Lawrence Arts Center 50th Celebration

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The Lawrence Arts Center turns 50

Ask Ann Evans, one of the founders of the Lawrence Arts Center, as well as its director for over thirty years, how it is the Arts Center has not only managed to survive, but thrive, and she comes back to one word again and again: community.

Evans credits everyone from city leaders and local businesses to individuals giving their time, labor, and money to ensure Lawrence fostered the arts, and she is keenly aware how monumental an anniversary this is. “There are large cities that don’t have an arts center like ours. It’s shocking that it’s really happening.”

Evans harkened back to the year 1974, when she and her husband had recently moved back to Lawrence after working on the East Coast. The City of Lawrence decided the best thing to do with the run-down Carnegie building at 9th and New Hampshire Streets was to let groups make proposals for a community center and take over care of the building. After the Lawrence Public Library moved out of the Carnegie, the historic building sat empty for years, having been vandalized, set on fire, and put up for sale with no success. The Lawrence Arts Commission won its proposal for an Arts Center, and hired Evans, who had worked in an arts center in Albany, N.Y., to run it.

“I laugh and I tell people there’s no way any public event could’ve happened in that building now, it was in such bad shape,” Evan says. The first time she set foot in the building, she was “shocked” by the condition.

Evans says only the front two rooms of

the Carnegie Building were usable when they moved in, while other rooms had holes in the floors and walls and needed extensive renovation. Water had to be bailed out of the basement. Instead of despairing, Evans, and a small group of dedicated individuals rolled up their sleeves and got to work. Renovations took thousands of hours and dollars.

Longtime Arts Center theater director Ric Averill was there from the beginning. “As soon as Ann Evans was starting to make plans for what to do with the new Lawrence Arts Center, she reached out to us immediately and said, ‘Why don’t you come and be the resident children’s theatre?’”

Evans sought out Averill’s theater expertise after City Parks and Rec director Fred DeVictor asked Evans if the new arts center would take over summer children’s theater. That’s how The Seem-ToBe Players came about.

“Summer youth theater just took off,” recalls Evans. “That’s been an important program for the Lawrence Arts Center.”

In fact, the Seem-To-Be Players traveled all over the state and the country putting on youth theater for kids during the school year, and teaching theater to kids during the summers. They put on shows every weekend and changed shows every month.

In those early days, everyone using the Arts Center had to be willing to share the limited amount of space. Averill chuckles about having to settle for a brown box theater, as opposed to a black box theater, because Evans insisted the theater space also be suitable for public events.

Soon after youth theater was up and running, the Arts Center added a few classes for preschoolers. They were so popular, eventually Linda Reimond, who had experience in early childhood education, was brought on board to start an arts-based preschool.

“It was kind of crazy,” Reimond recalls. The preschool was in the basement of Arts Center, with adult-sized tables and folding chairs, where adult classes took place at night. Reimond bought many of the arts supplies herself. “Every day we had to put everything away—move it out of the way for the after-school classes and the evening classes—and every morning we had to bring it all out again. We built it up and built it up, but the beginning was really bare bones.”

Despite the challenges, Reimond says the Arts Center board and directors have always been strong advocates for the preschool. “We had a lot of support. Otherwise, we couldn’t have done it.”

When the Arts Center moved into its new building in 2002, Reimond asked for three things—a kid-level bathroom in every classroom, a sink low enough the children could wash their hands without standing on a stepstool, and an outdoor space for fresh air.

Not only did she get her wishes, the Arts Center preschool program became so successful they were able to expand to offering kindergarten classes several years ago.

Reimond directed the preschool program at the Arts Center for 35 years before retiring in 2021. But she couldn’t stay away, and now works in the pre -

school one day per week. “I missed the children.”

Over the years, of course, the Arts Center has held countless arts exhibitions, hosted many artists in residence, added vital programs such as dance, and created iconic shows such as The Nutcracker: A Kansas Ballet

Since 2018, Margaret Morris has been the CEO of the Lawrence Arts Center.

