Winter 2022 Member News

Page 18

OF NEW MEXICO FOUNDATION WINTER 2022 2021-2022 YEAR IN REVIEW The Giving Spirit Members Move Foundation to Record-Breaking Fiscal Year
MUSEUM

Cover (clockwise from top left):

Gene Kloss, The Sanctuary, Chimayo, 1936. Photo by Fine Arts Program, Public Buildings Service, U.S. General Services Administration.

Synnøve Kvamme (center), with sisters Halldis and Gudrun Folkedal, dressed in Hardangerbunader, from the Dressing with Purpose exhibition, Museum of International Folk Art.

Photo © Jan M. Lillebø.

Bosque Redondo Memorial at Fort Sumner Historic Site.

Photo courtesy New Mexico Historic Sites.

Field excavation at Homol’ovi Pueblo, Arizona, during archaeomagnetic sampling. Photo by Gary Hein, courtesy Office of Archaeological Studies.

Van Gutierrez and Lela Gutierrez (Santa Clara Pueblo), Jar, ca. 1940s. Museum of Indian Arts and Culture/Laboratory of Anthropology Collection, gift from the Estate of Rick Dillingham. Photo by Addison Doty, courtesy Museum of Indian Arts and Culture.

Photographer John Candelario with camera. Palace of the Governors Photo Archives, John Candelario Collection.

Table of Contents

LETTER TO MEMBERS

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE

Our Mission

The Museum of New Mexico Foundation supports the Museum of New Mexico system, in collaboration with the Museum of New Mexico Board of Regents and the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs. The Foundation’s principal activities are fund development for exhibitions and education programs, retail and licensing programs, financial management, advocacy and special initiatives.

We serve the following state cultural institutions:

• Museum of Indian Arts and Culture

• Museum of International Folk Art

Below: Several new members were recently elected to the Museum of New Mexico Board of Trustees, including (left to right) Chris Ryon, Margo Thoma, Joe Colvin and Sandy Zane. Not pictured is Natalie Rivera.

• New Mexico History Museum

• New Mexico Museum of Art

• New Mexico Historic Sites

• Office of Archaeological Studies

Member News Contributors

Mariann Lovato, Managing Editor

Carmella Padilla, Writer and Editor

Steve Cantrell, Writer

Jennifer Levin, Writer

Saro Calewarts, Designer and Photographer

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THE YEAR IN REVIEW
MUSEUM
MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART 8 NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM 10 NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART
NEW MEXICO HISTORIC SITES
OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES
DONOR LISTS
MUSEUM SHOPS
LICENSING
WAYS TO GIVE 29
museumfoundation.org

Dear Members,

Join us in celebrating the best fundraising year ever for the Museum of New Mexico Foundation in fiscal year 2021-2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022).

We generated $11.8 million in earned and contributed revenues for FY22, the highest one-year total in the Foundation’s history. We are grateful to you, our members, as well as our trustees, donors and friends, for being so generous in supporting the Foundation and Museum of New Mexico system.

In this annual report issue of Member News, we are honored to recognize by name all those who contributed to this tremendous success, including Ambassador, Circles and Circles Explorer members, Corporate Partners and Business Council members. Donors to our Annual Fund (at $1,000+) and Exhibition Development and Education Funds are also acknowledged, as well as Founders Society and Legacy Society members.

Beginning on page 3 is a full report on the Foundation’s membership, devel opment, retail and licensing activities during FY22. All five of our member ship programs and Annual Fund exceeded our goals with $1.8 million in total revenues. In addition to cash contributions, the Santa Fe business community also provided in-kind services valued at more than $223,000.

Our many generous donors, along with endowment payouts, provided $3.5 million in direct support for exhibitions development and educational programming for our 13 cultural partners, including the four state museums in Santa Fe, eight historic sites statewide and the Office of Archaeological Studies. This is another history-making total for the Foundation.

Endowment and estate gifts were especially generous in FY22. New endow ments for the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, Museum of International Folk Art and New Mexico Museum of Art were established, while over $2 million was realized in planned gifts of cash, real estate and artwork.

In another extraordinary outcome, our Museum Shops and online store broke an all-time sales record with nearly $3.6 million in gross revenue and $575,035 in net income in FY22. Our licensing program also had a stellar year with nearly $136,000 in gross revenue and the launch of three new collections.

In the end, what matters most is the world-class programming this support makes possible throughout the Museum of New Mexico system. The benefits to our residents and visitors alike are immeasurable. Thank you for all you do for the Foundation and our state museum system. Best wishes to you and your family during the holidays and in the new year ahead.

Sincerely,

“What matters most is the world-class programming this support makes possible throughout the Museum of New Mexico system.”
—Jamie Clements
museumfoundation.org 1

Dear Members,

What a tremendous honor it is to express my gratitude on behalf of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation Board of Trustees to all who participated in this record-breaking year of support for the Museum of New Mexico system.

The success of fiscal year 2021-2022 is all the more remarkable given the challenges of the pandemic in the two years preceding. The Foundation staff warrants a standing ovation.

The product of the generous support of our members can be seen throughout New Mexico—from the rise of Santa Fe’s Vladem Contemporary to the opening of new permanent exhibitions at the Bosque Redondo Memorial and Museum of Indian Arts and Culture.

Finally, a special appreciation to my fellow trustees for their extraordinary generosity and guidance. As we move through these times of transition, the Foundation can look ahead to new and exciting horizons.

Sincerely,

Frieda Simons

Board Chair, Museum of New Mexico Foundation

Top: Frieda Simons. Photo courtesy Frieda Simons. Opposite: Ansel Adams, Church at Ranchos de Taos, 1931. Photo courtesy New Mexico Museum of Art.

MUSEUM OF NEW MEXICO FOUNDATION

Board of Trustees 2022–2023

OFFICERS

Frieda Simons, Chair

Cathy A. Allen,Vice Chair

Maria Gale, Vice Chair Michael Knight, Treasurer Kate Moss, Secretary

VOTING TRUSTEES

Lorin Abbey

Allan Affeldt

John Andrews

Cynthia Bolene

Julia Catron

Joe Colvin

Rosalind Doherty

Diane Domenici

John Duncan Gwenn Djupedal Eric Garduño

Robert Glick Guy Gronquist Pat Hall Bud Hamilton David Hawkanson

Susie Herman Ruth Hogan

Peggy Hubbard Edelma Huntley Bruce Larsen Christine McDermott Dan Monroe

Michael Ogg, M.D.

Dennis A. O’Toole, Ph.D. Sara Otto

Skip Poliner

Robert Reidy, M.D. Natalie Rivera

John Rochester Wilson Scanlan

Harriet Schreiner

Judy Sherman

Courtney Finch Taylor

Margo Thoma

Robert Vladem

Laura Widmar

David Young Sandy Zane Ellen Zieselman

ADVISORY TRUSTEES

Victoria Addison

Keith K. Anderson

Robert L. Clarke

Stockton Colt France Córdova

Liz Crews

Jim Davis

Joan Dayton Greg Dove George Duncan Kirk Ellis

Carlos Garcia

Leroy Garcia

J. Scott Hall

Steve Harris Stephen Hochberg Rae Hoffacker

Barbara Hoover

Kent F. Jacobs, M.D. Jim Manning David Matthews

Helene Singer Merrin Beverly Morris

Blair Naylor Mark Naylor Patty Newman

Jane O’Toole

Michael Pettit

Kathleen Pugh Jerry Richardson Chris Ryon

J. Edd Stepp

Nancy Meem Wirth Claire Woodcock

HONORARY TRUSTEES

Anne Bingaman

Jim Duncan Jr. John Marion

Edwina Milner

J. Paul Taylor Carol Warren Eileen A. Wells

TRUSTEES EMERITI

Saul Cohen

James Snead

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JULY 1, 2021–JUNE 30, 2022

Rising to New Heights

Donor Generosity Exceeds Pre-Pandemic Giving

The Museum of New Mexico Foundation experienced an historic fundraising year in fiscal year 2021–2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022), with total earned and contributed revenues rising to new heights at $11.8 million.

Not only did we exceed our goals for development, member ship and retail operations, we exceeded pre–pandemic giving levels. A portion of this success is due to the reopening of the museums and record-breaking sales in our Museum Shops, which for the first time in Foundation history, finished the year $1 million over budget. We secured $3.5 million in private support for our 13 cultural partners, far surpassing our goal by more than $1 million.

“We are grateful for the giving spirit of our members and donors,” says Foundation President/CEO Jamie Clements. “It is a testament to the loyalty and generosity of Foundation supporters that we have outperformed on our financial goals a year earlier than expected.”

A Diversity of Philanthropy

Numerous individuals and groups expressed their philan thropy in a variety of ways during FY22, from joining or renewing their museum memberships to contributing to endowment funds. To that end, some 3,500 transactions

were made in support of the Museum of New Mexico system and Foundation, a figure that includes grants, donations, special events and other categories.

Membership growth reflected a monumental jump in Circles Explorers, which bested its goals by 92% as people were eager to get out of their houses to reconnect physically with New Mexico’s art, culture and history. Business Council memberships outdid expectations by 69%. In all, Founda tion staff processed 6,060 general memberships, 257 Circles and Circles Explorers memberships, and 56 business memberships.

Grants generated nearly $1 million, including such highlights: The National Park Service gave $16,956 to the Office of Archaeological Studies to collaborate on an archaeomag netic study of Tonto National Monument’s Upper Cliff Dwelling. The Institute of Museum and Library Services provided $250,000 for conservation and digitization of select Vladem Contemporary collections. And McCune Charitable

Foundation gave $15,000 to the Museum of International Folk Art to engage cultural advisors in creating a more inclu sive narrative for the permanent exhibition Multiple Visions: A Common Bond. Endowment giving proved equally robust in FY22. The new Della Warrior Endowment Fund at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture will generate support for exhibitions and educational programs. Established in 2022, the fund honors Warrior, the museum’s former executive director who retired in 2021. Her eight-year legacy at the museum includes over seeing more than 30 exhibitions, expanding the museum’s collection of Native art, establishing innovative educational programs and strengthening relationships with Indigenous communities. Two donors each pledged $100,000 to match any and all contributions up to $200,000. As of June 30, 2022, the endowment total stood at $129,916.

Support for the Foundation also grew in FY22. The Founda tion is especially grateful to six thoughtful donors who bolstered our work through their wills and estate plans. Their contributions included cash, real estate and artwork, totaling more than $2 million in promised and realized gifts. Among the gifts are proceeds from the sale of a private house that will benefit the Photo Archives at the New Mexico History Museum.

Purchasing Power

Perhaps the most impressive, yet least surprising, elements of our success in FY22 came from our Museum Shops and licensing program. Retail revenues revealed that, even as people made their way back to museums, they continued to indulge in online shopping, where a stunning range of high-quality, eye-catching artworks, apparel, jewelry and other objects beckon.

The Alexander Girard Legacy Fund was also established in 2022 in honor of the 40th anniversary of the Girard Wing at the Museum of International Folk Art. The 106,000-object Girard collection comprises the core of the museum’s hold ings. The fund will provide ongoing support for educational programs and maintenance of the popular Girard-curated exhibition, Multiple Visions: A Common Bond, which opened in 1982. Two generous founding donors established the corpus of the fund, which will eventually be the catalyst for a $5 million endowment campaign. Finally, the R.H. Blommer Endowment Fund was established at the New Mexico Museum of Art. The fund supports acqui sition of artworks by New Mexico artists who worked in the first half of the twentieth century.

