of
Museum
REVIEW I PREVIEW
art deland
The Making of a Destination 4,5 Dive into Feuerman’s Body of Work 6,7 Take the Spot On Challenge 8,9 Inspiring Kids for Life 10,11 Welcome Members 16 - 19
J U LY 2 0 1 6 VOLUME 3 ISSUE 1
S U M M E R
2 0 1 6
Museum of Art - DeLand
RE PRE SAVE THE D AT E S
VIEW Now thru August 5 - Camp Create Weekly Classes July 15 Opening Reception for the exhibitions Miles Batt: Retrospective Walter Meigs: Transformations and Philip Smallwood: Personages July 16 Miles Batt Galler y Talk with Irene Batt July 22 Opening Reception for Theresa Bernstein: An Early Modernist July 25 - 31 Museum Store Summer Sizzler Sale
August 13 Camp Create Exhibition August 26 “But do I have to like it ” Lecture September 9 Galler y Talk & Reception with Artist Philip Smallwood September 17 Family Fun Saturday October 14 Fall Season Opens at 600 N. Woodland Blvd. October 15 Family Fun Saturday October 21 Fall Season Opens at 100 N. Woodland Blvd. Program times and details at MoArtDeLand.org
Cover: 2016 Summer Camp Create students, l to r, Robert B., Bladen D., Gabriella F., Naeyma A. (Volunteer) and Jocelyn A. “reflect” on Carole Feuerman’s Monumental Quan, 2012, bronze and polished stainless steel, 1500 lbs; Museum of Art - DeLand Carole Feuerman: Work of Art (April 8 - July 3, 2016).
TURNS
FACILITY
CAC 25! THE MAKING OF A D E S T I N AT I O N From the CEO’s Desk
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eLand Mayor Bob Apgar, City Manager Michael Pleus and other government officials joined a crowd of more than a hundred supporters of the arts on May 27 at the Museum of Art - DeLand to recognize and celebrate the critical role individuals and local businesses played in advancing the success and quality of life DeLand residents have experienced for more than a quarter of a century. Because of that ongoing commitment, today, DeLand is a premier cultural arts destination for visitors and retirees. In the mid-eighties, educational visionaries set out to establish a cultural art center to house the DeLand Museum of Art, the Theater Center and the DeLand Little Symphony. Current Museum Legacy Museum of Art - DeLand CEO, George Bolge, with CAC Past PresiMember and Past President Betty Johnson said that “it was a long, dent and current Museum Legacy Member, Betty Drees Johnson hard pull, not only to raise the funds, but to ensure that the muApril 13, 1991, grand opening of the CAC. Twenty-five seum and theater could keep operating during the process of raising years later, the CAC facility continues to represent a perfunds.” manent architectural symbol of the City’s pride in its past, commitment to the present, and faith in its future development.
It was a long, hard pull: to raise funds... to keep operating.
Betty Drees Johnson, Cultural Arts Center Trustee (1987 – 1994) and Past President; Museum of Art - DeLand Legacy Member Countless individuals and organizations joined forces to raise more than 2 million dollars to build a 26,000 square foot building at 600 North Woodland Boulevard with galleries, classrooms and a 250-seat auditorium. The Cultural Arts Center (CAC) not only served a multi-cultural constituency, it also enhanced the City of DeLand’s ability to attract tourism, new residents and commercial businesses. It was the cornerstone to its counterparts in New Smyrna Beach’s Atlantic Center for the Arts and Daytona Beach’s Museum of Arts & Sciences. Years of planning and fundraising resulted in the October 14, 1989, ground breaking ceremony and subsequent 4
The Betty Drees Johnson Children’s Center was established on the westside of the Museum's property in 2010; several years later a redesign of the facility facade occurred for curbside appeal; a new vault and gallery lighting systems were installed; foyer and loading dock doors were widened to accommodate large scale works of art; the roof was replaced with environmentally friendly products to lower energy costs.; and, just this spring, a new heating and air conditioning (HVAC) system was installed. Funding for these improvements came from Museum sources, private donations and matching Volusia County ECHO and State Cultural Facility grant funds. A facility, now home to the Museum of Art - DeLand, with theater space used by Stetson University’s Theatre Arts Department, continually provides space to develop new educational programming that keeps pace with its commitments to its educational community while reaching out to new audiences in and around the region. In this way we can continue acting as a cultural arts catalyst for growth and development of the City of DeLand. Museum of Art - DeLand: From the CEO’s Desk
CAC FAST FACTS
Plans are in the works to better utilize the current property. A new sculpture garden and pavilion courtyard are envisioned for the north side of the building. Once funds are raised and construction completed, the new outdoor space will provide a natural garden setting for receptions, concerts and informal social gatherings, and will contribute further to the success of DeLand as a tourist destination. Museum Board of Trustees President, and consummate DeLand supporter of the arts, Judy Thompson, agrees with all of us when she says that “in order for DeLand’s cultural resources to develop and to remain relevant, we will need the community’s continued nurturing, steadfast participation and financial support.” We are hopeful that all of you who have sustained the arts will continue to remain excited about what the future holds for this institution. Make a new commitment to supporting the evolving growth of this splendid community resource which you inaugurated 25 years ago. Turn to page 20 for additional images from the CAC 25th Anniversary Celebration sponsored by United Parachute Technologies. View video of CAC Past President, Betty Drees Johnson, and Margaret Lee, wife of former Stetson University President Dr. H. Douglas Lee (1987 – 2009)
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CAC built after approximately 2.25 million had been raised by numerous distinguished patrons of the arts, community partners, corporations and individuals during the years and months that preceded the opening, including $600,000 from Florida Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs; $250,000 from the County of Volusia; and $125,000 from the City of DeLand Groundbreaking of property at the northwest corner of N. Woodland Blvd. and W. University Ave. occurred on October 15, 1989, to build a 26,000 sq ft building to include a grand atrium entrance, upper and lower galleries, secured storage and prep facilities, gallery gift shop, classrooms and rehearsal space, offices and stage prop space, and a 250-seat theater. Building originally slated to be entirely brick. Cost prevented this, and so brick was used as accents on the exterior. The City of DeLand donated bricks to the CAC during its rejuvenation of Indiana Avenue and were installed in the CAC’s parking lot and entrances. Ribbon Cutting Ceremony was April 13, 1991 Additional funds to meet the construction goals were raised through earned revenue from various touring companies, grants, special events proceeds, memberships and donations. March 1992 Da Vinci Society commences a CAC Membership Drive Original land lease from Stetson University was $1/ year; Dec. 2008 CAC purchased land for $415,000 Dec. 2009 Sands Theatre Center moved to the restored Athens Theatre Aug. 2010 CAC and Museum merged; the Museum became the surviving entity Spring 2012 Stetson signed an extended agreement to lease the theatre space September 2013 Museum reincorporated as Museum of Art – DeLand, Florida, and opened galleries and renovated event spaces in historic Miller/Fish building at 100 N. Woodland Blvd.; Downtown Museum Store opens February 2014
Top, Groundbreaking Ceremony Oct. 15, 1989; Mayor Apgar 4th from left; Above, CAC’s 25th Anniversary Celebration: l to r, Museum Trustee/Artist, John Wilton; CAC Building Committee Chairman, Mary Ann Lawrence (top, 4th from right); Theatre Center President, Rene Sands (top, 2nd from right); Past DeLand Museum Director Harry Messersmith; and Guild Member/2015 Dorothy Johnson Award for the Arts recipient, Jane Messersmith
MoArtDeLand.org Tour. Shop. Join.
