Richmond magazine - May 2022

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LOCAL

A Pattern of Progress Fannie Criss Payne White went from Jackson Ward dressmaker to Harlem ‘modiste’ By Harry Kollatz Jr.

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his month, rare dresses designed by Fannie Criss Payne White, a daughter of former slaves from Cumberland County, form part of an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. “In America: An Anthology of Fashion,” runs May 7-Sept. 5. The inclusion is fitting, since Payne’s abilities took her from Richmond’s Jackson Ward to Manhattan’s Harlem. Fannie Criss came to Richmond following her 1895 marriage to William Thornton Payne. A 1900 directory lists their Jackson Ward residence as 1012 W. Leigh St. Fannie Criss Payne built her reputation creating garments for both Black and white clients. When Kristen E. Stewart, The Valentine’s curator of costumes and textiles, undertook research for the 2018-19 Valentine exhibition “Pretty Powerful: Fashion and Virginia Women,” she made a discovery. A sophisticated day dress of lightweight cream wool made for Ellen Scott Clarke Wallace was attributed to Fannie Criss, described as a “well-known colored dressmaker of Richmond.” That garment held no label, and the file, Stewart recalls, contained nothing further regarding “this mysterious but clearly very talented dressmaker.” Stewart in April 2019 addressed the annual Costume Society of America conference in Seattle, emphasizing Fannie Criss Payne as a unique example of a Black dressmaker from the early 20th century. From this, Elizabeth Way, an associate curator for The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology, asked Stewart to contribute a chapter on the Richmond dressmaker to a book she was editing, “Black Designers in American Fashion.”

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Stewart’s research, and the differences of reference to Payne’s married names, led her to three more dresses in the Valentine collection. Silk twill waist tapes include the maker’s name: “Payne.” None of Payne’s business records survive, though employee Lucy Ann Jackson Foster listed at least 54 wealthy white and commercially successful immigrants who commissioned Payne. The brass-plate surnames include those of Branch, Bryan, Ellyson, Nolting — and Valentine. The garments at the Met are examples of early 20th-century afternoon wear,

An early 20th-century dress by Fannie Criss Payne that will be on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York

Stewart says. All four are cream or ivory, including an afternoon lingerie-style reception garment for hostess Laura Roy Ellerson Massie, wife of lawyer and legislator Eugene C. Massie. Referrals built Payne’s client base rather than advertising. In a 1904 issue of The Voice of the Negro, writer William Patrick Burrell refers to Payne as the “finest dressmaker in Richmond, regardless of color”: “She employs eight girls regularly and her business amounts to more than $8,000 a year. ... A few years ago Mrs. Payne was a day cooker, earning one fifty cents [sic] a day. Her dresses may now be seen at the most prominent watering places of the country [summer resorts] and give the same satisfaction as many that are imported at a great cost.” Payne seems to have made the 1905 purchase of a two-story brick house at 219 W. Leigh St. in Jackson Ward by herself. She divorced her husband and married restaurant worker William T. White. An increase in race-based restrictions hemmed in their ambitions and hastened their departure to New York City. As Mrs. W.T. White in New York, she received consistent mention in social whirl columns while her husband’s hospitality business ambitions took them to the West Virginia resort of White Sulphur Springs and to St. Augustine, Florida. In the 1920 and 1930 federal censuses, she indicated a continuing career in fashion by describing her profession as “modiste.” This distinguished her, says Stewart, as “a creative professional in the language of the modern market.” The Depression and World War II altered fashion. Fannie Criss Payne White was in her 80s by the time of her February 1942 death. At present, no examples of her New York creations are known. Stewart says, “My hope is that once these dresses go on exhibit at the Met, where they’ll be seen by many people, someone will recognize the name of Fannie Criss Payne White and realize what’s in Grandmother’s closet.” R

V.44.48.06A, B CA. 1905 COURTESY THE VALENTINE, PHOTO BY MICHAEL SIMON

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F RIDAY NIGH T in early March, a previously approved permit to raze the structure in 1992 a group of mostly gray-haired preservationists marches was still valid. In other words, there’s nothing standing in slowly down Franklin Street. It’s a protest that feels more the way of the old church and the proverbial wrecking ball. like a funeral procession: There’s an accordionist and the “Look at it. We are never going to see the likes of that steady chime of a cowbell along with dozens of signs building again, ever,” bemoans Dotts in a recent interview. defending the honor of the iconic Second Baptist Church, “Walk around Jackson Ward. Walk around Church Hill. Go that 1906 Classical Revival masterpiece next to The Jefferdowntown. By and large, the new architecture, the new designs, they cannot compare to the design, the skill, the son Hotel with the columned portico and monumental front artistry embodied in Second Baptist. It’s just not there.” steps, the one that’s been under the threat of demolition If the rally elicited a sense of déjà vu, there’s a good for the past 30 years. reason for it. When the demolition permit for the church Longtime preservation advocate Jennie Dotts is directing traffic, advising the march line, speaking to the crowd was first granted 30 years ago, the preservation community on the sidewalk and the TV cameras assembled on the curb. fought back aggressively. Led by the Historic Richmond Foundation, they rallied around the church, put pressure Dotts, 71, jumped into the fight in early February, helping on City Council members and penned essays in the local to organize another rally on Feb. 12 and launching a petition newspaper. By December of 1992, the hotel’s owners to boycott the hotel, which now has nearly 800 signatures. relented, calling off the bulldozers. Last fall, Richmond billionaire Bill Goodwin’s Historic “I think everybody in the preservation community was Hotels, which owns The Jefferson and Second Baptist Church next door, applied for a demolition permit to raze shocked. Everyone thought that the owner would have to come the church, citing the need to “backfill and landback and make a whole case to demolish the sancscape” the property. Then in February, Kevin tuary,” says Joe Yates, 70, an architect who attended Preservationists rally to save Second Baptist Vonck, director of the city’s Department of Planthe rallies three decades ago — and the two Church, built in 1906, earlier this year. “I would chalk it up to complaning and Development Review, determined that in February.

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ELEVATING B LACK H ISTORY

The JXN Project, founded by sisters Enjoli and Sesha Joi Moon, is a case in point. While planning the fifth anniversary of the Afrikana Independent Film Festival in 2020, Enjoli Moon recalls reaching out to her sibling for help gathering information about Richmond’s Black neighborhoods for an exhibition. One of the neighborhoods was Jackson Ward, which raised a question they struggled to find an answer for: Who was the Jackson in Jackson Ward? “Compelling evidence suggests that it is Stonewall Jackson, but, you know, what I think was interesting is that it all depends on who you ask,” Sesha Joi Moon says. Longtime residents of Jackson Ward, a Black community established in 1871 to gerrymander its residents into political irrelevance, long held that the namesake was Giles B. Jackson, who was born enslaved but after the Civil War learned to

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read and write, eventually becoming an attorney, entrepreneur, real estate developer and civil rights activist. Some historians, however, contend that Jackson Ward is named after President Andrew Jackson or Confederate Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson. “It opened up a bit of a Pandora’s box around the naming convention of [Jackson Ward] and introduced us to more of the origin story,” Enjoli Moon says. The simple question led to more research and digging, as well as the formation of The JXN Project, a reparative preservation nonprofit that’s gained considerable traction in the past two years. The Moon sisters, for instance, are currently raising funds to construct a replica of the house built by Abraham Peyton Skipwith, the first known Black resident of what would become Jackson Ward. The small cottage, built in 1793, still stands, albeit in Goochland County, where it was relocated in the 1950s prior to the construction of Interstate 95. The Moon sisters initially wanted to bring the house back to Jackson Ward, but after extensive renovations, they say, the Skipwith cottage had been stripped of its original historical significance. Fundraising has gone exceedingly well. In April, the

Founders of The JXN Project, (from left) sisters Enjoli and Sesha Joi Moon aim to elevate the origin story of Jackson Ward, the economic heartbeat of Richmond’s Black community after the Civil War.

