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ANNUAL REPORT A PUBLICATION OF THE ORLANDO MUSEUM OF ART 2016-2017

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  • ANNUAL REPORTA P U B L I C AT I O N O F T H EO R L A N D O M U S E U M O F A R T

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    ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE FISCAL YEARJULY 1, 2016 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2017

    MISSIONThe mission of the Orlando Museum of Art is to inspire creativity, passion and

    intellectual curiosity by connecting people with art and new ideas.

    VISIONThe Orlando Museum of Art is to be a creative change agent for education

    and the center for artistic engagement, as well as a place for civic, cultural and economic development.

    PURPOSEThe purpose of the Orlando Museum of Art is to interpret and present the most compelling art for the public to experience, and to positively affect people’s lives

    with innovative and inspiring education programs that will endure as a cultural legacy in Central Florida.

    Front cover: Matthew Weinstein, detail of still from É Lobro, 2015, 17-minute computer animated video with music, Courtesy of the artist. © Matthew Weinstein. Image courtesy of the artist; Above: Florida Prize Exhibition Opening Preview Party, 2017.

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    TABLE OF CONTENTSANNUAL REPORT 2016-2017

    Board of Trustees

    Acquisitions, Loans & Deaccessions

    Exhibitions and & Installations

    Education & Community Programs

    Support

    Membership

    Volunteers

    Council of 101 Fundraisers

    2016-2017 Audit

    Publications

    Retail

    Public Engagement and Special Events

    Museum Staff

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    Image on left:

    Matthew WeinsteinAnna Kavan: The Living End, 2017Digital print, edition ¼41 x 28 in.Purchased with funds provided by the Acquisition Trust© Matthew WeinsteinImage courtesy of the artist

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    BOARD OF TRUSTEES2016-2017 BOARD OFFICERS & EXECUTIVE COMMITTEEA. William Forness, Jr., CPA Chairman

    Tony L. MasseyImmediate Past Chairman

    Ted R. Brown, Esq.Vice President

    Ben W. Subin, Esq.Vice President

    Robert B. Feldman, M.D. Vice PresidentVice President

    Patrick T. Christiansen, Esq.Vice President

    Bruce DouglasVice President

    Judge Winifred J. SharpVice President

    Patrick J. Knipe, CPAVice President & Treasurer

    Amelia McLeod, Esq.Secretary

    EX-OFFICIO, ALL COMMITTEESTony L. MasseyImmediate Past Chairman

    A. William Forness Jr., CPA Chairman

    Glen GenteleDirector & CEO

    2016-2017 TRUSTEES Reid Berman Ted R. Brown, Esq.Cynthia CrumbackCeleste ByersPatrick T. Christiansen, Esq.Bonnie DavisBruce DouglasRobert B. Feldman, M.D.Carolyn M. FennellA. William Forness Jr., CPAAndy C. GardinerStephen H. GoldmanNell Gonzalez, Esq.Edward HerbstRonald E. Jackson Richard KesslerPatrick J. Knipe, CPARena LangleyAmelia McLeod, Esq.Carolyn MartinTony L. MasseyFrancine NewbergSibille Hart PritchardR. J. SantomassinoJudge Winifred J. Sharp Nicolas St. George Ben W. Subin, Esq.Robert SummersJoseph VetterT. Picton Warlow IVPamela WebbMatthew A. WeberLuder G. Whitlock

    ADVANCEMENT COMMITTEE A. William Forness Jr., CPA, ChairTed R. Brown, Esq.Cynthia BrumbackCeleste ByersRena LangleyTony L. MasseyT. Picton Warlow IVMatthew A. Weber

    AUDIT COMMITTEEPatrick J. Knipe, CPA, ChairTed R. Brown, Esq.Carolyn FennellR.J. SantomassinoRobert SummersLuder Whitlock

    BUILDING/FACILITIES COMMITTEEBen W. Subin, Esq., ChairReid BermanStephen GoldmanRichard KesslerR. J. SantomassinoNicholas St. George

    FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION COMMITTEEPatrick J. Knipe, CPA, ChairTed R. Brown, Esq.Carolyn FennellR. J. SantomassinoRobert SummersLuder Whitlock

    COLLECTIONS & EXHIBITIONS COMMITTEERobert B. Feldman, M.D., ChairBonnie DavisRonald E. Jackson Amelia McLeod, Esq.Francine NewbergSibille Hart PritchardR.J. Santomassino Pamela Webb

    EDUCATION COMMITTEEJudge Winifred J. Sharp, ChairA William Forness Jr., CPAEdward HerbstCarolyn MartinBen W. Subin, Esq.Joseph Vetter

    TRUSTEESHIP COMMITTEETed R. Brown, Esq., ChairPatrick C. Christiansen, Esq.Bruce DouglasCarolyn FennellA. William Forness Jr., CPATony L. MasseyFrancine Newberg

    EX-OFFICIO TRUSTEESPresident, Acquisition Trust Francine Newberg

    President, Friends ofAmerican Art Bonnie Davis

    President, Associates Edward Herbst

    President, Council of 101 Pamela Webb

    Chair, Volunteer Council Carolyn Martin

    COUNSELORS TO THE BOARDJoseph R. Lee A. Thomas Young

    COMMUNITY ADVISORSJudy Albertson

    Frederick MacMonniesNathan Hale, 1890Bronze, brown patina28 3/8 x 9 ½ x 6 3/8 in.Purchased with funds provided by theFriends of American ArtImage courtesy of Taylor | Graham Gallery

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    ACCESSIONS TO THEPERMANENT COLLECTIONDuring the fiscal year 2016-2017, 32 objects were accessioned. GIFTS Bonnie Schiffman, George Burns, 1989, photography, 20 x 20 in. Gift of Bonnie Schiffman and the Museum Project.

    Andreas Feininger, Route 66, Arizona, 1953, silver gelatin print 17 ¼ x 13 5/8 in. Gift of Karen A. Dawson from the Frederick M. Dawson Photography Collection.

    Carl Mydans, Newspapered Room of Sharecropper’s Shack in Cotton and Melon Fields, Missouri, 1936, silver gelatin print, 13 x 16 7/8 in. Gift of Karen A. Dawson from the Frederick M. Dawson Photography Collection.

    Alfred Eisenstaedt, Children of the Lonnie Fair Family Working in Cotton Fields, Scott, Mississippi, 1936, silver gelatin print, 7 x 11 ¾ in. Gift of Karen A. Dawson from the Frederick M. Dawson Photography Collection.

    Carl Mydans, Arkansas Farmer and Daughter, 1936, silver gelatin print, 10 7/8 x 9 in. Gift of Karen A. Dawson from the Frederick M. Dawson Photography Collection.

    Carl Mydans, Café in Pikesville, Tennessee, 1936, silver gelatin print, 8 ¼ x 12 in. Gift of Karen A. Dawson from the Frederick M. Dawson Photography Collection.

    Andreas Feininger, George Washington Bridge, New York, 1950, silver gelatin print, 16 5/8 x 12 5/8 in. Gift of Karen A. Dawson from the Frederick M. Dawson Photography Collection.

    ACCESSIONS, LOANS & DEACCESSIONS

    Robin Rhode, Scales, 2015, c-print, edition of 5, 28 parts, each: 14 x 20 1/2 in. Purchased with funds provided by the Acquisition Trust.© Robin Rhode. Image courtesy of the Orlando Museum of Art. Image courtesy of Raymond Martinot.

    Bo BartlettOligarchy, 2016Oil on linen120 x 88 in.On loan from The Mennello Museum of American Art, in conjunction with their exhibition, Bo Bartlett: American Artist; Courtesy Ameringer | McEnery | Yohe, New York© Bo BartlettImage courtesy of Ameringer | McEnery | Yohe, New York

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    Andreas Feininger, Landscape, California, 1952, silver gelatin print, 14 x 16 in. Gift of Karen A. Dawson from the Frederick M. Dawson Photography Collection.

    Victor Landweber, Man Ray – Erik Satie, 2008, digital pigment print, 12 x 16 in. Gift of Victor Landweber and the Museum Project.

    Steve Lotz, Plant Goddess, 1974, wax pencil and pastel on paper mounted onto foam core, 47 x 48 in. Gift of the artist.

    Steve Lotz, Life Source Icon, 1974, wax pencil and pastel on paper mounted onto foam core, 55 1/2 x 55 3/4 in. Gift of the artist.

    Matthew Capaldo, wild west hero (repose), 2016, oil on canvas, 11 x 14 in. Gift of the artist.

    Oded Halahmy, Lady with Wonderful Crown, 1998, bronze cast, green patina (cupric nitrate), edition 2/5, 34 x 19 x 5 ¼ in. Gift of the artist.

    Oded Halahmy, Sky Moon Pom, 1997, bronze cast, silver-brown patina (ferric nitrate), edition 2/5, 35 x 23 x 8 in. Gift of the artist.

    Oded Halahmy, Wandering Home, 2003, bronze cast, silver-brown patina (ferric nitrate), edition 1/5, 48 x 28 ½ x 10 ½ in. Gift of the artist.

    Oded Halahmy, Proud Babylonian Lady, 2002, bronze cast, green patina (cupric nitrate), edition 1/9, 34 ½ x 13 x 6 ½ in. Gift of the artist.

    Oded Halahmy, My Homeland is a Memory, 2003, bronze cast, brown patina (ferric nitrate), edition 2/9, 32 ¾ x 27 ¾ 7 ¼ in. Gift of the artist.

    Trevor Bell, Orange Bender, 2002, pigment on corrugated board, 11 ½ x 10 in. Gift of Caroline Pinder Cracraft.

    Paul Wegner, New Orleans Style, 1984, bronze, 30 x 27 x 14 in. Gift of Howard Lippton.

    Coptic Cross Pendant, early 20th century, silver, 2 ¼ x 1 ½ x ¼ in. Gift of DuWayne Meliotes.

    Coptic Cross Pendant, early 20th century, silver, 2 ¼ x 1 ¾ x ½ in. Gift of DuWayne Meliotes.

    Mark Messersmith, Strange Matters, 2007, oil on canvas, 84 x 72 in. Gift of the artist

    Mark Messersmith, Deceptive Nature, 2006, oil on canvas, 74 x 72 in. Gift of the artist

    PURCHASES

    Zackary Drucker & Rhys Ernst, Relationship, #1 (This is the First Picture), 2008, c-print, 10 x 13 in. Purchased with funds provided by the Charles E. Meiner Acquisition Trust Endowment Fund.

    Zackary Drucker & Rhys Ernst, Relationship, #11 (Palindromes) 2008, c-print, 18 5/8 x 14 in. Purchased with funds provided by the Charles E. Meiner Acquisition Trust Endowment Fund.

    Zackary Drucker & Rhys Ernst, Relationship, #17, 2010, c-print, 12 x 16 in. Purchased with funds provided by the Charles E. Meiner Acquisition Trust Endowment Fund.

    Zackary Drucker, Relationship, #23 (The Longest day of the Year), 2011, c-print, 13 1/2 x 20 in. Purchased with funds provided by the Charles E. Meiner Acquisition Trust Endowment Fund.