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Dive into Feuerman’s Body of Work ...
A
t first glance, the bathing beauty sculptures in the exhibition Carole Feuerman: Body of Work, at the Museum of Art – DeLand (April 8 - July 3, 2016), seem as if they were hijacked from some Art Deco motel in Miami in the 1950s.
Here, in leisurely poses, are girl-next-door, bathing-capped gals whose hyper-realist looks are guaranteed to make kids go “Wow!” and want to reach out and to touch these sculptures’ cheekbones and sweat droplets beaded on their flesh, and test the waters. A closer engagement of Feuerman’s women reveals not only everyday leisure moments but, conversely, a seething sensuality and eroticism at play, not only a documentation of the female body but also a quiet celebration of the feminine that defies anyone to label Feuerman’s work as either pop art or the exploitive side of erotica. Feuerman, a contemporary of fellow hyper-realists Duane Hanson and John De Andrea, begins her artistic process by making casts directly from her subjects. Those casts then become sculptures crafted in resin or, less frequently, in bronze. View the video on carolefeuerman.com and her process becomes clear: Feuerman deploys not only “sanding, grinding and sculpting” but also, and perhaps more importantly, the skills of an oil painter via both traditional brush and airbrush. Her “canvas” is the sculptures she creates. The tone of Body of Work is established the moment one walks into the lobby at the Museum of Art – DeLand, where two Feuerman works greet visitors outside of the main gallery. The larger-than-life-sized New York City Slicker depicts a young woman clad in a bright red rain coat all shiny with water, her faced turned toward the heavens, her brunette hair cascading out from under her slicker’s hood. We feel the unseen raindrops that are caressing her face, we share the simple yet supremely sensual pleasure of water falling from the sky and touching one’s flesh. And we are secretly amazed, and perhaps secretly ashamed, at this gentle, stealthy reminder of how much we humans yearn to be touched and caressed, to bridge our bodies to other human bodies or to the sensual gifts of wind or rain or sunlight striking our skin or earth oozing up between our bare toes. 6
Museum of Art - DeLand: In the Galleries
before it leaves July 3
by Rick de Yampert
Monumental Quan, the other lobby work, is a silver-colored, lacquer-on-resin depiction of a bathing beauty perched on hands and knees on top of a globe. Is this a portrayal of a young woman’s playful inner-child emerging for a moment – or is Quan a reverse Atlas, a woman emerging from her “Cocoon” (a more expressionist Feuerman piece not included in this show) to self-assuredly ascend to the top of the world? Such a dynamic – the strength and sensuality that lie hidden just beneath the veneer of everyday, seemingly mundane life – infuses Feuerman’s bathing beauties. A lot of female flesh is on display here, yet the modest bathing suits, the retro bathing caps (who besides athletes wears these things?) and the decidedly casual, unprovocative poses would make most of these ladies suitable for display around a family swimming pool. The one nude work, Birth/Geyser, features a video by Michelangelo Batiani of water flowing over Feuerman’s sculpture of a woman with head and arms raised skyward. Ironically, it’s the least erotic of the bathing beauties, exactly because its would-be sensuality is advertising itself like a billboard. However, when one deeply engages the beatific, eyes-closed facial expressions of say, Grande Catalina or Christina, it’s then that one feels like a voyeur – as if we have unexpectedly intruded upon a private moment of someone else’s sensual, even erotic bliss. It’s then that Feuerman’s works become quietly provocative, and their most powerful.
Art Review: California Impressionism Expressing Nature’s Sublime Beauty Click Here
Rick de Yampert, Freelance writer and musician Daytona Beach News-Journal A & E writer for 23 years Sitarick@RickdeYampert.com Arthur G. Rider (1886-1976), The Spanish Boat, oil on canvas, 35” x 41” Top, l to r, Monumental Brooke with Beach Ball + Video Projection, 2015, lacquer on resin, 60” x 43” x 45” The James Irvine Swinden Family Collection, New York City Slicker, 2014, lacquer on resin, 63” x 36” x 28” Courtesy of The Irvine Museum News Channel 13’s Allison Walker Torres visits DeLand to see Feuerman’s works Museum of Art - DeLand Museum Guild Member, Laura Gosper, admiring Yaima on the Ball, 2014, oil on resin, 70” x 28” x 39” (January 22 - April 17, 2016)
Experience the Power of Art
MoArtDeLand.org
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Why take the
SP
T
q he average person spends 17 seconds or less looking at a work of art in a museum, but that does not translate into really seeing the work of art. Understanding an image or object requires slowing down and taking the time to see the details. Looking is passive, but seeing requires action. The active process of seeing requires thoughtful, close-observation which helps us to recognize that things are not always as they appear at first glance.
