,745 2,447,910 5,333,686 476,705 2,789,973 1,905,015 6,458,637 6,683,718 4,241,553 537,418 656,745 2,447,910 5,333,686 476,705 2,789,973 1,905,015 31,531,360 31,531,360 4,246 6,369,324 6,373,570 12,265,356 12,265,356 13,990,092 (13,990,092) 361,329 (16,847,775) (13,990,092) 2,518,755 (2,518,755) (6,117,748) (5,323,359) 6,117,748 (25,404,552) 218,860,353 Net assets at December 31, 2001 Temporarily Restricted $ 193,455,801 (13,990,092) 1,024,030 (28,309,301) 662,701 (11,461,526) $ (30,370,573) (30,370,573) (30,370,573) 345,303,000 (58,330,369) 761,242,869 (5,323,359) (2,555,244) 197,079,516 $ 194,524,272 $ 314,932,427 $ 702,912,500 See notes to financial statements. 103 6-Finance.p65 103 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM Statement of Cash Flows Years Ended December 31, 2002 Reconciliation of change in net assets to net cash provided by operating activities Decrease in net assets Adjustments to reconcile decrease in net assets to cash (used in) provided by operating activities: Depreciation Post-retirement medical benefits Investment loss (return)—net Decrease in fair value of charitable perpetual trusts Changes provided by (used in) operating assets and liabilities: Decrease (increase) in accounts receivable (Increase) decrease in inventories (Increase) decrease in prepaid expenses and other current assets (Increase) decrease in pledges receivable (Increase) decrease in other assets (Decrease) increase in accounts payable Increase (decrease) in other liabilities (Decrease) increase in deferred revenue Net cash used in operating activities $ (111,330,322) 46,004,648 45,818,974 1,905,015 5,323,359 11,126,929 30,370,573 76,974 169,187 970,345 2,086,037 143,342 (1,372,548) (141,987) (91,265) (86,118) 218,973 1,599,696 (1,996,207) (125,950) 5,935,450 (481,507) 306,579 $ (15,617,394) 4,440,000 Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities 4,440,000 (4,233,577) (2,700,000) (6,314,044) 234,094,292 (221,089,850) (8,694,864) 118,961,089 (96,877,737) Net cash provided by investing activities Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year $ 13,388,488 6,690,398 2,211,094 3,737,220 (243,179) 3,980,399 5,948,314 See notes to financial statements. 104 104 $ (2,700,000) Cash flows provided by (used in) investing activities Purchases of building and equipment Proceeds from sales and maturities of investments Purchases of investments 6-Finance.p65 $ (58,330,369) 2,049,221 Cash flows provided by financing activities Proceeds from short-term borrowings Payments on short-term borrowings Cash and cash equivalents at end of year December 31, 2001 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM $ 3,737,220 Notes to Financial Statements 1. Organization The Cleveland Museum of Art (the museum) maintains in the City of Cleveland a museum of art of the widest scope for the benefit of the public. 2. Significant Accounting Policies Use of Estimates The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying notes. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Temporarily and Permanently Restricted Net Assets Temporarily restricted net assets are used to differentiate resources, the use of which is restricted by donors or grantors to a specific time period or for a specific purpose, from resources on which no restrictions have been placed or that arise from the general operations of the museum. Temporarily restricted gifts, grants, and bequests are recorded as additions to temporarily restricted net assets in the period received. When restricted net assets are expended for their stipulated purpose, temporarily restricted net assets become unrestricted net assets and are reported in the statement of activities as net assets released from restrictions. Permanently restricted net assets consist of amounts held in perpetuity or for terms designated by donors. Earnings on investments, unless restricted by donors, of the permanently restricted net assets are included in unrestricted revenues and other changes in net assets. Restricted earnings are recorded as temporarily restricted revenues until amounts are expended in accordance with the donors’ specifications. Investment Income Investment income, including realized gains (losses), is added to (deducted from) the appropriate unrestricted or temporarily restricted net assets. Unrealized gains (losses) are added to (deducted from) the applicable unrestricted, temporarily, or permanently restricted net assets. Art Collection In keeping with standard museum practice, expenditures for art objects are charged as acquisitions in