    Zackary Drucker, Relationship, #33, 2010, c-print, 7 x 10 in. Purchased with funds provided by the Charles E. Meiner Acquisition Trust Endowment Fund.

    Zackary Drucker, Relationship, #35 (Pygmalion), 2013, c-print, 24 x 36 in. Purchased with funds provided by the Charles E. Meiner Acquisition Trust Endowment Fund.

    Kate Gilmore, Blood from a Stone, 2009, single channel video (running time 8:09 min.), dimensions variable. Purchased with funds provided by the Acquisition Trust.

    Frederick William MacMonnies, Nathan Hale, 1890, bronze, brown patina, 28 3/8 x 9 1/2 x 6 3/8 in. Purchased with funds provided by the Friends of American Art.

    Matthew Weinstein, The Living End, 2017, 20-minute computer animation with Kinect and thermal sensors, dimensions variable. Purchased with funds provided by the Acquisition Trust.

    LOANS FROM THE COLLECTION

    David Remfry, Blair, 1997, watercolor on paper, 59 ¾ x 16 in. Gift of the Cohen Family.

    David Remfry, Claudia R, 1999, graphite and wash on paper, 60 x 13 ¼ in. Gift of the Cohen Family.

    David Remfry, Club Scene, 1997, watercolor on paper, 27 x 60 in. Gift of the Cohen Family.

    David Remfry, Club Scene II, 1999, watercolor on paper, 27 x 60 in. Gift of the Cohen Family.

    David Remfry, Dancers, 1995, graphite on paper, 40 ¾ x 25 ¼ in. Gift of Sam F. Ewing.

    David Remfry, Nicola, 2000, watercolor on paper, 60 ¼ x 13 ¼ in. Gift of the Cohen Family.

    David Remfry, Waltz Me Once Around the Dance Floor, 1995, watercolor on paper, 72 x 90 in. Gift of the Cohen Family.

    Exhibition: David Remfry: Dancers, Museum of Art – DeLand, Florida (January 27 – April 9, 2017)

    Jon Carsman, Coco Palms, ca. 1979, slkscreen on paper; edition AP III, 32 x 24 in., Purchased with funds provided by the Council of 101, 86.06.

    Janet Fish, Cerises, 1992, silkscreen on paper; edition 41/60, 34 x 28 1/2 in., Purchased with funds provided by the Council of 101, 96.71.

    Ke Francis, Three Friends: Loggerhead, Albino Catfish, Magic Moon, 2003, woodcut on paper; edition AP, 29 3/8 x 29 in., Gift of the artist, 2009.03.

    Joseph Raffael, Amethyst Lily, 1989, woodcut on paper; edition 42/75, 32 1/2 x 24 1/2 in., Purchased with funds provided by the Council of 101, 96.68.

    Hunt Slonem, Two Cockatoos on Blue, 1996, screenprint on paper; edition 8/12, 29 3/4 x 21 3/4 in., Purchased with funds provided by the Council of 101, 96.70.

    Carol Summers, Basholi, 1980, woodcut with monoprint on paper; edition 67/125, 24 1/2 x 37 in., Purchased with funds provided by the Council of 101, 81.01.

    Betty Woodman, A Roman Interior, 1995, woodcut with chine collé on paper; edition W.P. 3/3, 37 1/4 x 27 1/4 in., Purchased with funds provided by the Council of 101, 2009.12.

    Robert Kipniss, Field with Open Fence, 2010, oil on canvas, 24 x 36 in., Gift of James F. White, 2014.07.

    Syd Solomon, Rally, 1984, acrylic on canvas, 52 x 54 in., Gift of the Proctor family in memory of Eve Proctor Morrill, 98.02.

    Hermann Dudley Murphy, Morning, Ogunquit, 1907, oil on canvas, 20 x 30 in., Purchased with funds provided by Colin Lawton Johnson in memory of Carrie Parish and John Colin Lawton (1893-1985), 98.01.

    Robert Rauschenberg, Hybrid (from the Stoned Moon series), 1970, lithograph on paper, 54 1/2 x 36 in., Purchased with funds provided by the Council of 101, 74.07.17.

    Alex Katz, Forest, 2008, woodblock on paper, 29 3/4 in. x 66 3/4 in., Purchased with funds provided by the Council of 101, 2009.09.

    Clyde Butcher, Little Butternut Key #1, 1999, gelatin silver print, 40 3/4 x 58 in., Gift of the artist, 2000.06.

    David Johnson, Below Albany, 1878, oil on canvas, 16 x 24 1/4 in. Anonymous Gift.

    Exhibition: Florida Governor’s Mansion, Tallahassee, Florida (December 1, 2016 – December 31, 2017)

    DEACCESSIONS

    There were no deaccessions during the fiscal year 2016-2017.

    Installation view of Oded Halahmy: Babylonian Odyssey, 2017. Image courtesy of Raymond Martinot.

    Eric Rohmann, Pteranodons flock, 1994, from the book Time Flies, oil on paper, 19 ¾ x 30 in. Courtesy of the artist. © 1994 Eric Rohmann Image courtesy of the National Center for Children’s Illustrated Literature, Abilene, Texas.

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    Fitz Henry LaneCamden Mountains from the SouthEntrance to the Harbor (detail), 1859Oil on canvas22 1/8 x 36 1/4 in.Collection of the Farnsworth Art Museum, Bequest of Mrs. Elizabeth B. Noyce, 1997.3.30Image courtesy of the FarnsworthArt Museum

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    TEMPORARY EXHIBITIONS

    Orlando Museum of Art Florida Prize in Contemporary Art 2016 May 13 – August 28, 2016

    The Florida Prize in Contemporary Art is an initiative of the Orlando Museum of Art that brings a new level of recognition to the State’s most progressive artists. In its third year, the 2016 exhibition presented ten outstanding artists, with one selected to receive the prize. These artists work in a range of media and artistic practices, often in new and unexpected ways. The challenging nature of their work offered Museum visitors insight into the complex and exciting world of contemporary art in Florida.

    This year’s artists were: Anthea Behm, Gainesville; Adler Guerrier, Miami; María Martínez-Cañas, Miami; Noelle Mason, Tampa; Ernesto Oroza, Aventura; Matthew Roberts, Deland; Dawn Roe, Winter Park; Kyle Trowbridge, Coral Gables; Michael Vasquez, Miami; and Sergio Vega, Gainesville.

    Technology and human geography were among the recurring themes examined by a number of this year’s artists. Some examples included mobile applications used by Matthew Roberts to create augmented reality experiences dependent on user location, tapestries by Noelle Mason that reproduce satellite images along the U.S. – Mexico border where human smuggling occurs, and video by Sergio Vega that explores an early Spanish Colonial author’s theory that the Garden of Eden was located deep in the Amazon River basin. These and many other works reflect the diversity of ideas and concerns that were brought together in the Florida Prize in Contemporary Art.

    My Friend: Eric Rohmann August 6 – October 30, 2016

    This exhibition included drawings, paintings and prints of children’s book art by author-illustrator Eric Rohmann. Rohmann holds degrees in fine arts from Arizona State University and Illinois State University and currently lives in a suburb of Chicago. In addition to writing and illustrating children’s books, he has taught drawing and printmaking. His artwork has been featured in various exhibitions and permanent collections throughout the country. Rohmann has created book jackets for a number of novels, including the cover for The Golden Compass, by Philip Pullman. He won a Caldecott Honor award for Time Flies, and a Caldecott Medal award for My Friend Rabbit. Illustrations from those and ten other books are represented — including Bone Dog, Clara and Asha, and The Cinder-Eyed Cats — among over 70 finished artworks, sketches, storyboards, and process pieces. This exhibition was organized by the National Center for Children’s Illustrated Literature, Abilene, Texas.

    The Conversation Continues: Highlights from the James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett Collection September 16, 2016 – January 1, 2017

    For more than 40 years, James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett have been building an exceptional collection of contemporary art. It is a collection that not only represents many prominent artists of the period, but also reflects the collector’s passion for discovering new talent and making commitments to challenging work before it is critically proven. Their high regard for the artists they collect is often demonstrated by long personal friendships and a practice of collecting an artist’s work in depth over time. (continued »)

    EXHIBITIONS & INSTALLATIONS

    Installation view of The Conversation Continues: Highlights from the James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett Collection, 2016. Image courtesy of Raymond Martinot.

    Cottrell and Lovett began collecting seriously in the late 1970s. Important early acquisitions include paintings by Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring collected before these artists were widely recognized. Also included are early paintings from a body of work done in the late 1980s and early 90s by Debora Kass that helped to establish her career. Among other significant artists represented are David Hockney, Malcom Morley and Robert Mapplethorpe. Inspired by their friendship with French artist, Roland Flexner, Cottrell and Lovett have also collected works by leading contemporary European painters such as Miguel Barceló, Daniel Dezeuze and Noël Dolla.

    The Encounter Series - Familiar Mysteries: Paintings by Matthew Capaldo September 16 - November 27, 2016

    Matthew Capaldo’s figurative paintings present psychologically charged narratives of contemporary life, balancing a tension between flux and stillness, saturation and transparency. Using imaginative elements, personal photographs and stills adapted from film and popular media his paintings depict scenes in which individuals or groups are engaged in situations that appear both mysterious and strangely familiar. His paintings explore the relationship of the self to others and the shifting nature of the individual both within and apart from society.

    Often the work is imbued with an underlying tone of reflection and nostalgia. “I’m referencing the past and external, seemingly unrelated images to reveal an internal landscape guided by personal symbolism,” explains the artist. Matthew Capaldo is a self-taught artist, based in Provincetown, Massachusetts. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English Literature from Boston University. The exhibition presents more than 25 paintings drawn from private collections locally and throughout the country. The Encounter Series is an in initiative of the Orlando Museum of Art which showcases notable artists in our community and beyond who have enriched Central Florida’s cultural life.

    The Wyeths and American Artists in Maine: Selections from the Collection of the Farnsworth Art Museum January 20 – April 23, 2017

    As a source of inspiration, Maine has played an important role in American art and culture since the 19th century. It was particularly attractive to early American painters who interpreted the State’s vast wildernesses and rockbound coast as emblematic of the nation’s rugged independence and unique spiritual relationship with nature. The reverence for nature eloquently written of in Henry David Thoreau’s The Maine Woods has continued to inform the work of artists to the present day.

    The Farnsworth Art Museum holds one of the foremost collections of painting by artists in Maine, including work by George Bellows, Robert Henri, Marsden Hartley, Childe Hassam, Fitz Henry Lane, Rockwell Kent and John Marin. The Museum and associated Wyeth Center also has an outstanding collection of painting by three generations of the Wyeth family. The exhibition included work by N.C., Andrew, and Jamie. 2017 will mark the 100 anniversary of Andrew Wyeth’s birth.

    Bo Bartlett: American Artist January 20 – April 23, 2017

    In conjunction with the exhibition, Bo Bartlett: American Artist, January 27 – April 23, 2017, organized by The Mennello Museum of American Art, the Orlando Museum of Art presented 4 additional major paintings by the artist. Bartlett’s mysterious and often unsettling works push the boundaries of traditional realism, combining an original artistic vision with a technique rooted in classic academic painting. This exhibition was presented concurrently with the Orlando Museum of Art’s exhibition, The Wyeths and American Artists in Maine. Bo Bartlett: American Artist, was curated by Shannon Fitzgerald, Executive Director, The Mennello Museum of America Art and Public Art, City of Orlando.

