JULY 1, 2019–JUNE 30, 2020
BEHIND THE SCENES Behind the Scenes
Fiscal Year 2020 Annual Report
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MESSAGE FROM THE DIRECTOR
No one could have imagined the depth or nature of the global crises that erupted last year. Human suffering was felt around the world, in our community, and inside the museum. COVID-19 made for a year unprecedented in our lifetimes, and George Floyd’s murder sparked a level of overdue reflection and action. 2020 opened our eyes, our minds, and our hearts - forever. While the pandemic forced the closure of the museum, it did not stop our dedicated staff from working tirelessly to prepare to reopen, with new safety protocols firmly in place. They simultaneously rescheduled exhibitions, supplied rich digital content including home art projects, shipped museum store purchases across the country, and communicated our rapidly changing status to the community. Our curators, conservators, and exhibitions teams, along with every department and staff member, continued preparing to serve the public again. We listened to many voices inside and outside of the Museum. We recognized and acknowledged the reality of racism and unconscious bias in our midst. We vowed to dismantle it as we embraced the principles of diversity, equity, access, and inclusion - and to exemplify that decision in the composition of our collections, acquisitions, exhibitions, and staffing. We have begun to work diligently on making sure that Black Lives Matter within TMA and the community we serve, not just for the moment, but permanently. We have worked to build a communitycentered strategic plan to guide us through the coming years as we strive to become the model art museum in this country. The goals we are pursuing are innovative and ambitious, but eminently achievable. The gratitude we feel toward the community, our employees, our members, donors, and community partners - everyone who has supported the museum during this time - cannot be overstated. We simply cannot be what we are meant to be, without you. This year’s annual report takes you “Behind the Scenes” at the Museum, highlighting the people and processes that make it the special place that it is. Our goal is to ensure that the Toledo Museum of Art, your museum, will always offer an enduring connection to you and the entire community; a place where everyone belongs and everyone can learn, enjoy, participate, and be comforted by the beauty of art.
Adam M. Levine Edward Drummond and Florence Scott Libbey President, Director and CEO
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Table of Contents
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BEHIND THE SCENES
CURATORS AND COLLECTIONS: EXCEPTIONAL QUALITY
CONSERVATION IS CRITICAL: HOW ART LIVES ACROSS THE CENTURIES
A look at the dozens of dedicated professionals working to make your visit an exceptional experience.
Pages 1 – 3
Each TMA curator brings special expertise to the collection and a commitment to quality.
Pages 4 – 7
Art conservators apply their scientific and artistic skills to maintain our collection for generations to come.
Pages 8 – 13
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WHY I BELONG: THE BEAUTY OF CONNECTION
LOOKING TO THE FUTURE: DOCUMENTING A YEAR OF TRANSITION AT TMA
EXHIBITIONS & ACQUISITIONS
IMPACT & DONORS
A remarkable array of exciting exhibitions filled TMA galleries, offering many opportunities to enjoy art.
The generosity of our donors continues to make TMA an exceptional museum.
TMA is a place where everyone belongs and can learn, enjoy, and be impacted by art.
Pages 14 – 17
In a year filled with changes, there were still enduring connections with visitors and community.
Pages 18 – 21
Pages 56 – 77 Pages 22 – 55
1 BEHIND THE SCENES Each exhibition and every addition of a work of art to our permanent collection is attended by the expertise of our curators. From seeking the highest quality acquisitions, to planning and managing numerous exhibition details, curators are at the heart of building our enviable collection and creating and developing exhilarating exhibitions.
