Becoming Heroes Festival Guide

Page 1

BECOMING HEROES


BECOMING HEROES A festival from March 23, to May 17, 2020 Colorado Springs Philharmonic Josep CaballĂŠ-Domenech Music Director

As long as we’ve had a tale to tell, heroes have been part of the story. They emerge out of unlikely situations. They protect others despite the risk and expect nothing in return. We celebrate their selflessness, their service, their sacrifice. And in that celebration, we become part of the story. Heroes challenge us to realize our own potential for greatness. They provide a source of creativity, inspiration, and vision. While we bask in their glory, we better understand ourselves as individuals, as a community, as a nation, and as global citizens. Reassessment is an inevitable part of that process. Sometimes heroes grow stronger and other times they disappoint, they disappear. But in their place new ones arise, new narratives emerge. Over the course of this special eight-week festival, the Colorado Springs Philharmonic, along with twenty-one other arts and non-profit community organizations explore how heroes become heroes. Because we all have our heroes and our own stories to tell.

Come. Share. Celebrate. Be part of something bigger.


My dear friends, In some ways, I feel that our work together has been leading to this moment. For 93 years, this community of Colorado Springs has drawn inspiration from this great orchestra. Today’s Colorado Springs Philharmonic has attracted worldwide talents to our stage – the likes of Yo-Yo Ma, Itzhak Perlman, and many others – whose musical gifts are matched only by their humanity and generous spirit. They are heroes of our art form and worldwide musical treasures. They have impacted me personally and inspired our Philharmonic to take on a great community project. Over the next eight weeks, we will dedicate all of our performances and collaborations to the community-wide festival Becoming Heroes. Along with twenty-one esteemed partner organizations, we’ll endeavor to tell the tale of those selfless heroes whose acts inspire us to realize our own potential for greatness. While we bask in their glory, we better understand ourselves as individuals, as a community, as a nation, and as global citizens. This ambitious project will culminate in an even more ambitious performance: Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem. Based on texts by the First World War soldier-poet Wilfred Owen, and commissioned to consecrate the reconstructed Coventry Cathedral destroyed by Hitler’s Luftwaffe, War Requiem is an arresting variation on the Latin Requiem Mass and a public statement about ‘war and the pity of war.’ It is one of the pivotal musical works of the Twentieth Century, serving as a reminder to future generations on the horror and futility of armed conflict. This once-in-a-generation performance will feature 450 musicians and choristers performing an endlessly moving elegy, which is not to be missed. Throughout this festival, we invite you to discover how heroes challenge you to realize your own potential for greatness, to better understand yourself and your neighbors, and to embrace our collective strength. On behalf of the Colorado Springs Philharmonic, I welcome you to Becoming Heroes. Come. Share. Celebrate.

Josep Caballé-Domenech, Music Director


PRESENTING SPONSORS

FESTIVAL PARTNERS

Title sponsor

Air Force Academy Scholars Program

Bringing cadets and veterans together through their shared experiences of hardship and heroism.

Presenting sponsors

The Artist Series

Presenting the genre-blurring PUBLIQuartet and international piano sensation Emanuel Ax, celebrating iconic composers. Eileen Nobles and Robert Odien H. Chase Stone Trust

Banning Lewis Preparatory Academy

Production sponsors

Exploring examples of heroism through music, the BLPA band and choir will honor local heroes nominated by the community.

Classical KCME | Jazz 93.5

a loo family foundation

The Joseph Henry Edmondson Foundation Richard and Sandra Hilt Rea Charitable Trust

Taking a deeper look at the heroic stories behind the music and composers of Becoming Heroes through feature programming. Also introducing “Heroic Influences,” a new radio segment inviting local musicians and artists to discuss their musical heroes.

Podium sponsors

SM f Lt. Col. (Ret) Eugene S. Harsh in loving memory of his wife Lois E. Harsh Ed and Mary Osborne

Venture sponsors

Jean Bodman Colorado College and the Fine Arts Center at Colorado College Arlen Feldman and Adriana Wood Mr. and Mrs. William Hybl Dr. Susan Rae Jensen and Mr. Tom Adams Trainer Christina McGarry Dr. and Mrs. James B. Miller Lance and Brenda Miller Ken Montera and Theresa Stahuva Jim and Carol Montgomery Mr. John Street and Ms. Mary Beazley Sally Sharpe and John R. King III Doris Tavernier-McLeod Anonymous (1)

Venture partners Kristen Christy and Sean Lange Glenn and Elizabeth Conklin Marty Kelley Marion and John Meyer Michael and Patricia Olsen Fran Pilch Mary T. and Victor L. Thacker Dr. Robert Tinker and Ms. Mary Tinker-Bartz Drs. Michael and Nga Turner This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. To find out more about how National Endowment for the Arts grants impact individuals and communities, visit www.arts.gov.