    The InFlux Series: Matthew Weinstein March 17 – June 11, 2017

    Based in New York, Matthew Weinstein is a visual artist with a diverse background in theater, acting, film, screenwriting, design and painting. He works extensively in 3D animation and transfers the technical and narrative concerns of this medium into his art. Using the most advanced technological graphics and a small scale production community, his work approaches the visual quality of Pixar-style animation. Weinstein describes his animations to be “culturally transgendered, existing between entertainment and art…that moment when the unreal becomes hyperreal but skips over reality on the way.” This exhibition featured videos, paintings, drawings and sculpture. Weinstein has exhibited at the new Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich, the Kunsthalle in Vienna, the Matisse Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Denver Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, as well as many international galleries.

    Oded Halahmy: Babylonian Odyssey April 7 – December 31, 2017

    The Orlando Museum of Art is pleased to announce the exhibition of Oded Halahmy: Babylonian Odyssey. Oded Halahmy’s sculptures are composed of evocative symbolic forms that reflect his extraordinary life’s journey. The 10 bronzes that comprise this exhibition clearly express elements of Middle Eastern geography, culture and myth, all of which have inspired Halahmy. While some of these elements are more abstract and some more graphic, palm trees, crescent moons, crowns and picturesque architecture are easily identified. The sculptures are assembled in surreal, dream-like compositions that appear, at times, to be either landscapes or figures. They evoke a myriad of stories from timeless religious text and folklore, and Halahmy imbues them with a spirit of joy and enchantment.

    Common to all these sculptures is the image of the pomegranate, an ancient symbol of love, abundance and prosperity. It is a symbol which is shared by every culture of the region and has appeared as a motif in visual art, architecture and literature, for millennia. For Halahmy, the pomegranate is central to the intent of this body of work. Its universal and life-affirming meaning expresses his fervent hope that someday the diverse people of the Middle East can come together in peace.

    Orlando Museum of Art Florida Prize in Contemporary Art June 2 – August 20, 2017

    The Florida Prize in Contemporary Art is an initiative of the Orlando Museum of Art that brings a new level of recognition to the State’s most progressive artists. In its fourth year, the 2017 exhibition presented ten outstanding artists, with one selected to receive the prize. These artists work in a range of media and artistic practices, often in new and unexpected ways. The challenging nature of their work offered Museum visitors insight into the complex and exciting world of contemporary art in Florida.

    This year’s artists are: Domingo Castillo, Miami; Michael Cordova, Miami; Coco Fusco, Gainesville; Mark Gerstein, Maitland; Aramis Gutierrez, Miami; Dana Hargrove, Maitland; Lisa Iglesias, Gainesville; Carl Juste, Miami; Ralph Provisero, Miami; Chase Westfall, Gainesville

    CONTINUING EXHIBITIONS

    J. Hyde Crawford and Anthony Tortora Collection

    The collection of J. Hyde Crawford and Anthony Tortora is the single most important gift of art the Orlando Museum of Art has received. It represents the generosity and forward thinking philanthropy of renowned artist and designer, J. Hyde Crawford. Crawford was a graduate of Orlando High School before establishing a successful career as a fashion illustrator and advertising designer in New York. He is best known as the designer of the Bonwit Teller shopping bag, which became an icon of sophisticated retail advertising in the “Mad Men” era of 1960s New York. (continued »)

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    Matthew Capaldo men at work, 2014 Oil on canvas 8 x 10 in. Collection of Ford Kiene © Matthew Capaldo Image courtesy of the artist

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    (continued ») The J. Hyde Crawford and Anthony Tortora Collection includes works by the important mid-20th century American painters, Richard Diebenkorn, Robert Motherwell, Helen Frankenthaler, Friedel Dzubas and Kenzo Okada. The modern realist painters, Claudio Bravo and Alan Magee are represented with examples of these artists’ best work. The collection also includes 19th century French paintings by the academic painter Jean-Leon Gerome, and one of the most successful female artists of the period, Rosa Bonheur.

    Contemporary Abstract Art: Selections from the Orlando Museum of Art Collection

    The works in this exhibition touch upon important developments in abstract art over the past 30 to 40 years. The exhibition includes works by artists such as John Chamberlain who established careers in the 1960s when abstract art was the predominant mainstream artistic practice. In the 1970s and 1980s, abstract art lost its central position in the art world. Many artists, though, continued to explore the artistic strategies of abstraction, and they have maintained a strong connection to the mainstream ideas of the 20th century Modernism. (continued »)

    This exhibition includes works by several generations of younger artists such as Jonathan Lasker and Ursula von Rydingsvard who have continued to produce important abstract art.

    Contemporary Figurative Art: Selections from the Orlando Museum of Art Collection

    This exhibition presents a variety of works in which artists working today have used the human figure. Some works depict specific individuals, while others use the figure in more generalized and symbolic forms. Surrounding settings, contextual imagery and transformations of the body are often used to develop the underlining meaning of the work. As these works demonstrate, contemporary artists present the figure in challenging and unexpected ways. By provoking the viewer to question what they see and discover interpretations of their own, artists have continued to make figurative art meaningful and relevant today. This exhibition includes works by artists such as Kristopher Benedict, Nick Cave, Barnaby Furnas, Robert Longo and George Segal.

    MADE IN U.S.A.: American Prints from the 1970s

    The American art of the 1960s and 1970s saw the outpouring of unprecedentedly diverse prints. Prominent artists who had first made their names as painters and sculptors in the art world, especially in New York, ventured into printmaking in collaboration with professional master-printers in newly established printmaking-publishing workshops. The graphic revival during these decades largely resulted from their experimenting in print mediums, often conceived as counterparts of their paintings and sculptures.

    This exhibition, with works drawn from the Museum’s robust collection, presents the richness and complexity of American printmaking in the 1970s in technical and stylistic terms, as well as in subject matters. It comprises silkscreens, lithographs, intaglios, and mixed media prints by some of the most significant modern and contemporary artists active during this decade, including Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol, Sol LeWitt, Helen Frankenthaler, Louise Nevelson, Alex Katz, Claes Oldenberg, Michael Heizer, and Romare Bearden. These works represent a variety of artistic expressions and practices (such as Abstract Expressionism, Pop, Op, Conceptual, figurative, and narrative arts) coexisting during this decade. Implicitly or explicitly, many of them—notably Jacob Lawrence, James Rosenquist, and Fritz Scholder—also reflect the turbulent sociopolitical and cultural developments of the time, ranging from the Vietnam War to the fight for equality by the traditionally marginalized groups of people, such as African Americans and Native Americans.

    Pattern and Decoration: Selections from the Collection of William D. and Norma Canelas Roth

    The Pattern and Decoration movement that emerged in the 1970s was inspired by the liberation politics of the time, particularly feminism, as well as by the traditional art of Africa, the Middle East and Asia. Artists such as Miriam Schapiro, Robert Zakanitch and Tony Robbin produced large paintings, fabric pieces and sculptures emphasizing pattern and all-over decoration. Their art prized an abundant visual field and a-rmed the value of art produced by women and world cultures that had been marginalized by European aesthetics. Their work also stood in sharp contrast to dominant artistic styles of the 1960s and 70s, such as Minimalist Abstraction, which sought to reduce art to its essential elements, and Conceptualism, which often rejected the practice of painting and sculpture completely.

    Currents in Mid-Century American Painting: Selections from the Orlando Museum of Art Collection

    In 2013, the Orlando Museum of Art received its largest gift of art to date, a bequest of 11 works from collectors J. Hyde Crawford and Anthony Tortora. This gift included paintings by important mid-20th century American artists, Richard DiebenKorn, Robert Motherwell, Helen Frankenthaler, Friedel Dzubas and Kenzo Okada. Joined here with other works in the Museum’s collection, this exhibition reveals some of the key developments in abstract art in the decades following World War II that include Abstract Expressionism, Color Field Painting and Post Painterly Abstraction. This was a period of great innovation in which artists often worked on large-scale canvases and experimented with new methods of using paint. In some ways, the new sense of scale, speed and energy seen in these works reflect America’s dynamic post war society.

    Who We Are Now: Selections from the Dr. Robert B. Feldman Collection of Contemporary Art and the Orlando Museum of Art Collection

    Who We Are Now brings together artists from the United States, Bahamas, Cuba, India, Pakistan and Japan whose artistic aims and practices, although quite diverse, share some very broad concerns. The impact of globalism on local cultures worldwide and the changing terms of individual identity, resulting when heritage cultures are changed or people leave their homelands to live in new places, are but a few subject matters the artists’ represented examine. Some artists view these issues through a lens of personal experience; while others offer more analytical and distanced critiques.

    The paintings of Lamar Peterson often explore his identity as a gay African American artist, sometimes confronting prejudices that exist in the U.S. across the demographic spectrum. The sculptures of Tallur L.N. use cultural materials found in his native India to critique customs and beliefs that conflict with contemporary realities. Lavar Munroe’s paintings explore his experience as an immigrant from the Bahamas in an American society that views his Caribbean heritage as “exotic.” Yoan Capote’s sculpture of handcuffs assembled to form a human spine is a powerful statement about the political repression in his Cuban homeland and elsewhere. For these and other artists in the exhibition, narrative content is critically important, but they avoid didactic commentary. Instead through an imaginative use of materials they create work which expresses their ideas in visually compelling ways.

    Dr. Robert B. Feldman has been collecting contemporary art for more than 25 years. Building upon research, education and thoughtful judgment, his collection has grown to include many of the most exciting artists working today. The Orlando Museum of Art is grateful for the opportunity to share these works with our visitors.

    People and Places: American Art from the Orlando Museum of Art Collection

    This exhibition features paintings and sculptures spanning a period of two hundred years, exploring themes of portraiture and landscape that have continued to interest artists over time. Celebrated painters, such as George Inness, Thomas Moran, Rockwell Kent and Charles Sheeler, respond to the American landscape in artistic styles that range from the Hudson River School, Impressionism to Modernism. Portrait and figurative works by renowned artists, such as Raphael Peale, Childe Hassam, Robert Henri and Barkley Hendricks, illustrate how artists have expressed aspects of identity and changing social values from the nation’s early years to the present.

    A Trek from North to South: Exploring the Art of the Ancient Americas

    A Trek from North to South features more than 180 works made by Native Americans prior to European contact in 1942. Representing a time period that spanned more than 3,000 years, the exhibition is drawn from the Orlando Museum of Art’s comprehensive Art of the Ancient Americas Collection. This exhibition provides a glimpse into the life and artistic achievement of dozens of Ancient American cultures which once lived in regions from the American Southwest to the Andes mountains of Peru. Highlights of the collection include masks and regalia made of gold, silver and jade, richly decorated ceramic vessels and stone sculpture.