In total, the Museum Shops recorded $3.6 million in sales and $575,035 in net revenue. Best-selling objects in the fiscal year included Gregory Lomayesva’s Kachina-styled figures at the Spiegelberg Shop at the New Mexico History Museum; Willard F. Clark prints at the Rosalie D. and Steven J. Harris Shop at the New Mexico Museum of Art; handmade books by Japanese artist Hana Tottori at the Lynn Godfrey Brown Shop at the Museum of International Folk Art; and works in glass by such artists as Robert “Spooner’’ Marcus, Carol Lujan and Ramson Lomotewama at the Colleen Cloney Duncan Shop at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture.

In this record-breaking year, the licensing program generated nearly $136,000 in gross revenue. New licensing agreements were also secured while three beautiful museum-inspired collections were brought to market.

“Our members and donors made possible these new levels of growth and support in all areas of our operations,” says Clements. “This support enhances exhibition development and educational programming throughout the Museum of New Mexico system.”

Opposite: Victor Higgins, Untitled (Adobe House with Woman in Red), n.d. Collection of the New Mexico Museum of Art, gift of the Joan Higgins Reed Estate, 1984. Photo by Blair Clark, courtesy New Mexico Museum of Art.
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“It is a testament to the loyalty and generosity of Foundation supporters that we have outperformed on our financial goals a year earlier than expected.”

Your Impact: $11.8 million

Earned Revenues $7.1 million Contributed Revenues $4.7 million

Shops and Licensing: $3.7 million

Shops (gross): $3.6 million

MNMF Other: $2.7 million

Legacy Society (gifts realized): $2 million

Federal Funding: $363,000

MNMF Endowment: $321,000

Checking Interest Income: $48,000

Annual Fund: $226,000 Division

Membership: $1.6 million

General: $744,000

$11.8 million

Licensing: $136,000 Division Support: $2.8 million

Circles and Explorers: $777,000 Corporate Partners and Business Council: $76,000 Division Other: $85,000

Friends Groups: $82,000 Foundation: $3,000

Museum of Indian Arts and Culture: $651,000

Museum of International Folk Art: $571,000

New Mexico Museum of Art: $1,069,000

Office of Archaeological Studies: $133,000

New Mexico History Museum: $338,000

Museum Resources Division: $49,000 New Mexico Historic Sites: $23,000

Endowments: $625,000
A complete audit may be viewed at museumfoundation.org. Figures above are rounded to the nearest
JULY 1, 2021–JUNE 30, 2022
thousandth.
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A Blockbuster Year Exhibitions Take Center Stage

Exhibitions took center stage at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture in fiscal year 2021-2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022), with the museum continuing to break ground on a curatorial approach that departs from tradi tional non-Indigenous Western models. These were supported by $146,000 in private gifts to the museum via the Museum of New Mexico Foundation’s Exhibitions Development Fund and unrestricted gifts.

Clearly Indigenous: Native Visions Reimagined in Glass opened May 16, 2021, and ran through June 12, 2022. The exhibition showcased works by 33 Indig enous artists who re-interpreted in glass traditional Native stories and designs or concerns affecting Indigenous Nations. A companion catalog tells these stories and includes photos of most of the works on display.

When the first iteration of Here, Now and Always opened in 1997, it was considered revolutionary. It was the first museum exhibition of its kind that transferred expertise away from non-Native academics and scholars to a primarily Indigenous curatorial team. The new Here, Now and Always, which opened on July 2, 2022, centers on the Indigenous people it represents, reflecting the museum’s meaningful partnerships with Native communities.

The reimagined permanent exhibition showcases more than 655 neverbefore-seen works from the museum’s collection, employing state-of-the-art technology and illustrating how the past informs the future from the vantage of the next generation.

By the Numbers $59,642 raised for exhibitions $9,615 raised for education 300 student tours $179,707 raised in grants 50 vitual programs $40,479 raised through Native Treasures 4 exhibitions opened $693,150 total division support
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Ehren Khee Natay (Navajo/Diné), multimedia artist and contributor to the Here, Now and Always exhibition. Photo © Mateo Perez.

Here, Now and Always is the museum’s hallmark exhibition,” says Tony Chavarria (Santa Clara Pueblo), the museum’s curator of ethnology. “Both its rejuvenation and celebratory opening in July were inclusive with many participants from Native communities near and far.”

Museum exhibitions were also at the nexus of Native Amer ican events and activities in Santa Fe this spring and summer as the museum joined with more than 40 Native-focused cultural organizations under the umbrella of Indigenous Celebration New Mexico 2022 (IC22). In addition to Here, Now and Always and Clearly Indigenous, the museum’s hosting of Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery, a collaboration of the Indian Arts Research Center of the School for Advanced Research in Santa Fe and the Vilcek Foundation in New York, was featured. The museum’s debut of the exhibition, which runs through May 29, 2023, includes 12 works in clay from the museum’s collection.

Treasures and Transition

Other museum needs in FY22—including education programming and acquisitions—benefited from proceeds from the 19th Annual Native Treasures Art Market, held over Memorial Day weekend. Over 174 Native artists returned to the Santa Fe Community Convention Center to show and sell their works. Among them was Virgil Ortiz (Cochiti

Pueblo), who was honored with the 2022 MIAC Living Trea sure Award, which recognizes Native artists who have made outstanding artistic contributions to Indigenous arts and culture. An exhibition of Ortiz’s ceramics and photographic works are featured in ReVOlution: Virgil Ortiz, on view at the museum through April 1, 2023.

Native Treasures raised some $40,479 for the museum in FY22. Additionally, the Foundation’s Education Fund for the museum generated $9,615, while grants through the Foun dation raised $179,707. Total private support for the museum in FY22 was $693,150.

A leadership transition also took place in FY22, with the retirement of Della Warrior, the museum’s executive director. In recognition of her eight years at the museum, the Della Warrior Endowment Fund was established to generate support for exhibitions and educational programs in the future. With Warrior’s departure, Melissa S. Powell was named deputy director. Powell’s experience includes more than 25 years at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History and the Maxwell Museum of Anthropology in Albuquerque.

To support the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, contact Lauren Paige at 505.982.2282 or Lauren@museumfoundation.org.

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Members preview the new Here, Now and Always. Photo © Mateo Perez.

A Year of Education

Engaging the Public

The headline from the Museum of International Folk Art in fiscal year 20212022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022) was the enduring popularity of education programs. These were bolstered by $47,318 in private contributions to the museum’s Education Fund via the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.

More than 7,500 people attended an array of public museum events during FY22 while 4,000 participated in off-site events. The museum’s specialty Folk Art to Go kits remained a solid hit with the younger set, with more than 2,300 distributed throughout the fiscal year.

The museum continued its strong partnerships with three public schools: El Camino Real Academy and Mandela International Magnet School in Santa Fe and San Juan Elementary School in the Española school district. Students from each school engaged in museum-led art projects, which were exhibited in the museum atrium with parents, family members and teachers attending.

The museum’s six-year collaboration with Cooking with Kids again served over 5,000 children in seven Rio Arriba County schools and thirteen public schools in Santa Fe County. In FY22, museum educators designed a folk art

By the Numbers $175,876 raised for exhibitions $47,318 raised for education $50,000 raised in grants 72,384 museum visitors 49 virtual tours $150,684 raised at Folk Art Flea $779,676 total division support Personal variations of the Leksandsdräkt worn
as featured in
with
2015. 8 museumfoundation.org
for Midsommar in Tibble Dalarna County, Sweden,
Dressing
Purpose: Belonging and Resistance in Scandinavia. Photo by Carrie Hertz,

lesson and art project complementing the food and culture of Cuba, the focus of the students’ cooking lessons.

The museum’s bilingual educator continued her work at Gerard’s House in Santa Fe. Projects included free folk art therapy craft sessions for young parents and a summer camp for youth grieving from life-changing loss and trauma.

Museum educators participated in the 10th annual Teacher’s Night Out Resource Fair, providing some 100 teachers with an overview of the museum’s educational opportunities.

Exhibitions also received significant support in FY22 with $175,876 in private gifts to the museum’s Exhibitions Devel opment Fund via the Foundation. In December of 2021, Dressing with Purpose: Belonging and Resistance in Scandi navia, examining costume’s role in expressing national identity, opened in the Neutrogena Wing. Elisabeth Alley, a longtime museum volunteer and Friends of Folk Art member, planned the opening evening in the museum atrium featuring a festive traditional Scandinavian dinner and holiday decor.

Work on future exhibitions is also benefiting from the funds generated in FY22, including $50,000 in grants and a total of $779,676 in overall division support.

Preparations continued for the January 2023 opening of La Cartonería Mexicana: The Mexican Art of Paper and Paste, featuring many historic and contemporary papier-mâché objects from the museum’s collection. Objects include piñatas, dolls, Day of the Dead skeletons and fantastical animals called alebrije. During the exhibition’s run, Mexican artists will demonstrate the cartonería craft and a giant alebrije will be on view at Santa Fe’s Southside Library.

The exhibition To Keep Them Warm: The Alaska Native Parka makes its museum debut in May 2023. The show explores how Indigenous peoples in a much colder clime protect themselves from the elements wearing parkas whose mate rials, beauty and craftsmanship belie their utilitarian func tion. Viewers will be treated to drawings, dolls and parka-making tools, as well as historic photographs illus trating the contexts in which parkas are worn. Examples of new directions in parka-making and sewing complete the picture of the Alaska Native parka in contemporary society.

A sampling of items from the 2022 Folk Art Flea, which raised a record $150,684 for the Museum of International Folk Art. Photo © David Margolis.

Notable Newsmakers

The museum moved forward with a series of transitions in FY22. A new sign was hoisted above the Museum of Interna tional Folk Art Shop in the name of Lynn Godfrey Brown, a former Foundation trustee and one of the folk art world’s biggest champions. The recognition was merited by Brown’s $100,000 gift to the Foundation’s newly established Alexander Girard Legacy Fund.

On June 14, 2022, the Friends of Folk Art, flush with three years of donated folk art, moved their largest-ever fund raising event to the Santa Fe County Fairgrounds. There, the 11th Annual Folk Art Flea raised a record-breaking $150,684 to support museum exhibitions and education programs. To date, the Folk Art Flea has raised more than $600,000 for the museum.

Finally, new leadership took the helm at the museum as former executive director Khristaan Villela departed for the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles. In May, Kate Macuen, the museum’s director of collections stepped in as interim executive director. Also, Laura J. Mueller, former curator of art at the Portland Japanese Garden, replaced Aurelia Gomez as deputy director.

To support the Museum of International Folk Art, contact Laura Sullivan at 505.216.0829 or Laura@museumfoundation.org.

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A Year of Digitization

Expanding Audiences Online

A push for the digitization of collections and other museum resources was top priority at the New Mexico History Museum during fiscal year 2021-2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022). That initiative, as well as exhibitions and public programs, generated $467,317 in institutional support in FY22 through grants and private gifts.

Billy Garrett, the museum’s executive director, says digitization adds another dimension to the multi-building museum campus, making it accessible to “users both on our campus and around the world” without having to physi cally visit. He points out that the museum’s website—nmhistory.org— recorded more than 2.6 million visits. Viewers from outside the country were as equitably represented as those from the Southwest.