JENAÉ HARRINGTON

stories and the more people whose hands shaped that place, and whose lives were shaped by that place. … Sometimes those stories are hard and complicated. But we shouldn’t shy away from those stories. We should learn from them.”

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CORTESY THE VALENTINE

Presbyterian Seminary decided to bulldoze the structure, located on its Brook Road campus and built in the early 1800s, as “repentance for the resourcing provided to the seminary through the labor of enslaved persons,” a spokesman for the seminary told Richmond BizSense in January of 2021. Hunter Holmes McGuire was a Confederate surgeon who published racist tropes after the Civil War, arguing that Blacks were naturally inferior to whites. The building came down quickly. “I’m very concerned about the politicization of everything,” Dotts says. “In the same way that you see this movement to extricate texts and limit how teachers can teach history, aren’t we doing the same thing when we erase those features that allow us to really explore and talk about the past?” The Confederate statues, she adds, “really needed to go,” but that shouldn’t extend to a The JXN Project is building a replica house or a building that wasn’t erected for the Mellon Foundation awarded The JXN of Abraham Peyton Skipwith’s sole purpose of memorializing the Confederacy Project $1.5 million for the project, which cottage on Duval Street in Jackson Ward, originally built in 1793. and the Lost Cause. includes reconstructing Skipwith’s cottage as a historical site with offices, park“It’s the point I’ve always made about presering and an outdoor green space. With the grant and a land vation and the materiality of it,” she says, referring to the donation from the Maggie Walker Community Land Trust, Emily Winfree Cottage, which she helped save in the early the sisters are nearly halfway to their fundraising goal of 2000s and which now sits behind Main Street Station in Shockoe Bottom, awaiting revitalization. Winfree, an $5.68 million. enslaved woman, was given the cottage by her former While some worry that the younger generation is losing interest in history, the Moon sisters say the social justice owner, along with 100 acres, in 1866. “If the Winfree Cottage movement and the ensuing protests of 2020 helped open isn’t there to talk about Emily Winfree and slavery and the the door for The JXN Project, “helping to just pivot a end of the war,” she says, “that’s a really hard thing for people to imagine in the abstract.” national lens, with Richmond kind of at the heart of that, and it’s made space for projects like JXN, but not us alone,” Engaging today’s young people with history may require Enjoli Moon says. “We talk a lot about the presidents … and a new approach, but there is a path forward, Sesha Joi Moon says. the Confederacy. But in those stories being elevated, what’s “It’s the difference between preservation of a place been submerged is the Black contribution.” The JXN Project aims to elevate the story of Black Amerversus putting something on a pedestal. What’s the differicans. “As we think about the ideas of monuments and ence between exalting versus acknowledging?” she asks, preservation,” she says, “how can we laser focus ourselves referencing a documentary she watched recently where a to the preservation of our stories that have just been paved discussion ensued about a Black-owned nonprofit that purchased a former plantation in Georgia. “Some people over for decades upon decades?” in the community didn’t understand. ‘Why would you want ‘EXALTING VERSUS ACKNOWLEDGING’ to buy a former plantation?’ And the other part was like, well, ‘Why not? This represents just as much of our story If the social justice movement demanded the removal of as it does the enslavers.’ Confederate monuments, how do you generate enthusiasm “I’m having to reconsider space and place, and which for preserving historic structures built by and for enslavers, often literally on the backs of enslaved people? one should I shy away from, or which one should I say, ‘No, Tearing them down isn’t the answer, says Dotts, the actually, I deserve ownership, too, because my ancestors preservation activist, who points to the demolition of the helped build this thing.’ … I can’t say I’ve necessarily arrived McGuire Cottage on the city’s North Side in 2021. The Union at an answer, but I think it’s a worthy one of asking.” R

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newcomer to Studio Two Three might notice humming printing presses, people huddled around computer tablets discussing a design, or its compact retail area displaying T-shirts, buttons, posters and prints. What’s less evident is the commitment to action that is central to the organization. Over the past two years, this shared community art space in Scott’s Addition has intensely focused on its mission of helping artists make a statement through printmaking, in all its forms. Materials produced at Studio Two Three have covered storefront windows along Broad Street during the protests in the summer 2020, offered inspiration at Lee Circle and other community gatherings, provided historical markers focusing on the Black history of Richmond, and celebrated the removal of the Robert E. Lee statue on Monument Avenue. And anyone looking for art need only visit the newspaper box sitting outside the studio, which is stocked with free prints, stickers and ephemera created by staff and local artists. “We have really lived into the past couple of years,” says Executive Director Ashley Hawkins. “Now the organization is able to take a stance and not be neutral and not be the organization for everybody. I think we really see ourselves as a resource for using art-making techniques for people who want to disseminate information and create something.” Studio Two Three has received numerous grants, including two $20,000 grants from the National Endowment of the Arts to support local artists; the most recent was awarded in January of this year. That same month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Foundation awarded Studio Two Three a $75,000 grant to encourage COVID-19 vaccination through citywide banners and other activities. In February, the Mary Morton Parsons Foundation offered a $100,000 challenge grant that will help the organization purchase additional equipment, support more local artists with its residency program, and — eventually — launch a capital campaign so that Studio Two Three can purchase its own building. “We are in a unique and exciting position, having come through these past two years stronger than we’ve ever been,” Hawkins says. “We are focused in a powerful way on what’s successful for us: supporting artists and art-making.”

A CREATIVE BIRTH

Founders Hawkins, Sarah Moore, Emily Gannon and Tyler Dawkins believed that sharing should be the cornerstone of Studio Two Three, named for its first address at Plant

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Zero in Manchester. “It felt overwhelming, but [Sarah Moore and I] had just gotten out of VCU and were working in this [printing] medium that required all this equipment that’s big, specialized and expensive,” Hawkins explains. “We felt that Richmond really needed this space.” “We were young, motivated printmakers hoping to share space and maybe do something bigger,” says Gannon, now the owner of Marge Ceramics in Philadelphia. “I think all of our separate energies just created this snowball.” Moore, now the marketing and public relations coordinator for the Department of Theatre at VCU, says the shared enthusiasm was crucial. “Most of our friends and classmates were moving to big cities or applying to grad school,” she says. “We knew that wasn’t our path. We really wanted to make [opportunities] for the people who came after us.” Beginning in 2009, the four originally split the rent for a 400-square-foot workspace and worked service-industry jobs to pay the bills. They borrowed equipment to start, and donations followed. They sold memberships to other like-minded artists and committed to 24/7 access. Within a year, they needed a bigger space. Studio Two Three moved to 1617 W. Main St., a commercial building that allowed it to offer more classes and, for a time, to host print exhibitions. The next step was establishing nonprofit status in 2011, paving the way for grants and individual contributions that would then be used to provide greater studio access. “We inherently saw printmaking as a democratic medium, and we wanted to make printmaking widely available,” Hawkins says, adding that she obtained a master’s in nonprofit management from VCU in 2013 “to lend some legitimacy to a 23-year-old covered in tattoos asking for grants. “Getting nonprofit status was important to move from a scrappy, all-volunteer [staff] to become a sustainable organization with paid staff and money in the bank,” she adds. “We had to find the resources and find the confidence and believe in the work [we] were doing.” That search didn’t come without missteps. In 2014, the organization published a print of a map of Richmond that omitted several traditionally African American neighborhoods. There was strong criticism from the public on social media. “We had created an inadvertently racist map, but the inadvertent part did not make the racist part any better,” Hawkins reflected in an essay published in Style Weekly in 2019. A more inclusive and accurate map was created and made available later. Studio Two Three moved again in 2015 into half of a building at 3300 W. Clay St. An expansion into the other half, in

