2019 Annual Report

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2019

ANNUAL REPORT

Issued Oct. 8, 2020

Celebrating Community Arts Since 1975



Program Schedule

Crealdé Annual Membership Meeting Friday, October 9, 2020 7pm–8pm Showalter Hughes Community Gallery Welcome Address and Presentation Dean Jennings, Board President and Peter Schreyer, CEO/Executive Director • Presentation of 2019 Annual Report • What’s Ahead for Crealdé • Introduction of New Officers

Summer ArtCamp Acknowledgements Presented by Ann Clement, Board of Directors, Honoring: • Cris Cruz, ArtCamp Coordinator • Belinda Glennon, Young Artists Program Manager • Laura McBryde, Registrar & Office Manager

Marie Orban Scholarship Presented by Patricia Byron, Painting & Drawing Program Manager

Acknowledgement of Peter Schreyer’s 25th Anniversary as Executive Director Presented by Dean Jennings, with Future Celebration Event TBA

Year End Campaign Kick-off Presented by Mark Thompson, Board Treasurer

COVER IMAGES Top: Jacquie R. Fort, Dancing Through Dawn’s Early Dew, Fiber; Bottom Left: Andrew M. Grant, Solar Flare, 14x18 inches, Oil on Panel; Bottom Right: Peter Schreyer, Mrs. Glenn Lenora Smith Franklin, Filmbased Photography

Introduction of Artist Alberto Gómez and Invitation to View Exhibit Presented by Barbara Tiffany, Senior Curator of Exhibitions

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Executive Director’s Progress Report

Dear Crealdé Members, Please join me and the Crealdé Board of Directors in celebrating the completion of the 44th year in our organization’s history! Thank you for your participation and support of Crealdé School of Art. Your dedication, along with support from local philanthropic foundations and government agencies, has enabled Crealdé to become one of Florida’s most vital arts organizations: • We feature a curriculum of over 125 visual arts courses and workshops in digital and traditional photography, painting, drawing, printmaking, ceramics, sculpture, jewelry, glass and fiber arts to students of all backgrounds, taught by a faculty of over 50 professional artists and guest instructors. • We host 10 annual visiting exhibitions in three galleries, five traveling exhibitions, an extensive sculpture garden, and nine collaborative public art installations throughout the community. • We honor the value of cultural preservation through innovative programming that uses the visual arts to inspire individuals and empower communities. Through an extensive permanent collection of 175 framed archival photographs and oral histories as well as public art installations, we celebrate Winter Park’s historic African American community at the Hannibal Square Heritage Center. • We provide extensive ongoing community outreach programs and scholarships to economically disadvantaged individuals and underserved communities throughout Central Florida. This commitment expresses the ideal that the arts are for everyone, and that every individual and every community has a story worth telling. • We offer unparalleled opportunities for emerging artists to be mentored by seasoned professional artists and to work in a studio environment.

Highlighted achievements from 2019 include: • 2019 fiscal year tuition income from classes and workshops increased 11.1% to $700,180 from 3,326 students in fee-based programs. Most artistic disciplines experienced increases, with the most dramatic being the combined 3-D programs which grew by 25.5% in tuition income. • Contributed cash income from membership, individual donations and grants grew modestly by 3.8% to $382,616. This included a successful 2019 year-end campaign that resulted in $30,590 raised to support Crealdé’s free 2020 outreach programs. • In its 13th year, the Hannibal Square Heritage Center hosted the 10th Annual Folk and Urban Art Festival and featured three visiting exhibitions with work by African American artists. • All major 2019 exhibitions at our main campus Jenkins Gallery along with the Hannibal Square Heritage Center, featured artists and topics of diverse cultural backgrounds, including Andrew Grant: Elements, The Sage Project II: Hannibal Square Elders Tell Their Stories, Soul Utterings: Creative Works by Kianga Jinaki and John Mascoll, Keepers of Heritage, and Collecting for Half a Century: Fine Craft From the Florida CraftArt Permanent Collection.

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Executive Director’s Progress Report

• Exhibitions celebrating the work of our students and emerging artist programs included the 38th Annual Juried Student Exhibition, the 37th Annual Summer ArtCamp Student Exhibition, and New Works by Crealdé’s Emerging Artists in Painting & Drawing. • Crealdé’s newest travelling exhibition, Storytellers XVIII: See Through Our Eyes, opened at the African American Museum of Arts in DeLand, where teen photographers documented their historic African American community. The Lake: A Documentary Exploring the Land and People of Lake Apopka traveled to the Orange County Regional History Center to be part of an extensive exhibition entitled The Accidental Historian. Crealdé is truly a place where everyone can feel welcomed, learn and progress at his or her own pace and level. It’s also a place where dreams of creative expression really do become reality. Your support has enabled Crealdé to continue fulfilling its inclusive mission of community service and quality of life enrichment through the visual arts and humanities. I want to thank you on behalf of the children in the free after school art classes in underserved communities, the seniors who look forward to their weekly art class with one of our talented artists, the visitors to our free exhibitions on our main campus and at the Heritage Center and the thousands of past and present students who benefit from our affordable art curriculum. Without your support and grant funding, a majority of students would not be able to afford these experiences. The arts make us better people, help create civilized communities, and bring us together in dialogue as citizens of a democratic society that values diversity in expression, lifestyle, and cultural heritage. With kind regards,

Personally, I serve on the Crealdé Board to encourage the arts in our community. I am very proud of what we do and how far we have come as a non-profit, communitybased arts school.

Peter Schreyer CEO/Executive Director

I am most proud of Crealdé’s commitment to seek out those special communities of residents who have traditionally not had access to the life enriching power of the visual arts and humanities. I continue to be inspired by our excellent staff and faculty and our wonderful volunteers that do the daily work of making a difference for individuals in our community.

Among the Redwood Trees, CA - 2018

— Dean Jennings, President, Crealdé Board of Directors

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School History

Crealdé Arts Inc. was founded in 1975 by William Jenkins to promote local artists by providing studio and gallery space. With profits earned from sales and rentals, Jenkins established ArtReach to provide art experiences to seniors and disabled individuals. By 1978, Crealdé evolved into a teaching center and became a 501(c)(3) organization. In the 1980s, three artistic departments were established, and the curriculum was expanded. A fine arts gallery was established in 1980, and in 1996 the gallery was named after Crealdé’s founder and his wife. Throughout the 1990s, Crealdé expanded on its mission, established a scholarship fund, launched the new Emerging Artist Program and deepened its commitment to make the arts available to the widest segment of the population. By the late 1990s, Crealdé had established three permanent outreach sites to conduct free classes for children, teens and seniors in underserved communities. In addition, more than 20 collaborative public art projects ‑ murals, sculptures and photo-documentaries – have been conducted through partnerships with other nonprofit organizations. Crealdé’s free galleries host artists from throughout the United States and the world to exhibit, present lectures and conduct workshops for the community. In 1999-2000, Crealdé undertook an aggressive capital campaign to construct its first building addition in more than 20 years. Nearly $200,000 was raised including a matching Cultural Facilities Grant from the State of Florida. The 3,000-square-foot expansion features a second painting studio, the Showalter Hughes Community Gallery and lecture space, and a covered porch overlooking beautiful Lake Sterling. In keeping with Crealdé’s mission to provide outreach and foster cultural diversity and preservation of our cultural heritage, Crealdé deepened its long-standing relationship with the City of Winter Park in 2007 by opening the Hannibal Square Heritage Center, which stands as a tribute to the past, present and future contributions of Winter Park’s African American community.

Crealdé Main Campus entrance with welcome sign by David Lee Cumbie, Cast Marble Aggregate with Masonry Dye, and Brushed Aluminum Lettering, Photograph by Talisee Carpenter 4 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART


School History

The facility serves as a home for The Heritage Collection: Photographs and Oral Histories of West Winter Park. In partnership with academic institutions and other nonprofit organizations, the center also presents exhibitions and programs that focus on local history, cultural preservation, African American experience and Southern folklore. With the addition of this new venue, Crealdé’s budget reached the million dollar mark for the first time. Out of the desire to increase its participation in the economic vitality of the community, Crealdé secured its first Cultural Tourism Funding grant from Orange County Government in 2007, which has continued, together with the City of Winter Park Redevelopment Agency, United Arts of Central Florida, and the State of Florida to be Crealdé’s largest funders. In 2010, Crealdé completed its second campus renovation, totaling $220,000, funded this time by an Orange County Cultural Facilities Grant and matched by contributions from an enthusiastic Crealdé membership. The renovation included campus re-roofing, air-conditioning, and a new campus entrance, featuring a large mosaic mural. In the same year Crealdé also entered a new government partnership with the City of Winter Garden, enabling us to offer a limited number of tuition-driven classes at the new Jessie Brock Community Center, strategically located near several growing west Orange County and Lake County communities.

It’s a getaway from everything… I drown in my own creations and don’t think of anything else. Even if you master the basics, there’s still so much to learn. –Tran N. Ceramics Student

Crealdé celebrated its 40th anniversary in 2015 with a series of exhibitions that focused on the artistic success of our alumni and also highlighted national artists whose work celebrates America’s cultural diversity. In the spring of 2017 we celebrated the 10th anniversary of the Hannibal Square Heritage Center, recognizing key people responsible for its first decade of success. Over the last five years we have continued with campus beautification that included paving the parking lot, improving sidewalks, modernizing teaching studios, introducing new art media in jewelry, glass and fiber arts, as well as adding substantial new pieces to the sculpture garden. Crealdé also completed a two-year rebranding campaign that included a new logo, the launch of two new websites, and a beautiful new campus welcome sign.

Decorated with festive luminarias, the Heritage Center welcomes visitors to one of its many free community events. Photograph by Rick Lang 2019 ANNUAL REPORT 5


Mission Statements

Mission Statement for Crealdé School of Art Crealdé’s mission is to stimulate the creative process inherent in each individual through hands-on education in the visual arts and to cultivate a lifelong aesthetic appreciation. This mission is realized through comprehensive studio art instruction and interaction with professional working artists; presentation of gallery exhibitions and lectures; related art activities that stimulate art exploration and specialization including an extensive outreach program that services at-risk minority youth, individuals with disabilities and seniors; and fostering cultural diversity and understanding of pluralism and preservation of our cultural heritage.

Mission Statement for Galleries and the Contemporary Sculpture Garden The primary focus of the galleries is to present thought-provoking, quality exhibitions and programs. Installations reflect a variety of media and represent the work of local, regional and national artists. As an extension of the community-based school of art, the Alice & William Jenkins Gallery, Showalter Hughes Community Gallery and the Contemporary Sculpture Garden are committed to providing educational experiences to students, members and Central Florida’s diverse population.