the statement of activities and are carried at no value on the statements of financial position of the museum. Contributions Unconditional pledges to give cash, marketable securities, and other assets are reported at fair value and discounted to present value at the date the pledge is made to the extent estimated to be collectible by the museum. Conditional promises to give and indications of intentions to give are not recognized until the condition is satisfied. Pledges received with donor restrictions that limit the use of the donated assets are reported as either temporarily or permanently restricted support, or other changes in net assets. When a donor restriction expires, that is, when a stipulated time restriction ends or purpose restriction is accomplished, temporarily restricted net assets are reclassified to unrestricted net assets and reported in the statement of activities as net assets released from restrictions. Cash Equivalents Cash equivalents are highly liquid investments with a maturity of three months or less when purchased. Cash equivalents are measured at fair value in the balance sheets and exclude amounts restricted or designated for long-term purposes. Inventories Inventories consist of merchandise available for sale and are stated at the lower of average cost or market. Financial Instruments The carrying values of accounts receivable, accounts payable, accrued expenses, and shortterm borrowings are reasonable estimates of their fair value due to the short-term nature of these financial instruments. Donated Services No amounts have been reflected in the financial statements for donated services. The museum pays for most services requiring specific expertise. However, many individuals volunteer their time and perform a variety of tasks that assist the museum with various programs. Special Exhibitions Prepaid expenses and deferred revenue include expenditures and revenues in connection with the development of special exhibitions. Revenues and expenses are recognized pro-rata over the life of the exhibition. Revenues include such items as corporate and individual sponsorships. The expenditures generally include such items as research, travel, insurance, transportation, and other costs related to the development and installation of the exhibition. 2001 2002 Pledges due: In less than one year In one to five years Greater than five years $ $ 3,244,687 5,113,320 7,647,337 18,029,333 (4,063,636) 16,005,344 (4,125,684) Discount on pledges $ 3,950,433 5,691,563 8,387,337 $ 11,879,660 13,965,697 105 6-Finance.p65 105 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM 3. Temporarily Restricted Net Assets Temporarily restricted net assets are available for the following purposes at December 31: 4. Permanently Restricted Net Assets Permanently restricted net assets are amounts held in perpetuity, or for terms designated by donors, the income from which is expendable to support the following purposes at December 31: Charitable Perpetual Trusts The museum is the sole income beneficiary of several charitable perpetual trusts and a partial income beneficiary of other charitable perpetual trusts. Because the trusts are not controlled by the museum, the assets are recorded as permanently restricted net assets. The charitable perpetual trusts are recorded at the fair value of the museum’s portion of the underlying trust assets. The fair value of the charitable perpetual trusts decreased by $45,818,974 and $30,370,573 in 2002 and 2001, respectively, and the decrease was recorded as a permanently restricted other change in the statement of activities. Income distributed to the museum by the trusts amounted to $13,202,055 and $14,686,461 in 2002 and 2001, respectively, and was recorded as unrestricted and temporarily restricted revenue in trust fund revenues and gifts from independent dedicated trusts, including income restricted for acquisition of art objects of $4,648,409 and $5,780,496, in 2002 and 2001, respectively, which was recorded as an other change in temporarily restricted net assets. During 2000, the museum undertook a project to restore and renovate the original 1916 building and surrounding walkways and landscaping. Included in operating expenses for 2002 and 2001 are $186,507 and $476,705 related to the assessment and phase one segments of the project. Phase one expenses primarily relate to repair and maintenance of the exterior of the 1916 building. Phases two and three relate to expenditures that are capital in nature and prolong the useful life of the buildings. Included