    Art that Speaks: Exploring the Visual Language of African Art

    Numerous artistic traditions from cultures throughout the African continent can communicate certain information as well as identify specific aesthetic styles. One feature that connects the diverse artwork in this exhibition is that all of these creations are part of a visual language. These objects conveyed a special meaning about the owner. These objects may also communicate information about the governmental rank of the wearer, the intentions of a love pursuit, the success of a hunter, the military or civic group represented, spiritual or religious beliefs, and so on. This is art that speaks. This exhibition will present a wide array of objects used to communicate information to others, with examples that includes hats, jewelry, flags, skirts, dolls, beaded and woven textiles and many other valued objects. This is the 11th in a series of exhibitions drawn from the William D. and Norma Canelas Roth Collection of African Art, which is among the finest of its kind and has been recognized as one of the top 100 art collections in America by Art and Antiques Magazine.

    Contemporary Outdoor Sculpture

    This exhibition were on the grounds in Orlando Loch Haven Park and in the Museum’s Sculpture Plaza. Sculptures will include Jean-Claude Farhi’s Victory of Winds, with its sweeping curves of welded corten steel incorporating a fountain with water cascading into a pool below; Wing Stepper, Jackie Ferrara’s large-scale wood construction inspired by the egrets and herons of Florida; Ernest Shaw’s Ruins VIII, composed of interlocking steel beams which rise up and arch to form a cantilevered structure; and Dwellings, Barbara Sorensen’s installation of ten colorful and whimsical sculptures. A sculpture by John Henry, Quark, is on temporary display in Orlando Loch Haven Park. Quark is an abstract composition made of welded steel that towers over 70 feet into the air.

    FUTURE TEMPORARY EXHIBITIONS

    During FY 2016-2017, the Orlando Museum of Art either began curatorial work or executed contracts for the following exhibitions, which will be presented in the next two fiscal years:

    FY 2017-2018

    Orlando Museum of Art Florida Prize in Contemporary Art 2017 June 2 – August 20, 2017

    Bravo! Chris Raschka August 5 – October 29, 2017

    Baggage Claims September 15 – December 31, 2017

    Virtual Views: Digital Art from the Thoma Foundation September 15 – December 31, 2017

    State of Excellence: Treasures from Florida Private Collections January 26 – April 29, 2018

    Enduring Beauty: Two Centuries of Seminole Art: The Collection of I.S.K. Reeves V and Sara W. Reeves March 22 – July 8, 2018

    The Winn Prize in Contemporary Art / Florida Prize in Contemporary Art June – August 2018

    FY 2018-2019

    The Winn Prize in Contemporary Art / Florida Prize in Contemporary Art June – August 2018

    Zen Tales: The Art of Jon J. Muth August 4 – October 28, 2018

    Nick Cave: Feat. September 14 – December 30, 2018

    Tagliapietra Effect: Lino Tagliapietra and The New Masters of Contemporary Glass January 25 – April 21, 2019

    Chris Raschka, Charlie Parker played be bop, 1992, watercolor and charcoal pencil, 17 ¼ x 17 ¾ in. Courtesy of the artist and the National Center for Children’s Illustrated Literature. © Chris Raschka. Image courtesy of the National Center for Children’s Illustrated Literature.

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    Installation view of Who We Are Now: Selections from the Dr. Robert B. Feldman Collection of Contemporary Art. Image courtesy of Raymond Martinot.

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    YOUTH & FAMILY PROGRAMS

    School Field Trips - Interdisciplinary tours explored various aspects of the Museum’s collections as well as special exhibitions. Using an inquiry method and stressing critical thinking skills, all tours aligned with Next Generation Sunshine State Standards and National Standards for Arts Education. Over 6,500 students, teachers, and chaperones were served through contract and non-contract tours.

    Peggy Crosby Student Gallery - Student artwork was showcased year-round through four exhibitions: Seminole County/Osceola County, two Orange County exhibitions, and OMA Summer Camp students. Student Gallery work is accessible to all visitors free of charge without requiring regular gallery admission.

    Art Camp - Students in grades 1-5 experienced art with half-day or full day camp options during winter break (total attendance of 100 over 9 days) and spring break (total attendance of 93 over 6 days). During summer vacation, the Museum offered camp options for middle school students through 8th grade as well as classes for 1st-5th graders. Two sold-out STEAM camp sessions were a new collaboration with the Orlando Science Center and the Orlando Shakespeare Theater. 424 enrollments in 45 sessions; 13 sessions sold out due to maximum enrollment; daily attendance: 3,568 students.

    Camp Scholarships – 18 scholarships were awarded to elementary-middle school students with financial need in Orange County to participate in the OMA Summer Art program. Ten scholarships were awarded from the Winifred Johnson Clive Foundation and 8 through individuals and other contributed support.

    Art in the Afternoon – This studio series for homeschooled students provided art instruction to 63 participants in 8 sessions, September 9, 2016-May 5, 2017.

    Art Adventures – Held monthly, this inspiring series encouraged children ages 3 and up and their favorite grownup to have fun while exploring art together through creative art looking and art making. 166 participants.

    Art Encounters – This monthly drop-off series engaged young artists ages 5-8 with a variety of art looking and ark making experiences to foster creativity and imagination. 98 participants.

    Saturday Art Encounters – Several times a year, we offered a special Saturday Art Encounters program for students involving a gallery and hands-on art experience; 159 participants.

    Creative Cravings – A new offering in 2016-2017, this monthly teen program focused on careers in humanities, current exhibitions at OMA, and supporting creative curiosity; 42 participants.

    Family Highlights Tours – Offered monthly on Saturday afternoons September–May, these family-friendly tours engaged 90 participants.

    My Friend: Eric Rohmann Programs – Award-winning/illustrator team Eric Rohmann and Candace Fleming presented a family workshop Words into Pictures on August 5, 2016; 9 participants, and a storytime the following day with art activities afterward, 60 participants. Eric Rohmann presented a gallery talk on August 6, 2016; 36 participants. To celebrate the final weekend of the picture book exhibition, a “Spooktacularly Arty” family workshop was presented on October 29, 2016 inspired by two of Eric Rohmann’s books - Bone Dog and Pumpkinhead; 17 participants.

    Scout Workshops - Scouts explored works of art in the galleries and participated in hands-on projects to earn badges. Junior Girl Scout Drawing workshops were held: October 22, 2016 (9 participants), and January 21, 2017 (7 participants).

    Family Day – Families enjoyed exploring the museum, art activities, face-painting, strolling magicians Ricky and Scott from David Copperfield’s Project Magic, storytelling with Mr. Bill, a dance party with Mr. Harley, scavenger hunts, a highlights tour, keepsake photos. April 1, 2017. 1,360 participants.

    Sketching in the Galleries – This new program met on the last Saturday of each month, January-April 2017; 89 participants.

    Birthday Parties – Six birthday parties were held with 215 people in attendance.

    EDUCATION & COMMUNITY PROGRAMSDuring fiscal year 2016-2017, the Orlando Museum of Art continued to provide engaging educational programming for all ages and diverse audiences, including tours, lectures, workshops, studio classes, teacher professional development workshops, outreach programs, art appreciation series, and community access programs that reached 19,630 participants. Highlights included:

    Exciting News – The Orlando Museum of Art was one of six museums from across the country selected to participate in a large-scale impact study this next school year with the National Art Education Association (NAEA) and the Association of Art Museum Directors (AAMD): The Impact of Art Museum Programs on K-12 Students. The NAEA and AAMD have received a prestigious National Leadership Grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) to fund the implementation portion of this important research. The OMA represented the Southeast Region of the study. In Orlando, eight schools participated with an estimated 1,025 students in approximately 41 classes: Fern Creek Elementary, Little River Elementary, Mollie Ray Elementary, Princeton Elementary, Rock Springs Elementary, Tangelo Park Elementary, Conway Middle and Howard Middle. Classroom presentations and field trips took place during spring 2017.

    ADULT PROGRAMS

    Arts Society – Held six Tuesdays a year September-April, each program began with a light brunch followed by a lecture led by Susan Rosoff, and concluded with an exclusive tour of the galleries. This season’s theme was Partners in Art; 66 participants, 359 total attendance. The Summer Series Scandals in Art was popular in June 2017 with 46 participants, 167 total attendance.

    Art Night Out – These engaging and fun studio art workshops offered a different theme each month and adult beverages. 217 participants.

    Highlights Tours – were offered by docents every Sunday afternoon, September 2016-May 2017. 286 participants.

    Gallery Talks – Museum curators presented these informal talks the first Wednesday of each month. 113 people attended.

    Art Sandwiched In – This monthly, noontime, informal lecture series had 198 participants.

    Distinguished Lectures Noelle Mason, Florida Prize Recipient 2016 presented a talk in the SunTrust Auditorium on August 13, 2016; 45 participants. On September 17, 2016, Sue Scott, guest curator of The Conversation Continues: Highlights from the James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett Collection, presented a gallery talk along with the collectors James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett; 40 participants. (continued »)

    Dr. Robert Feldman, art collector, presented a gallery talk on December 11; 51 participants. Artist Matthew Weinstein presented a gallery talk on March 18, 2017; 35 participants.

    Catrina Workshop – Contemporary artist Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz (2014 Florida Prize Artist) and local paper artist Ka Malinalli taught a special Catrina making workshop dedicated to the 49 lives lost and the living victims of the Pulse nightclub tragedy. The decorated skulls created in the workshop were part of a large Pulse Ofrenda installed at Chicago’s National Museum of Mexican Art’s Annual Dia de los Muertos exhibition; 67 participants.

    Studio One – A series of monthly art workshops offered on selected Saturday mornings. September 2016-May 2017; 71 participants.OMA Book Club – For lovers of literature and art, each monthly meeting highlighted a different book relevant to works on view in the Museum; 124 participants.Teacher Professional Development Workshops – Two Workshops were offered. Teachers were introduced to the artwork of Eric Rohmann and printmaking techniques by Jude Goodier-Mojher, associate curator of youth and family programs, and guest artist Camilo Velasquez; October 20, 2016, 12 participants. On March 2, 2017, teachers were introduced to the exhibition The Wyeths and American Artists in Maine; presented by Susan Rosoff and Dr. Mary Palmer; 17 participants.

    Art Encounters Teen Studio Art Night Out

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    COMMUNITY ACCESS/HEALING ARTS PROGRAMS

    Art on the Go! – The OMA’s popular outreach program for seniors in congregate living sites used art reproductions and hands-on objects to spark discussions to encourage reminiscing and lifelong learning. 154 people participated.

    Outreach Art Lectures – Art educators spoke at numerous area retirement centers, organizations and conferences on a variety of artists, art historical trends and current exhibitions at the Museum on a regular basis throughout the year reaching 995 people. Art’s the Spark – Held January-October, this monthly Saturday morning program, designed for adults with memory impairment and neurological impairments and their healthy caregivers, helped increase mental stimulation, socialization, and encouraged physical dexterity. Presented when the museum was closed to the general public, it provided a safe and welcoming environment, and included gallery discussion and an art-making activity in the studio. The National Parkinson Foundation – Central Florida Chapter provided support for this program. 191participants.

