ANNUAL REPORT 2013 / 2014
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ANNUAL REPORT 2013 / 2014
TABLE OF CONTENTS Exhibitions 5 Mel Chin: Recap 10 Joseph Herscher: The Dresser 16 Currencies: Real and Imagined 20 The Convergence of the Twain: New Works by Linda Luise Brown and Jason Watson 21 A Way From Home 22 Quynh Vantu: Thresholds 26 Aurora Robson: Stayin’ Alive
artists-in-residence 34 Joseph Herscher 36 Sheila Klein 38 Dread Scott 40 Samantha Hill 42 Jason Mcdonald 44 Quynh Vantu 46 crystal am nelson
48 Ivan Toth Depeña 50 Aurora Robson 52 Elizabeth Lasure 54 Alix Lambert 56 Betsy Birkner 58 Austin Ballard 60 Rosalia Torres-Weiner
62 Jon Prichard 64 Stacey Davidson 66 Ruganzu Bruno
Year in review 68 Affinity Groups 69 Spheres Of Impact 70 Year In Review 71 Donor Spotlight 2
72 Donor List Fiscal Year 2014 76 2014 Statement Of Financial Position
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EXHIBITIONS
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JUNE 28 TO AUGUST 17, 2013 OPENING RECEPTION: JUNE 28 CURATED BY LORIE MERTES
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From Fall 2012 through Winter 2013, Knight Artist-in-Residence Mel Chin transformed his studio into a headquarters for community gatherings and the development of new works in sculpture, video, drawing, collage, and painting. In addition, significant advances were made with Operation Paydirt, a long-term participatory art project to raise awareness about lead contamination and solutions and to help end childhood lead poisoning. Included in the exhibition was participatory installation and Fundred collection station for visitors and schools a key component of the Operation Paydirt initiative.Â
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SEPTEMBER 20 TO NOVEMBER 16, 2013 OPENING RECEPTION: SEPTEMBER 20 6 PERFORMANCES: NOVEMBER 9
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Knight Artist-in-Residence Joseph Herscher, a self-taught kinetic artist whose work has been viewed by more than 10 million viewers on YouTube, uses familiar objects in unfamiliar ways to create surrealist landscapes comprised of a series of chain reactions. During his residency from September 3 to November 17, Herscher transformed the Dickson Gallery into a working factory/studio where he created The Dresser, an extremely elaborate kinetic sculpture that assisted the artist in waking up and preparing for his day. Fabrication of The Dresser culminated in an afternoon of 6 live performances on November 9, 2013 for over 700 guests.
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SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH JOSEPH HERSCHER
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Currencies: Real and Imagined NOVEMBER 22, 2013 TO JANUARY 11, 2014 OPENING RECEPTION: NOVEMBER 22, 2013 Currencies: Real and Imagined was conceived and installed by CORE Visual Art, a collective of six former Affiliate Artists of McColl Center for Art + Innovation who work both individually and collaboratively. The members of CORE include Daniel Allegrucci, Crista Cammaroto, Diane Hughes, Ashley Lathe, Laura McCarthy and Felicia van Bork. Currencies references not only money, but anything that is used as a medium of exchange, in this instance, the flow and richness of ideas between members of the collective on a project.
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The Convergence of the Twain: New Works by Linda Luise Brown and Jason Watson NOVEMBER 22, 2013 TO JANUARY 11, 2014 OPENING RECEPTION: NOVEMBER 22, 2013 New, site-specific works developed by 11-month Affiliate Artist Linda Luise Brown and Wesley Mancini 11-month Artist-inResidence Jason Watson were showcased in the 2ND and 3RD Floor galleries. The title of the show makes reference to a poem by the British novelist and poet Thomas Hardy, and suggests the surprising formal connections that develop when art from two distinct aesthetic approaches mixes and collides in the same visual space.
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A Way From Home by ArtPlace America Environmental Artist-in-Residence Jason McDonald and Artist-in-Residence Samantha Hill Front Lawn Collaborative Installation NOVEMBER 22, 2013 A Way from Home is a collaborative installation created by Jason McDonald’s and Samantha Hill, providing a social and environmentally commentary on the transition occurring in the Statesville Avenue Corridor. The ArtVee is built from a reclaimed trailer and uses salvaged materials and environmentally conscious elements to create a mobile studio. Featuring a rainbarrel, solar panels for lighting and native plant beds the mobile studio is the first ArtPlace America sculptural intervention. Samantha Hill during her residency began phase I of her oral histories project of past and present residents in the Corridor. Hill activated the studio by recreating neighborhood leader Darryl Gaston’s home the use of emphemera, video and audio to share his personal story.