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“Screenprinting equipment is really expensive,” Dennis says. “The only options were to buy our own [machines] or pay premium prices at other places.” Dennis, who signed up for a membership the first day he walked in the studio, says he loved the space, feel and educational opportunities, citing Studio Two Three’s regular newsletter that lists job or art offerings. “They provide a safe haven to an artist to grow and develop naturally without any pressure,” he says. “I can print at night, when most people are asleep. That’s when my creativity flows.” Even though Chilalay now has a storefront at 212 W. Broad St., Dennis still has a Studio Two Three membership. “I have a printer in the basement [here], but I like the community atmosphere and the freedom to do larger orders,” he says. “I’ll always be a member.” For Cam Johnson, who taught himself screenprinting with an at-home kit and instruction from YouTube videos, walking in the door of Studio Two Three was “a touchstone moment,” he says. “My eyes lit up, just swinging the door open,” he adds. “I’ve been trying to figure this out, and here it is.” Johnson, a co-owner of MEANS apparel, rents one of the private workspaces. “I used to do [production] out of my house, and I hated every minute of it,” he says. “I needed separation.” Working at Studio Two Three helps his process, he says, because other artists can offer fresh takes. “That’s one of the studio’s strongest aspects: collaboration,” he says. “It’s hard to be an artist. You’re so stuck in your head.” And there’s support. With the help of others, Johnson says, he’s learned about the elements needed to run a business, everything from supplies and manufacturing to creating a website and managing shipping. But the art remains front and center. “This [place] is like a test kitchen for design,” he says. “I encourage people, even if you don’t know the person, even if the style isn’t the same, go up and ask a question. See what the process is.” Clara Cline, who makes and sells letterpress paper goods, prints and accessories through her business The Wild Wander, says Studio Two Three was the bridge she needed between a home workspace and a commercial studio. “It’s so important to have creative spaces where you are not under the pressure to create something for sale or for profit,” she says. “Studio Two Three provides that and a community around it that is vanishingly rare and needed.”

WIDESPREAD ATTENTION

Studio Two Three received its first grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2019, an important milestone. “People see you’re funded from the NEA, and then they think you’ve been vetted,” says Kate Fowler, Studio Two Three’s

director of community partnerships and development, who joined the staff in August 2019. Since then, other grants have followed, including one from CultureWorks to purchase and outfit a box truck as a mobile printing center that travels to schools, festivals, demonstrations and pop-up events. In February, the truck showed up at the book drive for Fox Elementary School after a fire destroyed it. The CDC grant creates a partnership with Richmond Public Schools, which will distribute Studio Two Three-produced zines containing grade-level vaccine information for elementary-, middle- and high-school students. At public events, Studio Two Three will offer giveaways of T-shirts, tote bags and posters, as well as on-site screenprinting. Helping one another is embedded in the culture of the studio, Fowler says. “There’s a grounding of shared values,” she says. “There are members who have been here since the beginning. They’ll just take presses [home to use] and bring them back. This is a creative home to people who are building their livelihood, and that has an economic impact.” Studio manager KB Brown, who uses they/them pronouns, came to Studio Two Three in 2015 as an intern, fresh out of Old Dominion University’s printmaking program. “This is the reason why I moved to Richmond,” they say. “This is a very inclusive space. I feel like our work has evolved depending on what the community needs and what we need to amplify.” Brown has taught classes, helped with the print truck and managed the popular holiday markets; now they focus on keeping the space in working order while managing a crew of 20 interns. “The studio has an ethic to respect one another, to treat everyone like an artist, to steal like an artist but not one another’s belongings,” Brown says. “There are no gatekeepers. It’s OK to make mistakes. Someone will be able to help you. We’re very much about sharing the knowledge.” For her part, Hawkins says she fell in love with printmaking “because there was this undergirding of technique that made me feel safe to explore,” she says. “It was unlike painting, where I was adrift in a sea of shame.” Hawkins laughs about how her life has changed alongside Studio Two Three. At age 36, she’s a little older than most current members, and with her partner, she has two children — a son, 8, and a daughter, 6. Her status as the only remaining founder often goes unnoticed. “I’m just the lady on the computer in the office,” she says. What matters, she says, is what happens within. “In essence, we are a community of 140 artists with 24/7 access, with their own processes,” Hawkins says. “Our strength has been a lack of control over how people use the space. It’s resulted in a beautiful community of trust.” R

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Contents

Spirits (Metamorphosis), 2019–20, Tsherin Sherpa (American, born Nepal, 1968), acrylic and ink on canvas. Collection of Dolma Chonzom Bhutia

WHISTLER TO CASSATT: American Painters in France pgs 4–6 TSHERIN SHERPA: Spirits pg 8 ALSO ON VIEW pg 10 EXPERIENCE VMFA AND VMFA SHOP pg 14 This spring, experience VMFA’s global art collection, special exhibitions, like Whistler to Cassatt: American Painters in France and Tsherin Sherpa: Spirits, as well as programs and events for all ages. Ranked among the top ten comprehensive art museums in the United States, VMFA is a world-class cultural destination and dynamic urban center where inspiration, contemplation, community, and wonder are possible for all. Open 365 days a year with free general admission. Cover: Idle Hours, ca. 1894, William Merritt Chase (American, 1849–1916), oil on canvas. Amon Carter Museum of Art, Fort Worth, Texas, 1982.1

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WHISTLER TO CASSATT: American Painters in France APR 16 –JUL 31, 2022

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ediscover late 19th- and early 20th-century painters who left the United States as expatriates and returned to shape the course of American art. In Paris, they trained under the influence of the École des Beaux-Arts and studied the “old master” works at the Louvre but then went beyond traditional practices to experiment with new ideas and techniques. Whistler to Cassatt: American Painters in France examines the rich variety and complexity of American painting in the advent of modernism, as French avant-garde philosophies and styles melded with American individualism. Assembled from international collections, the exhibition features more than 100 paintings by James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Mary Cassatt, John Singer Sargent, Childe Hassam, Theodore Robinson, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Elizabeth Nourse, Cecilia Beaux, and many others. This exhibition is organized by the Denver Art Museum and curated for VMFA by Dr. Susan J. Rawles, Elizabeth Locke Associate Curator of American Decorative Arts.

Sunlight, 1909, Frank Weston Benson (American, 1862–1951), oil on canvas. Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields, John Herron Fund, 11.1. © The Frank W. Benson Trust

The Beach at Marseille, 1901, James McNeill Whistler (American, 1834–1903), oil on panel, Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection, 1992.143. Photography © Terra Foundation for American Art, Chicago.

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TSHERIN SHERPA: Spirits Feb 19–Oct 16, 2022

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xplore the captivating paintings and sculptures of Nepalese-born Tibetan American artist Tsherin Sherpa. This thought-provoking, participatory art experience is presented in the form of a narrative telling a story of loss, struggle, and re-empowerment. Last seen at VMFA in the 2019 exhibition Awaken: A Tibetan Buddhist Journey Toward Enlightenment, Sherpa’s groundbreaking artwork continues to garner international acclaim. This focused mid-career retrospective is the global artist’s first solo museum exhibition. Tsherin Sherpa’s works are grounded in the traditional Buddhist art of his training but stretch, bend, reconfigure, and repurpose its forms to explore contemporary concerns. The exhibition’s 40 paintings and sculptures trace the evolution of his

“Spirits” series whose subjects resemble Tibetan Buddhist deities transformed by the modern world. Dislocated from their home— an experience familiar to the artist and communities all over the world—these figures move from grief and confusion, to courage and self-assurance, to triumph and wisdom. In their multiple manifestations, the Spirits reveal the power and endurance of transformation. Tsherin Sherpa: Spirits is organized by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. The exhibition is curated by Dr. John Henry Rice, VMFA’s E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Curator of South Asian and Islamic Art.