VISUAL ARTS BRAIN HEALTH 101
As stated in Harvard Business Review’s Cognitive Fitness by Roderick Gilkey and Clint Kilts, “The more new things you learn, the better you become at learning. Actively engaging in novel, challenging activities capitalizes on your capacity for neuroplasticity - the ability of your brain to reorganize itself adaptively and enhance its performance. Studies of older adults usually show that those who live this way possess more complex neural networks than those who do not. The people who remain engaged in life consistently display an attitude of openness to new and unexpected experiences.”
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• Observing and paying attention to the nuances of what you see and hear, results in the creation of a clearer, more detailed memor y. • Observation is a whole brain skill and is a process that engages the senses at their fullest capacity by paying close attention to many details, focusing, analyzing, reasoning, and remembering. • Accuracy of observation is the equivalent of accuracy of thinking. • Simply making an effort to pay attention by focusing, concentrating or incorporating keen observation skills will provide the building blocks for improving memor y.
Museum of Art - DeLand: Education
T ON
Challenge ?
Pam Coffman, Curator of Education Museum of Art - DeLand
How good are your powers of observation? The images to the right are just a sample of small sections taken from artworks on display in the downtown galleries at 100 N. Woodland Blvd. See how many images you can match to the works of artist Syd Solomon. Take the Spot on Challenge at Both Museum of Art - DeLand Locations. Details at MoArtDeLand.org Above, Syd Solomon, Marquee, 1947, Gouache, ink and oil on paper board, 16.5” x 27”
MoArtDeLand.org Tour. Shop. Join.
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I nspiring
Akids R T for CAMP life L i sa H aber mehl D ire c to r o f Mar keti n g, Museum of A r t - D eLan d
G
rowing up, you probably remember your favorite teacher and class. Art class is, more often than not, at the top of the list. For kids who are fortunate to have their parents or grandparents enroll them into a summer art program, similar to an outdoor camping trip or an intensive athletic workshop, that experience has an even greater impact than one could imagine. Take Lucas Zielasko for example. In 1991, at age 11 he was enrolled in summer art camp at the DeLand Museum in the Cultural Arts Center (CAC), which just celebrated a 25th Anniversary last month (pages 4 and 5). “What led me to pursue a career in art? I’d say it was a combination of having my creativity nurtured at a young age by teachers, parents, aunts and uncles, and, more importantly, being taught how to embrace failure. Being taught to not be afraid of trying new things was absolutely crucial for me and is why I have been successful today.” Working in the cultural arts does take a certain fearlessness that can be taught, and can be very beneficial when introduced during one’s formative years. Learning from past great artists, learning to express yourself using your hands, to embrace your unique style of creativity, and to turn your mistakes into masterpieces are all simple, but essential, tools to being happy and successful. “My ‘formal’ art education began at age seven starting at St. Peter’s Catholic School (in DeLand) and being involved in my grandfather’s stained glass studio, which my family continues to run, and continued at DeLand Middle and then Deltona High School,” added Zielasko. “I also went to two summer art camps, one in particular had me building a camera with my own hands. It was a pinhole camera made out of a Quaker Oats container! I remember capturing my first photo which was of a Volkswagen Beetle in the CAC parking lot. I remember being absolutely fascinated by the process of developing the film!” Today, Zielasko, of LucasZielasko.com, is a professional photographer living in Dallas, Texas, specializing in fashion and commercial work. He also designed and built a modern version of the photo booth and formed the company SocialLightPhoto.com, which rents these booths for private and corporate events. “Art means a lot to me. Sometimes school can be frustrating or exhausting, but I take those frustrations and put it into my art,” said Chloe Gurnow, DeLand High School Rising 9th Grader and past Camp Create student. “Going to the Museum’s Camp Create is a lot of fun, but it’s even better as a volunteer because you gain insight into the young lives of those you’re helping. It’s so amazing to see young minds, including my own, being shaped by art,” said Abigail Burrhus, University High School rising junior, Museum Camp Create Volunteer and past student.
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Top, Museum Summer Art student, Lucas Zielasko, 1991; above, Zielasko today working as a professional photographer in Dallas, Texas, courtesy of LucasZielasko.com
Museum of Art - DeLand: Education
Another successful young professional gaining notoriety in the area is artist and business manager Erica Group. Known for her #DeLandWings in the Alley, Group recalls summer art camp at the CAC having a major effect on her life. “I was exposed to art at an early age and have to thank my parents for sending me to art camp,” said Group. “My best friend and I enrolled in the same sessions and loved that portion of our summers. Learning how to make paper was absolutely fascinating, especially to learn the process, hands on. “Another stand out project involved a variety of dried beans used as a gradient to create a landscape of our choosing. I also remember creating a large ‘portfolio’ to store the projects from camp. Two large white poster boards stapled together on three sides, with your custom cover art, made the perfect pocket portfolio. Unlike art classes held in school, which were structured to hold the attention of a whole class, art camp was full of kids who had an equal desire to get creative. We were given materials and instruction, but were also encouraged to color outside of the lines.” Following high school, Group went to the University of South Florida and studied Architecture. After pre-architecture and one semester in the Master’s Program, she was craving something more creative, so switched her major to Interior Design, moved to upstate New York to attend Cazenovia College and earned her Bachelors of Fine Arts in Interior Design. Group currently manages SONY Market at the corner of New York and Woodland Blvd., just south of the Museum’s Downtown Galleries. She is also a member of KreweNouveau.com, a group whose mission is to raise funds and awareness for nonprofit organizations in our community, which for three years has been the Museum of Art DeLand. (Group on cover of Volsia/Flagler Business, March 2016, click.) Summer art camp at the Museum of Art – DeLand, on now through August 5 (excluding the week of July 4th) will end with an exhibition celebration on August 13, is no different today than it was 25 years ago at the CAC and 65 years ago when the Children’s Museum first opened in 1951. By learning from exhibited professional artworks, studying historical art figures and art movements, and using other literary and pop culture inspirations, summer art classes continue to foster childhood learning through exploration, observation and personal creativity. Seven weeks of fun, using a variety of art media taught by recognized art educators and the assistance of student volunteers (most of whom were Museum art students), is an enduring experience. An experience that parents and caregivers alike agree provides not only a cool contrast to outdoor summer activities, but contributes to the development of well-rounded young adults. MoArtDeLand.org Tour. Shop. Join.