Some of those users will undoubtedly be excited to have online access to the collection of seventh-generation New Mexican John S. Candelario. Though best known as a photographer, Candelario captured an assortment of Native songs, Spanish folk songs, interviews, lectures and more on reel-to-reel and cassette tapes. In FY22, a $15,000 grant from the Council on Library Informa tion Resources enabled staff at the museum’s Fray Angélico Chávez History Library to digitize and preserve some 200 of his rare audio recordings. While new audiences were engaged online, in-person outreach brought others to the source while also providing funding support in FY22. Friends of History, the museum’s member support group, continued to raise funds and increase awareness of the museum through a year-round program of tours, lectures and other events.

By the Numbers $100,175 raised for exhibitions $2,675 raised for education $224,564 raised in grants 131% increase in ticketed attendance 88,942 Facebook audience size $9,061 raised at Fred Harvey Weekend 17 new staff members $467,317 total division support $549,270 Campaign for New Mexico History
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“Harvey Girls in a Row,” from Katrina Parks’ documentary The Harvey Girls: Opportunity Bound Photo courtesy Northern Arizona University, Cline Library and Assertion Films.

Children swimming in the pool at the Carrie Tingley Hospital for Crippled Children, Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, ca. 1940. Photo courtesy Palace of the Governors Photo Archives, Neg. No. 059324.

Friends of History is perhaps best known for its downtown walking tours. Noting that tours now take place seven days per week with the season extended through Thanksgiving, Friends of History Steering Committee Chair Michael Ettema says, “This has been a year of expansion.” To that end, a FY22 $17,000 New Mexico Humanities Council grant made it possible for the tour manager to rewrite the docent training manual and to create a downloadable walking tour app.

Last November, history enthusiasts again gathered in Santa Fe for the annual museum-sponsored Fred Harvey History Weekend. Proceeds benefited the museum and included presentations in the museum auditorium and dinner at two historic New Mexico Fred Harvey hotels—Santa Fe’s La Fonda on the Plaza and the Castañeda in Las Vegas.

A Better Understanding

Garrett says the museum’s exhibitions strive for “bigger themes which resonate with our audience” in an effort “to better understand our world and how to operate in it.”

The Foundation’s Exhibitions Development Fund generated $100,175 in FY22 for exhibitions exploring local and global history. Opening in March 2022 was Curative Powers: New Mexico’s Hot Springs, whose 90 photographs provided a history of New Mexico’s restorative hot springs, which became internationally known for their healing properties in the late 19th century. This was followed in April and May by Stories, Memories, and Legacies, which educated museum-goers about one of the largest WWII internment camps in the country in the heart of Santa Fe.

Finally, steady progress continued in FY22 on significant interior renovations of the iconic Palace of the Governors, whose centuries-long local and global history appeals to residents and visitors alike. The year saw nearly $1 million directed toward these repairs with completion anticipated at the end of 2023.

To support the New Mexico History Museum, contact Yvonne Montoya at 505.216.1592 or Yvonne@museumfoundation.org.

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An Exceptional Year

Exhibitions, Donations and More

For New Mexico Museum of Art Executive Director Mark White, Poetic Justice: Judith F. Baca, Mildred Howard and Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith (October 2021 through June 2022) was the museum’s “major exhibition” for fiscal year 2021-2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022).

It was also just one of many exciting shows that benefited from $565,661 in museum support through the Museum of New Mexico Foundation’s Exhibi tions Development Fund during FY22.

Using pop culture imagery, Poetic Justice drew attention to such timely issues as the environment, housing, civil rights, police brutality and immigration through painting, installation and film. Baca, Howard and Quick-to-SeeSmith, artists now in their 70s and 80s, “are having career moments,” says White, “and are finally being recognized.”

Itself long recognized for a premier photography collection, the museum also exhibited the early work of Ansel Adams in FY22. Sixteen of Adams’ prints from the museum’s collection, including two promised gifts, were on view in Ansel Adams: Pure Photography from January through May of 2022. Two of Adams’ most iconic later prints, Aspens, New Mexico and Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, were also displayed.

By the Numbers $565,661 raised for exhibitions $36,411 raised for education 1,327 youth reached $436,044 in grants 54,248 museum visitors 109 new collections acquisitions 7 exhibitions opened $1,237,426 total division support
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Members preview Poetic Justice: Judith F. Baca, Mildred Howard and Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith Photos © Jane Phillips Photography.

As Curator of Photography

Katherine Ware noted, “This was a year of excep tional donations. I was especially delighted to have the opportunity to select a group of photographs from the private collection of W.M. Hunt in New York.”

Another exhibition, Southwest Rising: Contemporary Art and the Legacy of Elaine Horwitch (April 2021 through January 2022), showcased some of the greatest hits in Southwest art. Through her eponymous galleries, Horwitch advanced hundreds of Southwestern artists’ careers, fostering what has been called “Southwest pop.” Drawn from the museum’s collection, the show’s featured artists included Billy Schenck, John Fincher, Fritz Scholder, Georgia O’Keeffe and more.

Go West Said a Small Voice: Gustave Baumann and Dreams of New Mexico (August 2021 to February 2022) highlighted another perennially favorite Southwestern artist. Baumann was known for his depictions of New Mexico genre scenes of local landscapes and cultures. Works by 20th-century Baumann contemporaries, such as Cady Wells and Gene Kloss, as well as modern-day santeros Gustavo Victor Goler and Arthur López, provided additional interpretations of New Mexican life and culture.

Exhibitions were accompanied by education programs in FY22, made possible by $36,411 in private contributions to the museum’s Education Fund through the Foundation. Grant funding for the fiscal year reached $436,044, bringing total support for the museum in FY22 to $1,237,426.

Private giving from philanthropist Fred R. Haas through the Wyncote Foundation turned attention to the museum’s Saint Francis Auditorium, a centerpiece of Santa Fe’s cultural and social life. The Wyncote Foundation made possible the successful repair of the auditorium organ, unused for years. The auditorium also features a cycle of murals representing the Franciscans in the New World. These were designed in 1917 by Donald Beauregard, one of the first artists whose work Museum of New Mexico founder Edgar Lee Hewett

purchased for the museum’s collection. The murals were ultimately painted by Kenneth Chapman and Carlos Vierra after Beauregard’s premature death. A retrospective on Beauregard, curated by Dr. White, is in the works..

Looking Forward

FY22 was also steeped in planning for the soon-to-open Vladem Contemporary. The occasion has galvanized the Friends of Contemporary Art and Photography, noted Shaun Gilmore, chair of the group’s Steering Committee. The Friends intend to increase their activities to encompass the new venue with a year-round lecture series, increased support of educational programming and an annual contri bution to the museum’s acquisition fund.

A recent $10,000 gift will be used to purchase a work by Nancy Holt, an American contemporary artist. The group also plans to support site-specific installations by emerging New Mexico artists in the Vladem Contemporary’s Window Box, a storefront-like window display.

To support the New Mexico Museum of Art and Vladem Contemporary, contact Kristin Graham at 505.216.1199 or Kristin@museumfoundation.org.

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Top: David Bradley, El Farol, Canyon Road Cantina, 2000, acrylic on canvas. Collection of the New Mexico Museum of Art. Photo by Blair Clark.

A Year of Abundance

Sites Enjoy Renewal and Repair

Historians and other researchers studying New Mexico’s rich history and diverse cultures turn to primary sources, such as documents or artifacts, that provide direct evidence of their subject.

As places where history happened, each of the eight New Mexico Historic Sites serves as a stellar example.

In fiscal year 2021-2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022), the Bosque Redondo Memorial at Fort Sumner Historic Site strengthened its story as it debuted its new permanent exhibition, Bosque Redondo: A Place of Suffering, A Place of Survival, on May 28, 2022.

Designed in partnership with with Navajo Nation and Mescalero Apache tribe, the exhibition uses state-of-the-art technology to tell the story of the Long Walk, one of the most tragic events in this country’s history, when thou sands of Navajo (Diné) and Apache (N’de) were forcibly removed from their homelands to inhospitable land in central New Mexico. The memorial and its exhibition provide witness to this history.

The exhibition opening drew hundreds to the site for speeches, food, music, Native dance performances, children’s activities and Native art. The

By the Numbers $2,545 raised for exhibitions $5,745 raised for education 54,719 visitors 9 major events 7 preservation projects 17 new staff members 109 new collections acquisitions $43,244 total division support $820,082 Campaign for New Mexico History
main entrance
14 museumfoundation.org
Exterior and
of Bosque Redondo Memorial at Fort Sumner Historic Site. Photo courtesy New Mexico Historic Sites.

reimagined display and public outreach programming were funded in part by a previous grant via the Museum of New Mexico Foundation from the National Endowment for the Humanities. That $150,000 matching challenge grant gener ated $300,000 for the project over several years.

Private gifts in FY22 through the Foundation’s Exhibitions Development Fund generated an additional $2,545 for exhi bitions at all of the sites, while the Education Fund drew $5,745. A total of $43,244 was raised in private support for the division.

Planting and Preserving

FY22 could have easily been called “The Year of the Garden” as several sites statewide exercised their green thumb. Los Luceros Historic Site, a 148-acre ranch on the Río Grande just north of Española, engaged local farmers to help prepare and plant the fields with corn, winter wheat, watermelon, pumpkins, carrots and beans. Also located on the banks of the Río Grande, just north of Albuquerque, Coronado Historic Site debuted a redesigned interpretive garden inspired by traditional Indigenous waffle gardens and raised-row gardens. The “Three Sisters,” a tradi tional Native American companion planting method of corn, beans and squash, flourished along with amaranth, cotton and other traditional Pueblo crops. The newly created interpretive garden at Jemez Historic Site, located in the village of Jemez Springs, also featured an abundance of traditional Pueblo crops. Meanwhile, FY22 allocations from the New Mexico State Legislature and dedicated site Friends groups helped keep historic site structures—and the memories they hold—in repair and open to the public.

At Lincoln Historic Site, a town preserved as it was in 1880, phase one of the Tunstall Store’s preservation was success fully completed. This included foundation repairs, window and wood treatments and the humane removal of Mexican Freetail and Pallid bats who had made the building’s attic their home. The building re-opened to the public in the spring of 2022.

Some of Fort Stanton Historic Site’s 88 buildings date to 1855. Roofs on the Barracks, Fire House and Chapel were

repaired in FY22, while mold mitigation took place in the Nurses’ Quarters. The site’s water system was also completely refurbished.

The central parade ground at Fort Selden, an adobe garrison of 20 buildings, had its irrigation system upgraded and new gravel pathways installed. And at the Taylor-Mesilla Historic Property, where resident Foundation donor J. Paul Taylor turned 102, installation of a much-needed HVAC system helped stabilize the home’s interior temperatures and preserve priceless art and furnishings.

Finally, modernization and technology added to the visitor’s experience at various sites in FY22. Upgrades included touchscreens at Bosque Redondo Memorial, downloadable self-guided tour apps at Los Luceros and Jemez, and newly installed interpretive signage at Coronado.

To support the New Mexico Historic Sites, contact Yvonne Montoya at 505.216.1592 or Yvonne@museumfoundation.org.

museumfoundation.org 15
The roof on the chapel at Fort Stanton Historic Site was repaired in FY22. Photo © Kenneth Walter.

A Year of Revealing Research

Advancing Archaeological Knowledge

Research and education at the Office of Archaeological Studies benefited from the generosity of private donors during fiscal year 2021-2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022), generating a total of $189,233 from individuals, endowment payouts and grants.

A portion of these funds enabled OAS staff to pursue research and share knowledge beyond the salvage archaeology projects that help support this nonprofit enterprise division of the Museum of New Mexico system.

The Center for New Mexico Archaeology, the hub for OAS’s five specialized research laboratories, again had a robust research year, thanks to total endowment payouts of $56,594 from the Dr. Don E. Pierce Endowment Fund, Albert Simms Endowment Fund and the Friends of Archaeology Endowment Fund, as well as private research-designated gifts.