Colorado College Summer Music Festival Summer Music

festival

Presenting an Intermezzo Concert featuring the Ying Quartet with Susan Grace, piano. Witness the Colorado premiere of Dark Vigil, a reflection on the Columbine school shootings.

Colorado Springs Children’s Chorale Presenting X-VOX: Generations Joined in Song, featuring an intergenerational choir of over 100 voices and the regional premiere of composer Karen Walwyn’s Of Dance and Struggle celebrating the life of Nelson Mandela.

Colorado Springs Chorale Screening the 1962 D-Day classic, The Longest Day, in conjunction with their upcoming trip to Normandy to perform at the D-Day commemorative ceremonies in summer 2020. On May 16–17, the Chorale joins the Philharmonic for Britten’s War Requiem.

Fine Arts Center Theatre Company Presenting Silent Sky, a dramatized true story of 19th-century astronomer Henrietta Leavitt, which explores a woman’s place in society, drawing parallels between social and scientific progress.

Colorado Springs Youth Symphony Association Presenting the final concert of their 40th Anniversary Season, celebrating musical heroes in a side-by-side performance with members of the Colorado Springs Philharmonic.

Cultural Office of the Pikes Peak Region Supporting Becoming Heroes through promotional assistance and a dedicated festival page on PeakRadar.com, the cultural calendar of the Pikes Peak Region.


Downtown Partnership Offering a special walking tour that spotlights Colorado Springs luminaries and landmarks that stand against violence and injustice.

Fine Arts Center’s Bemis School of Art Joining Music & Mind through interactive workshops to explore feminine/masculine warrior archetypes, your personal hero archetype, and how they can use music to shape your state of mind, health, and relationships.

The Independence Center

FESTIVAL EVENTS Leningrad

March 28 - 29

Gathering over coffee to hear from veterans and their caregivers about what heroism means to them. Share your stories as well. Everyone welcome.

Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center Sharing stories of veterans, military personnel, and their families through art. Art Therapy offered at Mt. Carmel allows these heroes to process their struggles in ways that don’t need “words.” Artwork on exhibition at 1350 Distilling throughout the festival.

Ormao Dance Company

Marvel vs DC April 3 - 4

Revealing humanity and heroism through the inescapable power of movement. Join Ormao Dance Company for an evening of original choreography by nationallyrecognized choreographers.

Pikes Peak Library District Celebrating heroism throughout the month of April with Six Word Stories. Share your personal story, and discover the heroism in those around you.

Poetry 719 Three evenings that offer a chance to listen, learn, and connect with powerful voices and heroism in our community. Join us for a workshop, open mic by local performers, and thrilling featured poets.

The Shivers Fund at Pikes Peak Library District Joining the Colorado Springs Children’s Chorale to present composer Dr. Karen Walwyn and the regional premiere of her work Of Dance and Struggle, a musical tribute to the life and legacy of Nelson Mandela.

Theatreworks Examining heroism through time with two inventive epics: An Iliad is a modern take on Homer’s timeless tale; Passion Play sees three communities in three periods stage the Passion of the Christ.

Voices of Light: Passion of Joan of Arc April 25 - 26

Aretha: Queen of Soul May 8 - 9

War Requiem May 16 - 17

UCCS Galleries of Contemporary Art Exploring how heroic ideals and personal stories are communicated across time through material objects in Seat of Learning, an immersive art installation.

4th Infantry Division and Fort Carson Partnering for the Becoming Heroes festival to join the community in celebrating heroes past, present, and future.

Tickets at csphilharmonic.org


MARCH 23 - 29

WEEK ONE Classical Music with Keith Simon Classical KCME March 23 | 6:00 p.m. 88.7 FM

An Iliad

Leningrad

Colorado Springs Philharmonic March 28 | 7:30 p.m. March 29 | 2:30 p.m. Pikes Peak Center for the Performing Arts Tickets at csphilharmonic.org

Theatreworks March 26–29 | Various Times UCCS Cyber Security Building, 3650 N. Nevada Ave. Tickets at uccspresents.org

Contemporary take on Homer’s tale with one actor, one musician.