Top to bottom, Aritst Erica Group creates her DeLand Wings in Artisan Alley; 2016 Camp Create Week #1 taught by teacher Nancy Hatch; and Camp Volunteer Abigail Burrhus in front of the Linda Pinto Collection
“Art camp was a unique experience for Erica,” said Group’s mother, Melinda Group. “It may have been the little spark that ignited the creativity that is shining through her today.” For Camp Create applications, weekly sessions, teachers’ bios, scholarship donor and recipient information, and details on current exhibitions and related programming, visit MoArtDeLand.org/Learn.
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LAST SUMMER
WE ASKED AND YOU RESPONDED
DESCRIBE YOURSELF
47% 17% 16% 12% 8%
HOW DO YOU PREFER TO BE NOTIFIED OF ART-RELATED EVENTS?
EMAIL PLEASE
89.9% OTHER: LOCAL NEWSPAPER, MUSEUM WEBSITE, WEB, SOCIAL MEDIA, RADIO...
T H IS SU MME R
I EMOTIONALLY CONNECT TO ALL FORMS OF ART I AM AN ARTIST I ENJOY MEETING NEW PEOPLE AT ART OPENINGS I VISIT MUSEUMS TO RELAX & BE ENTERTAINED I VISIT MUSEUMS MOSTLY WHEN I TRAVEL
TOP 3 RESPONSES FOR MISSING AN ART OPENING OR EVENT
1. TOO BUSY 2. CAREGIVER 3. CONFLICTS OTHER: I WASN’T IN THE LOOP, BUT I AM NOW; I’M NEW TO THE AREA; HEALTH REASONS; IT’S AN HOUR DRIVE FOR ME...
WE HAVE JUST ONE QUESTION
WHAT INSPIRED YOU?
DID A WORK OF ART, GALLERY TALK OR ART WORKSHOP IN THE PAST TWO YEARS INSPIRE YOU TO DO SOMETHING CREATIVE?
“BEN SCHONZEIT’S
REALISTIC AMARYLLIS INSPIRED ME TO PLANT SOME AT HOME.
”
“FRED STALOFF’S BLUE VASE INSPIRED ME TO WRITE A POEM.
”
“THE WEST AFRICAN TRIBAL ART INSPIRED US TO CREATE MASKS IN ART CAMP.
”
Click on images.
Museum Members win in more ways than one.
A
fter participating in last summer’s Museum Survey, Steve and Jane Glover were entered into a drawing to receive a magnum of Brunello di Montalcino ($300) from the cellars of artist Sandro Chia. At the time, the Glovers were traveling - taking full advantage of their North American Reciprocal Museum (NARM) Membership that accompanies their Museum of Art - DeLand Membership - and were not able to pick up their gift. The Glovers were awarded their participation prize at the opening reception for the exhibition Two Points on a Plane: The Paintings of Charles Hinman on October 16, 2015. Thank you for the wonderful wine and for the fabulous work the museum does. A greater gift has been the passport to the world of art that museum membership has given us. In addition to the world class exhibits at our Museum of Art in DeLand, during the last two years we’ve visited more than 20 museums in the NARM family. From the Dali in St. Pete, The High in Atlanta, The Phillips Collection in D.C. to The Clark in Williamstown and The Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford. They are all jewels like our museum in DeLand and worthy of support. Thanks again for everything! Friends and patrons will be happy to raise a glass ‘To Art’ with us. - Museum Members Jane and Steve Glover of Ormond Beach (right)
Email your short art story of inspiration to Marketing@MoArtDeLand.org and be entered for a chance to win a Family Membership and a Special Gift Basket Your response might just appear in the next Museum of Art - DeLand’s REVIEW | PREVIEW Submissions will be accepted until July 21, 2016 Be sure to include the following information: Email Subject: What Inspired Me @MoArtDeLand Your Name / City + Zip Code Name of Art Exhibition / Artwork / Artist Estimated date you toured the galleries What specifically inspired you / What did you do Optional: Post your story on Twitter or Facebook and include @MoArtDeLand
EXHIBITIONS PREVIEW: 14
THERESA BERNSTEIN WA LT E R MEIGS
Theresa Bernstein: An Early Modernist July 22 - Oct. 9 Opening Reception July 22 | 5 to 7 p.m. 100 N. Woodland Blvd. $10 (Members no charge) A contemporary of Georgia O’Keefe, and Louise Nevelson’s first art teacher, Theresa Bernstein produced work well past her one hundredth birthday in a career that spanned the 20th Century. Her work resides in museum collections throughout the world.
Walter Meigs: Transformations July 15 - Oct. 2 Opening Reception July 15 | 5 to 7 p.m. 600 N. Woodland Blvd. $10 (Members no charge) Walter Meigs was selected for inclusion in the ART USA NOW collection in 1962 of 100 of The Most Famous Artists in America. This later became part of the Smithsonian’s Museum of American Art permanent collection. His abstract landscapes are in the permanent collections of more than 30 museums.
Museum of Art - DeLand: Exhibition Preview
P HILIP SMALLWOOD
Philip Smallwood: Personages July 15 - Oct. 2 Opening Reception July 15 | 5 to 7 p.m. 600 N. Woodland Blvd. $10 (Members no charge) Phillip Smallwood is a figurative watercolorist known for his “Lifescapes,” a powerful blend of portraiture and visual narrative. Among the awards for his work, is a Certificate of Special Congressional Recognition for his work related to the Art of the Soul Exhibition in Bergen County, New Jersey.
MoArtDeLand.org Tour. Shop. Join.
Miles G. Batt: Retrospective July 15 - Oct. 2 Opening Reception July 15 | 5 to 7 p.m. 600 N. Woodland Blvd.
SUMMER 2016
MILES B AT T
$10 (Members no charge) Miles Batt’s credentials include more than 225 major awards and consummate watermedia skills gained from more than 50 years involvement as an artist, teacher and author. In 2008, Batt was awarded the National Watercolor Society’s Lifetime Achievement Award. His work is in more than 250 public and private collections.