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QUYNH VANTU
Quynh Vantu: Thresholds JANUARY 24 to MARCH 29, 2014 OPENING RECEPTION: JANUARY 24, 2014 Trained as an architect, Quynh Vantu explores our physical relationship to the built environment and how we interact with our surroundings. During her residency from November 1, 2013 – January 28, 2014, Vantu focused on developing concepts for her exhibition and fabricating all the components onsite in the Center’s facilities. Building upon her research on the “threshold” in architecture and activating the Center’s Dickson Gallery as a laboratory for experimentation, she explored how thresholds–the most active spaces within architecture–usher us in and out of spaces and offers opportunities for engagement with the built environment and each other.
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Aurora Robson: Stayin’ Alive MAY 9 TO JULY 26, 2014 OPENING RECEPTION: MAY 9, 2014 ArtPlace America Environmental Artitst-in-Residence Aurora Robson is known for her transformative work intercepting the waste stream. Utilizing plastic debris, excess packaging, and junk mail, she transforms these cast-off materials into wildly inventive sculptures that bring awareness to this complex and persistent environmental problem. In addition to leading numerous community engagement initiatives during her residency from January 12 – May 13, Robson developed new work for during her residency for Stayin’ Alive, which also featured earlier works such as Be Like Water (2010), an ambitious installation that was suspended from the Center’s rafters and consisted of approximately 80,000 plastic bottle caps and material from 9,000 plastic bottles.
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Artists-in-Residence
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Joseph Herscher KNIGHT ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: TECHNOLOGY
Brooklyn, New York September 3 – November 26, 2013 As a Fall 2013 Knight Artist-in-Residence, Joseph Herscher was given the entire space of (former) Gallery 115, to create a Rube Goldberg-esque Machine. which had the ability to help him get dressed in the morning and ready for his day. During the three months of his residency, Herscher worked on this gallerysized kinetic sculpture, entitled The Dresser, for the entirety of his residency and his efforts culminated into an afternoon of five live performances, which brought a crowd of approximately 700 guests to see the machine for its world premiere.
SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH JOSEPH HERSCHER
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sheila klein ASC ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: ARCHITECTURE + DESIGN
Bow, Washington June 24 – November 25, 2013 Sheila Klein’s residency supported her Arts & Science Council commission for the creation of public art to be integrated into the City of Charlotte’s North Tryon Corridor streetscape improvement project. She met with residents, community leaders, and city planners to investigate and inform her design for the project and later developed Sky on Tryon, an abstract mural painted on the underside of the Interstate 227 overpass, just steps from the Center’s front door.
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This alternate creates forms a circle that acts as center to the space.
Sheila Klein
Artists Corps of Engineers
North Tryon Streetscape
Interim Project
Skyon Tryon
Charlotte, NC
2013
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dread scott KNIGHT ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: SOCIAL JUSTICE
Brooklyn, New York September 3 – November 26, 2013 Working in a range of media including installations, photography, video, performance and painting, Dread Scott makes revolutionary art to propel history forward. During his residency, he conducted extensive research and development of a new project that draws upon the tradition of Civil War reenactment for a restaging and reinterpretation of Louisiana’s German Coast Uprising of 1811, the largest slave rebellion in American history.
SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH Dread Scott 38
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samantha hill ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: SOCIAL JUSTICE
Chicago, Illinois September 3 – November 26, 2013 Samantha Hill is a transdisciplinary artist with an emphasis on archives, oral story collecting, social projects and art facilitations. At the Center, she experimented with her first photographic tintypes and initiated Reflections in the Moment (A Kinship Project Art Facilitation) that chronicled her conversations with residents in the Druid Hills neighborhood, a historic African American community in the Statesville Av Corridor.
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SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH samanth hill
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Jason McDonald ARTPLACE AMERICA ENVIRONMENTAL ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: ENVIRONMENT
Brooklyn, New York September 3 – November 26, 2013 Among his many accomplishments, Jason McDonald developed a sustainable projects such as an eco-resort on the banks of the Ganges in India, using local materials to create interventions that address a place’s natural attributes and the impact human beings have on it. During his residency, he experimented with adobe and steel sculptures, in addition to designing and constructing the ArtVee, a mobile eco-studio made from reclaimed materials.
SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH Jason McDonald
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Quynh Vantu ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: ARCHITECTURE + DESIGN
Glen Allen, Virginia November 1, 2013 – January 28, 2014 Furthering prior experimentations in concepts of architecture, Quynh Vantu spent her residency constructing a series of structural sensory explorations for her exhibition, Quynh Vantu: Thresholds, which was on view, January 24 – March 29 here at the Center. Vantu explored the various ways in which individuals enter and exit different thresholds within an architectural structure. 44
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crystal am nelson UNC CHARLOTTE ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: SOCIAL JUSTICE
California January 6 – March 25, 2014 crystal am nelson sources stories from mainstream media about the imbalances of power related to race, economic status, and authority. As the Winter 2014 UNC Charlotte Artist-in-Residence, nelson collaborated with Assistant Professor of Graphic Design Bobby Campbell to develop coursework and curate an exhibition of student projects that were developed by students who researched communities,causes and nonprofits to create promotional strategies utilizing an artist’s lens.