TSHERIN SHERPA: Spirits Feb 19–Oct 16, 2022

Tickets

Free for VMFA members, children ages 6 and under, active-duty military personnel and their immediate families; $10 for adults; $8 for seniors 65+, youth 7–17, and college students with ID.

Sponsors

Canvas at VMFA Fabergé Ball Endowment The Ellen Bayard Weedon Foundation Anne Battle and Leonard Slater Susan L. Buck in memory of Ed Chappell Nancy and Wayne Chasen

Heather Daniel, Barrie McDowell, and Susan Russell Birch Douglass Arnel Manalo Teri Craig Miles Mr. Hubert G. Phipps Jacquelyn Holby Pogue Ms. Jennifer L. Holley and Mr. William Bradley Burch

VMFA is also grateful to the following Sponsors:

Tara Gaga, 2016, Tsherin Sherpa (American, born Nepal, 1968), gold leaf, acrylic, and ink on cotton. Private collection of Nassib Abou-Khalil, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

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S P E C I A L

Nupa Agarwal, Esq. I Michael and Maura Bisceglia Paula and Charles Collins | Philip and Kay Davidson Mr. James W. Klaus | Deanna M. Maneker | Amy and Sean McGlynn John McGurl and Michelle Gluck | Jaclyn Miller, PhD Mr. and Mrs. Stanley | J. Olander, Jr. | Dr. and Mrs. Carl Patow Reynolds Gallery | Dr. Bibhakar Sunder Shakya | SouthState Bank Mr. and Mrs. John Stark | Shantaram and Sunita Talegaonkar Stephen C. Thompson, Jr. and Jon McCue Ting Xu and Evergreen Enterprises | A VMFA Supporter

A D V E R T I S I N G

S E C T I O N

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SP E C IAL ADV E RT ISIN G SE C T ION

VIRGINIA RICHMOND 2022 Alternative Dispute Resolution ..........................S-3 Antitrust Litigation ..............................................S-3

THE ANNUAL LIST

BY PRIMARY AREA OF PRACTICE

Appellate .............................................................S-3 Bankruptcy: Business ..........................................S-3 Bankruptcy: Consumer........................................S-3 Business Litigation ..............................................S-3 Business/Corporate ........................................... S-4 Civil Litigation: Defense ..................................... S-4 Civil Litigation: Plaintiff ...................................... S-4

The list was finalized as of November 1, 2021. Only attorneys who data verified with Super Lawyers for the current year are included on the list that follows. All current selections and any updates to the list (e.g., status changes or disqualifying events) will be reflected on superlawyers.com. Names and page numbers in RED indicate a profile on UIF TQFDJ¾FE QBHF 1IPOF OVNCFST BSF JODMVEFE POMZ for attorneys with paid Super Lawyers or Rising Stars print advertisements.

Civil Rights .......................................................... S-4 Class Action/Mass Torts .................................... S-4 Construction Litigation ...................................... S-4 Consumer Law.................................................... S-4 Creditor Debtor Rights ....................................... S-4 Criminal Defense ................................................ S-4

Elder Law ............................................................ S-5 Employment & Labor ......................................... S-5 Employment Litigation: Defense ....................... S-5

SUPER LAWYERS Hoofnagle, III, William H., FloranceGordonBrown, Richmond

Environmental Litigation ................................... S-6 Estate & Trust Litigation .................................... S-6 Estate Planning & Probate ................................ S-6 Family Law.......................................................... S-6 General Litigation................................................S-7 Government Relations ........................................S-7

ANTITRUST LITIGATION SUPER LAWYERS Slater, Jr., Thomas G., Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond

APPELLATE

Durrette, Jr., Wyatt B. %VSSFUUF "SLFNB (FSTPOª Gill, Richmond Eliades, II, P. George, The Eliades Law Firm, Chester Fain, III, Hugh M. 4QPUUT 'BJO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

Fowler, Jr., Calvin W. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

Gould, Andrea .BVDLª #SPPLF 3JDINPOE

McNew, Kyle .JDIJF)BNMFUU $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF

Intellectual Property .......................................... S-8

Personal Injury General: Defense ...................... S-8

Baril, Stephen E. ,BQMBO 7PFLMFS $VOOJOHIBNª Frank, Richmond

Lin, Elbert, Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond

Thomas, Norman /PSNBOª" 5IPNBT 3JDINPOE

Mergers & Acquisitions ...................................... S-8

SUPER LAWYERS Albert, Alan D. 0µ)BHBO .FZFS 3JDINPOE

Geiger, Jeffrey H., Sands Anderson, Richmond

Immigration .........................................................S-7

Land Use/Zoning ............................................... S-8

Patel, Nisha R., Dunlap Law, Henrico

SUPER LAWYERS Hurd, William H. &DLFSU 4FBNBOT $IFSJOª .FMMPUU 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

O’Herron, John P. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO 3JDINPOE

Intellectual Property Litigation.......................... S-8

RISING STARS Brown-Moseley, Veronica D., Boleman Law Firm, Richmond

Faraci, Sr., Stephen M. 8IJUFGPSE 5BZMPSª 1SFTUPO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

Health Care..........................................................S-7 Insurance Coverage............................................ S-8

Spiro, David K. 4QJSPª #SPXOF (MFOª"MMFO 1H ª4

Byrd, L. Lee, Sands Anderson, Richmond

Employment Litigation: Plaintiff ....................... S-5 Energy & Natural Resources .............................. S-6

SUPER LAWYERS Slayton, Marshall 4MBZUPO -BX $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF

BUSINESS LITIGATION ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION

Criminal Defense: DUI/DWI............................... S-5 Criminal Defense: White Collar ......................... S-5

BANKRUPTCY: CONSUMER

BANKRUPTCY: BUSINESS SUPER LAWYERS Beran, Paula S. 5BWFOOFSª #FSBO 3JDINPOE

Gladstone, Michael H. .D$BOEMJTI )PMUPO Richmond Harless, Warren David $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4 Hill, IV, R. Braxton $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE Inge, Jr., Vernon E. 8IJUFGPSE 5BZMPSª 1SFTUPO Richmond Malone, Christopher M. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4 Merritt, Craig T. .FSSJUU -BX 3JDINPOE Mullins, Jr., M.F. Connell, Spotts Fain, Richmond

Boehm, Sarah B. .D(VJSF8PPET 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

O’Toole, Brendan D. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

Personal Injury General: Plaintiff....................... S-8 Personal Injury Medical Malpractice: Defense ............................................................ S-9

Brown, Tyler P., Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond 1H ª4

Quinan, Michael J. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO 3JDINPOE

Personal Injury Medical Malpractice: Plaintiff ...........................................................S-10

Browne, David 4QJSPª #SPXOF (MFOª"MMFO

Skilling, James C. 8JMMJBNTª 4LJMMJOH .FDIBOJDTWJMMF 1H ª4

Personal Injury Products: Defense ...................S-10 Personal Injury Products: Plaintiff ....................S-10 Professional Liability: Defense .........................S-10

Chappell, III, Robert H., Spotts Fain, Richmond McLemore, Jennifer M. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

Pace, W. Benjamin 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE Seyfarth, Charles K. 0µ)BHBO .FZFS 3JDINPOE

Smith, Michael W. $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE Tunner, William W. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO Richmond

Real Estate ........................................................S-10

Mueller, Michael D. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

Securities & Corporate Finance ........................S-10

Page, Jr., Ronald, Ronald Page, Richmond

Walker, III, John L. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

Securities Litigation...........................................S-10

Ruby, David R. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO 3JDINPOE

Social Security Disability ...................................S-10 State, Local & Municipal ...................................S-10