Mission Statement for the Hannibal Square Heritage Center

A core part of this organization’s belief and mission is that the arts are for everyone, and that every individual has a story worth telling and something creative to contribute, making a positive impact on their peers, family and the community. Crealdé School of Art remains committed to offering stimulating, educational, hands-on arts experiences and gallery exhibitions to Central Florida’s diverse population. -Peter Schreyer, CEO/Executive Director 6 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

In partnership with the community and the City of Winter Park, Crealdé School of Art will operate the Hannibal Square Heritage Center as a tribute to the past, present and future contributions of Winter Park’s African American community. Through innovative programming in the arts and humanities, the Heritage Center will become a neighborhood focal point, archive and home to The Heritage Collection: Photographs and Oral Histories of West Winter Park. Through exhibitions and diverse educational programs, the center inspires all Central Floridians and visitors to our area to respect, explore, participate and become more aware of their own community’s history and heritage.

Ivonne Galanes, La madama, Oil on Canvas, 30x40 in. From the Keepers of Heritage exhibition, 2019


People at CrealdĂŠ

BOARD OF DIRECTORS Officers

Percy Maynard Director

Committee Chairs Mark Thompson

Dean K. Jennings

Valada Flewellyn Director

Audit and Finance Committee

Shannon Kelly

Christina McKelvey

Toni Peck, Board

Mark Thompson

Ann Clement

Dean Jennings

Toni Peck

Kristen Allen

Frank Schornagle III

Cecelia Bonifay

ADMINISTRATIVE TEAM

Fairolyn Livingston

President

Vice President Treasurer

Secretary

Officer-at-large

Peter Schreyer

CEO/Executive Director

Barbara Chandler

Hannibal Square Heritage Center Manager

Laura McBryde

Registrar & Office Manager

Nicole Fournier

Accounting Manager

Nicki Drumb

Marketing Manager

Talisee Carpenter

Marketing Assistant

Kristen Gillan

Development Assistant

Suzy Wilson

Program & Registration Assistant

Betsy Schreyer

Director Director

President Emeritus

Hannibal Square Heritage Center Chief Historian

Mary Daniels

Young Artist Program Manager

David Cumbie

Sculpture Garden Curator, Sculpture Program & Studio Manager

Vincent Sansone Ceramics Studio & Program Manager

Patricia Byron

Painting & Drawing Program Manager

Peter Schreyer

Acting Photography Manager

Chris Casler

Phylis Moore

Wendi Zlamal

Heritage Center Volunteer Coordinator

John Baker

Facility & Special Events Manager

Robert Ross

ADJUNCT & OUTREACH INSTRUCTORS Beatrice Athanas

Carlo Jannotti

Beth Pendleton

Assistant Facility Manager

Brian and Debbie Miller

Lindy Shepherd

Cris Cruz

Special Content Writer

SENIOR FACULTY Barbara Tiffany Belinda Glennon

David Lee Cumbie

Belinda Glennon

Anita Cohen Robert Lennox

Barbara Tiffany

CrealdĂŠ Volunteer Coordinator

ASSOCIATE FACULTY

Hannibal Square Heritage Center Historian & Docent

Catherine Hempel

Louise Thompson

Facilities Committee

Director

Grant Manager & Special Projects Assistant Senior Curator of Exhibitions

Nominating Committee

David Hunter Dennis Schmalstig Don Sondag Donne Bitner Doug Bringle Fabiola Hansen Jon Manchester Ken Foster Marie Orban Milton Heiberg Patricia Byron Peter Schreyer Sherri Bunye Stacy Barter Stefan Alexadres Tom Sadler Vadim Malkin Vincent Sansone

Gary Rupp Geoffry Sprague Glen Ward Jennifer Copp Jesus Minguez John Baker Luis Torruellas Noreen Coup Patti Shistle Patty Kane Prayong Deeying Tammy Lennox Thomas Thorspecken GUEST INSTRUCTORS Alyssa Foxson Andrew Grant Angel Bayron Elaine Persons Fontaine Rodgers Lynn Brenner-Katz Melissa Francis Sandro Pelicie Perez Warren Perko Lauren Austin 2019 ANNUAL REPORT 7


Program Curriculum

Crealdé School of Art continues to provide an extraordinary array of artistic opportunity for the Central Florida community across our three campuses: the Hannibal Square Heritage Center in Winter Park; the Jessie Brock Community Center in Winter Garden; and our main campus in Winter Park. For 2019, Crealdé’s tuition-based art education curriculum consisted of the following: • Five seasonal sessions for adults and five 6-week sessions for children totaling approximately 600 classes. • A total of 54 workshops led by Crealdé’s talented faculty, including landscape painting and drawing, sculptural welding, adult-child team ceramics projects, jewelry making and wedding photography. Our outreach programming provides access to the arts for underserved communities, and scholarships ensure tuition-based programming is accessible to all. Our Emerging Artists and Fellowship Programs provide professional development opportunities for emerging and established artists. Crealdé continues to provide unique learning opportunities beyond tuitionbased programming, including free exhibit lectures, gallery tours of the nine exhibitions for 2019, and tours of the Contemporary Sculpture Garden on our main campus. The permanent exhibits at the Heritage Center continue to reach new audiences, and both the Heritage Center and Jessie Bock campuses contributed to 12% of the overall Crealdé enrollment. Every year, thousands of individuals of all ages and backgrounds participate in Crealdé studio classes and related programs. The following synopses provide an overview to each medium’s educational programming.

Painting and Drawing VOLUNTEERS Main Campus Rebecca Bearup Holly Cabot Becky Clisch Cheryl Cuellar Eric Elbert Esther Elliot Denise Ertler Kathie Green Edian Gomez Diana Houle Margaret Jasinski Linda LaCombe Willy Maria Lopez Caitlin Lyberg Mary Ann McCunn Karla Orellano Kathy Salmieri Nicholas Schulman Lori Singletary 8 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

Crealdé’s largest program employs more than 20 arts educators and offers a comprehensive curriculum of more than 30 classes, including oil, acrylic, printmaking, collage, mixed media, watercolor, abstract, portrait, figure and plein-air painting. In addition to introductory and intermediate courses, Crealdé also offers classes for advanced art students, such as life drawing, abstract painting and portrait painting. Figure drawing workshops are held every Friday and Sunday. These two open-studio sessions are offered throughout the year. National and international artists have taught workshops on special topics such as advanced oil painting techniques, still‑life painting and looser abstract painting methods.


Program Curriculum

Photography Crealdé’s Photography Program provides over 25 classes designed for amateurs and advanced students. The curriculum offers a variety of classes and workshops for film and digital students interested in developing basic photography skills to pursue fine art and commercial photography careers. Conventional film photographers enjoy expanded access to one of the area’s only remaining school-based darkrooms. Two classrooms dedicated to digital photography include nine computer stations. Crealdé’s Digital Print Lab and Finishing Area give digital students the ability to take their images from pixels to print.

Ceramics and Sculpture

Art has always been a piece of my soul. I left everything behind to create. -Nurit Welding Student

Our 3-D curriculum features instruction in various media and subjects, such as figurative and abstract sculpture, bronze casting, coppersmithing, and functional ceramics including wheel throwing and handbuilding. The facility includes gas, raku and electric kilns, as well as a professional bronze foundry in a separate building. The program has a liberal open studio policy, enabling students to work independently. Visiting Artist Workshops have included special topics such as Using Colored Clay in Unusual Ways and Production Pots Big and Small. A series of weekend workshops include welding, hand building and stone carving. Collaborative projects have produced pieces on permanent display in Crealdé’s Contemporary Sculpture Garden.

Fiber Arts, Jewelry and Glass Introductory Fiber Arts programs include classes in thread painting and papier mâché. Crealdé offers classes in traditional and contemporary quilting methods including patchwork, appliqué, longarm workshops and fabric collage at the Hannibal Square Heritage Center. Jewelry offerings include repoussé techniques, metal folding and forging, and cold connections and riveting, as well as a popular four-week Introduction to Jewelry Design and Fabrication. Crealdé’s Glass program includes faculty-offered classes in stained glass as well as guest artist workshops in glassworking.

Young Artist Program The Young Artist program represents roughly 24% of Crealdé’s total enrollment. This program serves children and teens ages 4 to 17 in more than 30 classes on three campuses in a variety of media. Established as the first of its kind in 1982, Crealdé’s Summer ArtCamp provides for hundreds of children the opportunity to participate in one- or two-week sessions of hands-on art instruction in six mediums. The summer concludes with the Summer ArtCamp Exhibition, featuring artworks from individual campers and large-scale collaborative works mentored by the camp instructors. The art is on display for two weeks in the Showalter Hughes Community Gallery on Crealdé’s main campus. The Summer Program includes a Young Artist Immersion component where students can select their two favorite visual art mediums allowing them to deepen their studies, knowledge and experience.

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Hannibal Square Heritage Center

In partnership with the community and the City of Winter Park, Crealdé School of Art operates the Hannibal Square Heritage Center as a tribute to the past, present and future contributions of Winter Park’s African American community. In 2017, we celebrated the Heritage Center’s tenth full year of operations. Through innovative programming in the arts and humanities, the Heritage Center is a neighborhood focal point, archive and home to The Heritage Collection: Photographs and Oral Histories of West Winter Park. Through visiting exhibitions, community-based public art exhibitions and diverse educational programs, the center inspires all Central Floridians and visitors to our area to respect, explore, participate and become more aware of their own community’s history and heritage. The Heritage Center hosts regular tuitionbased classes, including digital photography coursework, but primarily exists as a service to the greater community and an outreach center for youth and senior classes as listed above and for other community arts-based services as follows:

The Heritage Collection: Photographs and Oral Histories of West Winter Park VOLUNTEERS Hannibal Square Heritage Center Carol Anderson LaWanda AsanteThompson Lauren Austin Tramaine Berryhill Tramaine Bonus Arkel Brantley Andrew Browne Martha Bryant-Hall Pam Bussey Daniel Dorelus Debra Dykes Princess Goode Richard Hall Jacqueline Johnson Jerry Johnson Vincent Knowles Josie Lemen Allen Earl Mike Joann Perkins Paulette Perkins Curtis Proctor Jaizone Redciff Bonnie Swain Joyce Swain Elizabeth Taylor Jane Turner Lasetta Varnedoe Denise Weathers Rose White Dimitrius Wilson Eleanor Wilson 10 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

Crealdé’s most extensive outreach project is an on-going communitybased project celebrating the heritage, character and contributions made by Winter Park’s African American community. During annual Community Heritage Days, the Crealdé team of historians, cultural anthropologists and documentary photographers collaborate with intergenerational members of the historic Hannibal Square neighborhood to collect historically illustrative personal photographs and corresponding oral histories to tell the story of the community. This project is modeled after similar efforts conducted by the Los Angeles County Library and represents the first collection of its kind implemented in a Central Florida community. Completed phases from this ongoing project have been dedicated annually during the City of Winter Park’s Martin Luther King Day Unity Heritage Festival. Originally on display at the Winter Park Community Center, the Heritage Collection became the cornerstone and impetus for building the new Hannibal Square Heritage Center. Crealdé’s book, The Hannibal Square Heritage Collection, highlights some of the Heritage Collection’s most popular images and oral histories and is sold at the Hannibal Square Heritage Center and Crealdé’s Gift Shop. Now in its second edition, the book won the 2017 Samuel Proctor Award from its publisher, the Florida Historical Society, for its substantial contribution to the documentation of Florida history. The center hosted many events, groups, and tours including the Winter Park Public Library Let’s Talk Diversity, Equality and Inclusion, Rollins College and Valencia College classes, the Equal Justice Initiative, Bridging the Color Divide, and Leadership Winter Park. Special events included the third annual Juneteenth Celebration in partnership with the Winter Park Community Center. In 2018, installation of the audio kiosk with braille buttons was completed, enabling the visually impaired to listen to the history and a sampling of the stories presented in the Heritage Collection: Photographs and Oral Histories of West Winter Park.