EXTENDED EVENTS Seat of Learning UCCS Galleries of Contemporary Art February 27 – July 18 | Tue–Sat 4:00–8:00 p.m., Sun 1:00–5:00 p.m. GOCA Ent Center Register for events at uccspresents.org

Investigating how heroic stories and ideas are communicated across time through material objects, this immersive art installation utilizes layered architectural space to alter and challenge perceptions. Stories come from a diverse range of individuals and objects from across the western U.S. and the Pikes Peak region.

Josep Caballé-Domenech conductor Michael Hanson violin Hartmann Concerto Funebre Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, “Leningrad” Opening the Festival is Shostakovich’s overwhelming seventh symphony, “Leningrad”. Written quite literally in the face of adversity, Shostakovich conceived and wrote the symphony just as Leningrad fell under siege in 1941. For its premiere, a public appeal was made for all musicians in Leningrad to partake, as all but 15 members of the Leningrad Radio Orchestra had left to serve in the army or succumbed to starvation. The evening prior, a bombardment of all German artillery positions was ordered so as to maintain silence during the performance, which was broadcast over loudspeakers to the entire city and across enemy lines. This incredible work stands as a monument to the tenacity and heroism of the common people.

Live Broadcast: Leningrad Military Artistic Healing – Heroes’ Art on Exhibit Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center March 28 – May 17 1350 Distilling, 520 E. Pikes Peak Ave

Artwork exhibition by veterans, military personnel, and their families, produced through Mt. Carmel’s Art Therapy program. Art Therapy offers an effective means for many who struggle to narrate their stories and traumas.

Classical KCME March 29 | 2:30 p.m. 88.7 FM


Listen Up – Shostakovich was a master of double-entendre. The “invasion theme”

of the first movement seemed to Soviet officials as representing the Nazi’s approach to Leningrad. . . but could also represent the creep of the authoritarian Soviet regime upon its people.


Marvel vs DC

Colorado Springs Philharmonic April 3–4 | 7:30 p.m. Pikes Peak Center for the Performing Arts Tickets at csphilharmonic.org

Thomas Wilson conductor It’s a bird! It’s a plane! Your friendly neighborhood Philharmonic has some fun with heroes of the imagination – leaping tall buildings, saving the world, and the immortal struggle of one comics powerhouse against another.

Listen Up – John Williams’ iconic score for 1978’s Superman was largely modeled on the

works of 19th Century Romantic composers like Wagner, Strauss, and Brahms, establishing those composers’ voices as “heroic” in the cultural zeitgeist. Their sound has influenced virtually every superhero film score since.


Classical Music with Keith Simon Classical KCME March 30 | 6:00 p.m. 88.7 FM

MARCH 30 - APRIL 5

WEEK TWO

Listen to Womxn of Color Poetry 719 March 31 | 6:30 p.m. The Gold Room, 18 S. Nevada Ave.

Tickets at goldroomlive.com/tickets Honoring heroes in our community, learn, listen, and connect with womxn of color.

BLPA Heroes Concert Banning Lewis Preparatory Academy April 2 | 6:00 p.m. Falcon High School, 10255 Lambert Road

$1 admission at the door Exploring heroism through music and recognizing nominated local heroes.

TUNED–IN: The Soundtrack of Your Life Fine Arts Center’s Bemis School of Art April 4–5 | 8:30 a.m.

Register at fac.coloradocollege.edu/art-school Explore your own hero’s journey and how music gives that journey voice.

PUBLIQuartet: Freedom and Faith The Artist Series April 2 | 7:00 p.m. Chapman Foundations Recital Hall Tickets at uccspresents.org

Known for its improvisational and genre-blurring approach to classical music, PUBLIQuartet expands the techniques and aesthetics of the traditional string quartet. Freedom and Faith celebrates composers and their personal relationship to faith. Forged from renewed conviction and hope in the face of oppression, their fresh approach to chamber music captures the essence of resilience.