Vogel, Christian K. “Kirk” 7PHFMª $SPNXFMM Richmond

Williams, Christine A. %VSSFUUF "SLFNB (FSTPOª Gill, Richmond

Tax......................................................................S-10

Westermann, Robert )JSTDIMFS 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

Technology Transactions ..................................S-10 Transportation/Maritime ..................................S-10 Utilities ...............................................................S-10 Workers’ Compensation....................................S-10

RISING STARS Prince IV, William D. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO Richmond Wuebker, Jennifer E., Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond

Walk, John R., Hirschler, Richmond

Wolf, Thomas M. .JMFTª 4UPDLCSJEHF 3JDINPOE

RISING STARS Cragle, III, Franklin R., Hirschler, Richmond Henry, II, Patrick C. .BSSTª )FOSZ 3JDINPOE Mihalko, Meagan A., Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders, Richmond CONTINUED ON PAGE S-4

SUPER LAWYERS VIRGINIA / RICHMOND 2022

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S-3

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SP E C IAL ADV E RT ISIN G SE C T ION

VIRGINIA RICHMOND 2022 BUSINESS LITIGATION RISING STARS CONT’D FROM PAGE S-3

Olcott, Elizabeth S. $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE Tyree, Benjamin S. $PBUFTª %BWFOQPSU 3JDINPOE

BUSINESS/CORPORATE

RISING STARS Flynn, Christopher J. ,BMCBVHI 1GVOEª .FTTFSTNJUI 3JDINPOE Goodwin, Joshua B. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE

CONSTRUCTION LITIGATION SUPER LAWYERS Burnett, W. Alexander 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

Hart, Ashley T. 'MPSB 1FUUJU $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF

Hill, Christopher G. 5IF -BX 0GGJDF PG $ISJTUPQIFSª( )JMM (MFOª"MMFO

Kaseorg, Karissa, Sands Anderson, Richmond

Mauck, Jr., William R., Spotts Fain, Richmond

SUPER LAWYERS Burgess, W. Ashley, Sands Anderson, Richmond

MacFarlane, Angela )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE

Moore, R. Webb, Hirschler, Richmond

Crump, Beverley L. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO Richmond

Mackey, Eli Jason S. 4FUMJGG -BX (MFOª"MMFO

Nanavati, Mark C. 4JOOPUU /VDLPMTª -PHBO .JEMPUIJBO 1H ª4

Miller, Jeffrey P., Gentry Locke, Richmond

Paulk, Courtney Moates, Hirschler, Richmond

Miller, Laura Lee )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE

Story, Nathaniel L., Hirschler, Richmond

Goolsby, Allen C., Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond Guanzon, Michael C. $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE Lohmann, Andrew M., Hirschler, Richmond

Nexsen, Brandon S. 8JOTMPX .D$VSSZª .BD$PSNBD .JEMPUIJBO

RISING STARS Bailey, James T. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

O’Brien, Blaire )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE

Daily, Shannon, Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond

Pittman, Douglas E., Reed Smith, Richmond

Farino, Jr., Kenneth V., Farino Law, Richmond

Pollock, Stewart .PSBO 3FFWFTª $POO 3JDINPOE

Palmieri, Rick 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

Relyea, Jessica G. ,BMCBVHI 1GVOEª .FTTFSTNJUI Richmond

Stanton, Caroline W. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF Way, Chris 8BZ -BX 3JDINPOE

CIVIL LITIGATION: DEFENSE SUPER LAWYERS Barnes, William J. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE Blain, Lynne Jones )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE Cafritz, Brian A. ,BMCBVHI 1GVOEª .FTTFSTNJUI Richmond Corrigan, David P. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4 Duddy, Dannel C. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE Hauck, David L. %VBOF )BVDL %BWJTª (SBWBUU 3JDINPOE 1H ª4 Jebo, James R. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE

Smaniotto, Jillian M. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO (MFOª"MMFO Southall, Elizabeth C. ;VOLB .JMOPSª $BSUFS $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF Tucker, Christian F. .PSBO 3FFWFTª $POO Richmond Webb, Andy ,BMCBVHI 1GVOEª .FTTFSTNJUI Richmond Wright, Gibson .D$BOEMJTI )PMUPO 3JDINPOE York, Melissa Y. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE

CIVIL LITIGATION: PLAINTIFF RISING STARS Soudrette, Leslee M. "MMFO "MMFO "MMFOª "MMFO 'SFEFSJDLTCVSH

Matheson, Michael G. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO Richmond Moore, Joseph M. .D$BOEMJTI )PMUPO 3JDINPOE Nichols, Jon A. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE Palmer, Julie S. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE Parrish, Jennifer Lee, Parrish Snead Franklin 4JNQTPO 'SFEFSJDLTCVSH 1H ª4

SUPER LAWYERS Gayle, Jr., John Cole, The Consumer Law Group, Richmond Pittman, Dale W. 5IF -BX 0GGJDF PG %BMFª8 1JUUNBO 1FUFSTCVSH

RISING STARS Dillon, Kevin A., Consumer Litigation Associates, Richmond Floyd, Jonathan P., Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders, Richmond Kennedy, Emily Connor, Boleman Law Firm, Richmond

CREDITOR DEBTOR RIGHTS SUPER LAWYERS Whitlock, III, Edward S. -BGBZFUUF "ZFSTª 8IJUMPDL (MFOª"MMFO

CRIMINAL DEFENSE SUPER LAWYERS Benjamin, Steven D. #FOKBNJOª %FT1PSUFT Richmond Cooley, Craig S., Attorney at Law, Richmond

CIVIL RIGHTS

Jones, Belinda D. $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE Lifson, Roman $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE

CONSUMER LAW

SUPER LAWYERS Krudys, Mark J., The Krudys Law Firm, Richmond McBeth, Isaac A. )BMQFSJO -BX $FOUFS (MFOª"MMFO

RISING STARS Fisher, Jr., M. Scott )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE

CLASS ACTION/MASS TORTS

Gardner, Mark S. (BSEOFSª #VSLT 4QPUTZMWBOJB Heilberg, David L. %BWJEª- )FJMCFSH $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF HuYoung, Michael #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 4 Loupassi, G. Manoli 5IF -BX 0GGJDF PGª( .BOPMJ Loupassi, Richmond Luxton, John W. +PIOª8 -VYUPO 3JDINPOE Riley, IV, W. Edward 3JMFZª 8FMMT 3JDINPOE Sheldon, Gregory R., Bain Sheldon, Richmond Stone, Todd B. 4UPOF -BX 0GGJDF 3JDINPOE

SUPER LAWYERS Anthony, David N., Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders, Richmond

Whaley, David %BWJE 8IBMFZ 3JDINPOE

Wise, Robert L. /FMTPO .VMMJOT 3JMFZª 4DBSCPSPVHI 3JDINPOE

Farmer, Joshua T. 'BSNFS -FHBM (MFOª"MMFO

Wellman, Stanley P. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

RISING STARS Brown, Jr., Orran, BrownGreer, Richmond

Mutnick, Stephen A. 8JOTMPX .D$VSSZª .BD$PSNBD .JEMPUIJBO

Willett, III, Henry I. $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE

Turner, Elizabeth Scott 0µ)BHBO .FZFS 3JDINPOE

Piracci, Sante 4BOUFª+ 1JSBDDJ .JEMPUIJBO

Pfund, William J. ,BMCBVHI 1GVOEª .FTTFSTNJUI Richmond Reeves, Eric G. .PSBO 3FFWFTª $POO 3JDINPOE Samet, Richard S., FloranceGordonBrown, Richmond

S-4

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RISING STARS Baez, Jesse #SPPLTª #BF[ 3JDINPOE Joyner, Jason, Joyner Law, Richmond

ATTORNEYS SELECTED TO SUPER LAWYERS AND RISING STARS WERE CHOSEN IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROCESS ON PAGE S-2.