Opening Fall 2016 Ernest Trova: Visionary Doug Safranek: Both Sides of the Bridge Francis Luis Mora: A Legacy Reconsidered Natvar Bhavsari: The Dimension of Color More at MoArtDeLand.org
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Museum Members, thank you for supporting the arts. June 2016
Ms. Elaine Abbe Mr. David Ables Ms. Mary Lee Adler & Mr. Herb Hiller Ms. Heather Alexander Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Keith Allen Ms. Cam Amici Mr. and Mrs. Michael Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Tanner Andrews Mr. and Mrs. Frank Arostegui Mr. and Mrs. Scott Ashley Mrs. Dana Avison Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Bacom Ms. Atanacia Bagatelas Ms. Lisa Ball Dr. Grady Ballenger and Dr. Karen Cole Mr. and Mrs. Edward Baranski Ms. Cyndy Barrow Mr. and Mrs. Tony Basile Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Baskett, Jr. Ms. Bobbi Baugh Mrs. Karen Baxley Ms. Barbara Beasley Ms. Savilla Beasley Mr. Joseph Beaulieu Mr. and Mrs. James Beckley Mrs. Stephanie D. Bender Mr. and Mrs. Julius Bennett Ms. Diane Benton Mr. and Mrs. Robert Berger Mr. and Mrs. Harlin Bessire Ms. Elizabeth Bhimjee Mr. and Mrs. Dan Biferie Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Bigman Dr. Nancy Billingsley Mr. and Mrs. Budd Bishop Ms. Betty Gregg Black Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Blake Mr. and Mrs. Keith Bohn Mrs. Sally Landis Bohon Mr. and Mrs. Gary Bolding
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Mr. George Bolge Sheila Boltuch and Vergil Wright Ms. Linda Bond Ms. Davita Bonner Mr. and Mrs. Bill Booth Ms. Kristee Booth and Mr. Steve Friedel Mrs. Kay Botet Ms. Mary Bots Ann Brady and Rick Kolodinsky Ms. Betty Brady Mrs. Sue Brannon Dr. and Mrs. Michael Branton Ms. Billie Breedlove Mr. and Mrs. Walt Briden Mr. Oscar Brock Mrs. Dorothy Brown Mrs. Shannon Brown Ms. Bonny Bryan Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Burgess Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Burgher Mr. and Mrs. Tom Burns Mr. Clayton Cabeen Ms. Louise Caccamise Ms. Katherine Cairns Ms. Mary Calcagni Mr. William Calkins Ms. Sherri Callahan Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Cantwell Mr. Robbie Carelli Mr. Greg Carlton Mr. Wayne Carter Ms. Jill Cerulli Edward Chambers and Donna Ramsay Mrs. Janet Chambliss Ms. Julie Chappel Mr. and Mrs. Nestor Charneco Ms. Sarah Childress Mr. and Mrs. Michael Clark Ms. Mary T. Clark Lora Clay Ms. Alison Clement
Ms. Donna Cochran Ms. Nancy Cockerham Mr. and Mrs. David Coffman Ms. Jeanne Colker Mr. and Mrs. Earl Colvard Ms. Ann Colwell Ms. Kathy Cone-Smith Mr. and Mrs. Jon Conrad Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy Cooper Mr. and Mrs. Taver Cornett Mrs. Frances Corradetti Ms. Angela Costa Mr. David Cox Mrs. Ginger Cox John Cox and Sherrill Schoening Katherine Crane and Rodney Crane Mr. and Mrs. Chirs Cruz Mr. and Mrs. Ray Cuprill Mr. Bill Dabney Mrs. Marion Dailey Ms. Dorothy Dansberger Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dascher Ms. Donna Dastic Paula Davey Manny De La Vega and Jannet Avila Nora De La Vega and Roy Badilla Mrs. Jayne deMontmollin Dr. and Mrs. Joseph De Peyster Mr. Rick de Yampert Ms. Corinne deArakal Mr. and Mrs. William Dellecker Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Delman Mr. Mark Denehy and Ms. Cynthia Denehy Ms. Patricia S. DeSalvo Ms. Deborah Devine Dr. and Mrs. Wayne Dickson Ms. Cindy Dill Mrs. Naomi Dimmick Ms. Lucy Dixon Ms. Betty Dollar Ms. Joan Dominus
Museum of Art - DeLand: Membership
There is nothing more awe-inspiring than to tour our local museum and see such incredible, thoughtprovoking work. I am proud to support DeLand’s Museum of Art and all of its educational programming. Doni Lennon, Insurance Agent/Managing Member Lane-Lennon Commercial Insurance, LLC Museum Corporate Member since 2007 Krewe Nouveau Member Purvis Young, Party Scene c. 1995, mixed media Gift of Dr. Robert & Marlene Uchin to Permanent Collection
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Donnelly Mr. and Mrs. Steve Doran Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dorian Gen. and Mrs. Lee Downer Ms. Bobbie Doyle Ms. Betty Drees-Johnson Mr. Jon Drossos and Ms. Diane Gugliotta Ms. Dominique DuBois Mr. and Mrs. Denis Duckett Mr. and Mrs. Michael Dunn Mr. and Mrs. John DuPree Mr. Michael Dyer Jin Long Edenfield and Jack Jonker Mr. Anthony Ehrlich Ms. Saundra Emerson Ms. Roberta English Ms. Connie Erickson Ms. Diane Erickson Ms. Diane Eubanks Mrs. Elly Evans Ms. Phyllis Evelyn Ms. Ruth Ann Fay Mr. Adam Feinstein Mr. Eric Feinstein and Ms. Laurice Nemetz Mr. and Mrs. Geof Felton BGen. William Feyk and Dr. Mary Theresa Izzo Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Figueroa Mrs. Andrea Finkle Mrs. Karen Finstad Mr. David Fithian and Ms. Judy Beaudroux Ms. Sharon Fithian Ms. Erlinda Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fleishel Mr. Ben Flowers, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Arden Fontaine Mr. and Mrs. James Ford Ms. Midge Fournier and Mr. Bob Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Larry French Dr. Tilman Friedrich & Mrs. Carlota Vollhardt Mrs. Patricia Fusco Mr. Tony Garan