Thanks to this wide-ranging support, the OAS radiocarbon sampling labora tory, under the direction of Dr. Marvin Rowe, engaged staff and volunteers in work on 11 projects for various international clients in FY22. This resulted in more than 70 dates of OAS plasma oxidation samples, including the first ever

By the Numbers $69,456 in grants $14,527 raised for education 202 educational programs 3,480 student participants 3,721 adult participants 70+ radiocarbon dates produced 24 client projects $189,233 total division support High energy oxygen plasma used in the Office of Archaeological Studies radiocarbon sampling laboratory. Photo by Eric Blinman, courtesy OAS. 16 museumfoundation.org

dates for rock art from the Sultanate of Oman. Another exciting project used insect fecal pellets to date Coptic textiles.

A third study, the radiocarbon dating of juniper ceiling wood from Room 219 at Aztec Ruins National Monument in north western New Mexico, also illuminated new discoveries. While tree-ring dating of pine and fir ceiling materials at the ruins documented beam harvest and construction dates between 1111 and 1113 CE (AD), growth patterns in the juniper ceiling were too erratic to establish climate correla tions. Repeated radiocarbon sampling of the outer rings revealed that the juniper died 230 to 430 years earlier than the cutting of the other woods. Juniper trees can survive as standing dead wood long after other species have decayed, and the Room 219 wood fits that model.

“The dating discrepancy is a warning of the pitfalls of relying on only one approach to dating archaeological structures,” says Office of Archaeological Studies Director Eric Blinman. “Private support through the Museum of New Mexico Foun dation allows our specialized research laboratories to go beyond simple answers to questions.”

Other vital information about New Mexico’s archaeological past was uncovered in FY22 in the OAS osteology lab via analysis at Pindi Pueblo, where site excavations in the 1930s recovered more than 80 burials of village residents. OAS Archaeologist Ann Stodder assembled a team of bioarchae ologists to describe these individuals and begin to create life histories.

Initial observations are that the Pindi residents were taller and generally healthier than residents of the later Classic period sites. Although there are traces of tuberculosis at Pindi, the incidences are fewer than at the later and more crowded villages. Data analysis is ongoing, and the team may be able to suggest whether the same or different genetic populations account for the discrete occupations.

Reaching Tribal Communities

The awarding-winning educational programs of OAS were also bolstered by private giving in FY22, including $14,527 in support from the OAS Education Fund via the Foundation. Additionally, a Futures for Children Legacy Fund grant allowed OAS staff to work with tribal schools and organiza tions in the design and delivery of education programs.

The highlight of the year, a collaboration with San Ildefonso Pueblo Day School, resulted in a multi-day program focusing on knowledge of the environment around the Pueblo. Tribal elders engaged students in the spiritual and historical importance of traditional places. On other days, students learned concepts and practices of mapmaking.

Students also took field trips, including one to Bandelier National Monument for an introduction to plants, animals, geology and geomorphology. They spent another day at the Center for New Mexico Archaeology, where they were intro duced to the diversity and sophistication of traditional tech nologies, including ancient hunting techniques, yucca textiles and ethnobotany. They also learned about modern technologies of dating and geographic information systems.

To support the Office of Archaeological Studies, contact Lauren Paige at 505.982.2282 or Lauren@museumfoundation.org.

museumfoundation.org 17
San Ildefonso Day School students participated in a field trip to Tsankawi as part of an Office of Archaeological Studies educational collaboration in FY22. Photo by Isaiah Coan, courtesy OAS.

Endowment Funds

AS OF JUNE 30, 2022

Endowment funds provide ongoing support to our 13 partner institutions. Donors may contribute to an existing fund or establish a new one to benefit a Museum of New Mexico division or the Museum of New Mexico Foundation. The Founda tion manages 37 endowments valued at more than $28 million.

NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM

Herzstein Family Endowment Fund for the Palace of the Governors and New Mexico History Museum: $451,824

Marianne and Michael O’Shaughnessy Endowment Fund for the Palace of the Governors and New Mexico History Museum: $530,886

Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the Palace of the Governors and New Mexico History Museum: $556,633

Palace of the Governors and New Mexico History Museum Endowment Fund: $1,096,852

Phyllis and Edward Gladden Endowment Fund for the Palace of the Governors and New Mexico History Museum: $237,151

Robert W. Frazer Fund for the Palace of the Governors Library: $515,453

Sue and Felix Warburg Collection Endowment: $802,269

The Ambassador Frank and Mrs. Dolores Ortiz Palace of the Governors Preservation Fund: $129,446

NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART

Boeckman Acquisition Fund for the New Mexico Museum of Art: $123,158

Clinton King Purchase Award: $47,646

Doris and Arnold Roland Endowment Fund for the New Mexico Museum of Art: $153,769

Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Endowment Fund for the New Mexico Museum of Art: $2,443,930

Herzstein Family Art Acquisition Fund for the New Mexico Museum of Art: $397,582

Jean and Robert L. Clarke Endowment Fund for the New Mexico Museum of Art: $618,132

Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment for the New Mexico Museum of Art: $605,893

MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE

Della Warrior Endowment Fund: $129,916

Friends of the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture Endowment: $26,870

Museum of Indian Arts and Culture Acquisition Endowment Fund: $306,633

Museum of Indian Arts and Culture Endowment for Youth Programs: $124,169

Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture: $611,171

MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART

Alexander Girard Legacy Fund: $43,266

Cotsen Family Foundation Fund #1 for the Neutrogena Collection of the Museum of International Folk Art: $2,638,077

Cotsen Family Foundation Fund #2 for the Neutrogena Collection of the Museum of International Folk Art: $1,307,745

Margot and Robert Linton Endowment Fund for Contemporary Hispanic Folk Art: $156,407

Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the Museum of International Folk Art: $506,387

NEW MEXICO HISTORIC SITES

Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the New Mexico Historic Sites: $507,381

OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES

Albert Simms Endowment Fund: $89,130

Dr. Don E. Pierce Endowment for Archaeology and Conservation: $1,438,920

Friends of Archaeology Endowment Fund: $225,857

MUSEUM OF NEW MEXICO FOUNDATION

Chairman’s Endowment Fund: $99,507

Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund: $4,871,980 Museum of New Mexico Operating Investment Fund: $5,420,961 Shonnard Campus Endowment: $98,424

BENEFITING ALL FOUR STATE MUSEUMS IN SANTA FE

Museum of New Mexico Acquisition Endowment Fund: $604,430

Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the Women’s Board of the Museum of New Mexico: $70,819

Starkweather Docent Program Endowment Fund: $84,878

Thomas B. Catron III and June Ellis Catron Endowment Fund: $192,594

PHOTOS COURTESY NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS 18 museumfoundation.org

Founders Society

AS OF JUNE 30, 2022

The Founders Society honors donors and grantors who have given more than $100,000 in cash and planned gifts. Together these benefactors have contributed more than $90 million to support our 13 partner cultural institutions.

GRAND BENEFACTOR

$2,000,000 AND ABOVE

Charmay Allred*

City of Santa Fe Arts Commission

Margit and Lloyd Cotsen* Institute of Museum and Library Services

Connie Thrasher Jaquith Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen National Endowment for the Humanities

Neutrogena Corporation

Bob Nurock*

Dr. Don E. Pierce*

Sallie Ritter and Kent Jacobs, M.D. Mara and Charles Robinson* Robert and Ellen Vladem Sue and Felix Warburg* Eileen A. Wells

BENEFACTOR

$1,000,000 TO $1,999,999

Albert and Ethel Herzstein

Charitable Foundation, Houston, TX

Andrea Waitt Carlton Family Foundation

Bob Blommer* and Lowell Soucie J.B.L. Goodwin*

Valerie and Bud Hamilton Mr.* and Mrs. Frank H. Hogan Lannan Foundation

Dana and Jim Manning McCune Charitable Foundation

Joan Higgins Reed* Maggy Ryan* Vicki and Ron Sullivan

PATRON

$500,000 TO $999,999

JoAnn and Robert Balzer

Lewis Barker*

Nancy and Richard Bloch* Bureau of Land Management

Mr. and Mrs. Bob L. Clarke

Edward and Maria Gale Phyllis and Eddie Gladden* I.A. O’Shaughnessy Foundation

Van Mabee

Edwina H. and Charles* P. Milner

Ashlyn and Dan Perry Doug Ring* and Cindy Miscikowski

Louisa Stude Sarofim

Rosemarie Shellaberger* Jack Stamm*

Thaw Charitable Trust The Frost Foundation

The Kresge Foundation

The National Park Service

Joan H. Vernick

Adele and Milton* Ward

Carol and Robert* Warren W.K. Kellogg Foundation

PARTNER

$250,000 TO $499,999

Carl M. Allen*

Ames Family Foundation

Ann Baumann*

John Berl* and Bob Bauernschmitt

Edwin E. Bewley Jr.*

Anne and Jeff Bingaman Dorothy and Rolfe Black John G. Bourne*

Dorothy Bracey and Tom Johnson

Lynn Godfrey Brown

Uschi and William Butler

Linda and John Comstock

William W. Cunningham* Joan and Doug* Dayton Rosalind and Lowell* Doherty

Carolyn Eason Ford Foundation

Patricia Foschi Barbara Foshay

Robert Frazer*

Karen Freeman Garcia Automotive Group

Pat and Jim Hall

Nicole Hixon

Hutson-Wiley and Echevarria Foundation Inc.

Mickey Inbody*

International Folk Art Alliance

Bruce Kaliser*

Austin Lamont* Diane and John Lenssen Nance and Ramón José López y Familia Janice* and Dave Matthews Scott* and Dee Ann McIntyre

Seymour Merrin* and Helene Singer Merrin

Doris Meyer* and Richard Hertz

National Archives Foundation

National Endowment for the Arts Newman’s Own Foundation, Patty and Arthur Newman New Mexico Humanities Council

Pettit Family Charitable Fund

Doris and Arnold Roland

Frauke and Keith* Roth

Celia D. Rumsey*

Helen Spuhler*

State of New Mexico

Suzanne and Joel Sugg Courtney Finch Taylor and Scott Taylor

The Brown Foundation Inc. of Houston

The Henry Luce Foundation Inc.