Hannibal Square Heritage Center

Hannibal Square Community Workshops with Visiting Artists Select artists exhibiting in the Heritage Center Visiting Exhibition Series provide free community workshops. Past artists include the Smithsoniancollected Ruby C. Williams and Mr. Imagination, Missionary Mary Proctor, Gee’s Bend quiltmakers Louisiana Bendolph and her mother, Rita Mae Pettway, and sweetgrass basketmaking workshops with Barbara McCormick and LaQuetta Smith. In 2019 the center featured a series of free quilting classes with internationally exhibited local fiber artist Lauren Austin, whose work is also in the center’s permanent collection.

Tenth Annual Hannibal Square Heritage Center Folk & Urban Art Festival In 2019, the Heritage Center hosted its Tenth Annual Hannibal Square Heritage Center Folk & Urban Art Festival, a day long celebration of our community’s diversity with roots music, folk and traditional arts. The Festival delights visitors with the cultural traditions of Central Floridians with activities and entertainment for all ages, such as African storytelling, Zydeco music, percussion performances, Puerto Rican Vejigante mask-making, and an Aztecas Indian Headband workshop and musical parade for children. Informational booths represent the center’s many supportive partners. The Hannibal Square Heritage Center also hosted walking tours of historic and formerly segregated Hannibal Square, led by Chief Historian Fairolyn Livingston, teaching the vibrant history of what was once a self-sustaining community.

The Heritage Center is certainly a beacon of light that brings dignity to the community, as well as inspiration to all who visit from near and far. I truly appreciate and was moved by the wonderful exhibition of photographs and stories as told by residents from Winter Park’s historic African American community. The Hannibal Square Heritage Center is a destination that I would recommend without reservation to those visiting Florida. –Martin Luther King, III Atlanta, GA

“Lubamba Spectacular” performing at the 10th Annual Hannibal Square Heritage Center Folk & Urban Art Festival, 2019, Photograph by Cynthia B. Slaughter

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Galleries & Lecture Series

Crealdé serves its mission to make the arts inspiring, engaging and accessible by providing the community with free exhibitions featuring visiting and local artists who often provide educational lectures and workshops together with their exhibitions.

The Alice & William Jenkins Gallery Formally opened in 1980, the mission of the Alice & William Jenkins Gallery is to exhibit the work of noted and established Florida artists, as well as to introduce national and international artists to the Central Florida region. Each of the three diverse exhibitions is professionally designed by Crealdé’s Curator of Exhibitions or a guest curator. In 2019, the Alice & William Jenkins Gallery hosted Keepers of Heritage, the 38th Annual Juried Student Exhibition, and Collecting for Half a Century: Fine Craft From the Florida CraftArt Permanent Collection.

Showalter Hughes Community Gallery Established in 2000, the Showalter Hughes Community Gallery highlights four to five exhibitions annually, featuring work by students, faculty, emerging artists and outreach programs. The gallery features shelves where ceramic fellowship artists display their work, and also serves as a classroom for member and community events with seating for 80. 2019 exhibitions included Hand in Hand: The Creative Works of Janvier Miller and Gustaf Miller, Emerge: New Works by Painting and Drawing Fellowship and Studio Artists, 37th Summer ArtCamp Exhibition, and It’s Only Human: The Figure in Art.

Contemporary Sculpture Garden Established in 1997, the lakeside Contemporary Sculpture Garden is located on the grounds of Crealdé School of Art’s main campus and is open to the public. A self-guided tour leads visitors through the attractively landscaped campus and approximately 60 pieces of outdoor art and educational panels. The sculptures are used to teach field trip students about the diversity of expressive styles and durable media available to the sculptor. Recent additions include three sculptures by Central Florida artist Sandro Perez, as well as Pulse Remembered, a tribute relief sculpture made from twice-fired clay. The creation of this memorial was initiated by Senior Faculty member Doug Bringle, and included nearly 40 contributors, ranging from novice to accomplished, and from first-time visitors to long-time Crealdé family members.

John Wolfe, Tropical Tree, Painted Steel, 2011 Photograph by Talisee Carpenter 12 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART


Galleries & Lecture Series

The Hannibal Square Heritage Center is a treasure in Central Florida. Since the 1880s, Hannibal Square has been a historically black neighborhood, contributing to the leadership, faith, culture, and diversity of our state. As a testament to these contributions, the center was founded in 2007 to honor Winter Park’s African American legacies. Now, the center serves as a hub and archive, allowing continuous exploration through local oral histories, exhibits, and photography. I have been proud to support the HSHC and am honored to serve Hannibal Square residents in the Florida Legislature. Not only is the center an important preservation of African American history in our community, but it also serves as a catalyst for courageous conversations about race, gentrification, and the future of Central Florida. –Anna V. Eskamani Florida House of Representatives District 47

Hannibal Square Heritage Center Visiting Exhibition Gallery Established in 2007, the galleries at the Hannibal Square Heritage Center host three annual exhibitions that explore local history, cultural preservation, the African American experience and Southern folklore through educational and visual arts mediums including documentary photography, painting, sculpture and textiles. Exhibitions in 2019 featured Andrew Grant: Elements, The Sage Project II: Hannibal Square Elders Tell Their Stories, and Soul Utterings: Creative Works by Kianga Jinaki and John Mascoll.

Kianga Jinaki, Spirit of the Cloth, Fiber Art from the “Soul Utterings” exhibition, 2019

Always on display are The Heritage Collection: Photographs and Oral Histories of West Winter Park, as well as the Hannibal Square Timeline juxtaposing significant local and national historic events impacting African Americans. Also on display is a collection of community-created artworks that are the result of collaborations with noted folk artists including Mr. Imagination, Ruby C. Williams, Missionary Mary Proctor, quiltmaker Lauren Austin, and Rigoberto Torres, who created the much-loved life-like sculpture of Tuskegee Airman and local hero, Richard Hall. In 2019 The Sage Project Phase II: Hannibal Square Elders Tell Their Stories exhibited a series of 17 new contemporary portraits by Peter Schreyer and oral histories by Fairolyn Livingston and Mary Daniels. The project recorded and honored Hannibal Square residents in their 80s and 90s, and augmented the original 2012 Sage Project, which was Crealdé’s tribute to Hannibal Square for the City of Winter Park’s 125th anniversary.

Traveling Exhibitions Exhibitions created as a result of Crealdé’s award-winning outreach and gallery programs become part of our archives, and are available to travel to other venues for display. In 2019, the newest addition of Crealde’s longrunning teen documentary photography project, Storytellers XVIII: See Through Our Eyes, debuted at the African American Museum of the Arts. The Lake: A Documentary Exploring the Land and People of Lake Apopka traveled to the Orange County Regional History Center, along with a selection of previous Storytellers projects, as part of their Accidental Historian exhibition.

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Outreach & Scholarship

Since 1995, Crealdé has taken the opportunity to use the visual arts as a means of connecting communities, fostering cultural awareness and promoting understanding. As part of its mission, Crealdé’s outreach programming sustains an unwavering commitment to serve every community we enter. Our outreach and scholarship programs emphasize working with underprivileged children, at-risk teens and low-income senior citizens. Each class or project introduces the student to the specific art medium, then, through a public exhibition or installation, shares the participants’ achievements with the community. Crealdé outreach programming includes the following:

Storytellers Teen Documentary Photography Program Ten-week classes use photography to give students ages 13–17 an opportunity to express themselves in pictures and words, while exploring their cultural heritage, neighborhoods, families and friends. Since 1996, Storytellers has been funded by six different private foundations, resulting in 18 completed projects and exhibitions at community sites. The projects are part of Crealdé’s Archive of Community-Based Documentary Photography, and individual exhibitions are periodically loaned for display in the community, including a showing at the state capital in Talihasee, the Museum of Arts & Sciences in Daytona Beach, and the Orange County Regional History Center in Orlando. The most recent Storytellers programs engaged students from the historic Spring Hill community in DeLand, in partnership with the African American Museum of the Arts.

Neighborhood Pride Public Murals Since 2000, Crealdé has produced seven privately funded murals throughout Central Florida. During these eight-week classes, young students ages 10 to 14 collaborate to create a public mural in their own community, helping to beautify as well as increase awareness of important themes such as non-violence, education, family and cultural heritage. In addition to the young painters developing their own styles and individual modes of expression, the program helps bring segments of the community together for a hands-on, shared experience.

Monument Builders Since 2001, young sculpture students have collaborated with their instructors to construct a permanent outdoor piece of art in neighborhoods throughout Central Florida. Themes include cultural heritage, non-violence and drug‑free living. A 12-foot-long, 4-foot-high Memory Wall created in 2008 with Mr. Imagination, a Pennsylvania-based African American folk artist, is permanently installed at the Hannibal Square Heritage Center. The Memory Wall, holding objects donated by community residents, is Winter Park’s first collaborative public art sculpture.

Art Samplers for Children Eight-week classes provide groups of students ages 5 to 10 with handson instruction in the fundamentals of art-making. Self-expression and self-esteem are fostered in the following underserved communities where Crealdé Outreach Programs are offered: The John H. Bridges Community Center in Apopka, the Maxey Community Center in Winter Garden and the Hannibal Square Heritage Center in Winter Park. An end-of-the-year party and exhibit allow these youth to display and celebrate their artworks. 14 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART


Outreach & Scholarship

Free Art Programs for Seniors The Free Senior Art Sampler Class for ages 60 and up began at the old Winter Park Community Center in 2000 and is offered at the Hannibal Square Heritage Center in partnership with the City of Winter Park Community Center. Participants learn techniques in painting and drawing to produce artwork on canvas, paper and unconventional materials. Many of the participants have been in the program for years, committed to the process of learning art. Since 2015, Crealdé has taught the Hands-On Inspiration Fine Art Sampler for participants in Easterseal’s Day Break Program at the Miller Center in Winter Park. Day Break serves adults with a decrease in physical, mental, or social abilities and provides respite to caregivers. The goal of the classes is to enhance the quality of life for participants. Day Break staff report that Crealdé’s art class increases participants’ socialization and improves mood, fine motor skills, and self-esteem. Families who attend the annual art exhibition in April are amazed by the beauty of the artwork produced by their loved ones.