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Mr. Harold Garde Ms. Linda Gatewood Mr. and Mrs. Bart Gawlikowski Ms. Nancy Gear Ms. Julie Gennaro Mr. and Mrs. Richard George Mrs. Ann Gerard Ms. Janette Geyer Mr. and Mrs. Tariq Gibran Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gilbert Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gleason Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Glover Mr. Ken Goldberg Mr. Lee Goldring and Dr. Deborah Goldring Mr. Armand Gonzalez Mr. Thomas Gormley Mr. Sal Cristofano and Ms. Laura Gosper Ms. Lou Anne Gossett Ms. Courtney Gossett Mr. and Mrs. Sam Granata Mr. and Mrs. Charles Granger Mr. Mark Grantham Mrs. Loretta Greenfield Ms. Pamela Griesinger Dr. Susan Griffis Mr. and Mrs. Peter Grigas Ms. Erica Group Mr. and Mrs. Al Guenther Mrs. Wynne Guy Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Habermehl Ms. Lorna Jean Hagstrom Mr. Tom Hale Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Hall Mr. and Mrs. William Hall Ms. Courtney Hamil Mr. Scott Hamsik and Ms. Marie Hamsik Ms. Cheri Haring Mrs. Laura Harlow Mr. Carl Harmon Mr. Chris Harris Ms. Debbie Harriss
Ms. Jeannie Harvey Mrs. Nancy Hatch Mr. and Mrs. Richard Haughwout Ms. Tara Hawkins and Mrs. Valentina Hawkins Ms. Sarah Hayman Mr. and Mrs. John Heidel Mr. Bob Hellermann and Mr. Sam McIlrath Ms. Elizabeth Henneberger Mr. Blake Henschel Mr. and Mrs. David Hensley Ms. Deb Herman Ms. Rachel Hernandez Mr.a nd Mrs. David Hickman Mr. Jack Hill Mr. and Mrs. Karl Hill Ms. Lynn Hoganson Mr. and Mrs. William Hohns Mr. and Mrs. Paul Holland Regina Holland and John Tengblad Mr. and Mrs. John Horn Mr. Frank Hotze and Mrs. Shirley Litteral Mr. and Mrs. Clark Houck Ms. Jennifer Houdeshell Mr. and Mrs. Keith Howard Ms. Connie Hughes Mrs. Samantha Hughes Mr. J. Martin Hurtado Ms. Kathy Hutchinson and Mr. William Hutshinson Mr. and Mrs. Ed Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Jacques Jacobsen, Jr. Ms. Jeanne Jendrzejewski Ms. Elizabeth Johns Lajara Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Everett Johnson Mr. Kevin Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Johnston Mr. and Mrs. Mark Johnston Mr. and Mrs. Edward Joiner Dr. and Mrs. Christopher Jordan
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It’s extremely important to the vitality of a community to support its cultural arts organizations. Being a Corporate Sponsor of the Museum of Art – DeLand provides support to the whole community. Manny De La Vega owner De La Vega Restaurante y Galeria Museum Board Trustee Member since 2010 Jim Couper, Way Back, 2001, oil on canvas
Jim Coupler: There Are No Other Everglades in the World (January 15 – March 26, 2016) Mr. and Mrs. Frank Juge Mr. Chad Justice Mr. and Mrs. Michael Katz Ms. Jacalyn Kies Mr. and Mrs. Harvey King Mr. Peter Klambatsen and Ms. Dorothy Powers Mr. Kenneth Klemp and Mr. Thomas Wilkey Ms. Carol Knox Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Knox Mr. Toby Knudsen Ms. Mary Koenig Ms. Dorothy Kopp Ms. Stephanie Koshiol Ms. Brenda Krist Mr. and Mrs. Ludlow Lambertson Mr. and Mrs. Barney Lane Mrs. Judie Lange Mr. and Mrs. David Langell Mr. and Mrs. Edward LaPierre Mrs. Carol Larson Ms. Madeline Larson Mr. and Mrs. William Lasher Ms. Diana Latow Ms. Mary Ann Lawrence Ms. Janice Lea Mrs. Janet Leahey-Daniels Mr. and Mrs. Cosmo Leboffe Ms. Joan Lee Mrs. Margaret Lee Ms. Sara Legard Mr. Bill Legard” Ms. Brooke Lennon Ms. Doni Lennon Mrs. Judith Levine Mr. John Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Scott Lewitt Ms. Louise Lieber and Mr. Pat Patton Mr. Arthur Lillquist Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Link Ms. Deborah Littler Ms. Nancy Livingston and Mr. David Bryan Mr. and Mrs. Julian Long Ms. Suzanne Lonky Mr. and Mrs. Tim Ludwig Ms. Charon Luebbers Ms. Marcia Luick Mr. and Mrs. John MacDonald Mr. Thomas MacPhail and Mrs. Deborah Ulbrich-MacPhail Mr. Michael Mankin
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Mr. and Mrs. David Marchese Mr. and Mrs. Van Massey Mr.Wayne Matthews and Mrs. Jackie Hannick Mr. Edmond Maurice and Ms. Sandra Maurice William May and Melissa Myers Mrs. Robin May Ms. Kelsey Mayid Ms. Mary McBride Ms. Hilda McCarter Mrs. Karlene McConnell Ms. Aida McCuen and Mr. James McCuen Mr. and Mrs. Daniel McKenna Ms. Deborah McShane Ms. Jane Mealy Mrs. Carol Mears Ms. Kelly Medei Ms. Gena Medrano Swartz Mrs. Sandra Medsker Ms. Dorothy Mehler Mr. and Mrs. Taner Mercho Ms. Mary Mericle Ms. Mary Louise Merola Ms. E. Jane Messersmith Mr. Harry Messersmith Patricia Miles Mr. Gilbert Miller Ms. Jean Miller Susan Miller Mr. and Mrs. Greg Milliken Ms. Erin Mindigo Mr. and Mrs. Adolfo Miralles Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Mitchell Mr. Peter Mollers and Mr. Bill McIntyre Ms. Roberta Montgomery Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Moore Mr. William Moran Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Morgan Mrs. Kathryn Morganelli Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Morrisett Ms. Melinda Mosley and Mr. Daniel Bullard Mrs. Susan Mulholland Mr. and Mrs. Michael Nabirny Mr. and Mrs. Justice Nass Ms. Susan Nathan Ms. Diane Neetz Mrs. Donna Nicosia Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nied Mrs. Carole Norman Ms. Mary Obrecht Ms. Dannette Olday