See the Open Door Interview with crystal am nelson
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Ivan Toth Depeña ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: ARCHITECTURE + DESIGN
Charlotte, North Carolina January 6 – March 25, 2014 Ivan Toth Depeña combines innovative materials, custom software and digital fabrication methods with traditional media. During his residency, Depeña collaborated with Discovery Place to develop a major, new viewer interactive piece with custom software that tracks and records movement of visitors and translates their movements into patterns of light and color. 48
SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH Ivan Toth Depeña
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Aurora Robson ARTPLACE AMERICA ENVIRONMENTAL ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: ENVIRONMENT
Chester, New York January 12 – May 13 During her Winter 2015 residency, Aurora Robson successfully implemented “Sculpture and Intercepting the Waste Stream” – a course she designed to foster environmental stewardship and sustainable art practices. Working with students enrolled at Central Piedmont Community College, Robson facilitated a stream clean-up in the Brightwalk neighborhood. The students used the collected debris to create sculptural works exhibited in a pop-up exhibition: Synthesis. Apart from her extensive community engagements, Robson created several new large-scale sculptures and installations that were featured in her solo exhibition Aurora Robson: Stayin’ Alive, which was on view May 9 – July 26, 2014.
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SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH Aurora Robson
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Elizabeth Lasure GAIL PEACOCK CMS ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: CRAFT
Charlotte, North Carolina January 6 – March 25, 2014 A trained potter, Elizabeth Lasure finds that working in clay is demanding, requiring both physical strength and careful manipulation. She prefers working with porcelain because of its soft, translucent qualities. The Gail Peacock Artist-in-Residence award afforded a regional public school teacher a three-month residency with pay, in addition to travel to museums and cultural destinations in New York and Chicago.
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SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH Elizabeth Lasure
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Alix Lambert ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: SOCIAL JUSTICE
Brooklyn, New York January 6 – March 25, 2014 and July 1 - August 9, 2014 Extending her years of research and projects related to CRIME USA, Alix Lambert developed a series of new screen prints and drawings based on courtroom trials she attended at the Federal Courthouse in Charlotte. In addition, a multi-media exhibition is planned for May 2015 that will feature the first stopaction animation film from the new series Prison Zoo that chronicles the strained relationship between an effusive fox and his cellmate, a mute sloth. Through humor and wit, Lambert provides commentary on the penal system’s revolving door, prison overcrowding, and inhumane nature of prison life.
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Betsy Birkner WINDGATE 11-MONTH AFFILIATE ARTIST SPHERE OF IMPACT: CRAFT
Charlotte, North Carolina April 14, 2014 – March 25, 2015 Among her best-known work, Birkner has continued to advance the series of mixed-media body armor sculptures that continue her exploration of narratives around the many facets of femininity, age, personal values, and internal struggles. In addition, Birkner launched her expansive Gratisphere project, a global initiative borne at the Center that digitally tracks acknowledgments of gratitude around the world. 56
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Austin Ballard WINDGATE 11-MONTH AFFILIATE ARTIST SPHERE OF IMPACT: ARCHITECTURE + DESIGN
Charlotte, North Carolina April 14, 2014 – March 25, 2015 In addition to developing new sculptures that draw inspiration from Japanese conceptual art and mid-century modern furniture design, Austin Ballard experimented with thin sheets of crumpled aluminum infused with colored pigment and subjected to multiple passes through the lithography press. These elements were later assembled and installed in large-scale installations throughout the Center.
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Rosalia Torres-Weiner AFFILIATE ARTIST SPHERE OF IMPACT: SOCIAL JUSTICE, INTERNATIONAL
Charlotte, North Carolina April 14 – August 9, 2014 “My aim is to use my art to make a social difference, and serve as part of a broader solution to issues affecting all of us.” Rosalia Torres-Weiner is an artist and activist who draws on her Mexican heritage to address persistent issues faced by immigrant populations, especially children. At the Center, she focused on the completion of an illustrated children’s book called “The Magic Kite,” and collaborated with acclaimed Los Angeles-based playwright Jose Cruz Gonzales and with Children’s Theater of Charlotte to adapt the story into a stage production. 60
SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH Rosalia Torres-Weiner
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Jon Prichard AFFILIATE ARTIST SPHERE OF IMPACT: BEAUTY
Charlotte, North Carolina April 14 – August 9, 2014 Jonathan Prichard’s practice incorporates performance art, elaborate costumes, dance, and sculptural elements that, when combined, represent altered psychological states and chaotic situations. His performance art ensemble Sinergismo improvised new works for the Center’s front lawn and inside studios during Studio Party 14.
SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH Jon Prichard
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Stacey Davidson AFFILIATE ARTIST SPHERE OF IMPACT: BEAUTY
Charlotte, North Carolina April 14 – August 9, 2014 Stacey Davidson explores the traditions of portraiture in a variety of mediums, some of which have pushed her beyond the physical bounds of her studio and into the realm of whimsical public interventions with her handmade dolls. During her residency, she learned the process of stop-action animation and began work on a video that brought to life her figurative creations.
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SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH Stacey Davidson
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Ruganzu Bruno ARTPLACE AMERICA ENVIRONMENTAL ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE SPHERE OF IMPACT: ENVIRONMENT
Kampala, Uganda April 30 – September 16, 2014 Ruganzu Bruno is committed to creating environments that support healthy childhoods through the reclamation of space and the transformation of salvaged materials into interactive places for discovery and play. During his residency, he lead numerous workshops and collaborated with community groups to construct sculptural play elements at the Art + Ecology Campus at Brightwalk and at The Penland School of Crafts in Penland, North Carolina.
SEE THE OPEN DOOR INTERVIEW WITH Jason McDonald 66
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What is an Affinity Group? McColl Center for Art + Innovation’s Affinity Group is a group of volunteer community members and thought leaders who seek to initiate, engage, and develop relationships with artists and community, and bolster public and private partnerships to support the Center’s mission. Affinity Groups reflect the Center’s goals to provide artists and community with resources – time, treasure and talent - in order to investigate topics that are critically important locally and globally. Guided by the Spheres of Impact (SOI), the Center commissions artists to address sphere-related topics and issues in a meaningful way. There are four active Affinity Groups, Environment, Social Justice, International, and Craft. Each sphere-related Affinity Group has approximately fifteen members charged with the task of identifying strategies, issues, partners, and resources relevant to their Sphere. The Center’s SOI engagement model has resulted in hundreds of in-depth participatory programs with schools and universities, hospitals, businesses, foundations and city/county government. The Spheres of Impact are Environment, Healthcare, Education, Social Justice, Technology, Business Innovation, International, Craft, Architecture/Design, and Beauty. If you would like to help McColl Center advance its mission to empower artists to advance communities and impact lives through art and the creative process by participating in an Affinity Group or another activity, please visit our website and click on “get involved.”
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SPHERES OF IMPACT
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YEAR IN REVIEW McColl Center for Art + Innovation is grateful for the generous support provided by our friends, partners and supporters whose contributions make up 74% of our annual operating budget. The Center was honored to recieve grants from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation supporting our Artistsin-Residence, the Windgate Foundation’s support of the Innovation Institute and Affiliate Artists, the Reemprise Fund’s underwrote our new, award winning website, Rasmuson Foundation’s continued support of an Artist-in-Residence exchange program between Charlotte and Alaska and The Surdna Foundation’s continued support of our Environmental Artist-inResidence program. Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Duke Energy’s commitments to the Center are a shining example of Charlotte’s commitment to arts and culture. Ed and the beloved late Gail Peacock funded a residency and were awarded the Center’s Luminary Award at Ashes to Art. Missy and Doug Smith made a lasting impact with their major gift to fund a residency for the next five years. The Center is privileged to have such incredible donors who made transformational gifts so we can continue to lead the way for artist residency programs and community engagement. The Center is proud to announce that our donor base grew by 25% during our Fiscal Year 2014. This is proof of your commitment to the artists, exhibitions and programs at McColl Center. We celebrate another successful year of bringing artists who have a purpose to their work, not only with the intent to improve their artistic practice, but engage our community in a meaningful way. The result of embedding artists into the community problem-solving process is demonstrating the power of the artist as creative catalyst and the effectiveness of their projects on complex issues in Charlotte.
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DONOR SPOTLIGHT “We always leave McColl Center feeling proud. Proud not only that the city to which we belong is home to such a vibrant scene for contemporary art, but proud even more so that McColl Center is giving back to the Charlotte community in so many remarkable ways.” – Missy and Doug Smith After attending the opening of McColl Center back in 1999, Missy was immediately drawn to the mission of the organization, recognizing the transformational power of connecting art and artists to community. As an emerging artist new to Charlotte, she still remembers leaving the event invigorated by what McColl Center was going to offer its artists as well as its city. Years later, when she met her husband Doug, a Charlotte native, they discovered a common bond in their love for the arts as well as a strong belief in service to the community. She introduced him to McColl Center and her passion for the Center quickly became theirs. In 2014, Missy and Doug decided it was their time to make a lasting impact on the arts in Charlotte, and they say McColl Center was the obvious choice for them. “We want to support the contemporary arts in Charlotte, but we also want to do something that will in turn benefit people from all walks of life in our community.” Their gift will support one local artist in eleven-month residency for the next five years at the Center. This gift brings to life their philanthropic goal of enabling artists to freely express their talent, beliefs and values through their art while making vital contributions to the community in Charlotte.