Youth Scholarships

Margaret Clark with her painting, Christmast Leftovers, during the Senior Art Exhibition III, at the Hannibal Square Heritage Center, 2019

The Alice M. Jenkins Scholarship Fund, founded in 1988 in honor of the wife of Crealdé founder Bill Jenkins, provides free classes to an average of 100 economically disadvantaged children and teens each year. In 2019, Crealdé provided $12,165 (a 5% increase) in full scholarships to 28 Summer ArtCamp students, 19 Young Artist Program students, and three senior citizens. Scholarship recipients come from as close as Winter Park and as far away as the farmworker communities of north Orange and south Lake counties. The fund is replenished annually with contributions from private foundations and individual donors.

“A Visit to the Art Studio” Field Trip Program

“It took a village, and we had a good village to work with. Look around you: We were all with you. We care. We don’t have a lot of money, but we have a lot of passion and dedication.” Mentor Audrey Fletcher-Lee, at the opening reception for Storytellers XVIII at the African American Museum of the Arts in DeLand. –Excerpt from DeLand Beacon story by Eli Witek December, 2019

During the 2018-2019 school year, 880 public school students and 173 private school students enjoyed the opportunity to observe professional artist at work in their studios, tour the exhibitions in the professional galleries, walk through the lakeside Contemporary Sculpture Garden, and become artist themselves in a hands-on workshop to create a masterpiece to take home.

Workshops for Osceola Public Schools For the second year, in partnership with United Arts and Osceola Public Schools, Crealdé offered 28 figure drawing workshops serving 600 high school students.

Free Programming at Area Events Crealdé conducted free hands-on workshops in painting, drawing, and clay for numerous community festivals including the Winter Park Autumn Art Festival, Winter Park Sidewalk Art Festival, Earth Day in the Park in Winter Park, Kid’s Fringe Festival at the Orlando International Fringe Theatre Festival, and the Women-to-Women Day through the Florida Farmworker Association in Apopka. 2019 ANNUAL REPORT 15


Civic Vitality

Economic Development and Community Partnerships Crealdé has been committed to creating civic vitality through the arts since its founding—before “creative place-making” became an important trend in community development efforts. This commitment has brought Crealdé into a position of leadership in Central Florida with a track record of longlasting partnerships, creating over 45 collaborative community projects in the past decade. Our diverse artistic programs – from children’s classes to exhibitions and public art projects – increase social, cultural and even environmental awareness and understanding among people of all ages, races and ethnicities. By celebrating the history and voice of a community through the visual arts, the Hannibal Square Heritage Center has gained the attention of the local community as well as visitors from around the world, helping the City of Winter Park to receive the prestigious America in Bloom Award for the past several years. Our advocacy for the African American community of west Winter Park and Executive Director Peter Schreyer’s role as the volunteer arts and culture representative on the city’s visioning committee led the city to embrace the importance of arts and culture, rebrand itself as the “City of Culture & Heritage” and invest in a “Be Inspired” campaign to highlight and celebrate Winter Park’s rich arts and cultural community. In addition, Crealdé’s economic impact has been measured at $3,159,184 through Americans for the Arts’ Arts & Economic Prosperity Calculator.

On permanent display at Maxey Community Center in east Winter Garden, a Crealdé free after-school satellite teaching site since 1999. In January 2019, this multi-media mural, Love of Our Community was created by the Maxey Community Center Outreach students. This collaborative project is a depiction of what love for community, history, and family means through the eyes of these talented Winter Garden children. Many of the Maxey Community Center youth participate in a weekly art class provided by Crealdé School of Art and taught by Painting & Drawing faculty member, Patricia Byron.

16 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART


Civic Vitality

Expanding Services to West Orange County and Lake County The once languishing agricultural city of Winter Garden has demonstrated its leadership by transforming into a thriving city with a focus on quality of life through arts, and historic preservation, balanced with economic development. In 2010, Crealdé began offering a limited number of painting, drawing, and photography classes at Jessie Brock Community Center, a newly renovated recreation center near historic downtown Winter Garden. Located 15 miles west of the Crealdé main campus, it has successfully attracted students from the growing communities of Ocoee, Windermere, Dr. Phillips, and Clermont. Participation is so successful that one out of 10 Crealdé students is now enrolled in a Winter Garden class.

Creating Opportunities for Florida Artists and Businesses Crealdé provides part-time employment for over 50 artists as faculty, visiting instructors, and curators; and engages paid visiting guest curators and artists as well as public art lead artists to instruct special workshops and projects. In addition to an administrative staff of ten (four full-time and six part-time), the programming for each of the school’s artistic programs is planned and administered by a part-time program and studio manager, who also teaches and uses studio space in the respective facility. A monthly stipend also is paid to a curator of exhibitions at our three galleries and the curator of the Contemporary Sculpture Garden. The estimated impact on the local economy, apart from tuition, is more than $1 million annually.

Attracting Tourists to the Hannibal Square Heritage Center

I wish I could send hundreds, thousands, millions of dollars, but even then that could not begin to compare to the contributions you have made to art and hearts; to children, adults, and to the community; to the Lake Apopka farmworkers and the Hannibal Square black community in Winter Park and the other communities that you have lifted up through your work; to raising awareness and preserving history; and to and for social justice. –Jeannie Economos, Pesticide Safety and Environmental Health Project Coordinator, Farmworker Association of Florida

Since its opening in 2007, Crealdé has received high scores from grant panels for the quality of its work presented at the Hannibal Square Heritage Center and the Jenkins Gallery on the main campus, resulting in 13 annual Cultural Tourism marketing grants from Orange County through the Arts & Cultural Affairs program, ranging from $40,000 to $86,000. The Heritage Center also receives an annual $40,000 operating support grant from the City of Winter Park’s Community Redevelopment Agency. The reputation of the Heritage Center continues to grow, attracting cultural tourists with a special interest in African American history.

Invitation for Storytellers 18 exhibition in DeLand, FL, 2019, featuring a photograph by Naomi Graham of Kristianna Holcombe in the doorway of the 100-year-old J.W. Wright Building 2019 ANNUAL REPORT 17


Emerging Artist Programs

Crealdé School of Art offers students opportunities to develop themselves into professional artists. Through the Crealdé Fellowship Program, the Studio Artist Program, Cheryl Bogdanowitch Sculpture Scholarship and an additional adult scholarship award, students can receive mentorship, access to studios, and free classes. In 2019, Crealdé provided 26 artists with a total of 117 free classes and half-price workshops – a $27,377 tuition equivalent, representing a 29% increase for the second year in a row. Artists in the Fellowship Program contributed over 3,000 hours of classroom, event and promotional support to Crealdé. All students are given the opportunity to exhibit and sell their work at annual art sales, the gift shop, and a student exhibition.

FELLOWSHIP ARTISTS Ceramics Miriam Levy Manager

Eun Cho Jamie Ferguson Rachel Kinbar Sculpture Lynn Brenner-Katz Manager

Shaun Cook Mila Dykes Painting & Drawing Kate Collins

The Fellowship Program Crealdé’s Fellowship work-study program, established in 1978, offers free educational opportunities to students in exchange for hours worked to maintain the studios, assist with children’s classes and festival workshops, help with gallery and community events, and other responsibilities. Applicants are nominated by faculty members. Once approved, Fellowship students stay involved for one to two years. During this period, they can enroll in classes at no cost and have unlimited studio use. They usually complete their Fellowship with an independent study and a developed portfolio. The students volunteer approximately 30 hours per session and applications are accepted year-round.

Manager

Studio Artist Program

Bushra Bhatti Kathryn Brohl Vera Gubnitskaia Sri Rao Patricia Schoene Diane Stapleton Suzy Wilson

Established in 1996, the Studio Artist Program is designed for advanced students, former Crealdé Fellows and emerging artists from the community whose goal is to pursue a professional career in the arts. Two positions per year are made available in each of the three Crealdé artistic departments for applicants recommended by a Crealdé staff member. Studio Artists show the results of their work in a biennial exhibition.

Photography Kristen Gillan

Adult Scholarship Programs

Manager

Ansel Daniel Laurie Hasan Davina Hovanec Laura McBryde

Established in 1999, the Visiting Scholarship Program enables two area college students to attend our workshops at no charge, and the program is promoted through art professors at area schools. In addition, scholarships are made available to seniors with financial need.

STUDIO ARTISTS Natalie Colon & Cynthia Slaughter

The Cheryl Bogdanowitsch Sculpture Scholarship provides an annual $1,000 scholarship for classes, workshops and studio use to an adult sculpture student.

Devyn Going & Ken Lichtenburger

Special Volunteers

Photography

Sculpture

Joan Sanchez

Painting & Drawing

Deborah Umphrey Painting & Drawing

Lynn Warnike Ceramics

Bogdanowitsch Scholar Jason Gillespie Gladiola Sotomayor 18 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

Crealdé is pleased to have a group of volunteers who support us in special ways as needs arise. These volunteers serve whenever their schedule and Crealdé’s needs match. Their areas of work are varied and include classroom assistance, curatorial proofreading, sculpture garden maintenance, and help with festivals, openings and special events.

Joe Kollar joins Kate Collins, Painting & Drawing Fellows Manager, at the Emerge exhibition in 2019, during an interview with the Orlando Sentinel.


2019 Attendance Statistics

Total Registrations for Adult and Youth Curriculum (4 to 8 week classes, workshops and Summer ArtCamp)

Paid in Full Member and Non-Member Students . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,213 Complimentary Classes for Fellowship & Scholarship Students. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 Life Drawing Sessions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,800 Total Registration Attendance for 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5,133

Outreach Art Classes and Workshops A Visit to the Art Studio Field Trip Program for OCPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 880 A Visit to the Art Studio Field Trip Program for Private Schools. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173 Storytellers Teen Documentary Photography Project. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Heritage Center After School Art Classes for Youth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 780 Heritage Center Senior Classes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 654 Easter Seals Day Break Program Fine Art Classes for Seniors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 Maxey Community Center After School Art Classes, Winter Garden . . . . . . . . . . . 640 John H. Bridges Community Center After School Art Classes, Apopka. . . . . . . . . 640 Crealdé’s 9th Annual Free Family Festival Workshops and Demos. . . . . . . . . . . . . 600 Kids Fringe Festival Youth Art Workshops. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160 Winter Park Earth Day in the Park . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 Winter Park Sidewalk Art Festival Youth Art and Heritage Workshops . . . . . . . . . . 173 Winter Park Autumn Art Festival Youth Art Workshops. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 Osceola County Figure Drawing Workshops. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600 Peace & Justice Institute, Peace Day in the Park Youth Workshops. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 Winter Park YMCA Healthy Kids Day. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Additional Workshops and Presentations to Community Groups

(Includes the HSHC Folk & Urban Art Festival workshop, Mead Garden Duck Derby, Earth Day in Shady Park, Women 2 Women Florida Farmworkers Assn., Bridge the Gap Coalition, Winter Park Housing

Authority Tranquil Terrace Fall Workshop for Seniors, and various field trips). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 328

Total for 2019 Outreach Attendance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6,254 NOTE: All of the above outreach programs are underwritten by grants, contracts, or member contributions and are offered completely free of charge for all participants.