The Stockman Family Foundation The Wallace Foundation Marilynn and Carl Thoma Thornburg Foundation Sheila and David Young

FOUNDER $100,000 TO $249,999

Albuquerque Museum Foundation

Catherine Allen and Paul Rooker M. Carlota Baca, Ph.D. Ethel and Sam Ballen* BF Foundation Sallie Bingham

Elizabeth and Duncan* Boeckman Karen and Bill* Bohnhoff Brautigam-Kaplan Foundation Brindle Foundation Jane and Bill Buchsbaum Caroline Burnett

June E. Catron and Thomas B. Catron III*

Peggy Catron and Jerome Premo Century Bank Jordie M. Chilson* Helen and George Cowan* Benjamin F. Crane Valerie and Charles Diker Ruth Dillingham Dobkin Family Foundation James H. Duncan Jr. Natalie Fitz-Gerald Mr. Gayle D. Fogelson* Jane and Charlie* Gaillard Craig Gibbs and Ilsa Cruz Rubio Gail and Jim Goodwin Carol and Steven Gray Gilda M. and Norman C. Greenberg* Catherine and Guy Gronquist Roddie and Steve Harris Healy Foundation Pauline* and Bert Heil

Helen Frankenthaler Foundation

Anne Hillerman and Don* Strel Stephen and Jane Hochberg Barbara and H. Earl Hoover Peggy and Samuel Hubbard Jeanene and Ron Hulsey

International Folk Art Foundation

David A. Kaplan and Glenn Ostergaard Sheryl Kelsey and George Duncan Miryam and Bob Knutson La Fonda on the Plaza

Marilyn and William Lenox Foundation

Margot and Robert* Linton Terese Lyons and Anthony Foltman

Susan and Philip Marineau

Anne and John Marion

Joan and Mitchell Markow Dr. and Mrs. James McCaffery Maureen McCarthy

National Historical Publications and Records Commission

National Science Foundation

Mark Naylor and Dale Gunn

New Mexico Department of Tourism

Ernestine O’Connell*

Claudia O’Keeffe

Kathryn O’Keeffe

Ambassador Frank V. and Dolores Duke Ortiz*

Jane and Tom O’Toole

Trudy and Dennis O’Toole

Eugenia Cowden Pettit*

Joann and Gifford Phillips*

Ildiko and Gary Poliner

Dan Prall*

Jerry Richardson

Ann* and Alan Rolley

Don* and Bergit Salazar

Anita Sarafa and John Duncan

Jenna and Wilson Scanlan

Jacqueline and Richard Schmeal

Beth and Richard Schnieders

Harriet and Karl Schreiner

Lety and Stephen Schwartz Tom and Patricia Semmes

Judith and Robert Sherman

Marian and Abe Silver Jr.*

Barbara and Albert Simms*

Christina Singleton

Marsha Swiss and Ronald Costell

Terra Foundation for American Art

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

The Barker Welfare Foundation

The Getty Foundation, Los Angeles

The Ludwig and Nancy Sternberger

Charitable Foundation

The Mill Atelier Foundation

The Rockefeller Foundation

Thornburg Charitable Foundation

Tanya J. Van Bergh Estate

Warren von Preissig

Gilbert Waldman* and Christy Vezolles

Johnette Ward*

Wells Fargo

William and Salome Scanlan Foundation

Judy and Gordon Wilson

*Deceased

museumfoundation.org 19
(continued on page 25)

Legacy Society

AS OF JUNE 30, 2022

The Legacy Society recognizes donors who have made an estate gift through the Museum of New Mexico Foundation to benefit our 13 partner institutions in the future. An estate gift can be a will, IRA, gift annuity, charitable trust, art, real estate or other arrangement.

Joan Ablon

Ann Neuberger Aceves

Maggie Alexander and John Sadd

Carl M. Allen*

Charmay B. Allred*

Keith K. Anderson and Barbara G. Lenssen

M. Carlota Baca, Ph.D.

Jennifer Bain

Nancy Ballenger*

Louisa Barkalow

Rhoda H. Barkan*

Lewis Barker*

Bob Bauernschmitt

Ann Baumann*

Karen F. Beall and Dale K. Haworth

Dr. Barry* and Natalie Beller

Susan Berk

Edwin E. Bewley Jr.*

Florence Davey Bhatnagar*

Eric Blinman

Robert H. Blommer*

Bill Bohnhoff*

Marsha C. Bol and Michael S. Katz

Barbara Boulay

Dorothy Bracey

Pat Brandenburg*

Emily Bristow

Lynn Godfrey Brown

Norma C. and Harold Brown*

Kenneth T. Burles and David H. Hundley

Gladys and Selig Burrows*

Uschi and William Butler

James Lee Byars*

Lawrence Calcagno*

Beverly M. Carl

Barbara A. Carmichael

Charles D. Carroll*

Mel Carter*

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Catron III*

Billie and Frank Chambers

Juliet Charnas*

Caroline T. Chavez*

Samuel Chell*

Jordie M. Chilson

Jane and Kenneth Cole

Benjamin Crane*

Sarah Crane*

Liz Crews

Anne Croy*

William Wallace Cunningham*

Nicole Panter Dailey and William* Dailey

Sally Davis and Richard Kozoll

Helen M. Derbyshire*

Richard Dillingham*

Ruth H. Dillingham

Rosalind T. and Lowell R.* Doherty

Gwenn and Eivind Djupedal

George Duncan and Sheryl Kelsey

James Duncan Jr.

James Duncan Sr.*

Ardith A. Eicher

Robert C. Ellis*

R.D. Erwin*

Judith Espinar

Eva Feld*

Alice and William Fienning

Natalie Fitz-Gerald

Joseph O’Kane Foster*

Robert Frazer*

Karen Freeman

Nancy and Haines Gaffner

Sheilah P. Garcia

Murray Gell-Mann*

Bernita E. and Arlin I. Ginsburg

Robert H. Glaze

Rod Goebel*

Gail and Jim Goodwin

J.B.L. Goodwin*

Michael Gottwald

Gilda M. and Norman C. Greenberg

Catherine and Guy Gronquist Blaine Gutermuth

Jacquelyn S. Hall

Pat and Jim Hall

Patricia and John Hamilton Valerie and Bud Hamilton

Henriette Harris*

Dorothy S. Harroun

Pat Haueter

Mildred N. Healy*

Pauline* and Bertram Heil

Sandra Herzon

Nicole Hixon

Joan Ashley Hodgell*

Rae Hoffacker

William Hoffman*

Mr.* and Mrs. Frank H. Hogan

Barbara and Bud Hoover

Tonia Horton

Jeanene and Ron Hulsey

Edelma and David Huntley

Dr. Joyce Ice and Ron Latimer

Mickey Inbody*

Connie Thrasher Jaquith

Jeanene Jenkins-Hulsey and Ronald Hulsey

Sandra Jenney

James R. Johnson*

Janet F. Jones*

Eleanore B. Joseph

Bruce Kaliser*

David Kaplan and Glenn Ostergaard

Spider Kedelsky

Narcissa Swift King and Clinton King

Judith Kingsley Fitting*

Allene H. and Walter P. Kleweno Jr. Evelyn C. Kupec*

Greg LaChapelle*

Judith and Henry Lackner

Austin Lamont*

Mihail Lari and Scott Murray Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen

Louise and Joseph Laval

Barbara H. Lidral*

Margot T. and Robert* Linton Christine and Pierre Lorillard Ronald S. Lushing

Terese Lyons and Anthony Foltman

Allan MacGillivray III

Enid Margolies*

Robert H. Martin*

Janice* and Dave Matthews Eileen A. Maynard*

Maureen D. McCarthy Christine and Drew McDermott Susan McGreevy*

Seymour Merrin* and Helene Singer Merrin

Doris Meyer*

Edwina Hawley Milner and Charles* P. Milner

Tina Mion and Allan Affeldt

Mary Sue Mize*

Marie Moore

Edgar H. Mueller

Jerome Munday*

Mark Naylor and Dale Gunn Patricia Newman

Elsie Nolan*

Bob Nurock*

Dr. Ernestine O’Connell* Claudia O’Keeffe*

Ambassador Frank V. and Dolores Duke Ortiz*

Jane and Tom O’Toole

Elizabeth and William Overstreet*

Mindy S. and William R.* Paquin

Cindi and Michael Pettit

Melinda Miles Phister*

Montgomery Phister* Dr. Don E. Pierce*

Yara and Gerald Pitchford*

Aline Porter*

Binnie and Paul Postelnek*

Dan Prall*

Margery Clark Primus*

Richard C. Pritzlaff*

Elizabeth Raspolic*

Joan Higgins Reed*

Jerry Richardson

Charles W. Rickel*

Sallie Ritter and Kent F. Jacobs, M.D. Nancy Anderson Roberts

Mara and Charles Robinson* John Rochester and Lawrence Fodor

Doris Rosen and Ronald P. Klein Lois M. Rosen and Robert W. Uphaus

Paul Rosenberg

Frauke and Keith* Roth

Celia D Rumsey*

Maggy Ryan*

Anita Sarafa and John Duncan Henry A. Sauerwein*

Jacqueline and Richard Schmeal Harriet and Karl Schreiner

Gertrude Schweitzer*

Judith Sellars

Margaret Shackelford

Rosemarie Shellaberger* Dr. Donald Shina and J. Kevin Waidmann

Eugenie Shonnard*

Abe and Marian Silver*

Albert* and Barbara Simms Sue Ann Snyder

Helen McKaig Spuhler* Jack Stamm* Helen L. Starbuck* Virginia E. Starkweather and Douglas Starkweather*

Carole and J. Edd Stepp

Vicki A. and Ronald L. Sullivan

Marsha Swiss and Ronald Costell Beverly Taylor*

Courtney Finch Taylor

J. Paul Taylor

Caroline and Frederic* Thompson Lore K. Thorpe

Charles and Kimberly Tope Alex Traube

Penny and Bruce* Tschantz

Tanya Van Bergh*

Joan and Clifford* Vernick Warren von Preissig

Sue and Felix Warburg*

Johnette Ward*

Carol H. and Robert A.* Warren Eileen A. Wells

Joel Wendt

Priscilla Taylor Williams

Corinne and Ray Willison Stacey Frederick Wilson*

Pamela Wolfe and David Levine

Sheila and David Young and those who wish to remain anonymous

*Deceased

20 museumfoundation.org

Corporate Partners and Business Council Members

AS OF JUNE 30, 2022

Corporate Partners and Business Council members provide cash and in-kind goods and services to support the Museum of New Mexico Foundation and the Museum of New Mexico system. Members enjoy benefits and recognition for their contributions.

CORPORATE PARTNERS

PLATINUM PARTNER | $25,000 AND ABOVE

PREMIER PARTNERS | $25,000 AND ABOVE (IN-KIND)

LEAD PARTNERS | $10,000 TO $24,999

PARTNERS | $5,000 TO $9,999

BUSINESS COUNCIL MEMBERS

GOVERNOR’S COUNCIL

$2,500 TO $4,999

Casa Cuma Bed & Breakfast

Compound Restaurant

First Citizens Bank

Invisible City Designs

Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm Paper Tiger

Parasol Productions

Redwood Media Group The Sage Hotel

REGENTS’ COUNCIL

$1,500 TO $2,499

Altar Spirits

AMP Concerts

Five and Dime General Store

Galpert/Ortega Group of Wells Fargo Advisors

GF Contemporary Hutton Broadcasting Inn of the Governors

Opuntia Cafe

Pronto! Signs and Graphics

Santa Fe Audio Visual

Santa Fe Gallery Association

Sommer Udall Law Firm

Starline Printing

Tia Collection

Vivo Studios

Whole Hog Cafe William Siegal Gallery

BENEFACTOR

$500 TO $1,499

Aaron Payne Fine Art

ABC Films Todd Ballantyne

Addison Rowe Fine Art

Adobe Gallery

Albuquerque Hispanic Chamber of Commerce

ArtfulTea

Ashley Margetson, Senior Real Estate Broker Sotheby’s International Realty

Bill Foutz Rugs Inc.

Bode’s Mercantile

Carmella Padilla Communications

Charlotte Jackson Fine Art

Clafoutis French Bakery & Restaurant

Coleman and Woodward Law Offices

Conron & Woods Architects

Cowgirl BBQ

Daniel Quat Photography

De La Harpe Holdings LLC

Dougherty Real Estate Co.

El Rancho de las Golondrinas

El Rey Court

Evoke Contemporary Gallagher and Associates

Georgia O’Keeffe Museum

Gruet Winery Ink & Images J. Stoilis Design LLC

Kaune’s Neighborhood Market

Kelly Koepke Professional Communication Services

La Lecheria

La Puerta Originals, Inc.