in construction in progress and net assets released from restriction used for capital at December 31, 2002 and 2001 are $2,930,995 and $2,518,755, respectively, related to the capital phases of the project. The museum has approximately $150,000 in additional commitments related to the project. Buildings and Equipment Buildings and equipment are carried at cost. Depreciation is computed by the straight-line method using the estimated useful lives of the assets. Reclassifications In 2002 and 2001 certain assets were reclassified from unrestricted to temporarily restricted based on a review of donor specifications. In addition, approximately $11.0 million has been committed for architect/contractor fees related to new construction and renovation of existing facilities of which $4.9 million has been expended and is included in construction in progress at December 31, 2002. 2001 2002 Acquisition of art $ Specific operating activities: Curatorial and conservation Education and extensions Library Publications, printing, and photography Musical programming Buildings, grounds, and protection services Fine Arts Garden Sundry $ 128,791,644 7,203,253 2,926,777 1,755,970 1,950,763 3,385,064 21,378,309 2,574,572 2,007,282 6,766,681 3,209,751 1,573,918 1,794,309 2,995,441 19,360,166 2,137,632 1,919,674 Total temporarily restricted net assets $ 168,549,216 Purchase of art Specific operating activities General operating activities $ Total permanently restricted net assets $ $ 194,524,272 88,957,826 4,223,552 175,932,075 $ 103,022,642 4,741,322 207,168,463 269,113,453 $ 314,932,427 2001 2002 106 6-Finance.p65 106 151,342,282 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM 5. Net Assets Released from Restrictions Net assets were released from restrictions during 2002 and 2001 by incurring expenses or making capital expenditures satisfying the restricted purposes as follows: 2001 2002 Acquisition of art Specific operating activities: Curatorial and conservation Education and extensions Library Publications, printing, and photography Musical programming Fine Arts Garden Sundry Buildings, repair, and maintenance Net assets released from restrictions used for operations $ 14,003,047 $ 13,990,092 $ 414,369 551,005 24,731 0 139,001 280,592 302,978 186,507 $ 216,825 587,624 28,782 490 60,418 79,471 241,311 476,705 $ 1,899,183 $ 1,691,626 Net assets released from restrictions used for capital expenditures were $2,930,995 and $2,518,755 for 2002 and 2001, respectively. 2002 2001 3,900,912 57,040,936 252,300,445 3,017,519 $ 16,125,293 70,014,911 298,205,606 2,002 $ 316,259,812 $ 384,347,812 2002 Unrestricted Temporarily Restricted Dividends and interest Realized and unrealized losses net of realized and unrealized gains Change in fair value of charitable perpetual trusts $ $ 6. Investments Fair Value Fair value, based on quoted market prices, of investments at December 31 are as follows: Cash and cash equivalents Bonds and combined bond funds Stocks and combined stock funds Other assets $ Investment Returns The following summarizes returns from the museum’s investments and the related classifications in the statements of activities. 3,254,229 (29,941,732) Permanently Restricted 4,059,470 (23,376,615) (45,818,974) Investment return (loss) Investment return designated for current operations Investment return after amounts designated Investment return (loss) after amounts designated (26,687,503) 13,409,884 (19,317,145) 343,840 8,279,715 $ (45,818,974) $ (40,097,387) $ (27,940,700) $ (45,818,974) $ $ 2001 Dividends and interest Realized and unrealized losses net of realized and unrealized gains Change in fair value of charitable perpetual trusts Spending Rule Concept The museum uses the spending rule concept in making distributions from its investments. In doing so, the museum takes into account the distributions from the charitable perpetual trusts. Under this method, a portion of its investment earnings is recorded as unrestricted revenue. For 2002 and 2001, the amount of investment income used by the museum for its operations and purchases of 3,963,450 (10,974,159) (8,573,433) (6,516,946) 10,330,829 (4,609,983) 366,683 6,484,860 (30,370,573) $ (16,847,775) $ (11,461,526) $ (30,370,573) $ (30,370,573) Investment return (loss) Investment return designated for current operations Investment return after amounts designated Investment return (loss) after amounts designated 4,457,213 art was calculated using a spending rate of 5.0% of the market value of the investments for the prior twenty-quarter average ending September 30 of the prior year, as adjusted (subject to certain limitations) for inflation and additional contributions. Investment returns in excess of (less than) amounts designated for current operations are classified as other changes in the statement of activities. 