Exhibitions and Special Events 8th Annual Night of Fire. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,000

Crealdé is a place where I have been able to find creative joy, expression of my thoughts, visions and ideas. I have taken moments of insecurity or stress, and stood behind my camera to fill those spaces with the passion that I have discovered among so many other wonderful artists at the school. –Kristen Gillan, Photography Fellowship Manager

Alice & William Jenkins Gallery (3 exhibitions) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,263 Showalter Hughes Community Gallery (4 exhibitions) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8,430 Hannibal Square Heritage Center (permanent collection, 3 visiting exhibitions, special events and tours) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6,836 Hannibal Square Outdoor Public Art Installations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,380 Traveling Exhibition: Storytellers at the African American Museum of the Arts, DeLand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 500 Traveling Exhibition: The Lake at Orange County Regional History Center. . . . 14,100 Contemporary Sculpture Garden. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12,000 Easter Seals Day Break Year-end Exhibition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 Handmade in Florida Gift Shop. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,600 Annual Holiday Art Sale and Annual Cup-A-Thon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 500 Total Exhibition Attendance for 2019. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54,709

Total 2019 Attendance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66,096 2019 ANNUAL REPORT 19


Membership Report

The total number of participants in our membership program remained stable at 1,237, generating $29,127. At the same time, general donation revenue — which is driven through our membership program — was up by 42%. Revenue increased by $31,706 to a total of $107,661. The number represents purchased memberships as well as memberships granted for all donations of $40 or greater, in-kind gifts, honorary and lifetime memberships with a 120‑day grace period. Basic Individual, $40 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 698 Basic Family, $65. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210 Friend of Crealdé, $100–$249 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Friend of Heritage Center, $100–$249. . . . . . . . . . 16 Advocate, $250–$499. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Patron, $500–$999. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Benefactor, $1000 Minimum. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Lifetime. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Corporate & Business Sponsors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 In-Kind. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Honorary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Total Memberships. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,237

Membership Growth January 1996–January 2020 1600 1600 1600 1400 1400 1400 1200 1200 1200 1000 1000 1000 800 800 800 600 600 600 400 400 400

20 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

1600 1600 1600 1400 1400 1400 1200 1200 1200

Jan 19

Jan 20

Jan 17

Jan 18

Jan 16

Jan 15

Jan 13

Jan 14

Jan 12

Jan 11

Jan 10

Jan 09

Jan 07

Jan 08

Jan 06

Jan 05

Jan 03

Jan 04

Jan 02

Jan 01

Jan 00

Jan 99

Jan 98

Jan 96

000

Jan 97

200 200 200


Financial Support

Crealdé School of Art thanks the following private foundations, government agencies, and corporations for their continuous support of our general and outreach programming: • United Arts of Central Florida (General Operating Support, Diverse Programming Grant, Arts Learning Mini Grant) • Florida Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs (General Program Support) • Orange County Government (Cultural Tourism Funding for the Hannibal Square Heritage Center and Jenkins Gallery exhibitions and events) • The City of Winter Park Community Redevelopment Agency (Hannibal Square Heritage Center programs and operations) • Anonymous private foundation support • Akerman LLP • Amazon Hose & Rubber Co. • Art Systems of Florida • The Central Florida Foundation • Citizens for Florida Arts, Inc. • Colonial Photo & Hobby • Dr. Phillips Foundation • Edyth Bush Charitable Foundation • English-Speaking Union, Central Florida Branch • Florida Clay Art • Florida Humanities Council • The James T. Barnes Foundation • KIWI Camera Services

Working with clay is grounding; it is zen and helps me destress. -Ava, Age 15 YA Ceramics Student

• Metal Supermarket • Orlando Utilities Commission • The Nelson Family Trust • Rotary Club of Winter Park Charitable Foundation • The St. Margaret Mary Outreach Fund • Sam Flax Art Supply • United Arts of Central Florida • The Walt Disney World Ears to You Program 2019 ANNUAL REPORT 21


History of Community Partnerships

Crealdé School of Art has an outstanding record in partnering with arts, cultural, social service and other grassroots organizations in Central Florida. These collaborations have resulted in numerous award-winning art classes, community exhibitions and permanent public art installations. As an example, our teen photography Storytellers program has positively impacted communities from rural Apopka to inner-city Orlando since 1996. A number of these young students’ images were exhibited at the State Capitol in Tallahassee. Crealdé partners with numerous governmental, private, nonprofit and social-service organizations in our area. Past and current partners include:

Winter Park Community Center, outreach partner (since 1996) and satellite teaching site (1996-2007) John H. Bridges Community Center, Apopka, satellite teaching site (since 1998) Maxey Community Center, Winter Garden, satellite teaching site (since 1999) Jessie Brock Community Center, Winter Garden, satellite teaching site (since 2010) Art & History Museums – Maitland, exhibition partner African American Museum of the Arts, DeLand, outreach and exhibition Partner Asian Cultural Association, Longwood, exhibition partner Association to Preserve the Eatonville Community (P.E.C.), Eatonville, outreach, ZORA! Festival Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Florida, outreach, exhibition partner BETA Center, Inc., Orlando, outreach partner Callahan Neighborhood Center, Orlando, outreach partner The Center for Contemporary Dance, Winter Park, program partner Center for Drug Free Living, Orlando, outreach partner City of Orlando, outreach and exhibition partner City of Winter Park Community Redevelopment Agency, Winter Park, outreach partner and funder City of Winter Garden classes and exhibitions Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, Jacksonville, exhibition partner Daybreak at The Miller Center, Winter Park, outreach partner Department of Cultural Affairs, State of Florida, Creative Capital Retreat for Professional Artists Easter Seals of Florida, outreach partner 22 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

ESTEEM Inc. and the Winter Park Housing Authority, outreach partner Federal Duck Stamp Program, Department of the Interior, jury participation Florida Farmworker Association, Apopka, outreach and exhibition partner Florida Humanities Council, traveling exhibition program and grant funder Full Sail, Visibility campaign for Heritage Center group project Gallery at Avalon Island, Orlando, Crealdé Faculty Exhibition Golden Rule Foundation, mosaic mural in Hannibal Square and Memory Wall at the Heritage Center Hope CommUnity Center, Apopka, outreach partner Jeanine Taylor Folk Art Gallery, Sanford, exhibition partner Lake County Cultural Affairs Council, Crealdé Faculty Exhibition The Mary S. Harrell Black Heritage Museum, New Smyrna Beach, outreach partner The Mennello Museum of American Art, Orlando, exhibition partner

outreach partner Public libraries in Mount Dora and Miami/Dade, outreach exhibition Ritz Theatre and Museum in Jacksonville, exhibition partner Rollins College, Winter Park, Office of Community Engagement Rural Heritage Center, Geneva, Florida Rural Woman’s Health Network, Gainesville, exhibition partner Seminole State College of Florida, Sanford, exhibition partner Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona Beach, exhibition partner St. Johns Cultural Council, St. Augustine, exhibition partner St. Margaret Mary, Winter Park, exhibition partner and funder Taft Community Center, Orlando, off-campus outreach exhibition Tajiri School of Performing Arts and Academics, Sanford, outreach partner Unity Heritage Festival, Winter Park, tours of Heritage Collection and free children’s art workshops

Museum of Arts & Sciences, Daytona, exhibition partner

University of Central Florida, Orlando, program partner for the Heritage Center

Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, exhibition partner

Very Special Arts of Florida:, St. Petersburg, senior outreach partner

Museum of Florida History, Tallahassee, exhibition partner

Winter Garden Heritage Foundation, Winter Garden, exhibition partner

Orange County Arts Education Center, outreach and field trip partner

Winter Park Autumn Art Festival, Winter Park, free children’s workshops and co-founder

Orange County, Dept. of Health and Family Services, outreach partner Orange County Library System, traveling exhibition Orange County Public Schools, daily school-year field trip program Orange County Regional History Center, exhibition partner Osceola Center for the Arts, Kissimmee, traveling exhibition Pace Center for Girls, Orlando,

Winter Park History Museum, Winter Park, exhibition partner Winter Park Sidewalk Art Festival, Winter Park, free hands-on children’s workshops Winter Park Unity Festival, Winter Park, free children’s art workshops, unveiling of Heritage Collection Winter Park Welcome Center, Winter Park, Crealdé Partners with Hannibal Square exhibition


Our Founder

Bill Jenkins & His Dream William Sterling Jenkins traveled the world, built and prospered in many different careers, recorded his travels and experiences in beautiful paintings, and made a permanent impact on the Central Florida community. 1909  Born William Sterling Jenkins on December 13 in Preston, Georgia. 1934  Graduates with a BFA from the University of Florida, Gainesville. 1935  Earns scholarship to study art in Florence, Italy, and travels extensively through Italy and Germany by bicycle and rail.

1937  Awarded prestigious Laurea Degree, Royal Academy of Fine Art, Florence, Italy.

1938  Opens art school in Columbus, Georgia and paints portraits. Holds solo art exhibitions in Atlanta and Gainesville. William S. “Bill” Jenkins, Barbara Tiffany, oil on canvas

1941  Holds solo exhibition in New York City. Travels to Taxco, Mexico to study silversmithing and meet his future wife, Alice Moberg.

1942  Marries Alice Moberg on June 6 in Anoka, Minnesota. 1942  Drafted into the U.S. Army, Jenkins contracts pneumonia at boot camp in Colorado and is transferred to Orlando, where he recuperates for 17 weeks in the Veterans Administration Hospital.

1944  Honorably discharged for work with Human Services, Veterans Administration. On November 11, daughter Ann Welch Jenkins is born in Orlando.

1944–46  Works with the Veterans Administration in St. Petersburg, Florida, where he starts a new rehabilitation method incorporating art therapy.

1946–48  Opens the Veterans Administration office in Winter Park, Florida, and builds his first home there.

1948  On October 3, son William Griffith Jenkins is born in Tallahassee. 1950  Earns master’s degree in psychology from Florida State University, Tallahassee, and then leaves the Veterans Administration to start Jenkins Construction Co. in Winter Park, Florida.