    Creative Connections – Guided tours that are adapted and enhanced for children and adults with disabilities and special needs were offered monthly throughout the year. This program, designed for the whole family, included tours and sketching in the galleries and studio fun. Funding from St. Margaret Mary Church and the Rooms to Go Foundation made this program possible. 270 participants. Family ArtReach Program at the Coalition for the Homeless – This outreach program for at-risk youth and their families living at the Coalition consisted of weekly evening art classes as well as special family weekend workshops and field trips to the OMA. This program was made possible by the Anew Foundation. 136 participants.

    Youth ArtReach – Thanks to the generous sponsorship from SunTrust Bank, art workshops were presented at Orlando Union Rescue Mission, Smith Neighborhood Center, and West Orange Boys and Girls Club. Students also visited the museum during the year for field trips and received art kits filled with much-needed art supplies. 123 participants.

    Art with Purpose —The museum’s involvement in the Zebra Coalition program began in May 2016. This weekly outreach program facilitated by museum staff that meets at the Zebra Coalition, a local non-profit that works with at-risk LGBT+ youth, ages 13-24. Each week participants engaged in a studio art exercise that focuses on topics relevant to identity; 205 participants. Sponsored by a United Arts of Central Florida mini-grant.

    Community Connections – This new pilot program for adults with disabilities and special needs is a partnership with the Orlando Science Center and the Orlando Shakespeare Theater. Each month, participants visited a different venue to engage in a friendly environment designed to promote learning and the connections between art and science. Date: August 2016-May 2017; 28 participants.

    Dr. P. Phillips Foundation Gallery – This mini-gallery featured artwork created by artists of all ages who’ve participated in special museum programs throughout the year including Art with Purpose, Family ArtReach: Creative Connections; Art’s the Spark, and Youth ArtReach.

    Foster Family Holiday Workshop – A fun holiday art workshop was provided for 61 participants through The Foundation for Foster Children on December 4, 2016.

    Children’s Art Tent at Winter Park Sidewalk Art Festival – On March 17 and 18, 2017, Museum staff offered children and families art activities based on the Wyeth exhibition. Approximately 1,500 people visited our tent.

    Art’s the Spark, 2017

    PARTNERSHIPS The Resource Center (TRC) – In cooperation with the University of Central Florida’s (UCF’s) College of Education, the Orlando Museum of Art developed TRC to provide materials for innovative techniques in teaching and to establish a strong connection to the art education program at the University. TRC provides resource trunks, learning kits, poster-size reproductions of art, slides, books and videos related to the Museum’s Permanent Collections of American art, African art and Art of the Ancient Americas and previous temporary exhibitions to students, teachers and educational institutions throughout Central Florida.

    VOLUNTEER SUPPORT Docents – Lee Bruno was Chairman of the Docent Corps in FY2016-2017. The Docent Corps is the heart of the Orlando Museum of Art’s education department. The word “docent” is derived from the Latin term for teacher. These devoted volunteers represent the Museum to visitors – the welcoming, friendly faces that help make art enjoyable and understandable. They are distinguished from other Museum volunteers by the training they receive and their dedication to visitors. In FY2016-2017, the Docent Corps included 35 men and women who devoted thousands of hours participating in on-going continuing education and providing tours for audiences of all ages, from pre-school children to adults. Docents are especially vital to the School Field Trip program and they engaged over 6,500 and teachers in looking at art during FY2016-2017.

    Creative Connections (Adults), 2017

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    SUPPORTThrough the generosity of members and donors, the Orlando Museum of Art is able to fulfill its mission to enrich the cultural life of Florida by providing excellence in the Visual Arts. The Museum has a special role in public education, centered in its capacity as an interactive place to better understand culture and the art of our time. Every donation given helps ensure the Museum continues to thrive as a dynamic institution in Florida.

    SEASON SPONSORS

    The Orlando Museum of Art is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit corporation that serves to enrich the cultural life of Florida by providing excellence in the visual arts. The Museum is privately owned and supported by the generosity of individuals, corporations and foundations through several annual funding opportunities. The Museum’s Season Sponsorship Program provides essential programmatic support for the entire season, July 1 through June 30 each year. Through this important support the Museum is able to provide quality exhibitions, educational programs and outreach services to the diverse communities of the region and beyond.

    Thank you to our 2016-2017 sponsors!

    PRESENTING PARTNER $100,000+

    Martin Andersen-Gracia Andersen FoundationCouncil of 101Orange County Arts & Cultural AffairsUnited Arts of Central Florida

    PARTNER $25,000 - $99,999

    Winifred Johnson Clive Foundation Ann and Carl CroftInge and Gene GrossOded Halahmy Foundation for the ArtsLeslie Warrington HardyChesley G. Magruder Foundation, Inc.State of Florida Division of Cultural AffairsGail and Michael Winn

    SPONSOR $10,000 - $24,999 ABC Fine Wine & Spirits - Robert SummersRita and Jeffrey Adler FoundationBank of America - Central FloridaO’Ann and Patrick ChristiansenCNL Charitable Foundation - Luder WhitlockBruce and Dolores DouglasDr. Robert FeldmanElizabeth Firestone Graham FoundationWarren and Augusta Hume Foundation, Inc.Hyatt Regency Orlando

    Ruth Ann Johns and Ted R. BrownRichard and Martha KesslerAudrey and Pat KnipeMassey Services Inc. - Tony MasseyPublix Super Markets CharitiesSam FlaxNicholas and Genie St. GeorgeR.J. SantomassinoSunTrust Foundation - Shari BartzWalt Disney World Co. - Rena Langley

    SUSTAINING FRIEND $5,000 - $9,999

    Cynthia BrumbackSusan DayFlorida Hospital Medical GroupUcola and Bill FornessGreater Orlando Aviation Authority - Carolyn FennellSusan HamiltonHolland & Knight LLP - Ben SubinHunter VisionSylvia and Ron E. JacksonTerry and. James W. MahaffeyCarolyn and John MartinFrancine and Neil NewbergDr. Ronald and Nina OppenheimOrlando Health - Andrew GardinerPNC Foundation - Joseph VetterSeretta Construction, Inc.Winifred and Joel SharpMr. and Mrs. Robert StinePaula Stuart

    CONTRIBUTING FRIEND $2,500 - $4,999

    Anew FoundationBill Dingman and Debbie WertJoe and Sarah Galloway FoundationKeith and Claudia KasenMr. and Mrs. Richard T. LeeDr. and Mrs. John LehrJoseph G. Markoly Foundation, Inc.Neiman MarcusNicholas A. PopeSteve and Marybeth PullumJames and Judy RussellTerry SnowDaisy and Jan StaniszkisRod R. SweetCynthia TomlinsonUCF School of Visual Arts and DesignWater Oak AdvisorsT. Picton Warlow

    FRIEND$1,000 - $2,499

    Dr. and Mrs. George AndreaeBond Foundation, Inc.Dr. Andy and Verna BuchsThe Honorable Anne C. ConwayWalter and Catherine CurrieDeloitte & Touche, LLPTedford EidsonThomas and Janet Elrod

    F. An O’NymousCarolyn M. FennellRandolph H. FieldsGlen Gentele and Shannon FitzgeraldStephen Goldman Charitable FoundationPhyllis R. GoodblattJames HairGene Hays Heller Brothers Packing CorporationEd HerbstInsurance Office of AmericaHenrietta and Marc KatzenLaurel Homes, Inc.Harriett and Shelley LakeNancy P. LewisRosemary Maher and Mendel MelzerMr. Ed Manning and Ms. Joan RuffierIrene McNuttTracey Morgan GalleryParkinson Association of Central FloridaLilly Pulitzer Winter ParkDiane and Phil ReeceSally and Jack SchottSeacoast BankBill and Sara SegalSt. Margaret Mary ChurchDona and Fred TannlerTESLA OrlandoKathryn C. UstlerPatricia Dial VigSue and Joe Warren, M.D.Matt and Pam WeberMarilyn and Len Williams

    Florida Prize Exhibition Opening Preview Party, 2017

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    SUPPORTAMBASSADORSThe Orlando Museum of Art’s Ambassadors are civic-minded leaders dedicated to philanthropically advancing the Museum to become the epiccenter for visual art in Central Florida. Ambassador contributions toward general operations allows for optimized funding of exhibitions, community events and educational programming. In FY 2016-2017, the Ambassadors provided $338,830 in vital public program support that enabled the Museum to continue to bring the highest quality visual art and art education to the Central Florida community and its visitors.

    PLATINUM Martin Andersen-Gracia Andersen FoundationLeslie Warrington Hardy

    GOLD AnonymousTed R. BrownCNL Charitable FoundationBruce and Dolores DouglasDr. and Mrs. H.E. GrossRichard and Martha KesslerAudrey and Pat KnipeMassey Services Inc.Nicholas and Genie St. GeorgeWalt Disney World Co.

    SILVER ABC Fine Wine & SpiritsCynthia BrumbackO’Ann and Patrick ChristiansenSusan DayUcola and Bill FornessGreater Orlando Aviation AuthoritySusan HamiltonHolland & Knight LLPRon E. JacksonCarolyn and John MartinDr. Ronald and Nina OppenheimPNC FoundationSeretta Construction, Inc.Winifred and Joel SharpMr. and Mrs. Robert StinePaula Stuart

    BRONZE Carl CroftKeith and Claudia KasenMr. and Mrs. Richard T. LeeDr. and Mrs. John LehrMr. and Mrs. James W. MahaffeyR.J. SantomassinoRod R. SweetCynthia TomlinsonWater Oak AdvisorsT. Picton Warlow

    COPPERDr. and Mrs. George AndreaeBond Foundation, Inc.Dr. Andy and Verna BuchsThe Honorable Anne C. ConwayWalter and Catherine CurrieTedford EidsonThomas and Janet ElrodCarolyn M. FennellRandolph H. FieldsStephen Goldman Charitable FoundationPhyllis R. GoodblattJames HairGene Hays Heller Brothers Packing CorporationEd HerbstHyatt Regency OrlandoInsurance Office of AmericaHenrietta and Marc KatzenLaurel Homes, Inc.Harriett and Shelley LakeNancy P. Lewis

    Francille MacFarlandRosemary Maher and Mendel MelzerMr. Ed Manning and Ms. Joan RuffierIrene McNuttTracey Morgan GalleryFrancine and Neil NewbergDiane and Phil ReeceBill and Sara SegalSally and Jack SchottDona and Fred TannlerKathryn C. UstlerPatricia Dial VigSue and Joe Warren, M.D.Matt and Pam WeberMarilyn and Len WilliamsGail and Michael Winn

    Current Ambassadors as of June 2017.

    SUPPORTCOLLECTING CIRCLES The generosity of the Collecting Circle Groups, which includes the Friends of American Art and the Acquisition Trust, enables the continued quality and growth of the Museum’s Permanent Collection. The increasing size, diversity and excellence of the Collection is an enduring tribute to the individuals who ensure the success of this program through their participation.

    FRIENDS OF AMERICAN ARTFriends of American Art Members provided $73,325.06 through membership dues towards the purchases of exceptional American art from the 18th Century through the early 20th Century for the Permanent Collection when it becomes available.