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SP E C IAL ADV E RT ISIN G SE C T ION

VIRGINIA RICHMOND 2022 EMPLOYMENT LITIGATION: PLAINTIFF SUPER LAWYERS CONT’D FROM PAGE S-5

Peaden, Paula L. 1BSLFS 1PMMBSE 8JMUPOª 1FBEFO Richmond

Henley, III, Robert E., Stiles Ewing Powers, 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-7

Antell, Zev, Butler Curwood, Richmond

Schwarzschild, Jane L. "SNTUSPOH #SJTUPX 'BSMFZª 4DIXBS[TDIJME 3JDINPOE

Hunt, Mary 'BNJMZ -BX "TTPDJBUFT PG 3JDINPOE Henrico

Snead, George P., Parrish Snead Franklin Simpson, 'SFEFSJDLTCVSH

Isaacs, Robert L. 3PCFSUª- *TBBDTª "TTPDJBUFT )FOSJDP 1H ªS-11

Stovall, Scott D., CowanGates, Richmond, 1H ªS-9

Jones, Brian H. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 4

Turner, III, John H. (Jay) 5VSOFS -VNQLJOTª Blackwell, Richmond

Karanian, John K. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1

RISING STARS Hendricks, Michael A. +PIOTPO (BTJOLª #BYUFS 8JMMJBNTCVSH

Leiner, Harris W. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 4

Jones, Susanna, FloranceGordonBrown, Richmond

Macturk, Christopher H. &WPMVUJPO %JWPSDFª Family Law, Henrico

Butler, III, Harris D., Butler Curwood, Richmond 1H ª4 Curwood, Craig J., Butler Curwood, Richmond North, Christopher Colt 5IF $POTVNFSª &NQMPZFF Rights Law Firm, Yorktown Thorsen, James B., ThorsenAllen, Richmond

ENERGY & NATURAL RESOURCES SUPER LAWYERS Coburn, S. Perry $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE RISING STARS Wallace, Eric, GreeneHurlocker, Richmond

ENVIRONMENTAL LITIGATION SUPER LAWYERS Johnson, III, Harry M., Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond

ESTATE & TRUST LITIGATION SUPER LAWYERS Mauck, Andrew G. .BVDLª #SPPLF 3JDINPOE RISING STARS Kyber, Benjamin P. 5IF .PUUMFZ -BX 'JSN Richmond Sleeth, III, William W., Gordon Rees Scully .BOTVLIBOJ 8JMMJBNTCVSH

ESTATE PLANNING & PROBATE SUPER LAWYERS Ackerly, Maureen C. "SNTUSPOH #SJTUPX 'BSMFZª 4DIXBS[TDIJME 3JDINPOE Antrim, Hugh T. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO 3JDINPOE Bowen, Rebecca C. 5IPNQTPO.D.VMMBO Richmond

Litman, Mary Rennie “M.R.” 7JSHJOJB &TUBUFª 5SVTU Law, Richmond Parker, Trey T. $BSSFMM #MBOUPO 'FSSJTª "TTPDJBUFT 8JMMJBNTCVSH Tiefenback, M. Benjamin, Sands Anderson, 8JMMJBNTCVSH Wall, Bennie $BSSFMM #MBOUPO 'FSSJTª "TTPDJBUFT Richmond

FAMILY LAW SUPER LAWYERS Bal, Nupur, Bowen Ten, Richmond

Mertens, Bruce L., Sands Anderson, Richmond Mock, Helena S. 5IF 1FOJOTVMB $FOUFS GPS &TUBUF BOE -JGFMPOH 1MBOOJOH 8JMMJBNTCVSH 1H ªS-11

HELENA S. MOCK THE PENINSULA CENTER FOR ESTATE AND LIFELONG PLANNING 8JMMJBNTCVSHª

www.tpcestate.com

S-6

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Napier, Mary A., BoykoNapier, Richmond

Partin, Robert W. 5IF 1BSUJO -BX 'JSN $IFTUFSGJFME Picard, Barbara S. 1JDBSE 'BNJMZ -BX .JEMPUIJBO Poole, Rodney M., Poole and Poole, Richmond

Barton, Mollie C., Stiles Ewing Powers, Richmond, 1H ªS-7 4

Powers, Charles E., Stiles Ewing Powers, Richmond, 1H ªS-7

Bemberis, Scott I. $MJGGPSEª %VLF 3JDINPOE

Ramsey, Kimberlee Harris, FloranceGordonBrown, Richmond

Boyko, Marc A., BoykoNapier, Richmond Breit, Carol A. N., Attorney at Law, Richmond, 1H ªS-11

CAROL A. N. BREIT

$"30- " / #3&*5 "5503/&:ª"5ª-"8 3JDINPOEª

www.carolbreit.com

Butler, Laura Blair 5VDLFS (SJGGJO #BSOFT $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF Campfield, Ann Brakke #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 Cillo, Julie M. 0XFOª 0XFOT .JEMPUIJBO 1H ª4

Cox, Morgan 5IF $IJME "EWPDBUF -BX 'JSN $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF

Kemp, Helen Lewis 7JSHJOJB &TUBUFª 5SVTU -BX Richmond

Michelsen, Player B., Stiles Ewing Powers, 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-7

Poss, Brandy M. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1

Cox, III, James P. .JDIJF)BNMFUU $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF

Guare, Timothy H. 5JNPUIZª) (VBSF 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

Michelsen, Mark B., Stiles Ewing Powers, 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-7

Barnes, Edward D. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 4

Cook, Deanna D. -BX 0GGJDFT PG %FBOOBª% $PPL (MFOª"MMFO 1H ªS-11

Freed, Robert 'SFFEª 4IFQIFSE 3JDINPOE

Meyer, Tracy A. .FZFSª #PXEFO 'SFEFSJDLTCVSH

Owens, Mary Burkey 0XFOª 0XFOT .JEMPUIJBO 1H ª4

Bristow, John D. "SNTUSPOH #SJTUPX 'BSMFZª 4DIXBS[TDIJME 3JDINPOE Farley, Matthew M. "SNTUSPOH #SJTUPX 'BSMFZª 4DIXBS[TDIJME 3JDINPOE

Locke, Richard L. -PDLFª 0UUP 3JDINPOE

DeFazio, David G. 'SJFENBO -BX 'JSN $IFTUFSGJFME Delcamp, Irene C. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 Diehl, Lawrence D. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 4 Evans, Ronald S. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 Ewing, Michael S., Stiles Ewing Powers, Richmond, 1H ªS-7 4

Raynor, Steven L. 3BZOPS -BX 0GGJDF $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF Sampson, Craig W. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 Schempf, Bryan H. 4DIFNQGª 8BSF :PSLUPXO Scott IV, William C. 5IF -BX 0GGJDF PG 8JMMJBNª$ 4DPUUª*7 $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF Stiles, Andrea R., Stiles Ewing Powers, Richmond, 1H ªS-7 VanZile, Melissa S. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1 Witmeyer, II, Carl J. 5IF 8JUNFZFS -BX 'JSN "TIMBOE

CARL J. WITMEYER, II 5)& 8*5.&:&3 -"8ª'*3. 1-$ "TIMBOEª

www.witmeyerlaw.com

RISING STARS Allgood, Jamie #PXFO 5FO )BOPWFS Auberger, Brittany E., Friedman Law Firm, $IFTUFSGJFME Baines, Erik #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1

Fox, Sherry A. 'PY 'BNJMZ 'PSNBUJPO (MFOª"MMFO

Boutwell, Jessica C., Stiles Ewing Powers, 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-7

Friedman, II, Rick A., Friedman Law Firm, $IFTUFSGJFME

Brennan, Mallory 0XFOª 0XFOT .JEMPUIJBO

Friend, Melanie A., CowanGates, Richmond, 1H ªS-9 Harris, Jr., Robert L. #BSOFTª %JFIM 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-1

Brown, Tara 8IJUCFDL #FOOFUU 3JDINPOE Carafiol, Benjamin H. 5IF -BX 0GGJDF PG #FOKBNJOª) $BSBGJPM 'SFEFSJDLTCVSH Conner, Sarah J. 'SJFENBO -BX 'JSN $IFTUFSGJFME

ATTORNEYS SELECTED TO SUPER LAWYERS AND RISING STARS WERE CHOSEN IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROCESS ON PAGE S-2.