1950–70  Jenkins starts West Park Homes, building countless houses, condominiums and shopping centers in the Central Florida area.

1953–54  Serves as a City Commissioner for Winter Park, Florida, and starts a movement to build the Olympic-sized pool at Cady Way.

1966  Co-founds the Orange County Council on Aging, which sponsors art classes. 1975  Founds Crealdé Arts Inc., which operates as Crealdé Arts Center, and daughter Ann Jenkins Clement serves as the first director. Crealdé pioneers the concept of a community arts center where local artists share their talent with the general public. The name “Crealdé” came from a combination of the Spanish verb “crear,” which means “to create,” and the suffix “alde,” which is Old English for “village.”

Even as we blossom and grow, we never lose sight of what Bill Jenkins intended for Crealdé. We are dedicated to keeping his dream alive. –Peter Schreyer, CEO/Executive Director, Crealdé School of Art

1978  The State of Florida approves the Crealdé articles of incorporation. 1981  The approval of 501(c)(3) nonprofit status enables the school to secure a broad range of funding sources and provide greater community service. A volunteer Board of Directors is established, and Jenkins initially serves as the President.

1982  Three formal departments are established at the renamed Crealdé School of Art – Painting & Drawing, Ceramics & Sculpture and Photography – which builds the groundwork for dramatic expansion in student participation in the coming decade. The still-popular Summer ArtCamp program for children and teens was launched. 2019 ANNUAL REPORT 23


Our Founder

1985–89  David A. Edgar serves as the school’s first full-time General Manager. Financial support for the school is secured from the State of Florida, among other funding sources.

1986  Jenkins donates $600,000 to the University of Central Florida to establish the Jenkins Chair, which he intends as a vehicle to bring the spirit of broad-based visual arts education into the academic environment.

1988  Jenkins receives award from American Art Therapy Association for significant contributions to the field of art therapy. Crealdé establishes the Alice M. Jenkins Scholarship Fund in memory of the founder’s wife, following her death late in the year.

1990  In December, Jenkins gives the school’s property to Crealdé Arts Inc., allowing it to establish complete autonomy, secure new funding sources and participate in partnerships that strengthen Crealdé’s role and relationship with the Central Florida community it serves.

1990–2000  Crealdé expands its mission, growing the emerging artist program, creating teaching sites in underserved communities and deepening its commitment to make the arts available to the widest segment possible of the Central Florida population. Longtime instructor and sculptor David Cumbie formally establishes the Contemporary Sculpture Garden.

1995  The Board of Directors promotes Director of Photography Peter Schreyer to the position of Executive Director. The Crealdé Fine Arts Gallery is renamed in honor of the founders: The Alice & William Jenkins Gallery.

1996  Jenkins dies March 30, survived by his daughter, Ann Clement, and, son, William Jenkins.

2000  Under Board Chair Frank Schornagle III, Crealdé undertakes a successful capital campaign matched by a Cultural Facilities grant from the State of Florida to construct the first new building in two decades and conduct a campus-wide face‑lift. The expansion includes a second painting studio and the establishment of the Showalter Hughes Community Gallery with a porch overlooking Lake Sterling. The gallery is named in honor of former Board President Louis Hughes and wife, Arlene Showalter.

2007  In keeping with the school’s mission to provide free community outreach programs and foster cultural diversity and preservation of cultural heritage, Crealdé deepens its long-standing relationship with the City of Winter Park by opening the Hannibal Square Heritage Center. The Heritage Center stands as a tribute to the past, present and future contributions of Winter Park’s African American community.

2009  Linda and Percy Maynard of Art Systems of Florida were honored with an

I’m captured by the way a few simple lines can bring such humor or meaning to a piece. -Richard Ceramics & Sculpture Student 24 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

Outstanding Business Partner Award for two decades of loyal service as volunteer board members and Crealdé supporters.

2009–10  A $220,000 campus renovation is completed, funded by an Orange County Cultural Facilities Grant and matched by contributions pledged by an enthusiastic Crealdé membership. A new front entrance is created and extensive repairs are made as well as beautification projects undertaken on the maturing campus.

2010  Crealdé enters a new government partnership with the City of Winter Garden, enabling the school to offer a limited number of classes at the new Jessie Brock Community Center, strategically located near growing West Orange and Lake County communities.

2011  Long-term board member and prominent attorney Cecelia Bonifay is elected Board President.

2015  Record enrollment experienced in the post-recession era coupled with increased private and public funding raises the organizational operating budget to surpass one million dollars. To celebrate the 40th Anniversary, Crealdé exhibitions highlight nationally recognized artists whose work celebrates America’s cultural diversity.


Balance Sheet

For the Twelve Month Period Ending December 31, 2019 Assets

Current Year – 2019

Previous Year - 2018

Current Assets Cash and Cash Equivalents Marketable Investments Other Current Assets Total Current Assets

$ 40,368 $ 36,058 $ 2,474 $ 78,900

$ 31,375 $ 31,807 $ 9,780 $ 72,962

$ 1,158,605

$ 1,153,147

$ 1,237,505

$ 1,226,109

Long Term Assets Land, Building, and Equipment

Total Assets Liabilities and Fund Balances

Financial Statement

Current Liabilities Accounts Payable Fixed Loan Other Payables Total Liabilities

$ 55,448 $ 166,591 $ 58,334 $ 280,373

$ 46,758 $ 175,663 $ 71,593 $ 294,014

Fund Balances Fund Balance Year to Date Net Income Total Equity

$ 766,314 $ 190,818 $ 957,132

$ 766,314 $ 165,781 $ 932,095

Total Liabilities and Fund Balance

$ 1,237,505

Unrestricted

Restricted

$ 1,226,109

Total 2019

Total 2018

Revenue Membership/Dues Tuition and Fees Interest/Dividend Income

$29,127

$-

$29,127

$29,253

$700,180

$-

$700,180

$633,118

$5,830

$-

$5,830

$(1,282)

United Arts

$61,700

$-

$61,700

$63,163

Government grants

$19,479

$126,714

$146,193

$149,898

Foundation grants

$-

$38,000

$38,000

$47,500

General donations

$59,116

$48,545

$107,661

$75,955

Special Projects & Events

$56,706

$-

$56,706

$56,082

In-Kind Income

$40,536

$-

$40,536

$50,667

$13,307

$-

$13,307

$9,355

$985,981

$213,259

$1,199,240

$1,113,709

Facility and Gallery

$234,424

$-

$234,424

$280,681

Programmatic Expenses

$558,427

$-

$558,427

$511,697

$6,186

$39,167

$799,037

$-

$799,037

$831,545

$375,166

$-

$375,166

$324,200

$1,174,203

$-

$1,174,203

$1,155,745

$25,037

$(42,036)

Miscellaneous TOTAL REVENUE Program Expenses

In-Kind Expense Total Program Expenses Administrative Expenses TOTAL EXPENSES NET INCOME

$6,186

2019 ANNUAL REPORT 25


Earned vs. Contributed Income

For Completed Fiscal Year 2019

Earned Income: 63% ($753,436)

Contributed Income: 37% ($445,804)

Farmworker Linda Lee at Home, Kucka Varghese, photographer, Apopka, FL From Crealdé’s 2017 traveling exhibition The Lake: A Documentary Exploring the Land and People of Lake Apopka, which was shown at the Orange Regional History Center in the Fall of 2019, as part of their exhibition The Accidental Historian.

26 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART


Earned and Contributed Income

2019 ANNUAL REPORT 27


Members and Contributors Lifetime Juanita Addeo Richard Auger Susan Bach Bill Bachmann Cheryl Bogdanowitsch James Bojarzuk Christopher Bolton Wallace Bookins Diane Boswell Butch Charlan Ann Clement Mindy Colton Heather Cowley David Cumbie Marsha DeBroske Glenn Dobkin David Edgar Johann Eyfells Julie Foley Frank Gady James Gibson Gary Graham Leslie Hardy Chuck Harmeling Cecil Herring Helen Hickey Jacqueline Jones Penny Jordan Timothy Keating Lesa Kramer Dennis Long Steve Lotz Mickey Luck Jon Manchester Rebekah McCloud Kevin Miller Susan Neumeyer Bill Platt Shirley Range Alzo Reddick Terri Rosenthal Vince Sansone Andy Schuerger Gerry Shepp Nikki Sims Henry Sinn Karen Smith Barbara Sorensen Geoffry Sprague Philip Tiedke Rigoberto Torres Richard Valentino 28 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

Robin Van Arsdol Susan Vey Michael Walsh Dean Warren John Wolfe

Benefactors Harold Barley James Barnes Cheryl Bogdanowitsch Cecelia Bonifay Ken Cashon Ann Clement Miriam Levy Lynn McCoy Marion Miller Kim Novak Beth Pendleton Jane Poche Jean Polarolo Frank Schornagle, III Cathy Slung Mark Thompson Barbara Tiffany Joseph Warren

Patrons Kristen Allen Elise Bloom Cecelia Bonifay Mindy Brenay Jolyn Charron Frances (Alicia) Clarke Valada Flewellyn Julie Foley Dean Jennings Michael Kakos Shannon Kelly Ford Kiene Felice Koscinski Debra Lane Miriam Levy Percy Maynard Christina McKelvey Edward Meyer Jeffrey Moore Antoinette Peck Kelly Sawyer Hye Shin Adrian Smith Robert Smither David Storm Kucku Varghese Stacey Viola

Advocates Helen Avalon Kristin Benbow Lynn Brenner-Katz Natalie Colon Kristin Congdon Debbie Davis Jing Debaere Anita Desai Michael Dively Jennifer Dymond Howard Fraser Kristen Gillan Jason Gillespie Marilyn Jeffcoat Jacqueline Johnson Debra Lane Joseph Lane Bruce Lieske Debra Lupton Bill Lynch Robert McIntosh Connor Mooney Jeffrey Moore Mari Moye Robin Murphy John Page Marsee Perkins Pamela Peters John Rigsby John Ruffier Judy Sandefur Robert Smither Joe Terranova Bill Walker Lynn Warnicke

Friends of CrealdĂŠ Lee Adler Nancy Albright Stefan Alexandres Phillip Anderson, Jr, Lynne Bachrach John Baker Melanie Barker Harold Barley Anita Bartels Stacy Barter Stacie Becker Sharon Bozarth Louise Buhrmann Terri Buzzella Kathleen Callaghan William Carpenter