    Leslie and George AndreaeVera AndersonWiesje and Jim Baker Jan and Durham BarnesCheryl BartchGail and Jim BaxterErnestine BeattieMary Beth BeckerCaroline and Jeffrey BlydenburghVan and Glenda BoganBetsy and Murray BrooksBuck and Ann BrownVerna BuchsMark BucklesHelen and Robert CairnsVirginia and Dennis CaseyO’Ann and Pat ChristiansenDave and Sally CookCarolyn ColemanGail and Thomas Colman Lynn and Joe ConteAnn Corcoran and Coreen HoltConnie and John CoxCarl CroftDiane CulpepperJean CummingCatherine and Walter CurrieBonnie and Bob DavisSusie DayMaureen and Miles DeardenDuncan DeWahlLibby Drosdick

    Paula and Buddy EidelMarsha and Ron EricksonEdith and Robin FawsettLynn Fessler and John PalmieriAnnette and Gavin FordMimi and Richards FordUcola and Bill FornessRich and Barbara FultonGerry and Manny GarciaJean GillenBeverly and Harl GrahamGayla and Roger GreenwaldSusan HamiltonSarah HansardLeslie Warrington Bailey HardyBetty and Bob HartnettMaude and Bill HaymanBarbara and Ted Hoepner Martha and Lynn HowleAlexandra and Robert JohnsonPatricia and Wayne JonesEric JontzBonnie and Clyde KingAudrey and Pat KnipeMary and A.E. LangleyNancy LewisRebecca and Steven MachDiane and Mike MaherJim and Suzanne MarkelBarbaranelle and Bill McClanahanVanna McHaleLynn and Ron McKinney

    Linda and Doug MetcalfLennon MooreBeth MurrayCynthia Pesch Carol and Jerry PierceKaren and Richard ProctorDawn ProffittChristopher and Carol RanckBetty and Ray SandhagenLinda SchofieldKendall SharpWinnie and Joel SharpRobert and Kay SimmonsJane and Butch SlaughterElizabeth SmithGenie and Nick St. GeorgeElaine and Bruce SullivanCharyl and Charley TabscottEllie and Dick TaylorSuzi and Jim TeelBetty VermillionNancy and Larry Wagers Julie and Alexander WallaceMary and Harold WardAlice and Bill WeirRenny WendnagelDavid and Judy WintersWoody WoodallButch and Patty Wooten

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    SUPPORTACQUISITION TRUSTAcquisition Trust Members provided $46,410.29 through membership dues and gifts to the Charles E. Meiner Acquisition Trust Endowment towards the purchases of outstanding global contemporary art for the Museum’s Permanent Collection.

    Rita and Jeff Adler

    Judy and David Albertson

    Beverly and Wayne Bargren

    Diana and Jim Barnes

    Nancy and Jeff Baumann

    Alan and Marcia Berman

    Loren Berry

    Caroline and Jeffrey Blydenburgh

    Connie and Roy Brand

    Betsy and Murray Brooks

    MaryBeth and Peter Brown

    Bill and Becky Bryan

    Jose Cabrera

    Elissa deBrito and Alan Cohen

    Terry and Mike Davis

    Sean and Ashley Dishman

    Sheri Heitker Dixon and Mark Dixon

    Dolores and Bruce Douglas

    Ixchell Duarte

    Sam Ewing and Philip Gates

    Rose Fajardo

    Fielding Featherston

    Bob Feldman

    Susan Finnegan

    Joan and Matt Giles

    Lauri Godfrey

    Eric Gray

    Sheila Greenspoon

    Inge and Gene Gross

    Lawrence and Deborah Gutter

    Sarah and Matthew Hansard

    Gene Hays

    Wendy and Michael Henner

    Linda and Bill Hobby

    Caryn and Mark Israel

    Norma Kaplan

    Henrietta and Marc Katzen

    Harriett Lake

    Ellyn and Mitchel Laskey

    David Legman

    Maria and Ed Leerdam

    Katie and John Lehr

    Elyse and Scott Levitt

    Vivienne Lewis

    Terry and Jim Mahaffey

    Tanya Papuga and Hector Maldanado

    Ed Manning and Joan Ruffier

    Carolyn and John Martin

    Mike Masur

    David Matteson

    Margie and David McIntosh

    Jeffrey Miller and Ted Maines

    Francine and Neil Newberg

    Jane and Bill Oatway

    Nina and Ron Oppenheim

    Dawn Peterson

    June Ponzio

    Shyla and Steve Reich

    Lenny and Howard Roland

    Rocky Santomassino

    Marta and Brett Sealy

    Denise Autorino and Terry Snow

    Barbara and Gary Sorensen

    Genie and Nick St. George

    Patricia Vig

    Cindy and Charles Walbroel

    Julie Walbroel

    Megan and Michael Wenrich

    Brenda Fisher Wetmore and James

    Wetmore

    Vivian and Woody Whitchurch

    Gail and Mike Winn

    Ashley and Michael Winship

    Nancy and Jonathan Wolf

    Hattie Wolfe and Ed Sabori

    Phyllis and Ed Zissman

    SUPPORTENDOWMENTSThe Museum receives annual support through earnings from established endowments, which help to support operations, acquisitions and educational programs in perpetuity. Endowments and funds as of June 30, 2017 include:

    Alvin Lehman Educational Scholarship EndowmentAmy Ginson Memorial Scholarship FundAnn Merrill Gross Educational Scholarship EndowmentBen and Carrol Walters Educational Scholarship EndowmentCharles E. Meiner Acquisition Trust EndowmentFlorida Cultural Endowment Program M. Weinstein Educational Scholarship EndowmentMargaret Haynes Educational Scholarship EndowmentMartha DeNeen Cotten FundOrlando Museum of Art EndowmentSignorile-Johnston Music and Art Education Fund

    IN-KIND CONTRIBUTIONSThe Museum received $123,240.49 ($674,602.50 w/ Council 101) as in-kind contributions during the 2016-2017 year.

    ABC Fine Wine & SpiritsAFA Protective SystemsLeslie T. AndreaeArthur’s Creative Events & CateringChic Event Furniture RentalCL Studio Inc.Clifton Larson Allen LLPCuisiniers Catered Cuisine & EventsCynthia BrumbackDeVine Wine and GrillFrancine NewbergGifn, LLCGoogle AdWordsHolland & Knight LLP – Ted R. BrownHyatt Regency Orlando

    Kirby Rental Services & SalesLee Forrest Design, LLCMallard Cleaning SystemsOrlando Wedding and Party RentalsPhotosound of Orlando, Inc.Puff N’ Stuff CateringReel Fish Coastal Kitchen and BarSigns NowSTK OrlandoThe Gourmet Cuisine at Rollins CollegeThe Winey Wench OviedoVisit OrlandoWeddingpages, LLCWinifred J. Sharp

    UNITED ARTS OF CENTRAL FLORIDAThe Museum was awarded $141,982 through the General Operating Support Grant. An additional $94,173 was raised by the Museum in partnership with United Arts via the United Arts Collaborative Campaign. A detailed list of donors are listed at omart.org.

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    MEMBERSHIPMembership contributions raised $131,603 in support of the Museum as an important cultural and educational resource for all of Florida while providing special benefits with the Museum and reciprocal organizations.

    M E M B E R S H I P T R E N D S All General Members to Sustaining Members

    FY13-14 to FY16-17

    SUSTAINING MEMBERS As of June 30, 2017

    Mrs. Carolyn L. Bosserman Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Cairns Ms. Karen Dawson Ms. Ralphine Ippoliti Mr. Ronald Pizzuti Mrs. Patricia A. Schwartz Mr. Andrew York

    SUPPORTING MEMBERS As of June 30, 2017

    Dr. and Mrs. Ademola AdewaleMrs. Carolyn L. BossermanMr. Earl CrittendenMr. Jeffrey FisherMs. Joseph W. GallagherMr. and Mrs. Jack W. GuignardMs. Elizabeth MallicoteMs. Deborah RandallMs. Maria RubinMr. and Mrs. Gary L. SorensenMr. and Mrs. John StarlingMr. Tracy S. Stein

    Mr. and Mrs. Neil Webman Mr. and Mrs. Ellwood F. Whitchurch

    CONTRIBUTING MEMBERS As of June 30, 2017

    Ms. Jacquelyn AdamsMs. Kristine AlipertiMr. Herbert AllenDr. Egberto Almenas and Mrs. Maria A. PinoMr. Scott Armstrong Mrs. Nancy Austin and Mr. Louis KorahaisMr. and Mrs. Barry B. BakerMs. Susan Z. Baker and Mr. Dennis C. WinterMs. Brenda BarfieldMs. Diana BerkeyMr. and Mrs. Gary M. BerksonMrs. Patricia Beville Dr. and Mrs. Morris T. Bird Mr. and Mrs. Glenn E. Bischof Mr. and Mrs. Glenn W. Blaser Mr. and Mrs. Warren S. Bloom Dr. and Mrs. Albert J. Bogdanowitsch Dr. and Mrs. Steven E. Bott

    Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Braun Mr. James Brehm Ms. Jackie Brockington Ms. Janet L. Brown Mrs. Christine Bucheli andf Mr. Hans P. Bucheli Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Buhrmann Mr. Jonathan C. Busdeker and Mrs. LeAnn Siefferman Ms. Minter Byrd Mr. Jose Camargo Tolosa and Eraita Vseche de Camargo Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Casey Mr. Michael S. Cassidy and Mrs. Patricia A. Titer Ms. Sanjay Chadeesingh Ms. Bertha Cherny Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Ciavatta Ms. Ila A. Clontz Ms. Brenda J. Cohen Mr. Jeffrey Cohen Mr. Michael Cohen Mr. Paul Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Colman Ms. Ruth A. Courney Dr. and Mrs. Randall B. Coverman Ms. Kathy Cressey

    MEMBERSHIPMr. Brian CrimminsMrs. Jeanne E. CurranMr. and Mrs. John CustisMr. and Mrs. Paul CzyzewskiMr. and Mrs. Lawrence R. DeeringDr. Karen DennisMr. Don DeYoungMr. and Mrs. Ernest DiLeonardoMr. and Mrs. James DixonToni DolphinMrs. Dana DoughertyDr. and Mrs. Leonard S. DreifusMr. Phillip Dunham and Mrs. Brenda DunhamMs. Connie EllsworthAndrea Elukovich and Den ArdingerMr. David FigueroaMs. Heidi FindlayMr. and Mrs. Frank B. FranciscoMr. and Mrs. Louis Frey, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. GamsonMr. and Mrs. Manuel H. GarciaMrs. Joanne F. GarnerMr. and Mrs. Roger O. GatlinMs. Amy A. GauszMr. and Mrs. Steven GibbMs. Krista M. GinterMs. Debbie GlaserMr. and Mrs. Tim GoadMr. and Mrs. Roger B. GoodenMr. and Mrs. James W. GoodrichMr. and Mrs. William G. Graney, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Richard GrantMs. Deborah M. GreearMs. Kimberly S. GrenMr. Lawrence L. Gutter and Mrs. Deborah MeitinMr. and Mrs. Michael V. HammondMr. Paul B. HaughMr. and Mrs. Chuck HazamaMr. and Mrs. Stephen HellerMs. Debra S. Hendrickson and Mr. Robert C. LinderMr. and Mrs. Gary D. HerrellMr. Bennett Herring and Mrs. Mary Lou HerringMr. Ron Hirsch and Ms. Betty ReidMr. Phil R. HoffmanMr. Jasper L. Holland, III, and Mr. Stephen M. BoyerMr. Keith HollowayMs. Beccy HosodaMs. Donna L. HowellMr. Gerry Hudson-MartinMr. Richard HunterMs. Dolores IndekMr. Mark T. InglertMr. and Mrs. Mark C. Israel