EXTENDED EVENTS Military Artistic Healing – Heroes’ Art on Exhibit Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center See week one for details

Seat of Learning

UCCS Galleries of Contemporary Art See week one for details

Silent Sky

Fine Arts Center Theatre Company See week three for details

Six Word Stories Pikes Peak Library District April 1–30 Various Pikes Peak Library Locations More information at ppld.org

Based on the writing prompt first taken up by Ernest Hemmingway, who famously responded: “For Sale: Baby shoes, never worn.” Visit your local library in the month of April to share your story and read others’ stories in six words.


APRIL 6 -19

WEEK THREE & FOUR Silent Sky Fine Arts Center Theatre Company April 2–19 | Various dates and times Fine Arts Center Mainstage Tickets at fac.coloradocollege.edu/theatre-events/silent-sky When Henrietta Leavitt begins work at the Harvard Observatory in the early 1900s, she isn’t allowed to touch a telescope or express an original idea. Instead, she joins a group of women “computers,” charting the stars for a renowned astronomer who calculates projects in “girl hours” and has no time for the women’s probing theories. As Henrietta, in her free time, attempts to measure the light and distance of stars, she must also take measure of her life on Earth, trying to balance her dedication to science with family obligations and the possibility of love. The true story of 19th-century astronomer Henrietta Leavitt explores a woman’s place in society during a time of immense scientific discoveries, when women’s ideas were dismissed until men claimed credit for them. Social progress, like scientific progress, can be hard to see when one is trapped among earthly complications. Henrietta Leavitt and her female peers believe in both, and their dedication changed the way we understand both the heavens and Earth.

Look Deeper – Henrietta Leavitt, the subject of Silent Sky, established

“Leavitt’s Law” which granted scientists the capability to accurately measure the distance to stars and other galaxies, paving the way for our modern understanding of the scale and structure of the universe.

Silent Sky: Talkback Fine Arts Center Theatre Company April 19 | 4:00 p.m. Fine Arts Center Mainstage

Discuss themes and context of Silent Sky with actors and producers of the show.


Colorado Black Voices Matter Open Mic Poetry 719 April 9 | 6:30 p.m. The Gold Room, 18 S. Nevada Ave. Tickets at goldroomlive.com/tickets

Mark your calendars for the award-winning Colorado Black Voices Matter Open Mic. Come and experience the powerful voices and heroism of the black community. Join us for a workshop, open mic of black performers, and a thrilling featured poet. Listen, learn, and engage.

Culture Zone: Conversation on The Passion of Joan of Arc Classical KCME April 12 | 5:00 p.m. 88.7 FM

Film critics and scholars discuss the classic silent film and Einhorn score.

Hometown Heroes Walking Tour Downtown Partnership of Colorado Springs April 18 | 10:00 a.m. Wild Goose Meeting House Register at downtowncs.com/event/tours Spotlights local luminaries and landmarks that stand against violence and injustice.

EXTENDED EVENTS Military Artistic Healing – Heroes’ Art on Exhibit Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center See week one for details

Seat of Learning

UCCS Galleries of Contemporary Art See week one for details

Six Word Stories

Pikes Peak Library District See week two for details



APRIL 20 - 26

WEEK FIVE Voices of Light: The Passion of Joan of Arc Live Cinema Experience

Colorado Springs Philharmonic April. 25 | 7:30 p.m. April. 26 | 2:30 p.m. Ent Center for the Arts Tickets at csphilharmonic.org

Josep Caballé-Domenech conductor Colorado Vocal Arts Ensemble Deborah Jenkins Teske director Richard Einhorn Voices of Light Recounting the last chapter of an heroic life martyred for God and France, Carl Theodor Dreyer’s 1928 classic is one of the most celebrated of all silent films. Screened in its entirety, with a musical score by Richard Einhorn.

“O feminine form, O sister of wisdom!

How glorious you are, for in you has arisen the mightiest life that death will never stifle.”

– St. Hildegard of Bingen

Listen Up – Nearly all of the lyrics in Einhorn’s score are drawn from Medieval women mystics, chosen for their beauty as literature and also for their relevance to themes in Joan’s life.