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DONOR list Fiscal Year 2014
$25000+ Mr. Edwin B. Peacock, Jr. Mr. Doug Smith and Mrs. Missy Luczak Smith
$10000-24999 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cottingham, III Lori and Liam McGee Mr. and Mrs. R. Edwin Shelton Mr. Richmond H. Stowe Mrs. Cheryl Walker Mr. and Mrs. William H. Williamson, III
$5000-9999 Dr. Kim Blanding Mr. and Mrs. Philip Blumenthal Mr. and Mrs. Derick S. Close Mr. and Mrs. David Conlan Mr. and Mrs. J. Bennett Dellinger, III Mr. and Mrs. Alvaro G. de Molina Dr. Andy Dews and Mr. Tom Warshauer Mr. and Mrs. Jay Faison Suzanne and Elmar Fetscher Mr. and Mrs. William Gorelick Laura and Mike Grace Mr. and Mrs. John Huson Mr. Fred W. Klein Ms. Barbara L. Laughlin Mr. and Mrs. Hugh L. McColl, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh L. McColl, III Mr. and Mrs. Richard McCracken 72
Sheila and Sean Mullen Mrs. Debra Plousha Moore and Col. John Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. D. Harding Stowe Lynn and Jeff Trenning
$2500-4999 Dr. Christie H. Amato and Dr. Louis H. Amato Ingrid and John Amols Mr. Michael Boyle Cassie Brown and John Cornely Mr. Shaun Cassidy Mr. and Mrs. J. Bennett Dellinger, III Mr. Jason Fararooei Mr. and Mrs. Clark Jackson Mr. Charlie Elberson and Ms. Lou Kinard Mr. and Mrs. W. Clay Grubb Mr. Alvaro Gurdian, Jr. Ms. Rebecca Hannum Mr. and Mrs. Adam Ortiz Ms. Betsy Rosen and Mr. Liam Stokes Mr. and Mrs. William Serenius Mr. Shannon G. Smith Mrs. Zewditu Menelik and Mr. Adrian Woolcock Mr. and Mrs. Manuel L. Zapata
$1000-2499 Mr. Charles T. Barger, III May Barger Mr. and Mrs. William M. Barnhardt Dr. Sharon Baxter and Prof. Lawrence Baxter Mr. Sanford R. Berlin
Mr. and Mrs. Howard C. Bissell Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Bowman Mr. J. Larry Brady, Jr. MD Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Bragg Jr. Mr. and Ms. Christopher Branch Mr. and Mrs. Eugene A. Bratek Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Brown Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Brown, III Mr. and Mrs. Gregory L. Cagle Ms. Candice Campbell and Mr. Mark Aderholt Ms. Lori T. Collins Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Connelly PA Mr. and Mrs. Chris Cope Mr. and Mrs. Robert Culbertson Mr. and Mrs. Russ Daniel Mr. Mike Davis Mrs. Mary Anne Dickson Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose W. Dittloff Meredith and Walter Dolhare Mr. and Mrs. Jubal A. Early Liz and Lane Faison Mr. and Mrs. William P. Farthing Jr. Mrs. Lorne Lassiter and Mr. Gary Ferraro Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Finke Mr. and Mrs. Ron Freeman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Gaither Mrs. Elizabeth Galen Mr.s Berhan Nebioglu and Mr. Michael Gallis Carol and Shelton Gorelick Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Gossett Michelle and Mark Hamilton
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Harrison Jr. Mr. James E. Hatley Lisa and Phil Hoffman Jody Rimmer and Jeff Hull Ms. Lynne Ingersoll Mr. and Mrs. Charles Izard Ms. Laura Grosch and Mr. Herb Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Clark Jackson Mr. William E. Keenan Ashley and Peter Larkin Mr. Christopher Lawing Ms. Amy Lefkof and Mr. Tim Mayopoulos Mr. and Mrs. F. Walker Lockett Mr. and Mrs. Christopher McCoy Devlin McNeil and Aime’e Nichols Mr. and Mrs. Jerald Melberg Ulrike and Alex Miles Mr. and Mrs. Thruston B. Morton Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Oudmayer Mr. Kevin L. Patterson and Mrs. Charlene PricePatterson Mrs. Pamela Pearson and Mr. John Akin Mr. and Mrs. David Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Tom Phillips Mr. Samuel Ramsey Mrs. Betty Chafin Rash and Mr. Dennis Rash Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Jon Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Russell Robinson Ms. Barbara Schreiber and Mr. Bill Ribarsky Mr. and Mrs. T. Jeff Scott, III Mr. and Mrs. Pat Sheehan Mr. and Mrs. Alan Simonini Mr. and Mrs. H. Paul Steiger, Jr. Ms. Sarah Schultz and Jeffrey Sugarman Sharon Blalock and Marcia Tillotson Mr. Bill Tome Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Vanbergen Mr. and Mrs. Robert Vest Mr. and Mrs. David C. Vorhoff Ms. Anne Vulcano Dr. and Mrs. Will Warlick Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Webb Mr. and Mrs. John Williams Mr. Rob Williams and Mr. Warren Womble Mr. and Mrs. Robert Zimmerman