Kenneth Cashon Judith Chisdes Linda Clifford Beatriz Collado Natalie Colon David Cumbie Jing Debaere Lee Dunkel Eric Elbert Esther Elliott Dione Fetner Barbara Fischler Robert Flick Barbara Fowle Mary Fruhwirth Renee Garrett Kristen Gillan Kim Giovanoli Ediana Gomez Melissa GranberryPranke Laurie Hagemaier Clyde Hall Daphne Hammond Judy Hasan Catherine Hempel Diana Hough Marilyn Jeffcoat Jacqueline Johnson Penny Jordan Bette Jore Etta Juge Dawn Knight Robert Kreps Nancy Krug Bill Lambert Paul Lartonoix Bruce Lieske Fairolyn Livingston Faye MacDowellGonzalez Lynne Martin Shelley Mathews Laura McBryde Ricki McCurdy Mary McDowell Bob Michaels, Jr. Brian Miller Debbie Miller Jan Moss Ann Murrah Jane Oatway Nina Oppenheim Marie Orban


Members and Contributors Mary Palmer Marsee Perkins Randy Pritchard Eric Ravndal III Patricia Richardson Marianna Ross Kathy Salmieri Jesus Santiago Kelly Sawyer Peter Schreyer Sara Segal Marcia Selleri Yuping Shen Karla Shultz Dana Singer Les Slesnick Kathleen Smedes Melissa Smith Pamela Snyder Susan Spraker Diane Stapleton Kathy Stecker Elizabeth Stewart J. Martin Sullivan Mark Thompson Diane Tomaz Deborah Umphrey Margaret Vail Sharon Verhoef Lance Walker Robert Waltman Lynn Warnicke Tim Wata Trudy Wild Suzanne Wilson Sandy Womble Thouraya Zapara

Friends of the Heritage Center Steven Leary Beatriz Collado Cru Campus Ministry LaTiara Love Bridget Monroe Marc Henderson The Links Inc. Altamonte Springs Chapter John Hintz Gloria Bryant Jennifer Anderson Richard Hall Ruth McDaniel

First Congregational Church of Winter Park Fairolyn Livingston Jamie Weiss Brittany Roberts

Family Laura Abram Ekaterina Abramova Kristin Abramson Kimberly Alch Cindy Anderson Ana-Klara Anderson Amy Armenia Sarah Arnold Danette Arroyo Corinne Audette Julie Azar Magda Bailey Nicole Baker Jim Baston Jonathan Bear Stefanie Bennett Dana Berisha Yunyuan Bi Gen Billedeau Donne Bitner Samira Blommel Kari Bonestroo Kellie Brinker Vicki Brodnax Paige Brunault Stacy Bucek Cathy Buckland Davi Budnik Emily Burgess Chris Calder Trevor Campbell Rebecca Carr Jennifer Carter Kelly Cary Monica Castillo David Cavalleri Patricia Cavazos Yagmur Cetin Tas Cynthia Chanatry Randall Chapman Hong Chen Enid Childs Emma Chong Christie Cichra Hind Cocen Ashley Cockayne Kate Collins

Gail Colman Rhodora Conricode Hilary Cooperman Amanda Cronin Cathy Dailey Allison D’Anna Susan Davenport Marsha DeBroske Dana DeClerk Lauren Detzel Walter Dewar Michele Dicus Sarah Dizney Erika Doss Nicki Drumb Mariah Dyan Malagian Rosaura Elias-Trujillo Xiao Fang Tiffany Feinberg Barbara Felkel John Forrester Alicja Fournier Jennifer French Dan Gable Diana Galante Renee Garrett Laura Garza-Huizar Kim Giovanoli Victor Gomez Jennifer Gonzalez Latria Graham Lori Hall Charles Hamilton Gina Hanna George Hardy Michelle Harmer Heidi Harne Ketti Harrison Kathy Henriquez Vivian Hirston-Bowden Janette Hobbs Michael Hodges Laurel Holmes Keith Jenkins Linda Johnson Penny Jordan Angela Kamm Patty Kane Salsabeel Khan Jennifer Kimball Brian Kimsey-Hickman Dawn Knight Annette Kodera

Martha Kuffskie Willy Lai Nelly Lama Kristen Lancaster Julie LaRosa Darcy LeBlanc Jeni Leemis Shannon Letcher Nancy Lockwood Amy Lorengo Caitlen Lyberg Katherine MacDiarmid Zinthia MacFarlane Mariah Malagian Roman Malkin Loijielyn Marasigan Mary Martin Phyllis Martin Shelley Mathews Anna McPherson Jennifer Mercado Sharon Mignardi Jackie Miller Matt Miller Betty Mittleman Kenneth Mohr Steffany Morel Cindy Murray Bryn Nadeau Marilynn Nelson Thanh Nguyen Betsy Owens Megan Pardick Maritza Parks Shaunessey Peck Antje Pepper Allison Perez Liza Pettingill Eliza Pineau Casler Gary Plancher Amanda Plesa Brenda Polczynski Carolyn Polomski Don Preble Brenda Pritts Amanda Rady Kalpana Raman Vernellia Randall Suzie Reas Shelby Reid Stella Ren Maribeth Reyes Patricia Richardson 2019 ANNUAL REPORT 29


Members and Contributors Mari Rivera April Robbins Margaret Rodriguez Kira Rodriguez Andrea Romero Greg Root Marianna Ross Shalini Roy Judith Rubin Linda Rumsey Courtney Salmons Joan Sanchez Angela Sander Norma Sardy Marc Sardy Heidi Savage Dick Scheibe Barbara Scott Michael Seif Peter Shapiro Tiffani Sheehan Barbara Sills Luciana Silva Kelly Six Porter Smith Paula Smith Anna Smith Garvin Smith Louise Sprimont Tammy Stafford Kathy Stecker Mary Lynn Stevens Helen Stone Donna Story Vitoria Suplicy Luwei Tao Agnieszka Tarnawska Grey Thornberry Heather Torre Michelle Tracey Steve Trofatter Acela Troffer Fulya Ugur Claudia Vanuno Thanh Vo Susan Walker Tanya Warman Peter Westlake Karen Wetteland Dan Wilcox Pam Willoughby Brittany Winder Stephen Withers 30 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

Bill Wood Ying Wu Shin Young Yang Terri Zollinger

Individuals Lisa Acuna Carla Adduci Laurie Akers Faisal Alawadhi Kimberly Alch Megan Alexander Eileen Allen Isis Alsina Raul Alvarez Jari Alvarez Tom Alvarez Felipe Andiarena Kristie Ansley Graham Aplin Stella Arbelaez Christina Armendariz Danielle Arora Beatrice Athanas Holly Austin Howard Axner Suzanne Bagley Sandi Baier Donna Baker Jolie Baldanza Pat Barbee Melanie Barker Patrick Barnes Kariti Barre Stacy Barter Brenda Bartnick Janie Baskin Julie Bauer James Baughman Michael Bazor Dan Beard Sherry Bears Rebecca Bearup Eddie Beis Patricia Benishek Michelle Bennett Pedro Rafael Berrios Louisa Berry Tyler Berthoff James Bessey John Bettin Jennifer Bevan Bushra Bhatti Peter Bianchetta

Julia Bilski Bridget Bird Jim Bittle Debra Blaine Veronica Bleakley Sarah Bloodgood Stuart Bogue Derek Bohn Ruth Bond Cheryl Boyer Theresa Bradley Kathryn Brohl Kelaine Brothers Lawrence Brown Kevin Brown Carolyn Bruce Danielle Bruehl Davi Budnik Jane Burford Kaila Burke Susan Butler Martha Caban Carley Caldwell Kathleen Callaghan Skylar Calzada Robert Cambridge, Sr. Katy Camp Barbara Campbell Katie Cantlon Alice Caraballo Thomas Carmon Ann Carreon Yelitza Carvajal Mildred Casaretti Jennifer Castro Andrea Castro Paula Castro Sandra Cawthern Zara Cestero Carolyn Chace Shree Chauhan Tina Chenault Natalia Cherevko Eun Cho Jennifer Clark Gay Clayton Becky Clisch Hind Cocen Alexandria Coleman Kevin Coleman Lynn Collins Kate Collins Gail Colman

Marilyn Colon Anne-Marie Colwell Kat Cook Mary Jo Corbett Carol Corder Amanda Cortes Igna Cote Lesley Cross Corbie Crouse Elizabeth Cuccuro Cheryl Cuellar Laura Culhane Candace Curtis Laura Cuty-Ruiz Amanda Czop Carissa D’amelio Ansel Daniel Kathy Danna Howard Daughtrey Richard Davidson Myah Davie Marissa Davila Alina Davis Nicole Davis Jack Davis Eby Day Adriana De Azevedo Chris Deason Jing Debaere Helen DeBevoise Madison Deener Julie Dees Yulia Deeter Prayong Deeying Danielle Deguglimo Katie Deits Laurie Delaney Kim DenBeste Christopher Denion Jackie Denning Maggie DeVane Carmen Diaz Sarah Dickerman Nancy Dinkel Jennifer Dostie Era Drake Judy Drewett Lisa Drury James Dumas Valerie Duncan Joseph Dunn, Jr. Debra Dykes Mila Dykes


Members and Contributors Jeannie Economos Tabatha Eggleston Gary Ehrlich Esther Elliott Sinead Elmor Nada Elzeidy Linda Ericksson Denise Ertler Fiorella Escalon Maite Escudero Noelle Eslick Robert Estevez Barbara Estevez Connie Ettelson Yasmin Fakhoury Beverly Falls Jaime Ferguson Anna Ferguson Frannie Ferrara Carolina Figueroa Barbara Fischler Joseph Fisher Joseph Fisher Andrew FitzPatrick Vera Flores Shiniko Floyd John Forrester Todd Fox Victoria Francis Mary Freisinger Wendy Frey Mary Fruhwirth Sandra Fuller Julia Gagne Sidney Galpern Roberto Garcia Nicole Garner Grant Gessel Jason Gillespie Kristina Girard Hugo Giraud Erin Givens Nurit Goffer Devyn Going Victor Gomez David Goode Steven Gordiany Joann Gould Mary Gouvellis Tiffany Gower Melissa GranberryPranke Andrew Grant Mervyn Grant

Alexandra Gravett Mary J Gray Karen Green Michelle Greenwald Theresa Griffiths Charlie Grindrod Courtney Grodack Kelly Grosse Vera Gubnitskaia Svetlana Gubnitskaya Lorena Guimaraes Viyan Hadeghi Ashley Haering Colleen Hage Kay Hall Melinda Hamilton Donnue Hamulak Claire Hansen Lynette Hardin Barbara Hart Aisling Hartin Laurie Hasan Marilyn Hatchett Shelley Hatfield Nydia Hawthorne Miriam Hellinger Mary Hense Jeanette Hermansson Eileen Hernandez Peter Herzog Bret Hill Zorriya Hines Sara Hoefler Evan Hoffman Bob Holden David Hollenbach Diana Hough Sonya Hough Jerry Howard Ed Hull Christy Hultberg Michelle Humphrey Davi Hunton Nancy Huyck Karen Iaccarino Misoon Im John Ingoglia Kathy Irvine Rakhee Jain Caroline James Jason Jankowski Margaret Jasinski Jasmine Jaucian