LEFT TMA preparators Jason DePriest (left) and Russ Curry (right) carefully pack LJ Roberts quilt VanDykes TransDykes TranVan TransGrandmxDykes TransAmDentalDamDamn (2014-20), mixed media
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In 2020, they brought a remarkable array of opportunities to be impacted by art to Toledo – from artist Anila Quayyum Agha’s Between Light and Shadow, a “contemplation on the nature of boundaries and alienation,” to Yayoi Kusama’s Fireflies on the Water, an immersive and breathtaking installation of lights and mirrors, creating the feeling of infinite space. We were encouraged to step into the lives of others in artist Alison Saar’s Mirror, Mirror, where she shared her experiences as a biracial woman, showcasing prints and sculptures that address social and political injustice. One of the most important paintings in our collection, Camille Pissarro’s Still Life of 1867, was the focus of One Each, a compilation of the still lifes of six revolutionary French artists, painting in the 1860’s.
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ABOVE Art Preparators John Hummel (left) and Joe LaLonde (right) hanging Quilt 8 (The Cartographer’s Conundrum) by Sanford Biggers (2012) for the exhibition Radical Tradition: American Quilts and Social Change.
RIGHT Samuel H. Kress Conservation Fellow Marissa Stevenson reviewing the conservation condition report for The International Honor Quilt (1980) during the exhibition installation of Radical Tradition: American Quilts and Social Change.
New acquisitions included contemporary artist Bisa Butler’s dynamic quilted portrait of abolitionist Frederick Douglass, The Storm, the Whirlwind and the Earthquake and Hugo Simberg’s painting from the Finnish Golden Age, A Sea View. Pablo Picasso’s lush linocut print, Still Life with Glass Under the Lamp became part of our permanent collection thanks to the Georgia Welles Apollo Society, a group of generous donors who fund the purchase of art for TMA annually. Behind the scenes of our museum, dozens of dedicated professionals work to ensure that everyone who visits will leave with a cherished experience that beckons them to return for more. n
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I am most proud of my contribution to the augmentation of the international, national, regional and local reputation of Toledo Museum of Art. Lawrence W. Nichols William Hutton Senior Curator, European and American Painting and Sculpture before 1900
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2 CURATORS AND COLLECTIONS: EXCEPTIONAL QUALITY At the heart of the Toledo Museum of Art’s remarkable collection lies a steadfast commitment to quality, among the most inclusive and egalitarian of concepts. Only the best of the best artworks are acquired for the Museum. This fiscal year, our curators sought art that broadens the narrative of art history and offers visitors a reflection of themselves and their histories.
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This year’s acquisitions, whether contemporary or classical, mirrored these beliefs – while maintaining the highest standards of quality. Our curators hold an equally impressive collective expertise that is rivaled only by the depth of their commitment to the Museum and the work they accomplish here. Each one has something they are most proud of accomplishing for the museum and the community. n
I am most proud of expanding TMA’s collection to include artists who are significantly underrepresented: those who identify as female, LGBTQ and BIPOC. Diane Wright Senior Curator of Glass & Contemporary Craft
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The thing I am most proud of doing as the Associate Curator of American Art at the Toledo Museum of Art, is deepening the Museum’s commitment to broadening the narrative of art history, both through exhibitions and new acquisitions. Lauren Applebaum, PhD Associate Curator of American Art
Since arriving at the Toledo Museum of Art I have consciously sought to diversify and raise the visibility of TMA’s works on paper collection. I am proud of my many acquisitions that give voice to a scope of artists from various cultural and historical traditions, including works created by Wesaam Al-Badry, Mary Cassatt, LaToya Ruby Fraser, Jeffrey Gibson, Angelika Kaufmann, Ernst L. Kirchner, Aïda Muluneh, Alison Saar, Kara Walker, Wendy Red Star, and William Villalongo, among others. Robin Reisenfeld Senior Curator of Works on Paper
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3 CONSERVATION IS CRITICAL: HOW ART LIVES ACROSS THE CENTURIES LEFT Summer Conservation Interns (preprogram) Jennifer Beetem (left) and Olivia Schoenfeld (right) apply a protective wax coating to Pinkerton by Jun Kaneko (2004) during the seasonal conservation maintenance of outdoor sculpture.