Laura Comeau, DDS

Meow Wolf

Museum Hill Cafe

Museum of the Mountain West

Newman’s Nursery

Ohori’s Coffee Roasters

Patina Gallery

Payne’s Nurseries and Greenhouses

Raymond James & Associates, John Adams

Santa Fe Brewing Company

Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce

Santa Fe Community College

Santa Fe Hispanic Chamber of Commerce

Santa Fe School of Cooking

Scher Center for Well Being

School for Advanced Research

Scottish Rite Temple

Second Street Brewery

Shiprock Santa Fe Southwestern Association for Indian Arts

Specifica Inc.

The Feasting Place

The Shop, A Christmas Store

TOKo

Ulrich Consulting Walter Burke Catering

museumfoundation.org 21

Exhibition Development and Education Funds

AS OF JUNE 30, 2022

Exhibition Development and Education Funds support exhibitions, education and outreach programs, and institutional advancement at our 13 partner institutions.

CUMULATIVE LEADERSHIP SUPPORT

$10,000 AND ABOVE

Anonymous

Anne Embree Charitable Foundation

David Arment and Jim Rimelspach

Mark Bahti, Bahti Indian Arts

Mary Bechmann

Eric Blinman and Melissa Hagstrum

Lynn Godfrey Brown

Uschi and William Butler

Kay and Chip Chippeaux

William Dougherty

Earle & Annette Shawe Family Foundation

Patricia Foschi

Barbara Foshay

Futures for Children Legacy Fund

Edward and Maria Gale, Gale Family Foundation

Ambassador David and Connie Girard-diCarlo

Susan and Thomas Kevin Golden Susan and Steven Goldstein

Carol and Steven Gray

Catherine and Guy Gronquist Marian and Robert Haight

Pat and Jim Hall

Valerie and Bud Hamilton Helen Frankenthaler Foundation Ellen and James Hubbell

Edelma and David Huntley

Hutson-Wiley and Echevarria Foundation

Institute of Museum & Library Services

JA Community Foundation

Connie Thrasher Jaquith

Joe and Van Mabee Foundation

Carl Kawaja

Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen

Van Mabee

Carol and Scott Malouf, Malouf on the Plaza

Amy McCombs

McCune Charitable Foundation

Dee Ann McIntyre

Kate and Bob Moss

National Archives Foundation

National Endowment for the Humanities

National Historical Publications and Records Commission

Neuberger Berman Foundation

New Mexico Council on Photography

New Mexico Historical Records Advisory Board

New Mexico Humanities Council

Catherine Oppenheimer

Trudy and Dennis O’Toole

Cindi and Michael Pettit, Pettit Family Charitable Fund

Ildiko and Gary Poliner

John Rochester and Lawrence Fodor

Anita Sarafa and John Duncan

Harriet and Karl Schreiner

SophiaGrace Foundation

Suzanne and Joel Sugg

Courtney Finch Taylor and Scott Taylor

The Ludwig and Nancy Sternberger Charitable Foundation

Joan Vernick Eileen Wells

Wyncote Foundation

Sheila and David Young Sandy Zane and Ned Bennett

DIVISION SUPPORT $1,000 AND ABOVE

MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE

Catherine Allen and Paul Rooker Aversa Foundation

Donna and Tom Berg Anne and Jeff Bingaman

Dorothy Bracey and Tom Johnson Jane and Bill Buchsbaum

Merrilee Caldwell and Marcus Randolph Stockton Colt

Bunny and Joe Colvin

Sharon Curran-Wescott and Earl F. “Skip” Wescott

Susan and Conrad De Jong Ardith Eicher

Nancy Gardner

Constance and Malcolm Goodman

Cynthia and Scott Hale

Chris and J. Scott Hall

John Harris

Roddie and Steve Harris

Richard Hawkins

Ellen and James Hubbell

IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts

John M. and Patricia L. Bowell Foundation

Constance Langston

Robert Lucas

Margaret and Barry Lyerly

Christine and Drew McDermott

Native American Advised Endowment Fund

Patty Newman Ann Parker

Donna and Jay Ralph

Michael Reid and Bill Robnett

Brenda and Gary Ruttenberg

Judy and Bob Sherman

Suzanne and Brian Smith

Southwestern Association for Indian Arts

The Dancing Rabbit Gallery

The Keshi Foundation

Thomas A. & Mary S. James Foundation

Charles Thornton Carol Warren

MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART

Catherine Allen and Paul Rooker Keith Anderson and Barbara Lenssen

Catherine Campbell Joan and Dick Chodosh

Liz Crews

Gwenn and Eivind Djupedal Rosalind Doherty

Martha Egan

Sheila and Kirk Ellis

Emily Garcia Group at Sotheby’s International Reality

Jay Grodin

Jacqueline Helin and Robert Glick

Rae Hoffacker and Peter Pappas International Folk Art Alliance Inc.

Suzi Jones

Sara and Chris Julsrud Marlene Lind

Nance and Ramón José López

Mark Naylor and Dale Gunn

Melinne Owen and Paul Giguere

Patricia Arscott La Farge Foundation for Folk Art

Ildiko and Skip Poliner

Prior LLC

Jacqueline and Richard Schmeal

James R. Seitz Jr.

Sylvia and Ira Seret

Judy and Bob Sherman

Carole and Edd Stepp

The William H. and Mattie Wattis Harris Foundation

Laurel and Michael Vander Velde

Jo Ann Ward

Zaplin-Lampert Gallery Inc.

NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART/ VLADEM CONTEMPORARY

Ann Neuberger Aceves

Alicia M. and William A. Miller

Charitable Gift Fund

Dr. Edward Ted Angus

Elizabeth Boeckman

Cynthia and Bruce Bolene

Maria and Bob Borden

Century Bank

Barbara and Jack Cochran

Stockton Colt

Rkia and Vincent Cornell

Barbara Doroba-Ogg and Michael Ogg

Gwenn and Eivind Djupedal

Rebecca and Michael du Mond Alice and William Fienning

Mary Helen Follingstad and Michael Madden

Peter Graham

Victoria T. Graham

David Hawkanson

Barbara and Bud Hoover

Edelma and David Huntley

Samir Khushalani and David Brantley

Alice and Jerry Kruse

Elizabeth Lea

Marietta Patricia Leis and David Vogel

Laurie and Tom Linton

Benita and Richard Mackenzie

Tina Mion and Allan Affeldt

Carol and George Miraben

Kate and Bob Moss

Edward J. Osowski

Nathaniel O. Owings

Grace Philips

Michael Reid and Bill Robnett

Rotary Club of Santa Fe, Downtown Club Arts Committee

Joyleen Rottenstein

Jenna and Wilson Scanlan

Judy and Bob Sherman

William Siegal

The Elaine and Arnold Horwitch Family

The Owings Gallery

Thornburg Investment Management

Charles Thornton Marissa Thornton

(continued next page)

22 museumfoundation.org

(continued from page 22)

Cathy and Tom Van Berkem

Brittny and James Wood

Linda and Donald Zillman

NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM

Minnette Burges and Alan Huerta

Hanna Gamble

Susan and Kevin Golden

Susie and C. T. Herman

Helene Singer Merrin

New Mexico Historical Records Advisory Board

The Owings Gallery

Laura Widmar and Sergio Tapia

NEW MEXICO HISTORIC SITES

Richard and Jane Cunningham Sheila and Kirk Ellis

OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES

Donna and Tom Berg Eric Blinman and Melissa Hagstrum

Kathleen and Donald Fiero

Carolyn and Robert Florek

John Martin

Nathaniel O. Owings

Frauke Roth

Betsy and Tom Shillinglaw

Sherill Spaar and Lucas Sanchez Judy and Gordon Wilson

Annual Fund

AS OF JUNE 30, 2022

Annual Fund donors contribute $1,000 or more to fund support services provided by the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.

Addison Rowe Fine Art

Karin and Jack Aguilar

Melissa and Samuel Alexander Catherine Allen and Paul Rooker

Ann Griffith Ash

Kathleen Blake

Cynthia and Bruce Bolene

Joseph M. Bryan Jr.

Cornelia Bryer and Herman Siegelaar

Jo Ann Burtard and Richard Hughes Renee Castagnola

David Cost

Chris Daigle

Julie and Glenn Davidson

Gwenn and Eivind Djupedal Rosalind Doherty

Sheila and Kirk Ellis

Vicki and John Flynn

Phyllis Frier and Francis Elkin

Brooke Gamble

Susan and Thomas Kevin Golden Maria Griego-Raby and R. Randall Royster

Catherine and Guy Gronquist

Marian and Robert Haight

Susie and C. T. Herman

Nicole Hixon

Rae Hoffacker and Peter Pappas

Ruth Hogan

Myra and Robert Hull

Edelma and David Huntley Rosalyn Hurley

Lynn Johnson and Jackie Lovelace Kwang-Wu Kim

Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen

Phyllis Lehmberg

Laurie and Tom Linton

Juliet Mattila and Robin Magowan

Christine and Drew McDermott Beverly and Mike Morris

Sandy Nachman

Sarah Nolan and Barbara Houser

Carol Norton and Steven Dayton

Jean Baer O’Gorman

Ashlyn and Dan Perry

Cindi and Michael Pettit

Marla Pringle

Jerry Richardson

Leslie Roundstream and Debra Hart

Pito and Chris Salas

Anita Sarafa and John Duncan

Jenna and Wilson Scanlan

John Scanlan

Nan Schwanfelder

Susan and John Shaffer

Judy and Bob Sherman

Frieda Simons

Courtney Finch Taylor and Scott Taylor

The Owings Gallery

Owen Van Essen

Andrew Wallerstein and Mary Sloane

Brenda Whorton

Nancy Meem Wirth

Claire and Jim Woodcock

Sheila and David Young

Barbara Zickler and Thaddeus Miller

Year-End Giving

Give to the Annual Fund Today— Receive a 2022 Tax Deduction

In this season of giving, a contribution to the Museum of New Mexico Foundation is one of the most meaningful gifts you can make.

Your tax-deductible donation for 2022 will help the Foundation provide essential support services for our 13 partner institutions.

However you give, these payment notes will assist you in meeting the December 31, 2022, deadline:

Check: Envelopes must be postmarked by December 31, 2022, to qualify as a 2022 gift. The legal date is the date your gift is postmarked, not the check date.

Credit Card: The date the charge clears is the legal gift date, not the date the charge is submitted.

Stock: In the case of a direct transfer, the legal gift date is the transfer date, not the date a broker is requested to make the transfer.

IRA Charitable Rollover: If you are 70½ years of age or older, you may direct up to $100,000 annually from your required minimum distribution to support the Foundation without being taxed on the income.

Donor Advised Fund (DAF): You may establish a DAF at a financial institution of your choice and receive a tax deduction. You may then make annual distributions from that fund.

For suggested ways to give, see page 29. To make a gift, visit museumfoundation.org or call 505.982.6366 ext. 100.

museumfoundation.org 23
Right: Photo © Gabriella Marks.

The Circles

AS OF JUNE 30, 2021

Members of The Circles and Circles Explorers contribute from $895 to more than $10,000 annually to enhance the Museum of New Mexico Foundation’s work in delivering essential support services to our 13 partner institutions.