“I’ve been connected to the Arts Center in some form since I moved here from New York twenty some years ago,” says Morris, who was first hired as the Arts Center education director in 2002. Her background is in painting and art therapy, and much like Evans, she credits the entire Lawrence community with the Art Center’s success.

Morris sees the Arts Center going strong for another fifty years.

“The community created this place,” she says. “What a beautiful thing to have happen.”

These individuals are credited with starting the

Arts

City

Commission members Marilyn Brown, Jed Davis, Paul Gray, Janis Hutchinson, George Ryan, Jeannot Barnes Seymour, Helen Shumway, Jeanne Stump, and Alton Thomas. Manager Buford W. Watson, Jr., and City Commissioners Jack Rose (Mayor), Barkley Clark, John Emick, Nancy S. Hambleton, and Fred Pence.
Lawrence Journal-World Advertising Supplement CELEBRATING CREATION AND COMMUNITY Cheers to 50 years of providing the joy of the arts to Lawrence and Douglas County dccfoundation.org
Lawrence Arts Center:
Ann Evans, right, steps down from her position as executive director Driven by high demand, the Arts Center expanded to 10th and Mass. Studios, an annex space for dance, theatre classes, small audience productions, movie screenings and community events. Lawrence Arts Center - cheers to 50 years of celebrating art and community! Tom & Marilyn Dobski & McDonald’s congratulate the Lawrence Arts Center on it’s 50th Golden Anniversary! Kansas McDonald’s TIMELINE Born from a partnership between the Lawrence Arts Commission and the City of Lawrence, LAC was established. 1975 Working in partnership with the City, the Lawrence Arts Center launched in the historic Carnegie Library Building and quickly held its first arts center exhibit. 1978 After remodeling the facility, the Lawrence Arts Center’s 1978 curriculum included 41 classes, up from just 9 classes when the center first opened. 1979 Lawrence Arts Center presents the Seem-To-Be-Players, a theatre group for young people. 1980 The Lawrence Arts Center was awarded a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, helping grant access to workshops and classes for those in need of financial assistance. 1983 The Seem-To-Be-Players become a professional acting group. 1985 10th anniversary of Lawrence Arts Center. Dance Program is founded by Candi Baker. First printmaking artist-in-residence, Taryn McMahon, is hired. Lawrence Arts Center purchased the Salvation Army building at 946 New Hampshire to preserve green space for the Preschool and Kindergarten, and expand its campus footprint. Lawrence Ballet Theatre (LBT) is founded by Cynthia Crews with the mission of providing extensive training and performance opportunities for dance students while expanding connections to the dance community. Inaugural Free State Festival Hang12, a teen curatorial collective, is founded under the Youth Visual Arts program. Summer Youth Theatre’s internship program is introduced to give high school and college students hands-on, professional experience. South Park Stage is built for outdoor performances as a partnership between Lawrence Parks & Recreation and the Lawrence Arts Center. 1987 The inaugural Cultural Arts Fair for parents, teachers, and youth leaders was held on Oct. 13, and Ann Evans, arts director at the time, received the Lawrence Cultural Enhancement award for “major contributions to city enhancement and cultural exchange.” 1991 Lawrence Arts Center receives the Kansas Governor’s Arts Award. 1994 The Lawrence Arts Center celebrates its 20th anniversary and 15th annual auction. 1995 Plans for an expansion of the Arts Center begin. 1997 The inaugural Langston Hughes Creative Writing Awards, sponsored by the Lawrence Arts Center and Raven Bookstore. 1998 Candi Baker is awarded the City of Lawrence’s Phoenix Award in Performing Arts. 2000 The people of Lawrence raised $3.5 million to build a state-of-the-art facility. The City agreed to match this private investment, and through this partnership, a $7 million thriving public facility and city asset was born. 2002 The Lawrence Arts Center opens the doors to its new building at 940 New Hampshire St. The new facility has room to expand existing programs. First performance of Little “Nutcracker” on the Prairie, a version of the Nutcracker set in Lawrence during the “Bleeding Kansas” period. This has transformed into what is now The Nutcracker, A Kansas Ballet, a Lawrence Arts Center holiday tradition. 