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Olsen Ms. Kathy Omeara Mrs. Patricia Onorato-Downey Mrs. Muriel Orenstein Ms. Patricia Orfely Mr. and Mrs. Terry Overbey Jami Owens Mr. and Mrs. Edson Pacheco Dr. Zoē Paiva Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Palmer Mrs. Joyce Palmer Mr. Judson Pankey and Ms. Lisa Wilson Ms. Mimi Panton Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pardee Mrs. Betty Parker Mr. Phil Parker Ms. Bonnie Partridge Mrs. Genevieve Patrick Ms. Deb Patterson and Mr. Randy Miller Jennifer Patty and Mary Anne Blum Mr. and Mrs. Fred Peace Ms. Susan Peacock Mr. and Mrs. Rob Peaden Mrs. Hyae Ok Pederson Ms. Mary Lou Peffer Mr. Ray Pennebaker and Ms. Laura Bounds Ms. Donna Pepin Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Perkins Mr. and Mrs. Ken Petschauer Ms. Susie Pinder and Mr. Virgil Bolton Mrs. Linda Pinto Mr. and Mrs. James Pizza Ms. Mary Pollock Ms. Frances Porter Mr. Bruce Pratt and Ms. Jane Slivka Mr. and Mrs. Fred Preston Dr. and Mrs. Harry Price David Putnam and Marcia Heath Ms. Holly Rabits Ms. Clare Radigan Mrs. Petra Ramirez de Arellano Mr. Charles Ramos Mrs. Terri Randall Mr. Glen Raney Ms. Linda Raney Mrs. Tia Raney Dr. and Mrs. Curt Rausch Mr. David Ray and Ms. Elizabeth Ray Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Reed Mr. Richard Reep and Ms. Kimberly Mathis
Museum of Art - DeLand: Membership
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Reid Mr. and Mrs. Louis Reinoso Mrs. Lorene Richards Mr. and Mrs. William Richards Mr. and Mrs. Sean Richter Ms. Jessie Ritz and Mr. Derek Ridgway Mr. Mike Rizzo Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Robertson Mr. and Mrs. Bill Rode Ms. Janice Roedel Mr. and Mrs. Curt Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rollins Ms. Roberta Rollins and Mr. Charles Kane Ms. Cacee Rose Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Roth Ms. Sherry Rowdon Mrs. Rene Sands Ms. Regina Santilli and Mr. Dirk Eskew Ms. Amanda Sarnes Ms. Sylvia Saul and Mr. Harold London Ms. Anita Scheller Ms. Audrey Scherr Mr. and Mrs. William Scheurich Ms. Tracy Schneider Ms. Patty Schwarze Ms. Diana Scimone Ms. Lois Scott Ms. Maude Scott Mrs. Sandy Scovell and Ms. Michele Holloway Mr. and Mrs. David Seaberg Mr. Robert Seigel & Dr. Roxanne Seigel Ms. Carolyn Sekerak Ms. Lynn Seleck Mr. and Mrs. Todd Serwanski Ms. Virginia Shanley Mrs. Patricia Shattuck Mr. Jeffrey Shepherd and Ms. Barbara Button Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sherman Ms. Peggy Shotton Mr. Mark Shuttleworth and Ms. Anna Tomczak Ms. Katharine Sibbald Mr. and Mrs. Nate Siebens Ms. Rachel Sieg and Mrs. Elizabeth Sieg Mr. and Mrs. Peter Simoneau Mr. Robert Sindelir and Ms. Jill Cannady Mr. Andy Sistrunk Sheldon Skolfield and Barbara Parks Mr. and Mrs. Chandler Smith
Ms. Denise Smith Ms. Mary K. Smith Drs. Robert & Ellen Smith Ms. Suzy Smith Ms. Lori Snook Ed and Diana Snyder Renee and Jeannine Solomon Mr. and Mrs. Peter Sorensen Mrs. Yolanda Spicer Dr. and Mrs. Mac Steen Dr. and Mrs. Paul Steeves Mr. and Mrs. Martin Stein Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stewart Mrs. Janet Stone Mr. and Mrs. Michael Stover Ms. Peg Strahman Ms. Rebecca Strunks Ms. Jennifer Stubbs Dr. and Mrs. Joe Suarez Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sugarman Ms. Carole Sustak Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Sutherland Mr. Steve Suttle Mr. Dennis Talbert Susan Tanner and Erin Tanner Ms. Sara Taylor Mrs. Vivian Taylor Ms. Caroline Teal Mr. and Mrs. Gary Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thomas Mr. Kendrick Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Thompson Ms. Judy Thompson Ms. Trish Thompson Tricia Twitty Mr. Donald Van Wagenen Mr. and Mrs. Gary Vargas Mrs. Ilene Vegazo Ms. Joan Vincent Ms. Carmen Visconti Dr. and Mrs. Tony Visconti, III Mrs. Reychelle Vise Mr. and Mrs. Peter Vollstadt Ms. Laurel Von Syda Dr. Nancy Vosburg and Ms. Rhonda Scull Mr. Eric Voss Mr. and Mrs. John Wagner Mrs. Frances Walker Mr. and Mrs. Richard Walker Mr. and Mrs. David Wall Ms. Kathy Walsh
Genna and Roger Wangsness Mr. and Mrs. Barry Ward Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Ward Gail Warner Mr. and Mrs. Richard Warner Ms. Barbara Waterston Dr. Shari Watkins Ms. Shirley Webb Ms. Sandy Weil Ms. Mary Lou Weiner Mr. Seymour Weiner Mr. Scott Weiss and Dr. Karen Weiss Mrs. Barbara Wells Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wendland Mr. and Mrs. David West Mr. and Mrs. Matt West Ms. Mara Whitridge Ms. Nina Wilder Heather Wilkinson and Stephanie Coutavas Dr. Ian Williams and Dr. Nancy Hutson Ms. Joyce Williams Mrs. Margaret Williams Mr. Samuel Williamson, Jr. and Ms. Linda Williamson Ms. Sylvia Wilson Dr. John & Ms. Nancy Wilton Mr. Michael Wingo and Ms. Charlaine Free Mrs. Jeanne C. Wolfe Mrs. Karen Wolf Mr. Paul Wolkovits Dr. and Mrs. James Woodward Ms. Diane Yoches and Mr. Charles Bull Mr. Rick Cothran and Mrs. Elizabeth Zapata-Cothran Ms. Sandra Zapf Ms. Caroline Zendt Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Zipay Dr. and Mrs. Fred Zollinger Discover the Benefits of Museum Membership: Click here.