$500-999
Mr. and Mrs. John Alexander Mr. Steve Allen and Dr. William Larsen Ms and Dr. Rosalyn Allison-Jacobs Jennifer and Wayne Appleby Ms. Deborah Atkins Mr. and Mrs. James G. Babb, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Belk, Jr. Mrs. Kristina Burke Ms. Cheryl Carpenter Ms. Astrid Chirinos Hillary and Fairfax Cooper Dana Martin Davis and Rick Davis Mrs. Gay Dillashaw Christine Eades Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Ford Mr. and Mrs. David Furman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Gabbard Mr. and Mrs. Frederic H. Garner, IV Mr. and Mrs. Edwin E. Harris, Jr. Dr. Khalil E. Kardous Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Lamberth Mr. and Mrs. Stefan R. Latorre Ms. Joan F. Lorden Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan H. Mangels Mr. and Mrs. Alex W. McAlister Mrs. and Mr. Susan McKeithen Sheila and Sean Mullen Ms. Jarleth Van Meter Nurkin Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Payne Mr. and Mrs. Steve Phifer Dr. and Mrs. John Santopietro Marjorie Serralles-Russell and Terry Russell Mr. William B. Caldwell and Mr. Robert L. Shore Mr. and Mrs. David Simpkins Ms. Donna Sofsky Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Tate Dr. Lee R. Rocamora and Dr. John Thompson Mrs. Lucy Thomspon Dean and Mr. Clark Dean Irina Toshkova Mrs. Sally Van Allen Mr. and Mrs. David Van Hemel Neely and Michael Verano Ms. Janet Wall Mr. Chris & Linda William Mr. and Mrs. Bryan L. Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Williams Mr. Doug Wood
$250-499 Ms. Judith V. Allen and Mr. David L. Coburn Mr. Keith Alyea and Mr. Fidel Montoya Mr. William B. Barnhardt Ms. Briarlee Barrow Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Bernstein Mr. Ron Boozer Mr. Ralph Breeden Mr. Michael Broderick Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Brown Ms. Ann Browning Ms. and Mr. Lynn-Anne Bruns Mr. and Mrs. Trip Bulla Mr. Robert Bush Ms. Merryman Cassels Mr. and Mrs. Addison B. Causey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James D. Cooley Mr. and Mrs. Marion A. Cowell Mr. W. Rennie Cuthbertson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Fortin Mr. James Funderburk and Mr. Jim Hock Ms. Lisa Gary Mrs. Claudia Gonzalez Griffin Mr. and Mrs. John Grimes Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Gross Mr. and Mrs. Marc Gustafson Mr. Ralph Helmick Mrs. Anne Henderson Mr. Dan Hooks Ms. Lisa Hunting Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hurden Ms. Susan Jedrzejewski Mr. and Mrs. Jon Joffe Mr. and Mrs. Lenoir C. Keesler, Jr. Mr. Garth F. Knight Mrs. June Lambla and Mr. Kenneth Lambla Mr. and Mrs. David Levine Mr. and Ms. Michael E. Link Ms. and Mr. Hillary B. Maclean Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Maddrey III Yvonne and Dick McCracken Mr. and Mrs. Robert McDonnell Mr. and Mrs. E. Graham McGoogan Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew McGowan 73
DONOR list continued Mr. James McLawhorn Ms. Chris McLeod J.D. Mr. Joel McPhee Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Mitchell Ms. June Moore Mr. and Mrs. Keith Neus Dr. and Mrs. J. Gray Norris Mr. and Mrs. Don Olin Mr. and Mrs. William D. Parmelee Mrs. Sandy Patrick Mr. and Mrs. Craig Radke Amy Hockett and Eric Rohm Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ross Mrs. Elizabeth Wolfe and Mr. Gary S. Ross Ms. Chelsea Samuel and Mr. Joe Rauch Mr. and Mrs. Carl Scheer Marjorie Moses Schwab Mrs. Rita Smith Martha Smyre Mustard and Todd Mustard Mr. and Mrs. Kostas Stamoploulos Mrs. Laura Southwell and Mr. Brad Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Tober Ms. Charlotte V. Wainwright Ms. Stephanie Walker Mr. and Mrs. Craig Weisbruch Lyman G. Welton Mr. Christoper Wilson Dr. and Mrs. James H. Woodward