2004 Linda Reimond, Lawrence Arts Center arts-based preschool instructor, is awarded the Mayor’s Award for teachers in the Lawrence school district. The Lawrence Arts Center’s 25th annual auction was deemed the most successful to-date. The auction raised more $76,565 with 667 people in attendance. Souper Bowl event aims to score funds for an art studio at the Lawrence Arts Center. First ceramics artist-in-residence, Stacy Barnes, is hired. 1989 First “Lawrence Indian Arts Show”: a unique opportunity to view an exhibition entirely by Native artists. Thirty-one North American Native American tribes from 17 states were represented. The Lawrence Arts Center features a women artists exhibition. The seven local women artists formed a club to support each other’s careers, and their work was featured at the LAC. 1986 1974 2005 2007 2022 2010 2011 2015 2016 2021 2006 2023 2024 YOU’RE INVITED: Celebrate 50 Years of Art for Everyone! FRIDAY, MAY 24 • Final Friday, 5-9 pm Check out JT Daniel’s new mural at 10th & Mass Studios, then head to the Arts Center for a cash bar with champagne and birthday treats Art for All, 5-9 pm Free artmaking for all ages Hang12 + Art Tougeau Block Party, 5-10 pm Check out the art cars, shop Hang 12’s Alley Art Market... plus so much more! Averill Awards + 50th Birthday Toast, 6:30-10 pm Kickoff the 2024 SYT season by honoring former SYT student, Kari Paludan-Sorey and celebrating 50 years of the Arts Center Get ready for a weekend filled with excitement and festivities. Everyone’s invited to join in the fun. The weekend starts with the second annual Averill Awards at 6:30 pm on Friday, May 24, where we’ll honor Kari Paludan-Sorey with a Lifetime Achievement Award. Raise a glass with us as we share a champagne toast to mark the Arts Center’s 50th birthday. Plus, don’t miss out on spectacular performances that will kick off the 2024 Summer Youth Theatre season. Best of all? This event is free and open to the public. Don’t miss this golden opportunity to be part of a milestone celebration all weekend long! SATURDAY, MAY 25 Art for All, 11 am -2 pm Free artmaking for all ages Steamroll Printing 10 am-3 pm Watch a full-size steamroller print a collaborative piece of art Art Tougeau Parade, 10:30 am See all the art cars in front of the Arts Center before they parade down Mass Street at noon Sunflower Summer Download the app for free admission to attractions across Kansas and check in at the Arts Center to support our free programming SEE YOU AT THE LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER! Lawrence Arts Center celebrates 50 years of art for everyone! Summer Youth Theatre faculty in front of the Carnegie Building. Happy Anniversary to the Lawrence Arts Center - cheers to 50 years of celebrating art and community! Innovation. Imagination. Collaboration.
Ann Evans, right, steps down from her position as executive director Driven by high demand, the Arts Center expanded to 10th and Mass. Studios, an annex space for dance, theatre classes, small audience productions, movie screenings and community events. Lawrence Arts Center - cheers to 50 years of celebrating art and community! Tom & Marilyn Dobski & McDonald’s congratulate the Lawrence Arts Center on it’s 50th Golden Anniversary! Kansas McDonald’s TIMELINE Born from a partnership between the Lawrence Arts Commission and the City of Lawrence, LAC was established. 1975 Working in partnership with the City, the Lawrence Arts Center launched in the historic Carnegie Library Building and quickly held its first arts center exhibit. 1978 After remodeling the facility, the Lawrence Arts Center’s 1978 curriculum included 41 classes, up from just 9 classes when the center first opened. 1979 Lawrence Arts Center presents the Seem-To-Be-Players, a theatre group for young people. 1980 The Lawrence Arts Center was awarded a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, helping grant access to workshops and classes for those in need of financial assistance. 1983 The Seem-To-Be-Players become a professional acting group. 1985 10th anniversary of Lawrence Arts Center. Dance Program is founded by Candi Baker. First printmaking artist-in-residence, Taryn McMahon, is hired. Lawrence Arts Center purchased the Salvation Army building at 946 New Hampshire to preserve green space for the Preschool and Kindergarten, and expand its campus footprint. Lawrence Ballet Theatre (LBT) is founded by Cynthia Crews with the mission of providing extensive training and performance opportunities for dance students while expanding connections to the dance community. Inaugural Free State Festival Hang12, a teen curatorial collective, is founded under the Youth Visual Arts program. Summer Youth Theatre’s internship program is introduced to give high school and college students hands-on, professional experience. South Park Stage is built for outdoor performances as a partnership between Lawrence Parks & Recreation and the Lawrence Arts Center. 