    Ms. Naoko Izuhara Mr. and Mrs. Harvey JacobyMs. Marilyn JeffcoatMr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Johnson Mrs. Bette W. JoreMr. and Mrs. Hans J. KairiesMr. and Mrs. Matt KanuckMs. Jacqueline P. KeithMs. Jean Keyes Dr. Kimberly Kilgore and Mr. John JohnsonDr. Elizabeth Klonopr and Dr. Kristi AlexanderMs. Debra KnorowskiMrs. Ellen Kristensen and Ms. Kate CrainMr. and Mrs. John W. KubovicMs. Jennifer A. KusiakMr. Guillaume LabelleDr. and Mrs. Jack C. LaneMr. and Mrs. Mark P. LangMr. and Mrs. Louis H. LauteriaMr. and Mrs. Arthur LeeDr. and Mrs. Richard F. LeedyMr. Tim Lloyd-MorganLarry LoweMr. James R. Lussier and Ms. Nancy C. JacobsonMr. and Mrs. Randy A. MaddoxMs. April L. Martin and Mr. Andrew FrankMs. Ruth A. McClureMs. Alice Mary McMahonMs. Audrey MihacyMr. Carl MinchMr. and Mrs. Robert MolsickDovel MooreMr. Micheal MorganMr. and Mrs. Scott MudraMrs. Anne Hicks MurrahMrs. Cindy MurrayMs. Heidi D. NaidamastMr. Tim J. NashMr. and Mrs. Douglas NashMr. and Mrs. David NissenMs. Kathryn S. NyrosMr. and Mrs. William H. OatwayMr. Hector Ortiz-CintronMr. and Mrs. Tom E. OwensMr. Jim Paddack Ms. Mary J. PalmerMr. Robert Peralta Dr. and Mrs. Calvin R. PetersMs. Carol PhiferMr. Marvin Phillips and Mr. Fritz StinebaughMrs. Virginia W. PoeMr. and Mrs. Richard H. Proctor, Jr.Ms. Carol RamirezMr. Elmo RamosDr. and Mrs. Harry ReinMr. Van Richardson

    Mrs. Edythe C. RiesingerMr. Edwin D. RodriguezMs. Anne RogersMr. Thomas L. Scelza and Miss Janene ScelzaMr. and Mrs. George W. SchieleMr. and Mrs. Jack W. ScottMr. David SimonMr. and Mrs. Charles R. SimpsonMs. Cyndy SineniMr. and Mrs. Charles SloanMs. Chen So YeonMr. and Mrs. Robert SorensenMr. Jan Staniszkis and Ms. Daisy StaniszkisMr. and Mrs. John StarkovichMr. and Mrs. Andrew StarlingMrs. Kathryn Stewart and Mr. John StewartMs. Joan W. StricklandMr. and Mrs. Larry L. StutsmanMs. Kathy StutzmanMr. and Mrs. Toby J. SullivanMr. Charles A. Tabscott and Dr. Charyl G. TabscottDr. Stacy TannerMr. Arthur B ThompsonMs. Judy TothMr. Rory C. Trumbore and Ms. Chere L. ForceMr. and Mrs. Jay TyneMr. and Mrs. Dale Van GelderMs. Carol VincentiMs. Alexandra VonhawkMs. Julia WalshMr. Qinghai WangMr. and Mrs. Graham WhiteMr. and Mrs. Jake WhiteMs. Sharon K. WissertMr. G. Charles Wohlust and Ms. Judith SanbornMs. Tracy WosabaMs. Sarah WrightMs. Barbara YarbroughDr. Shari Yudenfreund-Sujka and Dr. Stan Yudenfreund-SujkaMs. Laura Zavodney ---

    THE FOLLOWING MEMBERSHIPSARE RECOGNIZED ONLINE AT OMART.ORG

    Dual/Family Memberships: 979 MembersGeneral Memberships: 2,141 Members

  • 34 35A N N U A L R E P O R T l 2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7

    VOLUNTEERSLAST YEAR, 560 VOLUNTEERS CONTRIBUTED 20,499.74 HOURS TO THE ORLANDO MUSEUM OF ART FOR AN ESTIMATED VALUE OF $432,325.49. THEIR GENEROUS SERVICE WAS HONORED AT THE VOLUNTEER APPRECIATION RECEPTION IN APRIL. BELOW ARE LISTED VOLUNTEERS WHO ASSISTED IN SOME OF THE MAJOR EVENTS AND SERVICES OF THE MUSEUM YEAR.

    The Associates present the 1st Thursdays event each month, Central Florida’s first and still favorite art party. 1st Thursdays Associates & event volunteers combined:

    For the past 52 years, the Council of 101 has raised funds for the Museum with two major fundraisers, the FESTIVAL OF TREES in November and the ANTIQUES VINTAGE & GARDEN SHOW in February. The Council of 101 presented a $319,500 check to the Museum for operating support as a result of its outstanding fundraising events, which included the aforementioned Festival of Trees and Antiques Vintage & Garden Show as well as the Corporate Lease Program. Thank you for over 50 fine years of support!

    The Museum’s well-trained Docent Corps volunteers lead tours through the galleries for school learning trips and group tours.

    80 VOLUNTEERS

    142 VOLUNTEERS

    35 DOCENTS

    47 VOLUNTEERS

    19 INTERNS

    Volunteers assist the Museum’s Education Department with its extensive programming, including seasonal art camp when school is not in session.

    The OMA has a robust internship program that provides college students real work opportunities to gain experience, build skills, and apply their knowledge in every department across the museum.

    THE ASSOCIATES

    THE COUNCIL OF 101

    DOCENT CORPS

    EDUCATION/ART CAMP

    INTERNS

    From left to right: Sean Corcoran, Sheila Greenspoon, Angel Hainesworth and Babette Fitzgerald at the Volunteer Appreciation Reception, 2017

    Coral and Amy Dixon at the Volunteer Appreciation Reception, 2017

    1st Thursdays Volunteers, 2017

  • 36 37A N N U A L R E P O R T l 2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7

    10% 9%

    MANAGEMENTAND GENERAL

    FUNDRAISING

    SPECIALEVENTS

    54%

    5%

    9%

    6%

    6%

    12%

    EARNEDREVENUE

    GIFTS ANDIN-KIND

    GOVERNMENTSUPPORT

    FOUNDATIONSUPPORT

    CORPORATESUPPORT

    INDIVIDUALCONTRIBUTED

    SUPPORT

    ENDOWMENTINCOME

    65%PROGRAMSERVICES

    16%

    8%

    COUNCIL OF 101 FUNDRAISERS

    FESTIVAL OF TREES

    The Council of 101 of the Orlando Museum of Art presented “The Art of the Holidays,” the 30th annual Festival of Trees, November 12-20, 2016. Each year the Council of 101 transforms the Orlando Museum of Art into a Holiday Wonderland.

    The Festival of Trees, the major fundraiser for the Museum, brings thousands of people to the Museum each year. Dozens of Central Florida businesses and individual designers sponsor trees and created decadent decorations and displays.

    ANTIQUES VINTAGE & GARDEN SHOW

    The Council of 101 presented its 35th annual Antiques Vintage & Garden Show on February 17-19, 2017, featuring highly respected dealers offering an array of fine quality antique furniture, paintings,

    jewelry, oriental rugs, porcelain and vintage collectibles as well as inspiration from expert home and garden designers.

    2016-2017 AUDITFINANCIAL ACTIVITIES SUMMARYYear Ended June 30, 2017

    WHERE OUR SUPPORT COMES FROM

    WHERE OUR SUPPORT GOES

  • 38 39A N N U A L R E P O R T l 2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7

    Malcolm Morley, The Art of Painting, 2008, watercolor on paper, 60 x 40 in. Image courtesy of James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett. Collection of James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett. © Malcolm Morley, Courtesy Sperone Westwater, New York.

    Bo Bartlett, The Good Old Days, 2000, oil on linen, 86 x 90 in. On loan from The Mennello Museum of American Art, in conjunction with their exhibition, Bo Bartlett: American Artist; Collection of Otis and Sandy Scarborough. © Bo Bartlett. Image courtesy of Otis and Sandy Scarborough.

    PUBLICATIONSQuarterly CalendarsSummer (May - August, 2016)Fall (September - December, 2016)Spring (January - April, 2017)Summer (May - August, 2017)

    Exhibition CatalogsOrlando Museum of Art Florida Prize in Contemporary Art, 2016.Foreward by Glen Gentele, Director & CEO, Orlando Museum of Art. Introduction by Hansen Mulford, Curator.

    Familiar Mysteries: Paintings by Matthew Capaldo, 2016.Foreward by Glen Gentele, Director & CEO, Orlando Museum of Art. Introduction by Hansen Mulford, Curator.

    The Conversation Continues: Highlights from the James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett Collection, 2016.Foreward by Glen Gentele, Director & CEO, Orlando Museum of Art. Introduction by Hansen Mulford, Curator.

    PublicationsFlorida Prize Exhibition Map – June 2016Florida Prize Reception Invitation– June 2016Florida Prize Banner– June 2016Florida Prize Light Pole Banners – June 2016Ambassadors Reception Save the Date – July 2016The Conversation Continues + Familiar Mysteries Invitation – September 2016The Conversation Continues + Familiar Mysteries Banner – September 2016The Conversation Continues + Familiar Mysteries Banner Light Pole Banners – September 2016The Wyeths and American Artists in Maine Exhibition Map – June 2017The Wyeths and American Artists in Maine Reception Invitation– June 2017The Wyeths and American Artists in Maine Banner– June 2017The Wyeths and American Artists in Maine Light Pole Banners – June 2017Matthew Weinstein - The Living End – Exhibition Pamphlet – March 2017Matthew Weinstein - The Living End – Invitation – March 2017Matthew Weinstein - The Living End – Banner- March 2017Oded Halahmy: Babylonian Odyssey - Exhibition Map - 2017Florida Prize Exhibition Guide – June 2017Florida Prize Reception Invitation– June 2017Florida Prize Banner– June 2017Florida Prize Light Pole Banners – June 2017

    WebsiteOmart.org – content management system updated weekly.Ticketing system changed to TAM Retail.

    Art CampEducational Programs Brochure – September - December, 2016 Educational Programs Brochure – January - April, 2017 Educational Programs Brochure – May - August, 2017 Summer Camp Brochure – May 2017 Summer Art Camp Banner - May 2017

    Ralph Provisero, left to right: Distopiantopia, 2017, lead, stainless steel, wood, 33 in. diameter; Ironcrossed, 2017, cast iron, steel, bronze, 72 x 52 in. Courtesy of the artist.© Ralph Provisero. Image courtesy of Raymond Martinot.