CHAIRMAN’S CIRCLE $10,000 AND ABOVE

Anne and Jeff Bingaman

Patricia and Joseph Casadone

Susan and Alfred Chandler

Nicole Panter Dailey

Maria and Edward Gale

Sheilah Garcia

Carol and Steven Gray

Catherine and Guy Gronquist

Val and Bud Hamilton

Nicole Hixon

Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen

Dana and Jim Manning

Dee Ann McIntyre

Cindy Miscikowski

Cindi and Michael Pettit

Jose Piedra and Ernesto Roederer

Ildy and Skip Poliner

Linda and Pat Rayes

Frauke Roth

Anita Sarafa and John Duncan

Beth and Rick Schnieders

Nan Schwanfelder

Charles Thornton

Cathy and Tom Van Berkem

Bob and Ellen Vladem

NATIONAL CIRCLE $5,000 TO $9,999

Victoria Addison and Jim Baker

Catherine Allen and Paul Rooker

Keith Anderson and Barbara Lenssen

Ann Griffith Ash

JoAnn and Bob Balzer

Audrey Baxter

Mary Bechmann

Cynthia and Bruce Bolene

Karen and Robert Bowden

Uschi and Bill Butler

Kathleen and Robert Clarke

Susan and James Clay

Diane Domenici and Lawrence Saunders

Greg Dove

Olga Echevarria and James Hutson-Wiley

Roddie and Steve Harris

Susie and C. T. Herman

Rae Hoffacker and Peter Pappas

Lynne and Joseph Horning

Edelma and David Huntley

Sheryl Kelsey and George Duncan

Phyllis Lehmberg

Susan and Phil Marineau

Joan and Mitchell Markow

Tina Mion and Allan Affeldt

Theresa and Charles Niemeier

John Rochester and Lawrence Fodor

Harriet and Karl Schreiner

James R. Seitz Jr.

Frederick Spiegelberg

Cathy Van der Schans

Merja and Axel Weinreich

Laura Widmar and Sergio Tapia

Claire and Jim Woodcock

Sheila and David Young

GOVERNOR’S CIRCLE

$2,500 TO $4,999

Ann Neuberger Aceves

Patricia Assimakis and Becky Gould

Lisa and David Barker

Suzanne and Enrico Bartolucci

Bob Bauernschmitt

Elizabeth Boeckman

Denise Carter and Jeffrey Parker Honey and Peter Chapin

Elaine and William Chapman

Kay and Chip Chippeaux

Elaine and Ken Cole

Kathryn King Coleman and Hank Coleman

Stockton Colt

Bunny and Joe Colvin

Anne and Thomas Conner

Sharon Curran-Wescott and Earle Wescott

Joan and R. Thomas Dalbey

Jim Davis

Darcy and Richard Davis-Flagler

Jed Dean

Gwenn and Eivind Djupedal

Rosalind Doherty

Thelma Domenici

Barbara Doroba-Ogg and Michael Ogg

Carmen and Mike Duffek

Cameron Duncan

James Duncan Jr.

Sheila and Kirk Ellis

Pam and David Fleischaker

Jo Flittie

Karen Freeman

Cynthia and Billy G. Garrett

Carolyn Gibbs and Rick Nelson

Ambassador David and Connie Girard-diCarlo

Joel Goldfrank

Susan and Steven Goldstein

Marian and Robert Haight

Chris and J. Scott Hall

Pat and Jim Hall

Debra and Kenneth Hamlett

Bert Heil

Kim Kurian Hiner and Greg Hiner

Stephen and Jane Hochberg

Ruth Hogan

Helen Joan Holt

Barbara and Bud Hoover Peggy and Tom Hubbard Ellen and Jim Hubbell

Joanne Joyce and Cynthia Robins

Lea Ann and Michael Knight Gayle Kuldell

Mary Laraia and Andrew Mooney Marian and Emil Liddell Margaret and Barry Lyerly Mary and John Macukas

Anne May Maureen D. McCarthy Christine and Drew McDermott Helene Singer Merrin Beverly and Mike Morris Kate and Bob Moss

Mark Naylor and Dale Gunn

Susan Conway Oliphant and Patrick Oliphant Christophe Olson and Josed Granados

Trudy and Dennis O’Toole Sallyann Paschall

Maria and Dan Peterson Kathleen and Randy Pugh Deborah and James Quirk Leslie and William Ramsey Michael Reid and Bill Robnett Kathleen and Robert Reidy Judy and Dennis Reinhartz Jerry Richardson Roberta Robinson Judy and Bob Sherman Harriet Silverman and Hon. Paul Smelkinson

Jo Anne H. Singer Barbara and Louis Sklar Linda and Gary Smith Silvia and Alexander Speyer Carole and Edd Stepp Courtney Finch Taylor and Scott Taylor Marissa Thornton

J. Kevin Waidmann and Donald Shina

Joan and Truel West

Jan and John Wilcynski

Sally Pettit Wimberly

Sharon and Donald Wright Catherine Wygant and Dan Monroe

Nina Zingale and Jerry Meyer

REGENTS’ CIRCLE

$1,500 TO $2,499

David Arment and Jim Rimelspach M. Carlota Baca, Ph.D.

Emily and Jerald Baldridge

David Loren Bass

Joan and Robert Benedetti

Gail and Joel Bernstein

Joyce Blalock

Cristi Branum and Kathryn Shelley Lynn and Norman Brown

Joseph M. Bryan Jr.

Susie Chang and Roy Schneiderman

Katherin and David Chase

Sara Cody and Steven Berry

Eve Cohen and Halley Faust

France Cordova and Chris Foster

Carole and Philip Coviello

Liz Crews

Joan Dayton and Richard Curless

Janet Denton and John Andrews

Nancy Dickenson

Nancy Sue Dimit

Ann and Richard Donnelly Pam and Donn Duncan

Brenda Edelson and Blaine Gutermuth

Gayle Farris

Leslie Finegan

Donna Fleetwood and Michael Bartram

Vicki and John Flynn

Nancy Gardner

Suzanne and Norman George Elizabeth Hahn and George Goldstein

Jacqueline Helin and Robert Glick

Lynne Hohlfeld and Michael Crockett

David Hundley and Kenneth Burles

Barbara and Larry Good Gail and Jim Goodwin

Madeleine Grigg-Damberger and Stan Damberger

Gwen and Eugene Gritton

Martha Hargrove

Margaret Hoban

Susan and Karl Horn

Myra and Robert Hull

Kay Ingalls

Julie and David Itz

Jeanene Jenkins-Hulsey and Ronald Hulsey

Leslie and Hervey Juris

Phyllis and Lane Keller

Sherry and Adel Kheir-Eldin

Sally and Tom Kitch

Philippa and Karl Klessig

Maria and Edward Kompare Ray Landy and John Gray (continued next page)

24 museumfoundation.org

(continued from page 24)

Larry Lazarus

Catherine D. Lewis

Janis Lyon

Megan Lyon

Gwyn and Wilson Mason

Amy McCombs

Darcy McGrath

Terry and Walter Melendres

Marie-Noelle Meyer

Bill Miller and Robbie Firestone

Faye Miller

Sandra Miller and Thomas Holmes

Helen Harvey Mills

Steven Moise

Carol Moldaw

Sandy Nachman

Carol Norton and Steven Dayton

Sara and Nigel Otto

Melinne Owen and Paul Giguere

Jo and Tony Paap

Priya Pai and Stephen Raff

Ashlyn and Dan Perry

Roni and Wes Perry

Katherine Pomonis and Yorgos Marinakis

Lauren Eaton Prescott and Larry Prescott

Julie Phillips Puckett

Claire and James Rhotenberry

Katie and Michael Richarme

Sallie Ritter and Kent Jacobs

Felicia Rutledge

Pam and Mike Ryan

Suzannah and Marshall Sale

Jenna and Wilson Scanlan

Jacqueline and Richard Schmeal

Merry Schroeder and Dave Matthews

Eve Simon

Frieda Simons

Mary Sloane and Andrew Wallerstein

James Snead

Lea and David Soifer

Susanne Stauffer

Karen and Marc Still

Suzanne and Joel Sugg

Kazakuni Sugiyama and David Frank

Melody Taft and Bernie Tibbetts

Eva Valencia de Himmerich and Robert Himmerich y Valencia

Joan Vernick

Eileen Wells

Kay West and John Molyneaux

Judith and Gordon Wilson

Nancy Meem Wirth

Karen Wohlgemuth

Lyle York and Matthew Wilson

Gloria Zamora and Robert Shea

CIRCLES EXPLORERS

$895 TO $1,499

Lori and Edward Adcock

Susan and Robert Anderson

Meredith M. Baker Esq. and Zach Taylor

Suzanna and Lawrence Becerra

Greg Betts and Glen Long

Rita and Jerred Blanchard

Joanne and Scot Boulton

Janine Bradford and Greg Casey

Gretta and Alex Brooks

Matt Bunkowski

Lee Caldwell and Marcus Randolph

Paul and James Campion

Julia Catron and David Andersson

Tom Cleary

Nicole Panter Dailey

Julia and Jude Damasco

Diane Domenici and Lawrence Saunders Nella Domenici and Patrick McDonough

Jamie Douglass

Norah Edelstein

Sheila and Gabriel Fajl

Anna and Paul Farrier

Doris Francis-Erhard

Maria and Edward Gale

Victoria Graham

Stephanie Green and Alex Hobson Kaki and Kent Grubbs Kami Gupta Thomas Hall and George Xillas Alex Hanna Ned Harris

Sheila Hartney Rae Hoffacker and Peter Pappas

Kathy and Bill Howard Bridget Jones and Dinesh Goburdhun

Leslie Jones and Paul Zeller Jenifer and Grayson Kirtland

Laura Kiser

Constance Langston

Mary Jean Little and Martin Herrera

Elizabeth Love Louellen and Michael Lusk Dee Ann McIntyre

Laura and John Meyer

Jeannine and Jim O’Bannon

Catherine Oppenheimer and William Thornburg

Julie Parcells and Robert Barney Maria and Dan Peterson

Erilsa Randolph and Mike Miller

Karla and Jean-Michel Rendu Natalie Rivera and Joseph Walsh Susan and Stephen Robeck Margaret and David Rose

Alice Saland

Safae Sanhaji and Ryan Price

Lynn Sellers-Carr and David Carr

Lance Simpson Mari and Alex Thornburg

Charles Thornton Marissa Thornton

Jodi Vevoda and Will Prull Bob and Ellen Vladem Karyl and Marc Yeston

Tegan and Michael Youssefmir Nina Zingale and Jerry Meyer

Ambassador Members

AS OF JUNE 30,

2022

Ambassador members contribute $1,000 to $1,499 annually in membership dues to support the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.

Lorin and David Abbey Jane Alexander Peggy and David Ater Christine and Bill Aylward Thomas and Janet Bailey Barry and Lisa Bartee Deborah Baxter and Vernon Yenne Beverly Berger and Matt Gomez Bonnie Binkert and Michael Melody Charles Braun and Diane Waters S. Lori Brown Renee Castagnola Judy and Stephen Chreist Audrey Chumley and Gary Sullivan William and Leslie Coe Glenn and Julie Davidson Mary de Compiegne Stephen Foltyn Chris and Judith Ford Dody Fugate Valentin Garcia and Jodi Colchomiro C. William Gaynor Betty Gold Susan and Thomas Kevin Golden Elizabeth Gordon and Helen Whitesides Kirsten and Mark Graham John Guffey

Catherine Harvey and Laura Noel Harvey Richard Hughes and Jo Ann Burtard Penelope Hunter-Stiebel and Gerald Stiebel

Eric Hvolboll

Marilyn and Richard Hyde

Joyce Idema

Alice and Jerry Kruse

Leonora J. Lopez

Nance and Ramón José López

Ron Lushing and Dan Reid

Chris Martin and William Walker

Charlotte Mittler

Christina and William Moore

Jean Baer O’Gorman

Maura O’Leary

Elizabeth and Duncan Osborne

David and Terry Peak

Janet Perelson and Diane Gerard

Barbara and Jeff Pontius

Ronald and Marilyn Racca

Alexander and Martha Rochelle

Leslie Roundstream and Debra Hart

Julie and Jary Shimer

Herman Siegelaar and Cornelia Bryer

Lura and Richard Sivalls

Eugene and Jean Stark

Phillip Stern and Leslie Markman-Stern

Evelyne Taylor

Paul and Christine Vogel Peter Walsh and Diane Roussel-Dupre Polly Wotherspoon

Ellen Yarrell Anne and Louis Yegge

Founders Society

(continued from page 19)

Claire and Jim Woodcock Sharon and Don Wright Wyncote Foundation Sandy Zane and Ned Bennett and those who wish to remain anonymous

*Deceased

museumfoundation.org 25

Best Year Ever

Record-Breaking Sales Drive Shops Forward

It was a banner year for the Museum Shops as recordbreaking sales reflected a rebound in attendance during fiscal year 2021-2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022).