1987 The inaugural Cultural Arts Fair for parents, teachers, and youth leaders was held on Oct. 13, and Ann Evans, arts director at the time, received the Lawrence Cultural Enhancement award for “major contributions to city enhancement and cultural exchange.” 1991 Lawrence Arts Center receives the Kansas Governor’s Arts Award. 1994 The Lawrence Arts Center celebrates its 20th anniversary and 15th annual auction. 1995 Plans for an expansion of the Arts Center begin. 1997 The inaugural Langston Hughes Creative Writing Awards, sponsored by the Lawrence Arts Center and Raven Bookstore. 1998 Candi Baker is awarded the City of Lawrence’s Phoenix Award in Performing Arts. 2000 The people of Lawrence raised $3.5 million to build a state-of-the-art facility. The City agreed to match this private investment, and through this partnership, a $7 million thriving public facility and city asset was born. 2002 The Lawrence Arts Center opens the doors to its new building at 940 New Hampshire St. The new facility has room to expand existing programs. First performance of Little “Nutcracker” on the Prairie, a version of the Nutcracker set in Lawrence during the “Bleeding Kansas” period. This has transformed into what is now The Nutcracker, A Kansas Ballet, a Lawrence Arts Center holiday tradition. 2004 Linda Reimond, Lawrence Arts Center arts-based preschool instructor, is awarded the Mayor’s Award for teachers in the Lawrence school district. The Lawrence Arts Center’s 25th annual auction was deemed the most successful to-date. The auction raised more $76,565 with 667 people in attendance. Souper Bowl event aims to score funds for an art studio at the Lawrence Arts Center. First ceramics artist-in-residence, Stacy Barnes, is hired. 1989 First “Lawrence Indian Arts Show”: a unique opportunity to view an exhibition entirely by Native artists. Thirty-one North American Native American tribes from 17 states were represented. The Lawrence Arts Center features a women artists exhibition. The seven local women artists formed a club to support each other’s careers, and their work was featured at the LAC. 1986 1974 2005 2007 2022 2010 2011 2015 2016 2021 2006 2023 2024 YOU’RE INVITED: Celebrate 50 Years of Art for Everyone! FRIDAY, MAY 24 • Final Friday, 5-9 pm Check out JT Daniel’s new mural at 10th & Mass Studios, then head to the Arts Center for a cash bar with champagne and birthday treats Art for All, 5-9 pm Free artmaking for all ages Hang12 + Art Tougeau Block Party, 5-10 pm Check out the art cars, shop Hang 12’s Alley Art Market... plus so much more! Averill Awards + 50th Birthday Toast, 6:30-10 pm Kickoff the 2024 SYT season by honoring former SYT student, Kari Paludan-Sorey and celebrating 50 years of the Arts Center Get ready for a weekend filled with excitement and festivities. Everyone’s invited to join in the fun. The weekend starts with the second annual Averill Awards at 6:30 pm on Friday, May 24, where we’ll honor Kari Paludan-Sorey with a Lifetime Achievement Award. Raise a glass with us as we share a champagne toast to mark the Arts Center’s 50th birthday. Plus, don’t miss out on spectacular performances that will kick off the 2024 Summer Youth Theatre season. Best of all? This event is free and open to the public. Don’t miss this golden opportunity to be part of a milestone celebration all weekend long! SATURDAY, MAY 25 Art for All, 11 am -2 pm Free artmaking for all ages Steamroll Printing 10 am-3 pm Watch a full-size steamroller print a collaborative piece of art Art Tougeau Parade, 10:30 am See all the art cars in front of the Arts Center before they parade down Mass Street at noon Sunflower Summer Download the app for free admission to attractions across Kansas and check in at the Arts Center to support our free programming SEE YOU AT THE LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER! Lawrence Arts Center celebrates 50 years of art for everyone! Summer Youth Theatre faculty in front of the Carnegie Building. Happy Anniversary to the Lawrence Arts Center - cheers to 50 years of celebrating art and community! Innovation. Imagination. Collaboration.