4/7/22 2:45 PM 4/1/22 12:30 PM





SP E C IAL ADV E RT ISIN G SE C T ION

VIRGINIA RICHMOND 2022 PERSONAL INJURY RISING STARS CONT’D FROM PAGE S-9

Mackenzie, Christopher M., Sands Anderson, Richmond

Skilling Larkin, Katherine 8JNCJTI (FOUJMF .D$SBZª 3PFCFS 3JDINPOE

Noble, R. Joseph 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

Terry, C. Walker 8PPET 3PHFST 3JDINPOE

PERSONAL INJURY MEDICAL MALPRACTICE: PLAINTIFF

Nowlin, Lauren D. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE Thumma, Christopher, Peake Law Group, .JEMPUIJBO

SECURITIES & CORPORATE FINANCE

SUPER LAWYERS Livingston, Lee .JDIJF)BNMFUU $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF 1H ª4

SUPER LAWYERS Farmer, S. Brian, Hirschler, Richmond

McConnell, III, Malcolm P. "MMFO "MMFO "MMFOª "MMFO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

Meyers, David I., Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders, Richmond

Williamson, Jr., Thomas W. 8JMMJBNTPO -BX Richmond Zaug, Heather E. .JDIJF)BNMFUU $IBSMPUUFTWJMMF

RISING STARS Donohue, Mayme, Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond

RISING STARS Hunt, Brielle 1IFMBOª] 1FUUZ 3JDINPOE

Forbes, Steven .PSBO 3FFWFTª $POO 3JDINPOE

Robins, Jr., W. Randolph -BOU[ª 3PCJOT Richmond

Swartz, Zachary A. 7JOTPOª &MLJOT 3JDINPOE

Sturtevant, Glen H., Rawls Law Group, Richmond

PERSONAL INJURY PRODUCTS: DEFENSE SUPER LAWYERS Conn, Martin A. .PSBO 3FFWFTª $POO 3JDINPOE Lonas, C. Dewayne .PSBO 3FFWFTª $POO Richmond Owen, John R. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

PERSONAL INJURY PRODUCTS: PLAINTIFF SUPER LAWYERS Alexander, Emmet D. "MFYBOEFS -BX (SPVQ 3JDINPOE 1H ªS-8

Savage, Alina A., Hirschler, Richmond Van Thunen, William J., Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond Way, Lawton B., Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond Wind, Trevor D. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE Winter, Seth, Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders, Richmond

SECURITIES LITIGATION SUPER LAWYERS Palais, Douglas M. 7BOEFWFOUFS #MBDL 3JDINPOE

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY

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REAL ESTATE SUPER LAWYERS Gill, Christopher M. $ISJTUJBOª #BSUPO 3JDINPOE Mercer, John M. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

RISING STARS D’alessandro, Diana, D’Alessandro Law, 'SFEFSJDLTCVSH Flurry, Molly K., Parrish Snead Franklin Simpson, 'SFEFSJDLTCVSH Hicks, Sean D. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE Holt, William L. ,BVGNBOª $BOPMFT 8JMMJBNTCVSH

S-10

SUPERLAWYERS.COM

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Graves, Terrence L., Sands Anderson, Richmond Harman, Michael E. )BSNBO $MBZUPS $PSSJHBOª 8FMMNBO 3JDINPOE 1H ª4 Setliff, C. Stephen 4FUMJGG -BX (MFOª"MMFO

UTILITIES RISING STARS Ritter, James G., Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond

WORKERS’ COMPENSATION SUPER LAWYERS Carroll, Lauren, Commonwealth Law Group, 3JDINPOE Cloe, Kevin W. .JELJGG .VODJFª 3PTT 3JDINPOE Davis, Craig B. 3FJOIBSEUª] )BSQFSª] %BWJT 3JDINPOE 1H ª4 Goodwin, Brad, ReidGoodwin, Richmond, Harper, Stephen T. 3FJOIBSEUª] )BSQFSª] %BWJT 3JDINPOE 1H ª4 Lewane, Michele S. *OKVSFE 8PSLFST -BX 'JSN Richmond Lynch, Daniel E., Lynch Seli, Henrico Marks, Jr., B. Mayes .BSLTª "TTPDJBUFT )PQFXFMM Midkiff, Charles F. .JELJGG .VODJFª 3PTT Richmond Reid, Brody, ReidGoodwin, Richmond, Reinhardt, Andrew J. 3FJOIBSEUª] )BSQFSª] %BWJT 3JDINPOE 1H ª4

Suyes, Joanna L. .BSLTª )BSSJTPO 3JDINPOE

Stiner, Elyse, Commonwealth Law Group, 3JDINPOE

STATE, LOCAL & MUNICIPAL RISING STARS Tait, David C., Sands Anderson, Richmond

PROFESSIONAL LIABILITY: DEFENSE SUPER LAWYERS Rucker, Jr., Douglas P., Sands Anderson, Richmond

SUPER LAWYERS Beck, Jr., D. Cameron .D$BOEMJTI )PMUPO Richmond

SUPER LAWYERS Gillette, Brian J. (JMMFUUF -BX (SPVQ 8JMMJBNTCVSH

EMMET D. ALEXANDER

ALEXANDER LAW GROUP, PLC 3JDINPOEª

TRANSPORTATION/MARITIME

Theisen, Steven H. .JELJGG .VODJFª 3PTT Richmond

RISING STARS Bleakley, Connor, Commonwealth Law Group, 3JDINPOE Childrey, Julia 3FJOIBSEUª] )BSQFSª] %BWJT Richmond

TAX SUPER LAWYERS Aghdami, Farhad 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

Park, Daniel Yun Je, Commonwealth Law Group, 3JDINPOE Perkinson, A. Jacob 8IJUUª %FM #VFOP (MFOª"MMFO

Garcia, J. Conrad 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

Pollard, Corey R., Corey Pollard Law, Richmond

Rogers, N. Pendleton, Hirschler, Richmond

Riordan, Rachel ,BMCBVHI 1GVOEª .FTTFSTNJUI Richmond

RISING STARS Anderson, Paige C. 7JOTPOª &MLJOT 3JDINPOE

Roffis, Eva .D$BOEMJTI )PMUPO 3JDINPOE

Connors, Jenny H. 8JMMJBNT .VMMFO 3JDINPOE

Smith, III, Joseph P. ,BMCBVHI 1GVOEª .FTTFSTNJUI 3JDINPOE Swartz, Bryn 1BUIGJOEFS *OKVSZ -BX (MFOª"MMFO

TECHNOLOGY TRANSACTIONS SUPER LAWYERS Parks, Randall S., Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond

Wagner, Megan A. ,BMCBVHI 1GVOEª .FTTFSTNJUI 3JDINPOE Wilson, Christopher R. ,BMCBVHI 1GVOEª .FTTFSTNJUI 3JDINPOE

ATTORNEYS SELECTED TO SUPER LAWYERS AND RISING STARS WERE CHOSEN IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROCESS ON PAGE S-2.