$100-249 Mr. and Mrs. William J. Augerot Ms. Luann Bailey Mr. Robert P. Barbee Mrs. Catherine Bates Reading and Mr. William Reading Ms. Jean Batten Paula and Danny Beaver Ms. Laura Belcher Ms. Terri Bennett Giordano Mr. David Deal and Mr. Stephen C. Bentley 74
Betsy Birkner and Randy Wall Ms. Lynda Boozer Dr. and Mrs. John Bourgeois Ms. Virginia H. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. Kevin M. Brewton Dr. Elizabeth J. Bumgarner and Dr. Parag Phadke Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Buonanno Mr. and Mrs. Rob Capozziello Mr. and Mrs. Tom Carlson-Redding Mr. Robert Carr Mr. and Mrs. Rob Carter Ms. Lesley Chambless Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Conrad Mr. and Mrs. James Cook Mr. Steve Copulsky Ms. Katie Culclasure Mr. and Mrs. Adam Thompson Mr. and Mrs. James Currie Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Dalton, Jr. Mr. Geoff D’Amico Mr. and Mrs. Hal Davis Ms. Ann Depta Ms. Kim Depuy and Mr. Joe Nash Mr. and Mrs. Dean DeVillers Mr. Philip L. Dubois Ms. Dianne English Mr. and Mrs. Dennis M. Farrell Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Fennimore Mr. Brent Fischthal Mr. and Mrs. Mick Fisher Mr. and Mrs. John Fortson Mrs. Angela T. Frederick Lanham and Mr. J. Gregory --Lanham Ms. Sarah Belk Gambrell Mr. Sam Gardner Ms. Sarah M. Gay Mr. and Mrs. Tom Goodwin Mrs. Mary Hahn Fetter and Mr. Kris Fetter Ms. Melva Hanna Mrs. Jill Dinwiddie and Mr. Bernard J. Hargadon Jr. Ms. Peggy Harris Mr. Joe Haubenhofer Mr. and Mrs. David Haynes Mr. and Mrs. Randall Hitt Ms. Dorothy Hodges Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Johnson Jr.
Ms. Leslie Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Luke W. Jones Randall Morrow and David Jones Ms. and Mr. Jenny Joyner Bek Mitchell Kidd and Mike Kidd Dr. Sheila Kilbane Ms. Janice S. Ladley Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lasure Mr. and Mrs. Haynes P. Lea Mrs. Elizabeth M. Lee Mr. Dennis Lemmons Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Lipps Mr. Eric Little Mr. and Mrs. William B. Little Mr. and Mrs. Michael Long Mrs. and Mr. Jennifer Lover Ms. Vi Lyles Mrs. and Mr. Ruth Ava Lyons Ms. Annabel Manning and Mr. Michael Kelly Mr. Larry Markel Mrs. Amy L.C. Markel Ms. Mary O’Brien and Mr. Daniel McCormick Ms. Carrie McCracken Ms. Missy Mcdonald Ms. Latisha McElroy and Mr. Cao Nguyen Mr. and Ms Martin McInerney Ms and Mr. Elizabeth McKee Paras and Shivani Mehta Mr. Tim Miron Ms. Ruth Moeller Mr. Monty Montague Katherine and Flynn Mooring Meg and Bob Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Morrison Mr. Phan Neuman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Okel Ms. and Mr. Nancy Olah Dr. Leland M. Park Mrs. Lisa Perkins Dr. Elizabeth Perry Mr. Richard Petershiem Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pierce Ms. Phyllis Primm Mr. and Mrs. Jim Prock Mr. Frank Quarttrochi Maja Godlewska and Marek Ranis Dr. George S. Rent
Mrs. Linda Foard Roberts and Mr. George Roberts Mr. and Mrs. George W. Rohe Mr. and Mrs. Michael Rose Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Roselle Mr. Erik Rosenwood Mr. and Mrs. Todd Rubenson Ms. Octavia Z. Seawell Mr. and Mrs. Art Shiver Mrs. Melissa Vrana and Mr. Andrew Skalaban Mr. and Mrs. E. Harold Smith Mr. and Mrs. Tom Stanley Mr. and Mrs. Paul Steadman Matthew Steele Mr. David Stoke Dr. Sharon Sullivan and Mr. D. M. Sullivan Ms. Micaila Milburn and Mr. Charles Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Matt Varner Mrs. Martha Viser Clontz Mr. Kevin Vogel Mrs. Candice Langston and Mr. Felix Von Uklanski Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Waldthausen Mr. James D. Walsh Ms. Kathleen Curry and Mr. Michael Weinstein Mr. Allen West Mr. and Mrs. Owen H. Whitfield, Jr. Pam and Herb Winegard Mr. and Mrs. Michael Yaffe Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Zimmern Ms. Patricia Zoder
$1-99 Ms. Mary Edith Alexander Anonymous Ms. Diana Arvanites and Mr. Marc Leclair Ms. Jeanette Barker Mr. Andre Barnett Mr. and Mrs. Mark Bernstein Mr. and Mrs. Mark Bivens Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Blackmon Ms. Kathryn Blanchard Ms. Taylor Blanchard Mr. and Mrs. Shaylor Knight Mr. and Mrs. John V. Boyer Ms. Susan Brenner Ms. Rubie Britt Height Mrs. Cindy Caldwell Mrs. Kathryn Causey Miller and Mr. G. Anthony Miller