As thousands of visitors were drawn to major exhibitions at our cultural institutions on Museum Hill and downtown Santa Fe, shop sales benefited—to the tune of $3.6 million. In turn, these revenues supported the Museum of New Mexico Foundation’s ability to serve our four Santa Fe museums, eight historic sites statewide and the Office of Archaeological Studies.

The Colleen Cloney Duncan Shop at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture again proved itself as one of the state’s premier locations to purchase museum-quality jewelry, pottery and other original Native American arts, in addition

to an unparalleled selection of books and exhibition catalogs on Native art. Clearly Indigenous: Native Visions Reimagined in Glass, a groundbreaking exhibition of works in glass by 33 Indigenous artists, reflected the artform’s large following as Native contemporary art glass for sale in the shop and online marked the single largest growth category this year.

Additionally, sales of the stunning Clearly Indigenous catalog topped 1,000 copies. An expanded selection of Pueblo pottery accompanied the reopening of Here, Now and Always and remained a best-seller. Native jewelry, especially Jimmy Poyer’s (Navajo/Diné) inlay designs, remained a top seller as well.

At the recently dedicated Lynn Godfrey Brown Shop at the Museum of International Folk Art, exquisite items by newly

MUSEUM SHOPS
26 museumfoundation.org
Above: Glass art from the Colleen Cloney Duncan Shop at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture. Opposite: Catrina figurines from the Lynn Godfrey Brown Shop at the Museum of International Folk Art. Photos courtesy of the Museum Shops.

featured jewelers and potters expanded and increased sales of the museum’s popular product lines. Best-selling products include a full line of calacas (skeletons), calaveras de azúcar (sugar skulls) and Catrinas (female skeletons), whose sales were especially brisk during the museum’s annual Day of the Dead Community Day. Merchandise inspired by the Yokai: Ghosts & Demons of Japan exhibition also attracted a range of shoppers. The younger set related to the shop’s Pokémon characters, while other Japanese products, espe cially ceramics, sold well to their parents and grandparents.

Downtown, the Spiegelberg Shop at the New Mexico History Museum continued to be a destination for art collectors and aficionados alike. The shop’s best-sellers included original works by local silversmiths, local sculptors like the everpopular Gregory Lomayesva (Hopi), and San Ildefonso Pueblo potters Marvin Martinez and Marvin Lee Martinez, fourth- and fifth-generation descendants of internationally renowned potter Maria Martinez. Sales also benefited from the shop’s reputation as a local literary resource, offering books on the history of both Santa Fe and New Mexico, nonfiction and fiction books by local authors, exhibition cata logs and more.

At the Rosalie D. and Steven J. Harris Shop at the New Mexico Museum of Art, sales of Gustave Baumann-related merchan dise were sparked by the exhibition Go West Said A Small Voice: Gustave Baumann and Dreams of New Mexico. Bestsellers included Baumann calendars and posters. The currently out-of-print catalog, Gustave Baumann’s Southwest, will be republished in 2023 and is anticipated to return as a

shop best-seller. The book features more than 50 reproduc tions of the artist’s woodblock prints and gouaches as well as an essay by former Museum of Art curator Joseph Traugott.

A Local Approach

For decades, the Museum Shops have showcased local vendors and artists, whose works comprise more than 70% of their museum-related merchandise.

“Seven of our top 20 best-sellers are custom products based on iconic museum pieces,” says Teresa Curl, the Founda tion’s vice president of retail. “Moving forward, we will be expanding this category.”

In FY22, Curl took the retail reins from Sara Birmingham, who over two decades played a significant role in developing the Museum Shops into a powerhouse retail operation supporting Foundation operating expenses.

“Our Museum Shops became arts and crafts galleries set amidst Santa Fe’s high standards,” Birmingham recalls. “We stuck with that vision and never looked back. The shops are in the top tier of museum shops nationwide. Our reputation among vendors, artists, customers and visitors is stellar.”

Now under Curl’s direction, inspired by this record-breaking year, the quality of merchandise continues to evolve while dedicated shop staff members keep customers coming back for more.

To learn more about the Museum Shops, visit shopmuseum.org.

museumfoundation.org 27

A Bountiful Year

Licensing Program Yields Creative Collaborations

Fiscal year 2021-2022 (July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022) deliv ered a bounty of products from the Museum of New Mexico Foundation’s licensing department. Pamela Kelly, the Foun dation’s vice president of licensing, signed three new agree ments, ushered three new collections to market, and arranged for a significant carpet donation to the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture. Overall, the program generated nearly $136,000 in gross revenues.

Among the highlights was a return visit last November from the Kravet Fabrics design team to the Museum of Interna tional Folk Art. It was the first time since 2002 that Scott Kravet, the executive creative director for his family’s textile business, reviewed the collection. Fifty textiles were photo graphed, and the Foundation’s fifth Kravet fabric collection will launch in early 2024.

Early in 2022, Kelly signed with Hartmann & Forbes of Port land, Oregon, an innovative producer of bespoke, hand woven window and wall coverings featuring sustainably harvested natural fibers. Design inspiration for their collec tion, launching in 2024, comes from the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture basketry, textile and pottery collections.

The final FY22 license is with Annie Sloan, a famed UK-based artist, colorist and paint manufacturer. Sloan invented “chalk paint,” a sensation among DIY home décor enthusiasts that can be applied to any surface without preparation. Sloan’s Foundation collaboration will feature a paint line based on the collections at the Museum of International Folk Art, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture and Santa Fe in general, as well as several paper products—stencils, sketch books and more—for use in DIY furniture painting kits. Sloan’s international magazine, The Colourist, will feature a story about this exciting collaboration launching in 2024.

New collections from existing licensees also debuted in FY22. Jan Kath, creator of hand-knotted carpets, introduced several new rug colorways from the successful Common Threads collection. Accessory and furniture manufacturer

Studio|A Home completed work on several new products launching in early 2024.

Finally, Mohawk introduced its third carpet collaboration, Celebrated Heritage, based on objects from the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture. The company generously donated carpet tiles from this collection for the entrance of the muse um’s Here, Now and Always exhibition as well as in the Buchsbaum and Lloyd Kiva New galleries.

For more information about licensing, contact Pamela Kelly at Pamela@museumfoundation.org or 505.216.0614.

LICENSING
28 museumfoundation.org
Carpet from Mohawk’s Celebrated Heritage, inspired by objects in the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture collection.

Ways to Give

Membership

Support the Museum of New Mexico Foundation’s efforts to deliver essential services to our 13 partner cultural institu tions while offering enjoyable member benefits.

The Circles

Participate in a series of exclusive events while providing leadership-level support.

Circles Explorers

Support and explore the art, culture and history of New Mexico through active, adventurous, and educational cultural excursions and experiences.

Corporate Partners and Business Council

Support the museums through your business and receive recognition and member benefits for your business, clients and employees.

Annual Fund

Provide critical operating support for the Museum of New Mexico Foundation to fulfill its mission on behalf of our 13 partner cultural institutions.

Education Funds

Fund museum education and public outreach programs at our four museums, eight historic sites and the Office of Archaeological Studies.

Exhibition Development Funds

Support exhibitions, related programming and institutional advancement at the division of your choice.

Planned Gift

Provide a long-lasting impact through a bequest in your will, beneficiary designation, charitable gift annuity or gift of art.

Endowment

Establish a new fund, or add to the principal of an existing fund, to provide a reliable source of annual income that sustains a variety of cultural programs and purposes.

Special Campaigns

Give to special campaign initiatives designed to fund a range of capital expansions and programming advances throughout the Museum of New Mexico system.

For more information, visit museumfoundation.org/give.

MUSEUM OF NEW MEXICO FOUNDATION Staff

DEVELOPMENT

Kristin Graham

New Mexico Museum of Art 505.216.1199

Kristin@museumfoundation.org

Yvonne Montoya New Mexico History Museum New Mexico Historic Sites 505.216.1592

Yvonne@museumfoundation.org

Lauren Paige Museum of Indian Arts and Culture Office of Archaeological Studies 505.982.2282

Lauren@museumfoundation.org

MEMBERSHIP AND COMMUNICATIONS

Saro Calewarts 505.216.0617

Saro@museumfoundation.org

Mariann Lovato 505.216.0849

Mariann@museumfoundation.org

Raven Malliett 505.216.1700

Raven@museumfoundation.org

Cara O’Brien 505.216.0848

Cara@museumfoundation.org

Georgine Chavez 505.216.1651

Georgine@museumfoundation.org

Sachiko Hunter-Rivers 505.216.1663

Sachiko@museumfoundation.org

Joaquin Ramirez 505.216.0830

Joaquin@museumfoundation.org

SHOPS

Teresa Curl 505.216.0725

Teresa@museumfoundation.org

For a full Foundation staff list, visit: museumfoundation.org/staff

EXECUTIVE OFFICE

Jamie Clements

Jamie@museumfoundation.org

Asya Beardsley 505.216.0826

Asya@museumfoundation.org

Laura Sullivan Museum of International Folk Art 505.216.0829

Laura@museumfoundation.org

Stephanie Wilson 505.216.1186

Stephanie@museumfoundation.org

GRANTS

Johanna Saretzki 505.216.0839

Johanna@museumfoundation.org

Brittny Wood 505.216.0837

Brittny@museumfoundation.org

FINANCE AND OPERATIONS

Eduardo Corrales 505.216.1606

Eduardo@museumfoundation.org

Tammie Crowley 505.216.1619

Tammie@museumfoundation.org

Jonah Smith 505.216.3135

Jonah@museumfoundation.org

Kylie Strijek 505.216.0651

Kylie@museumfoundation.org

LICENSING

Pamela Kelly 505.216.0614

Pamela@museumfoundation.org

Signature Stone of the Southwest

at the Colleen Cloney Duncan Shop at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture

Our state gem is a prized possession in the Southwest, used ceremonially, medicinally and decoratively for thousands of years. Found in shades ranging from magnetic blue to deep green, this stone shines on its own, but also pairs beautifully with sterling silver. Find your new favorite piece online and in-store.

As always, members save 10% and Circles members save 15% on every purchase.

Santa Fe Plaza

Museum Hill

shopmuseum.org
Rosalie D. and Steven J. Harris Shop at the New Mexico Museum of Art The Spiegelberg Shop at the New Mexico History Museum Lynn Godfrey Brown Shop at the Museum of International Folk Art Colleen Cloney Duncan Museum Shop at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture

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