THANK YOU FOR 50 YEARS

In honor of our 50th Anniversary, we want to thank everyone who makes Lawrence Arts Center so incredibly special: our donors, members, sponsors, grantors, audiences, students, teachers, board members, artists, performers, staff, interns, colleagues, volunteers, neighbors and community partners. We recognize that it is because of the support of our community that we have reached this important milestone.

Lawrence Arts Center is the largest employer of artists in the state of Kansas. This allows us to be a nexus for creativity and a magnificent destination for making art, sharing art, and showcasing art. We have students of all ages and are proud of all the disciplines available to the community: painting, dance, photography, metalsmithing, ceramics, sewing, drawing, writing, printmaking, acting, and jewelry making. Our unique combination of galleries, studios, and performance spaces in concert with our focus on education sets us apart from other arts centers across the nation.

We believe art is for everyone. When you make a gift to the Arts Center, you are providing financial aid to those who need it, underwriting the cost of world-class exhibitions and ensuring high-quality community art experiences thrive in Lawrence. Your support would enable more families to experience the joy of art.

Over the course of 50 years, the Lawrence Arts Center has shaped generations of artists through our Early Childhood Arts Programming, Summer Youth Theatre, School of Dance and Youth Visual Arts classes. We have grown from a handful of art classes and galleries at the Carnegie Library Building to an extraordinary hub of creativity unlike anywhere else.

Please make your gift in celebration of our 50th birthday and fuel the joy of creating in Lawrence. Your investment will guarantee that the Arts Center continues to thrive and nurture our next generation of artists. Gifts can be made online at lawrenceartscenter.org, over the phone at 785-843-2787 or in the mail at 940 New Hampshire St., Lawrence, KS 66044. With sincere gratitude,

Summer Fun for Kansas Families: 200+ Attractions Offer Free Admission

Lawrence Arts Center is proud to announce its participation in the 2024 Kansas Tourism Sunflower Summer program.

The Sunflower Summer Program benefits Kansas families with school-aged children. It encourages them to explore and fall in love with Kansas. The program gives affordable access to tourism attractions across the state and supports the Kansas tourism economy.

“We are thrilled to be a venue for the 2024 Kansas Sunflower Summer program,” said Lawrence Arts Center CEO, Margaret Weisbrod Morris. “This opportunity allows us to welcome Kansas families to explore the Arts Center’s summer lineup of contemporary art exhibitions here in the heart of Downtown Lawrence.”

Kansas Tourism, a division of the Kansas Department of Commerce, aims to inspire travel to and throughout Kansas to maximize the positive impacts that tourism has on our state and local communities.

“Kansas Tourism is excited to have Lawrence Arts Center as a part of the Sunflower Summer program,” said Kansas Tourism Director, Bridgette Jobe. “This program is an amazing benefit for the residents of Kansas, and we are looking forward to growing the program in the 2024 season. Lawrence Arts Center is an important part of making this the best season yet for the program.”

Eligible Kansas families can download the Sunflower Summer app to claim tickets to participating venues and discover more about the program at SunflowerSummer.org. The 2024 season will run from May 24 to Aug. 11.

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cekinsurance.com Coverage for everything you care about. CONGRATULATIONS FOR 50 YEARS OF ART FOR EVERYONE

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