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* Percent of Homes Bought & Sold. Based on data supplied by CVRMLS and its member Association(s) of REALTORS, who are not responsible for its accuracy. Does not reflect all activity in the marketplace. January 1, 2021 — December 31, 2021, as of January 7, 2022. Information contained in this report is deemed reliable but not guaranteed, should be independently verified, and does not constitute an opinion of CVRMLS or Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc. ©2022 All rights reserved.

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C O N G R AT U L AT I O N S TO OUR 2021 TOP AGENTS & TEAMS

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YOU ARE LOOKING AT THE BEST REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONALS IN RICHMOND Reginald Potts

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Expert landscape design to improve your outdoor view

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editor’s letter

W

hen we learned that we’d have fewer pages than normal for this issue due to an international shortage of printing paper, a kitchen and bath issue had been on our minds for some time. And as we considered the situation, Art Director Rachel Lee and I realized that it offered an opportunity to get creative. So we threw out our normal template in order to take a deep dive into kitchen and bath trends for 2022. Kitchens are at the heart of the home, and baths are necessities. They’re also among the most remodeled rooms in a house, so it’s no surprise that designers are filling these utilitarian spaces with state-of-the-art appliances, chic lighting and thoughtful cabinetry, while enhancing them with decorative details that mesh with the decor in the rest of the house. Taylor Peterson spoke with Peyton Edwards of KDW Home, Grace Sheehan of Kitchen Doctors, and Sarah Pierce of Lane Homes & Remodeling about current trends in kitchen and bath design for a story that begins on Page 26. Artificial intelligence — think Alexa and Siri — continues to integrate into our lives, assisting with tasks throughout our homes. The designers we spoke to suggest that the use of technology in our kitchens and baths will only continue to grow. On Page 28, Joan Tupponce reports on six luxury stoves — some of which operate through Wi-Fi or Bluetooth — that come with all the bells and whistles, including convection cooking, induction cooktops and ovens, air sous vide, air-fry options, and more. Sometimes just one large kitchen island will not do. When tweaking the kitchen floor plan for her clients’ new build in Powhatan, Jamie Ivey of Ivey Design Group realized that two smaller islands — a worktable and a dining spot — made more sense. Paula Peters Chambers takes us for a tour on Page 44. For this issue we enlisted the assistance of eight local designers and present their work in two folios, with each featured room created by a different designer: Dream Kitchens on Page 32 and Bodacious Baths on Page 40. We also focused on great kitchen island lighting in The Goods on Page 19, and new tile designs for the story “Splash Guards” on Page 58. HAPPY READING!

Find us at R•Home magazine on Facebook and @rhomemag on Instagram.

CHECK OUT R•HOME ON CBS 6 DURING ‘VIRGINIA THIS MORNING’! Tune in for our home and garden tips on the following Wednesdays: May 4, May 18, June 1, June 15

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may-june 2022

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Susan W. Morgan

ONLINE, ALL THE TIME

Find beautiful photos of local homes, expert design tips and advice, and much more at rhomemag.com.

Top: Kate Thompson

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the goods

Luminaries The island is literally the star of the show in every kitchen — it’s where everyone wants to be. So have fun dressing it with lighting you love, be it simple, sculptural, industrial, organic and earthy, vintage, quirky, or traditional.

Styled by Susan W. Morgan

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1. NOAH PENDANT, Arteriors, arteriorshome.com, $650 2. CHAPMAN & MYERS COUNTRY INDUSTRIAL SMALL PENDANT, Visual Comfort, visualcomfortlightinglights.com, $1,839

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3. HARMONY GLOBES ISLAND CHANDELIER, Shades of Light, shadesoflight.com, $475

5. MALLORY AGED IRON PENDANT, Mitzi, hvlgroup.com, $550

4. ANDROS LARGE PENDANT, Visual Comfort, visualcomfortlightinglights.com, $1,319

6. PORTSMITH CHANDELIER GOLD, Wildwood Lamps, wildwoodhome.com, $1,020-$1,300

7. LARGE BRASS GARDEN FLOWER PENDANT, Umanoff Design, umanoffdesign.com, $1,150 8. WOODLAWN PENDANT, Hudson Valley Lighting, hvlgroup.com, $1,300

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photos by QUENTIN PEN-HOLLAR

Anchored by a custom-made V-shaped cabinet and crafted with a shedua-wood top and a hand-forged iron base, the peninsula is angled to improve sightlines to the TV on the other side of the room.

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esigned and sited to welcome the outdoors in, the architectural elements — ample windows and high, beamed ceilings that create an expansive feel — in this modern home reflect the homeowners’ desire to make the most of the landscape. While modern homes are often thought to have limited color schemes, the homeowners chose a bold palette of blues and greens to play against neutral walls. Natural wood — white oak, walnut and cedar — is used thoughtfully throughout, adding warmth and connecting to the verdant landscape just steps away. “They liked color and fun, so [the design] became about bal-

ancing the color with the views,” says designer Jamie Ivey of Ivey Design Group. The 9,000-square-foot residence offers both togetherness and separation. The open living area has kitchen, dining and sitting spaces that burst with color: blue kitchen cabinets, luxe blue-green leather recliners, chartreuse dining chairs. It’s decidedly modern, but hardly sterile. Muted tones are found in the cocoonlike den, which serves as a movie room, with sliding panels and dark walls. Color is also limited in the main floor primary suite, which instead is layered with texture: a hot-rolled, rough-surfaced steel fireplace; Elitis wallpaper; boucle chaise; plush rug and sumptuous bedding.

“It’s the one area of the house without color, a space to retreat and unwind,” Ivey says. Function was also essential, as the family has two sons and multiple pets. In the kitchen, rather than one oversized kitchen island as originally planned, Ivey suggested two, a work area and a bar space that the clients could envision through 3D modeling. “Once that was changed, it was like, ‘Why didn’t we do this from the beginning?’ ” Ivey says. The resulting interiors are not only beautiful, they’re equally suited to family life and entertaining. “It’s higher-end but still approachable, tough-wearing but elevated,” Ivey says. “We kept the focus on the outside but had fun in key places.”

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details

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Splash Guards

A new generation of tile in trendsetting colors, patterns and shapes Styled by Susan W. Morgan

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3. JEFFREY COURT GEODE DRAWN STONE, 8-by-9.25-inch, Architessa, architessa.com 1. MIRTH STUDIO INKY BUD PORCELAIN TILE, 13-inch, Mosaic Tile Co., mosaictileco.com 2. BRYANT PARK BLACK GOLD FACE MATTE CERAMIC TILE, 12inch, Architessa, architessa.com 4. MANTA WABI BLUE PORCELAIN TILE, 5-inch, Architessa, architessa.com

5. MANISCALCO KALEIDOSCOPE SERIES HANDMADE CERAMIC TILE, 3-by-6-inch, Mosaic Tile Co., mosaictileco.com

8. LILI RISE HEXAGON CEMENT TILE, black and white with solid brass core, 6-by-7-inch, Architessa, architessa.com

6. LILI TERRAZZO CONFETTI, CEMENT TILE, 8-inch, Architessa, architessa.com

9. MSI BOATHOUSE BLUE PICKET 8 MM GLASS TILE, Costen Floors, costenfloors.com

7. ELON TILE & STONE CALACATTA HERRINGBONE WITH GOLD ALUMINUM MOSAIC POLISHED, 11-by-13-inch sheet, Morris Tile Distributors, morristile.net

10. LILI SAVANNAH 4 CEMENT TILE, 8-inch, Architessa, architessa.com 11. LILI INDIE TRIANGLE 3 CEMENT TILE, 7-inch, Architessa, architessa.com

may-june 2022

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4/12/22 12:38 PM


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