107 6-Finance.p65 107 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM 7. Pension The following table sets forth the funded status of the Plan at December 31: The museum converted from a contributory defined benefit pension plan (the Plan) for eligible employees to a non-contributory plan on January 1, 2002. Eligible participants in the Plan on December 31, 2001 were given the option of continuing to contribute to the contributory defined benefit plan. For those employees not making this election, their accumulated benefit was converted to the non-contributory plan. Benefits under the Plan are based on years of service and the final five-year average compensation. It is the policy of the museum to fund with an insurance company at least the minimum amounts required by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act. Plan assets are invested in group annuity contracts. Benefit obligation at year end Fair value of plan assets at year end $ 17,799,789 20,511,873 $ 16,736,556 19,056,789 Over funded status of the plan $ 2,712,084 $ 2,320,233 Prepaid benefit cost recognized in the statements of financial position $ 495,782 $ 767,138 2001 2002 2001 2002 Weighted-average assumptions as of December 31: Discount rate Expected rate of return on plan assets Compensation growth rate The following table summarizes the net periodic pension cost and other activity related to the Plan for the year ended December 31: 7.00% 7.00% 3.00% 6.75% 7.00% 3.00% 2001 2002 Net periodic benefit cost Employer contributions Employee contributions Benefits paid $ $ 271,356 — 118,511 973,749 92,344 — 292,793 951,952 In addition, effective January 1, 2002 the museum initiated a 401(k) savings plan. The museum matches employee contributions at a rate of 50% of the first 4%. The museum’s contributions to the 401(k) plan were $190,324 in 2002. 8. Postretirement Medical Benefits The museum provides health care benefits upon retirement to certain employees. The museum’s policy is to fund the annual costs of these benefits from unrestricted assets of the museum. The museum paid postretirement medical benefits of $341,824 and $360,379 in 2002 and 2001, respectively. During 2002, the museum had net postretirement benefit expense of $380,390, and at December 31, 2002 the accumulated postretirement medical benefit obligation was approximately $5.4 million and is included in other liabilities. The postretirement benefit obligation was actuarially determined with a discount rate of 6.75% and 7.50% in 2002 and 2001, respectively. The health care cost trend rate for 2003 is 8% decreasing to an ultimate rate of 5% in 2007. In 2001, the museum reduced unrestricted net assets by approximately $5.3 million to record the accumulated postretirement medical benefits under the postretirement medical plan. 9. Financing Arrangements At December 31, 2002 and 2001, the museum has $3,000,000 of short-term borrowings under a demand note with a bank. The amount borrowed under the note bears interest at the London Interbank Offering Rate (LIBOR) plus 30 basis points (1.93% and 2.42% at December 31, 2002 and 2001, respectively) and is payable on demand. The museum incurred interest expense on the note of approximately $72,000 and $142,000 in 2002 and 2001. Interest payments amounted to approximately $73,000 and $149,000 in 2002 and 2001, respectively. At December 31, 2002, the museum has $4,440,000 of short-term borrowings under a line of credit with a bank. No amounts were outstanding under the line at December 31, 2001. The amounts borrowed under the line of credit bears interest at the LIBOR plus 75 basis points (2.17% to 2.51% at December 31, 2002) and is payable on demand. The unused portion of the line of credit, $15,560,000 and $40,000,000 at December 31, 2002 and 2001, respectively, can be drawn upon as needed. The line was reduced in January 2003 to $20,000,000. The museum incurred interest expense on the line of credit of approximately $25,000 and $112,000 in 2002 and 2001. Interest payments amounted to approximately $22,000 and $129,000 in 2002 and 2001, respectively. 10. Income Taxes The museum is a nonprofit organization and is exempt from federal income taxes on related income under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. 108 6-Finance.p65 108 6/12/2003, 4:18 PM