EXTENDED EVENTS Classical Music with Keith Simon Classical KCME April 20 | 6:00 p.m. 88.7 FM

Military Artistic Healing – Heroes’ Art on Exhibit

Seat of Learning

Passion Play

Six Word Stories

Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center See week one for details

Theatreworks See week three for details

UCCS Galleries of Contemporary Art See week one for details

Pikes Peak Library District See week two for details


Passion Play Theatreworks April 23–May 10 | Various dates and times Dusty Loo Bon Vivant Theater Tickets at uccspresents.org This inventive epic takes us behind the scenes of three communities in three periods – Elizabethan England, Germany during the rise of Hitler, and Vietnam-era South Dakota – all staging the Passion of the Christ. This ambitious play asks how individuals find themselves in a community that allows them to play just a single role.

Look Deeper – The central roles in the Passion play of each period are depicted by the same actors, setting up historical, political, and philosophical parallels throughout.

EXTENDED EVENTS Military Artistic Healing – Heroes’ Art on Exhibit Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center See week one for details

Seat of Learning

UCCS Galleries of Contemporary Art See week one for details

Six Word Stories

Pikes Peak Library District See week two for details


APRIL 27 - MAY 3

Ying Quartet with Susan Grace

WEEK SIX

Colorado College Summer Music Festival May 1 | 7:30 p.m. Packard Hall, 5 W. Cache la Poudre St. Tickets at coloradocollege.edu/musicfestival The CC Summer Music Festival presents an Intermezzo Concert featuring the Ying Quartet, with Susan Grace, piano. The program includes Mendelssohn’s Quartet in A minor (in which the teenage composer emulates his musical hero, Beethoven) and the Colorado premiere of Kevin Puts’ Dark Vigil, a reflection on the Columbine school shootings and the humanity that heroically rises above tragedy and despair.

Women’s Feminine/Masculine Hero, Fine-Tuned

Film Screening: The Longest Day

Fine Arts Center’s Bemis School of Art May 2 | 8:30 a.m. Lloyd E. Worner Campus Center, 902 N. Cascade Ave.

Colorado Springs Chorale May 3 | 3:00 p.m. First Christian Church, 16 E. Platte Ave.

Nerd Open Mic

Colorado Springs Youth Symphony Spring Concert

Register at fac.coloradocollege.edu/art-school Explore feminine and masculine warrior archetypes and how to leverage them in your everyday life.

Poetry 719 May 2 | 4:00 p.m. Kapow Comics & Coffee, 4239 N. Nevada Ave.

Free admission Poetry meets fantasy, sci-fi, and superheroes. Cosplay encouraged.

Above and Beyond: Stories of Heroism The Independence Center May 3 | 11:00 a.m. Veteran Coffee Roasters, 2110 Busch Ave.

Free admission Veterans and their caregivers relate personal stories of heroism.

Free admission Celebrating the heroes of D-Day ahead of the Chorale’s performance in Normandy.

Colorado Springs Youth Symphony Association May 3 | 3:00 p.m. & 6:30 p.m. Ent Center for the Arts Tickets available at the Ent Center box office

Culture Zone: Capathia Jenkins Interview Classical KCME May 3 | 5:00 p.m. 88.7 FM


MAY 4 - 10

WEEK SEVEN

Aretha Queen of Soul

ARETHA: QUEEN OF SOUL Colorado Springs Philharmonic May 8–9 | 7:30 p.m. Pikes Peak Center for the Performing Arts Tickets at csphilharmonic.org

Josep Caballé-Domenech conductor Capathia Jenkins, Ryan Shaw vocals From gospel roots to R&B sensation, Aretha Franklin reigned supreme as the Queen of Soul and raised her voice for civil rights. Hear her incomparable hits including Respect, Think, A Natural Woman, and Chain of Fools.

Listen Up – “Respect” became Aretha’s signature song because, in her words, “It [reflected] the need of a nation, the need of the average man and woman in the street. . . everyone wanted respect,” and it became an anthem of the civil rights and women’s movements.

Aretha Franklin Retrospective Jazz 93.5 May 4–8 | Various times 93.5 FM Jazz 93.5 FM celebrates the life and legacy of the Queen of Soul with a week-long on-air retrospective on Aretha Franklin’s heroic career, a listening party, and an interview with Capathia Jenkins. Jazz 93.5 is also proud to announce a new “Heroic Influences” segment in which local artists and musicians discuss their musical heroes and their impact on the world.


Culture Zone: Capathia Jenkins Interview Classical KCME May 4 | 5:00 p.m. 88.7 FM

Soldiers in Petticoats Pikes Peak Library District May 9 | 2:00 p.m. East Library, 5550 N. Union Blvd.