  • 40 41A N N U A L R E P O R T l 2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7

    RETAILTHE O SHOP (MUSEUM SHOP)

    Sales for the Museum Shop’s 2016-2017 fiscal year were $87,359.

    The Museum Shop is open to visitors Tuesday through Sunday, with extended hours for 1st Thursdays, Festival of Trees and the Antique Vintage and Garden Show, as well as special events. Exceptional service from both our paid and volunteer employees continues in the Museum Shop.

    The shop continues to offer an array of merchandise suited gift giving. Popular merchandise this fiscal year included OMA Logo items, catalogues related to the exhibitions currently on view, holiday merchandise, and home décor items. Additionally, the shop continues to sell consigned merchandise from local artists—including paintings, sculptures, ceramics, and jewelry. This commitment to supporting local artists is a strong selling point offered to museum shop visitors.

    Museum Shop, 2017

    Art Encounters, 2016

    Image from the Opening Reception of The Wyeths and American Artists in Maine: Selections from the Farnsworth Art Museum, 2017

  • 42 43A N N U A L R E P O R T l 2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7

    PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AND SPECIAL EVENTSEvery Sunday (September-May) 1:00 pm – Highlights Tour of the collection with a docent

    June 13 –August 12, 2016Summer Art Camp(Grades 1-8)

    July 6, 2016Gallery TalkArt with Purpose

    July 7, 20161st Thursdays: Rock!

    July 9, 2016 Art’s the Spark

    July 10, 2016Creative Connections

    July 13, 2016Art with Purpose

    July 12 – October 2, 2016Peggy Crosby Student Gallery: Summer Art Programs

    July 27, 2016Art Night Out

    August 3, 2016Gallery Talk

    August 4, 20161st Thursdays: Declaration of the Mind: Art and Philosophy

    August 5, 2016Words into Pictures workshop with Eric RohmannGallery Talk with Eric Rohmann

    August 6, 2016Storytime with Eric Rohmann

    August 10, 2016Art with Purpose

    August 13, 2016Art’s the SparkNoelle Mason lecturewith Stitch ‘n Bitch afterward

    August 14, 2016 Creative Connections

    August 17, 2016Art with Purpose

    August 19, 2016Art AdventuresArt Encounters

    August 24, 2016Art Night Out

    August 30, 2016Docent Training: My Friend: Eric Rohmann

    August 31, 2016Art with Purpose

    September 1, 20161st Thursdays: Eclectic Knights VIII

    September 2, 2016OMA Book Club

    September 3, 2016Family Highlights Tour

    September 7, 2016Gallery TalkArt with Purpose

    September 10, 2015Acquisition Trust: Board Meeting

    September 9, 2016Art AdventuresArt Encounters Art in the Afternoon

    September 10, 2016Art’s the Spark Catrina Workshop

    September 11, 2016Creative Connections

    September 14, 2016Art with Purpose

    PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AND SPECIAL EVENTSSeptember 16, 2016Exhibition Opening of The Conversation Continues: Highlights from the James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett Collection and Familiar Mysteries: Paintings by Matthew Capaldo

    September 17, 2016Special Gallery Talk with Sue Scott, James Cottrell, Joseph Lovett

    September 18, 2016Acquisition Trust event in the Museum

    September 19, 2016Youth ArtReachDocent Orientation: The Conversation Continues

    September 20, 2016Arts Society

    September 21, 2016Art Sandwiched InArt with PurposeYouth ArtReach

    September 24, 2016Studio OneCreative Cravings

    September 26, 2016Youth ArtReach

    September 27, 2016Community Connections

    September 28, 2016Art Night OutYouth ArtReach

    October 1, 2016Artlando

    October 1, 2016Family Highlights Tour

    October 4, 2016Youth ArtReach

    October 5, 2016Art with Purpose

    October 6, 20161st Thursdays: Going Goth!

    October 11, 2016Youth ArtReach

    October 11, 2016-January 1, 2017Peggy Crosby Student Gallery: Seminole/Osceola Public Schools

    October 12, 2016Art with Purpose

    October 13, 2016Ambassadors Reception

    October 14, 2016OMA Book ClubAcquisition Trust event within the Museum

    October 15, 2016Studio OneCreative Cravings

    October 19, 2016Art Sandwiched InArt with PurposeRescheduled 1st Thursdays: Going Goth!

    October 22, 2016Girl Scout Workshop

    October 22, 2015Ambassadors Reception

    October 23, 2016 Creative Connections

    October 25, 2016Youth ArtReach

    October 26, 2016Art Night Out

    October 29, 2016Family WorkshopSaturday Art Encounters

    October 30, 2016Yoga in the Galleries: Halloween Edition

  • 44 45A N N U A L R E P O R T l 2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7

    Image of Currents in Mid-Century American Painting: Selections from the OMA Collection, 2016

    James Cottrell, Joseph Lovett and Sue Scott giving a Gallery Talk of The Conversation Continues: Highlights from the James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett Collection, 2016

    Special Guest Speaker Sharon Louden Presenting her book: The Artist As Culture Producer at the Orlando Museum of Art Ambassador Reception, 2016

  • 46 47A N N U A L R E P O R T l 2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7

    November 1, 2016Arts SocietyYouth ArtReach

    November 2, 2016Gallery Talk

    November 3, 20161st Thursdays: Cultural Frontline

    November 4, 2016Art Sandwiched InArt AdventuresArt EncountersArt in the AfternoonOMA Book Club

    November 5, 2016Family Highlights TourCreative Cravings

    November 8, 2016Art Night Out

    November 9, 2016Art with Purpose

    November 11, 2016Opening Night: Festival of Trees

    November 12 – 20, 2016Festival of Trees

    November 30, 2016Art with Purpose

    December 1, 2016 1st Thursdays: Art Under $200 –‘Tis the Season

    December 3, 2016Family Highlights TourDecember 4, 2016Foster Family Holiday Workshop

    December 6, 2016Arts SocietyArt Night Out

    December 7, 2016Art with Purpose

    December 9, 2016Art AdventuresArt EncountersArt in the Afternoon

    December 10, 2016Studio OneCreative CravingsSaturday Art Encounters

    December 11, 2016Special Gallery Talk with Dr. Robert Feldman

    December 14, 2016Art Sandwiched InArt with Purpose

    December 19, 2016Winter Art Camp

    December 20, 2016Winter Art Camp

    December 21, 2016Winter Art CampArt with Purpose

    December 22, 2016Winter Art Camp

    December 23, 2016Winter Art Camp

    December 27, 2016Winter Art Camp

    December 28, 2016Winter Art CampArt with Purpose

    December 29, 2016Winter Art Camp

    December 30, 2016Winter Art Camp

    January 4, 2017Gallery Talk

    PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AND SPECIAL EVENTS

    Installation view of The Conversation Continues: Highlights from the James Cottrell and Joseph Lovett Collection, ARTLANDO, 2016

    From left to right: Michael Winn, Wes Featherston, Linda and Bill Hobby and Christine Madrid-French at the Acquisition Trust reception celebrating the acquisition of Scales by Robin Rhode, 2017

  • 48 49A N N U A L R E P O R T l 2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7

    PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AND SPECIAL EVENTSJanuary 5, 2017Family ArtReach1st Thursdays: Steam Machine

    January 6, 2017Art AdventuresArt EncountersArt in the Afternoon

    January 7, 2017Family Highlights TourStudio OneSaturday Art Encounters

    January 7, 20161st Thursdays: The Art of Steam Punk

    January 10, 2017Arts SocietyArt with Purpose

    January 11, 2017Art Sandwiched In

    January 11, 2016Friends of American Art: Trip Committee Meeting January 10-March 26, 2017Peggy Crosby Student Gallery: Orange County Public Schools I

    January 12, 2017Family ArtReach

    January 15, 2017Creative Connections

    January 18, 2017Art with Purpose

    January 19, 2017Family ArtReachFriends of American Art Evening in the Galleries

    January 20, 2017Exhibition opening of The Wyeths: American Artists in Maine

    January 21, 2017Art’s the SparkGirl Scout Workshop

    January 23, 2017Docent Orientation: Wyeth exhibition

    January 24, 2017Youth ArtReach

    January 25, 2017Art Night Out

    January 27, 2017Acquisition Trust event in the Museum

    January 28, 2017Creative CravingsSketching in the Galleries

    January 31, 2017Youth ArtReach

    February 1, 2017Gallery TalkArt with Purpose

    February 2, 20171st Thursdays: “Fat Thursday” Carnivale

    February 3, 2017OMA Book Club

    February 4, 2017Family Highlights Tour

    February 4, 2017United Arts: Arts for All Day

    February 8, 2017Art Sandwiched InArt with PurposeFriends of American Art Annual Meeting in the Galleries

    February 9, 2017Family ArtReach

    February 10, 2017Art AdventuresArt EncountersArt in the Afternoon

    February 11, 2017 Art’s the SparkStudio OneSaturday Art Encounters

    PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AND SPECIAL EVENTSFebruary 12, 2017Creative Connections

    February 15, 2017Art with Purpose

    February 17-19, 2017Antiques Vintage & Garden Show

    February 22, 2017Art Night Out Art with Purpose

    February 25, 2017Creative CravingsSketching in the Galleries

    February 26, 2017Family ArtReach

    March 1, 2017Gallery Talk

    March 2, 2017Family ArtReach1st Thursdays: The Finer Things

    March 4, 2017Art’s the SparkFamily Highlights Tour

    March 8, 2016Friends of American Art: Trip Committee Meeting

    March 8, 2017Art Sandwiched In

    March 9, 2017Family ArtReach

    March 10, 2017Art AdventuresArt Encounters Art in the Afternoon

    March 12, 2017Creative Connections

    March 15, 2017Art with Purpose

    March 17, 2016Provisional Orientation

    March 17, 2017Spring Art Camp

    March 18, 2017Special Gallery Talk with Matthew Weinstein

    March 20, 2017Spring Art Camp

    March 21, 2017Spring Art Camp Acquisition Trust event with Artist in the Galleries

    March 22, 2017 Arts SocietyArt with PurposeFriends of American Art: Board Meeting

    March 23, 2017Spring Art Camp

    March 24, 2017Spring Art Camp

    March 25, 2017Creative CravingsSketching in the Galleries

    March 28, 2017Creative Connections

    March 29, 2017Art Night OutFamily ArtReach

    March 30, 2017Family ArtReach

    April 1, 2017Family Highlights Tour Family Day

    April 5, 2017Gallery TalkArt with PurposeFamily ArtReach

  • 50 51A N N U A L R E P O R T l 2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7

    PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AND SPECIAL EVENTSApril 6, 2017Family ArtReach1st Thursdays: Before I Die: The Ultimate Celebration of Life

    April 7, 2017Art AdventuresArt EncountersArt in the AfternoonOMA Book Club

    April 8, 2017Saturday Art EncountersStudio One

    April 9, 2017Creative Connections

    April 11, 2017Arts Society

    April 11-June 25, 2017Peggy Crosby Student Gallery: Orange County Public Schools II

    April 12, 2017Art with PurposeFamily ArtReach

    April 15, 2017Art