Ms. Amy Cheng Jeffrey Cook Grace and Aaron Cote Kimberly Crothers Ms. Geri Cruickshank-Eaker Mrs. Mary C. Curtis and Mr. Martin F. Olsen Mr. James Delark Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Diamond Ms. Sharon Dowell Ms. Leigh A. Dyer Mr. and Mrs. Michael Egues Mrs. Ryann C. Fairweather Ms. Denise Finck-Rothman Mr. and Mrs. Jason Fowler Ms. Ashley Hudler and Ms. Jennifer S. Gaisbauer Ms. Karen Garloch Ms. Paula A. Guilfoyle Dr. Nancy A. Gutierrez Mr. Jeremy K. Hall Mr. Brian K. Harden Ms. Amy B. Hartman Ms. Cathy Hasty Mrs. ML Hedin-Goldfield Ms. Meredith Helgeson Ms. Kimberly Henderson Mr. Gregory Hill Ms. Sandra A. Hoeft Mr. and Mrs. Brian Hudson Ms. Julie Hulley Ms. Lenore Jones Deutsch Ms. Sarah J. Kuhaneck Ms. Jennifer Lang Mr. Scott Laws Ms. and Mr. Cambria Lohri Ms. Raquel Lynch Mr. and Mrs. R. Weldon Mann, III Mrs. Angie Mattson Ms. Jenny Matz Ms. Kathryn McEntee Ms. Andrea McGuire Ms. Beverly McIver Mr. and Mrs. Mike McNelis Mr. William Mealey Mr. and Mrs. Mark W. Mealy Marge Loudon Moody Ms. Karen E. Morgan Ms. Laura Morrow-Fox
Ms. Maaike Mulders Mr. Dennis Narsoun Ms. Lia Newman and Mr. Chris Gannon Mr. and Mrs. Jon Player Woodie and Shep Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Todd Rubenson Mr. and Mrs. Chris Schultz Mrs. Lisa Sebnick Ashley and Adam Sellner Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sires Ms. Beverly Y. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Spears Ms. Stephanie Stenglein Mr. Ryan Strait Ms. Michelle Sutch Merritt T. Tracy Ms. Mary Tuma Mr. and Mrs. Kevin W. Tydings Mrs. Pat Viser Ms. Joan Vitale Ms. Gaye Walden Dr. Deborah J. Walker Ms. Elize Weston and Mr. Dave Molinaro Mr. and Mrs. Gene White Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wilson Ms. Lauren Woodruff
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2014 STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION FY 2014 SOURCES OF OPERATING REVENUE
FY 2014 OPERATING CASH EXPENSES
Individual & corporate contributions Donated goods & services Foundation & corporate grants Arts & Science Council Basic Operating Grant Government grants Earned Revenue Fundraising Event Endowment Support
$657,909 $54,000 $786,254 $350,766 $66,906 $220,379 $129,248 $480,000
Administration Organizational development & marketing Residencies, exhibitions & education Program support services & facilities
$314,083 $598,303 $1,391,024 $243,510
Total Operating Expenditures Depreciation, In-kind & Non-Cash Expenditures
$2,546,920 $304,384
Total Organizational Expenses
$2,851,304
Total Operating Revenue
$2,745,462
SELECTED FINANCIAL INFORMATION FOR FISCAL YEARS ENDING JUNE 30, 2013 & 2012
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2014
2013
Investments (held at Foundation for the Carolinas at fair value) Total Assets Total Liabilities Total Net Assets
$7,265,563 $14,840,890 $889,788 $13,951,102
$6,826,874 $14,256,211 $637,956 $13,618,255
Total Revenue & Support Total Operating Expense Operating Surplus (Loss) Net change in investments Increase (Decrease) Change in Net Assets
$2,745,462 $2,851,304 $-105,842 $918,689 $332,847
$2,304,975 $2,549,933 $-244,958 $662,660 $37,702
Operating Revenue Endowment Support 17%
Individual + corporate contributions 24%
Fundraising 5% Earned Revenue 8%
Donated goods + services 2%
Government grants 2% Arts & Sciences Council Basic Operating Grants 13%
Foundation + corporate grants 29%
Operating Expense Residencies, exhibitions + education 55%
Organizational development + marketing 23%
Administration 12%
Program support services + facilities 10%
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McColl Center for Art + Innovation is supported, in part, by a Basic Operating Grant from the Arts & Science Council; as well as the North Carolina Arts Council with funding from the State of North Carolina and the National Endowment for the Arts, which believes that a great nation deserves great art; and the generosity of corporate and individual donors.
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