Free admission Discover the contributions of women soldiers throughout history.

X-VOX: Generations Joined in Song Colorado Springs Children’s Chorale May 9 | 7:00 p.m. Ent Center for the Arts

Tickets at tickets.uccspresents.org/2234 Celebrating heroism, humanism, and Nelson Mandela.

Emanuel Ax Plays Beethoven The Artist Series May 10 | 2:30 p.m Shockley-Zalabak Theater

Tickets at uccspresents.org/events One musical icon honors another in this celebration of Beethoven’s 250th Anniversary. Known for his “uncanny dramatic timing and melting sound,” international piano sensation Emanuel Ax performs some of Beethoven’s most beloved piano works.

EXTENDED EVENTS Military Artistic Healing – Heroes’ Art on Exhibit Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center See week one for details

Passion Play

Theatreworks See week three for details

Seat of Learning

UCCS Galleries of Contemporary Art See week one for details

Six Word Stories

Pikes Peak Library District See week two for details


MAY 11 -17

WEEK EIGHT WAR REQUIEM Colorado Springs Philharmonic May 16 | 7:30 p.m. May 17 | 2:30 p.m. Pikes Peak Center for the Performing Arts Tickets at csphilharmonic.org

Josep Caballé-Domenech conductor Colorado Springs Chorale Colorado Vocal Arts Ensemble Colorado Springs Children’s Chorale Christine Brewer soprano Colin Balzer tenor Tyler Duncan baritone Benjamin Britten’s masterpiece was written and premiered in 1962 to reconsecrate Coventry Cathedral, which was destroyed by bombs in the Battle of Britain in 1940. Based on texts by the First World War soldier-poet Wilfred Owen, War Requiem is an extraordinary re-imagining of the Latin Requiem Mass. Impressive in its scope and intent, this monumental and poignant work is an unparalleled tour-de-force.

“What passing bells for these who die as cattle?”

- Wilfred Owen

Listen Up – The bells toll and the choir sings a dissonant and ambiguoussounding tritone that creates a sense of unrest. Britten never resolves this tension, reinforcing his dedication on the title page:

“My subject is War, and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity. . . All a poet can do today is warn.”


Classical Music with Keith Simon Classical KCME May 11 | 6:00 p.m. 88.7 FM

Out of the Crowd Ormao Dance Company May 15 | 7:30 p.m. Shockley-Zalabak Theater

Tickets at ormaodance.org Connecting heroism and humanity through movement.

Live Broadcast: War Requiem Classical KCME May 17 | 2:30 p.m. 88.7 FM

EXTENDED EVENTS Military Artistic Healing – Heroes’ Art on Exhibit Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center See week one for details

Seat of Learning

UCCS Galleries of Contemporary Art See week one for details


Nonprofit Organization US Postage PAID Colo. Spgs, CO Permit No. 434

PO Box 1266 Colorado Springs, CO 80901-1266 (719) 575-9632 csphilharmonic.org

PRESENTING SPONSORS Title sponsor

Presenting sponsors

Production sponsors

Podium sponsors

a loo family foundation

The Joseph Henry Edmondson Foundation Richard and Sandra Hilt Rea Charitable Trust Lt. Col. (Ret) Eugene S. Harsh in loving memory of his wife Lois E. Harsh Ed and Mary Osborne

Eileen Nobles and Robert Odien H. Chase Stone Trust

Venture sponsors Jean Bodman Colorado College and the Fine Arts Center at Colorado College Arlen Feldman and Adriana Wood Mr. and Mrs. William Hybl Dr. Susan Rae Jensen and Mr. Tom Adams Trainer Christina McGarry

Venture partners Dr. and Mrs. James B. Miller Lance and Brenda Miller Ken Montera and Theresa Stahuva Jim and Carol Montgomery Mr. John Street and Ms. Mary Beazley Sally Sharpe and John R. King III Doris Tavernier-McLeod Anonymous (1)

Kristen Christy and Sean Lange Glenn and Elizabeth Conklin Marty Kelley Marion and John Meyer Michael and Patricia Olsen Fran Pilch Mary T. and Victor L. Thacker

Dr. Robert Tinker and Ms. Mary Tinker-Bartz Drs. Michael and Nga Turner

This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. To find out more about how National Endowment for the Arts grants impact individuals and communities, visit www.arts.gov.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.