Marie Jenne Linda Johnson Kelli Johnson Ashley Jones Gerald Jowers Donald Kahrs Daniel Keister Darlene Keller Sharon Kelly Michele Kennedy Seeta Khanna Benton Kim Rachel Kinbar Luciana King Yannick Kinnie Margaret Kinst Devin Kirkpatrick Leslie Kirschner Rebecca Klingsten Sara Koczan Bob Kodzis Blanca Kogl Carol Kolp Maria Kortlever Earis Koufos Jeff Kraus Anuradha Krishnan Christine Kuerth Meghan Lacey Lyn Lacey Ellen LaGrone Rachel Lamb Angie Lamolinara Debra Lane Terrie Lang Valerie Lassman Maria Lawrence Caroline Lazar Nancy Leck Francisco Lederman Kate Lee Herzyl Legaspi Anita Legler Katie Lehr Tony Leonard Sharyn Leonard Diane Levine Richard Levine Dazhong Li Ken Lichtenberger Amy Liebmann Rejane Lima Galina Lioubina

Tom Lochrane Renee Lomas Julio Londono Caridad Lopez Kathy Lundy Faye MacDowellGonzalez Penny MacFarland Traci Maclaine Anita Magoon Mays Mahayni Michelle Maldonado Christine Malgoza Mike Malloy Reva Malloy Linda Mann Gregoria Marrero Linda Marsteller Melody Martin Chalender Martina Silvana Martins Maurizio Maso Shelley Mathews Jennifer Mattison Donald McCloskey Mike McCorkle Mary Anne McCunn Mary McCurdy Lori McDowell Beverlye McNair Kayleigh McRae Cindy Meadows Lori Mejias Mercedes Mendez Geraldine Merrill Joanne Merrill Edward Meyer George Meyers Divina Mezydlo Lyndol Michael Climaco Maurice Middendorf Colleen Mielke Alita Mikiten Amanda Miley Dainya Miller Russ Miller Teri Mills-Uvalle Gary Minor Patty Moenssens Yaneth Montalve Sandra Montes Marsha Montgomery Jennifer Moore 2019 ANNUAL REPORT 31


Members and Contributors Individuals (continued) Amber Moreau Elizabeth Morrison Christine Morton Yvette Motter Deborah Murray Edward Murtha Igor Muzychuk John Nadeau Leticia Nebbiai-Rieman Kelly Negvesky Marilynn Nelson David Newell Debra Newman Kelly Newman Danielle Newton Angela Nguyen Laurie Nicolai-Ramsey Vanessa Nieves Maribel Nieves Renee Nixon Eva Nyizsnyanszki Bonnie O’Connell Dana O’Connor Karla Orellano Esra Orer Enrique Ortiz Aida Ortiz Rosemary O’Shea Mark Osterberg Pamela O’Toole Patricia Owen Antonio Pabon John Page Cheryl Parker Katherine Parry Rebecca Pasantes Jessica Pedraza Kathleen Pequignot William Perretti Barbara Perrotti Pamela Peters Merline Petion Tatyana Petrovich Plinio Pinto Judy Plett Jean Polarolo Leslie Postal Marty Potter Louise Prairie Dejun Qian Roman Quitoriano Joy Racanelli 32 CREALDÉ SCHOOL OF ART

Linda Rackley Erica Jo Rago Charles Rahn Cheryl Railey Maria Ramirez Jan Ramsay Sri Rao Mary Recchia Brown Stockton Reeves Katie Reischmann Orit Reuben Maybel Reyes Jarrod Reynolds Nilsa Rezzonico Nicki Rhee Toni Rhines Janey Rice Robert Rich Cherie Rieck Elizabeth Roberts Kimberly Roberts Lisa Roberts Aida Robles Guadalupe Rocha Felix Rodriguez Sarah Romsa Kathleen Rooney Jody Rousseau John Ruggiero Linda Rumsey Frances Ryan Gary Sacheck Charlotte Sadtler Maroocia Saint-Jean Juan Salamanca Kim Saltzer Lisa San Filippo Giannina Sanchez-Masi Judy Sandefur Anne Sandoval Ann Sapp Vashon Sarkisian Karen Saslaw Renuka Sastri Linda Saunders Heidi Savage Kelly Sawyer Deborah Schick Cyndi Schieffelin Patricia Schoene Joella Schroeder Nicholas Schulman Narita Schultz

Katrina Schulz Mitch Scott Joshua Seif Marcia Selleri Debra Sellers Octavio Serrano Ellie Shafer Bonnie Shapiro Diana Sharkey Lisa Sheppard Steve Sherrill Shamsah Shidi Gwen Shirley Nicole Sidwar Kristen Silvay Lisa Silvershein Heidi Simbolick Charlotte Simons Deborah Sims Cyndy Sineni Dana Singer Anju Singh Lori Singletary Paul Skomsky Porter Smith Joyce Smith David Smith Frederick Smith Sharon Smoley Cathleen Snead Mikayela Solomons Gladiola Sotomayor Linda Southard Jodi Spector Andrea Sperling Katelyn Spurlock Karla Staker Betsy Stange Diane Stapleton Kathy Stecker Rissah Steele Eleanor Stettner Samantha Stigler Vicky Sudik Enid Swift Andrea Swope Ola Szelag Darelyn Talbott Deborah Tallungan Luwei Tao Agnieszka Tarnawska Clara Tatum Stella Terenteva

David Teske Keith Thomas Claudia Thomas Patricia Thompson Qurentia Throm Rauel Tirado Luca Travesso Sigrid Trujillo Deborah Updike John Upperco Juan Valazquez Claudia Vanuno Christine Varela Sahra Vargas Monica Vasquez Mirna Vega Sharon Verhoef Lillian Verkins Olena Virichenko Kim Vu Anne Walker Elida Wallack Kathleen Walsh Heather Walsh Dawn Watkins Wendy Waxman Jennifer Weader Catherine Weibel Sharon Weil Karen Wells Kimberly Wessel Molly White Jordan White Rebecca Wilkinson Karen Williams Venessa Williams George Williams Suzanne Wilson Sherri Winston Lauren Winston Nicki Wise Marianne Wolda Jody Wolf Christine Wong Heather Wood Asia Woodbury Angela Workinger Ileana Worrall C Wray Marian Wright Kellen Wright Xuyang Xie Shin Yang


Members and Contributors Rain Yates Penny Yochum Karyl Young Jie Yu Debbie Zacharias Lauren Zastrow Nan Zheng Hongjie Zhu Mary Zimmerman Terri Zollinger Nancy Albright Carol Andreyev William Ashby Barbara Bailey Donna Baker Anita Bartels Stacy Barter Lauren Beers Lauren Beers Ray Betler Raymond Betler Samira Blommel Randall Brown Judith Burridge Michael Cantillo Sandra Carbone Al Castellana Kiara Castillo Lawanza Charlton Colleen Cleary Becky Clisch Carolyn Coleman Paul Conway Cristina Cruz Howard Daughtry Paula Davis Adriana De Azevedo Prayong Deeying Yazmin Del Valle Carmen Diaz Vaughn Dunham Vaughn Dunham Mila Dykes Tiva Emerson Barbara Estevez Patricia Ezzard Stafford Ezzard Nicole Fournier Keith Gardner Belinda Glennon Sharon Good Madeline Gordon Kathie Green Betsy Gwinn

Ronald Habin Fabiola Hansen Tia Harris Piper Head Robert Heller Catherine Hempel Gloria Hill Diana Houle Wania Howard Bonnie Hubbard Patricia Jenkins Allan Jones Robin Katz Tara Kaufmann Susan Kuhlman Linda Lacombe Bill Lambert Paul Lartonoix Mary Lidkea Willy Lopez Kris Lyden Francille Macfarland Vadim Malkin Silvana Martins John McConnell Lynne McCoy Lyndol Michael Kristy Montgomery Elizabeth Moore Sonia Mueller Anne Olenek Maxwell Osborne Stacy Panepinto Samantha Panepinto Rosemarie Pell Marsee Perkins Leah Pertot Flora Pinder Rolly Reel Elizabeth Roberts Shakira Rodriguez Julia Rutkowski Mariolina Salvatori Luis Sanchez-Masi Dennis Schmalstig Patricia Schoene Diana Sharkey Lindy Shepherd Arthur Shevchenko Cynthia Slaughter Katty Smith Heather Sooder Andrea Springhart Betsy Stange

Elizabeth Strange Yagmur Tas Lee Tavel Harlan Trammell Deborah Umphrey Nancy Wahl Michael Walsh Yang Wang Max Watzman Craig Weeks Cindy Wilkerson Sarena Wilkerson Sharon Wirag Christine Wong Karin Wood

Corporate & Business Art Systems of Florida Citizens for Florida Arts, Inc. Colonial Photo & Hobby Diversity Window Solutions Dr. Phillips Foundation Edyth Bush Charitable Foundation Effective Financial Services English-Speaking Union, Central Florida Branch Florida Clay Art Florida Humanities Council Jacoda Family Foundation Kiwi Camera Services Lure Design Matthew’s Gallery & Florida Frame House Metal Supermarket Opus 1 Orlando Magic Orlando Utilities Commission Pinder Rehabilitative Services Rotary Club of Winter Park Charitable Foundation Sam Flax Art Supply St. Margaret Mary Outreach Fund The Central Florida Foundation The James T. Barnes Foundation

The Nelson Family Trust The Robert G. and Ellen S. Gutenstein Family Foundation The Walt Disney World “Ears to You” Program United Arts of Central Florida Waste Pro USA, Inc

In Kind Trevor Birdsall Suzanne Grantham Sandro Pelicié Perez Robert Rolle Jan La Coste Suzanne Grantham G. Adair Ratliff Barbara Russo Carol Tague Percy Maynard Carrie Berry Michael Rausch Michael Cantillo Ruben Madrid Chuck Wyre Belinda Glennon Devyn Going Don Sondag Matthew Cornell

Honorary Brandon Arrington George Bahler George Bolge Robert Bowden Shannon Fitzgerald Glen Gentele Mark Harmon Ena Heller Melinda Horton Pam Kancher Debbie Komanski Robert Lemon Ed Moore N.Y. Nathiri JoAnn Newman Betsy Owens Mike Perkins Crystal Recktenwald Lawrence Ruggiero Jeffrey Shonkwiler Susan Skofield Sara Van Arsdel

2019 ANNUAL REPORT 33


CrealdĂŠ School of Art is a nonprofit art organization supported in part by memberships; United Arts of Central Florida; the City of Winter Park; Orange County Government through the Arts & Cultural Affairs Program; the State of Florida, Division of Cultural Affairs; the Florida Arts Council; the National Endowment for the Arts; and various private foundations.


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