Bob and I support the Museum because of its exceptional programming for adults and children. I urge everyone to visit the museum and its shops and join the effort to increase the culture and value in our community. Linda Colvard Dorian, Museum Trustee, Past President, Member since 2006, Attorney (husband Bob, right) George Brandriff, Cannery Row, Newport, c. 1928, oil onboard California Impressionsim: Selections from The Irvine Museum (January 22 – April 17, 2016)
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Museum of Art - DeLand: In the Galleries
DeLand Sculpture Walk | California Impressionism
Krewe Nouveau | Teacher ’s Institute | Syd Solomon
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IT’S TIME TO
AT THE 3RD ANNUAL
MUSEUM ST O RE SUMMER SIZZLER SALE MUSEUM OF ART - DELAND SUMMER SIZZLER STORE SALE JULY 25 - 31 AT 100 N. WOODLAND BLVD. JULY 26 - 31 AT 600 N. WOODLAND BLVD. | 50% OFF SELECT EXHIBITION CATALOGUES & POSTERS 10% OFF ALL STORE MERCHANDISE MUSEUM MEMBERS RECEIVE 20% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE | GET MAD THIS SUMMER: EXPERIENCE ALL OF THE BENEFITS OF A M USEUM OF A RT - D ELAND MEMBERSHIP MOARTDELAND.ORG/MEMBERSHIP 22
Museum of Art - DeLand: Membership
Museum of Art - DeLand Established in 1951, the Museum of Art - DeLand, Florida, is a vital and interactive nonprofit community visual arts museum dedicated to the collecting, preservation, study, display and educational use of the fine arts. The Museum of Art - DeLand, Florida, is a 501(c)(3) organization incorporated in the State of Florida and is a member of the American Alliance of Museums and the Florida Association of Museums. Museum of Art - DeLand Staff
Museum of Art - DeLand Board of Trustees
George S. Bolge, Chief Executive Officer Dorothy Dansberger, Director of Finance & Operations Pattie Pardee, Director of Development Lisa Habermehl, Director of Marketing Pam Coffman, Curator of Education David Fithian, Curator of Art and Exhibitions Tariq Gibran, Registrar Teri Peaden, Manager of Downtown Museum Suzi Tanner, Manager of Guest Services, Membership & Special Events
Judy Thompson, President Gen. Lee Downer, Vice President Linda Colvard Dorian, Past President Mary Jeanne Ludwig, Treasurer Dr. John Wilton, Secretary Dennis Aylward, Samuel Blatt, Bill Booth, Sal Cristofano, Manny De La Vega, Jewel Dickson, Linda Colvard Dorian, Dr. Deborah Goldring, John Horn, Ray Johnson, Frances Massey, Robin May, Deborah McShane, Dagny Robertson, Marty Suarez, Dr. Ian Williams.
Letters to the Editor email Marketing@MoArtDeLand.org
2015 - 16 Museum of Art - DeLand Legacy Circle, Endowment Fund, Leadership Circle Foundations, Corporate Members, Patrons and Community Partners Dennis Aylward, Dr. Bruce Bigman and Carolyn Bigman, Samuel and Donna Blatt, Bill and Terri Booth, Earl and Patti Colvard, Sal Cristofano and Laura Gosper, Manny De La Vega, Dr. Wayne Dickson and Jewel Dickson, Robert Dorian and Linda Colvard Dorian, Lee and Susan Downer, Betty Drees Johnson, Dr. Deborah and Lee Goldring, Christie G. Har-ris, John and Karen Horn, Ed Jackson and Pat Heller-Jackson, Ray and Betty Johnson, Barney and Linda Lane, Tim and Mary Jeanne Ludwig, Van and Frances Massey, Walter and Robin May, Beth and Greg Milliken, Linda Pinto, Dagny and Tommy Robertson, Stephen and Claudia Roth, Patricia Schwarze, Fred and Jeanne Staloff, Harry Sugarman, Judith Thompson, Dr. Ian Williams and Dr. Nancy Hutson, Dr. John Wilton and Nancy Wilton, Art League of Daytona Beach, Inc., Dorothy M. Gillespie Foundation, Daytona Auto Mall, DeLand Breakfast Rotary, DeLand Fall Festival of the Arts, DeLand Rotary Club, Inc., DeLand Women’s Organization, Inc., Boulevard Tire Center, Collaborative WEALTH, E.O. Painter Printing Company, Faith Hope & Charity, Krewe Nouveau, Fleishel Financial Associates, Lane Insurance, Inc., Lacey Family Charitable Trust, Mainstreet Community Bank, Massey Services, Inc., Museum Guild, Publix Supermarket Charities, United Parachute Technologies, West Volusia Beacon, W. W. Gay Mechanical Contractor, Inc., State of Florida Division of Cultural Affairs and the County of Volusia.
Art & Business For information on the benefits of Corporate Membership & Event Sponsorship, contact Pattie Pardee, Director of Development, at Pardee@MoArtDeLand.org
Museum of Art - DeLand 600 N. Woodland Blvd. DeLand, FL 32720 386.734.4371 Museum of Art - DeLand Downtown 100 N. Woodland Blvd. DeLand, FL 32720 386.279.7534 MoArtDeLand.org Museum of Art - DeLand Review I Preview Summer 2016 Copyright 2016 Museum of Art - DeLand, Florida. All rights reserved. Sponsored in part by the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs, and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture.
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