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We are privileged to view works of art created centuries before our existence. The fact that we can do so bears testimony to the work of many talented art conservators. Without their vast knowledge of art and science, coupled with the skilled application of that knowledge to each treasure in the Museum, we would not have the scope and breadth of artists’ works to enjoy today. Suzanne Hargrove, Head of Conservation at the Toledo Museum of Art, is committed to achieving the twin goals of preserving the longevity of each object and offering museum visitors the best experience possible with the art. Her work ensures that objects will be protected from extreme temperatures, exposure to certain types of light, and high humidity. Conservation Fellow Emily Cummins treating the delicate painted surface on a Torres Strait Islanders Mask (late 19th C).
LEFT Conservation Fellow Emily Cummins and Emmett Lodge (Contract Conservator of Industrial Coatings and Painted Surfaces for McKay Lodge Inc.) applying finishing touch up paint to the newly repainted and reinstalled Stegosaurus by Alexander Calder (1972-1973).
RIGHT Head of Conservation Suzanne Hargrove examining a gilt and enameled Mughal Dynasty glass plate (late 18th C.), the foreground shows a Mughal Style bracelet containing emeralds, diamonds, rubies, gold and enamel (19th C).
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I am most proud of being a mentor to students who are interested in becoming art conservators. I give them the same support that I received from industry professionals when I first started in this career. Providing opportunities for others benefits both the museum and contributes to launching the careers of students seeking work in the field of art conservation. Suzanne Hargrove Head of Conservation
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TOP Samuel H. Kress Conservation Fellow Marissa Stevenson (top), Conservation Technician Jeff Boyer (lower left), and Archivist Julie McMaster (lower right) delicately position the Libbey Spun Glass Dress (Chicago World’s Fair, 1893) for photography.
LEFT Samuel H. Kress Conservation Fellow Marissa Stevenson stabilizing a small hole on Martha Pettway’s Housetop, Half-Log Cabin variation quilt (1930s) recently acquired from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation.
If you have ever wondered how so many works of art from decades past still exist at the Toledo Museum of Art today, the answer lies in the critical role art conservators play here. A combination of preventative maintenance of objects, coupled with expert techniques for scientific analysis and fine hand skills for repairing, help preserve the collection for future generations to enjoy. The preventative role requires protecting art from excess humidity, temperatures and exposure to certain types of light. The work of art repair and restoration involves detailed examination, analytical testing, and direct treatment of objects. Conservation activities can range from repairing worn textiles with thread smaller in diameter than a human hair, to recreating damaged gold surfaces and reassembling ancient ceramics. n
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I became a member to support the best place in Toledo. I love the TMA! @terigthomas
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4 WHY I BELONG: THE BEAUTY OF CONNECTION What power lies within an art museum’s collection? What value does it possess beyond its monetary worth? Can it achieve something beyond its ability to educate and entertain? The resounding answer is “yes!’” especially when it fosters a deep sense of belonging. The Toledo Museum of Art is planning and creating a museum for everyone!
LEFT A family enjoying art in the Glass Pavilion.
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People love the Toledo Museum of Art and its collection, because of the personal experiences and memories they have shared within its galleries. They care about the growth and preservation of these special experiences and they join the museum to help support them. They know that they have been impacted by art, and by the shared joy of engaging with it. Wine tasting events are always exciting, especially when surrounded by art in the Glass Pavilion.
To learn about art is to learn about one’s self. The appreciation of art becomes a new lens through which to view life and the world around us. It creates a sense of belonging, engages the mind, and connects the heart to the experience of being human. n
Why WOULDN’T I support my 2nd home??
One of the best art museums in the U.S. It is a true gem. I live in Northern Michigan now and the museum is one of the things I miss most about Toledo. Proud to be a member.
@artofgregjustus
@deborahk9824 TOP RIGHT Friends exploring art in Classic Court and having a great time!
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The Toledo Museum of Art has so many wonderful programs and offerings. Being a Museum Member means you can occasionally get an inside track on exhibits or events or performances or classes. During the Pandemic the Museum had several programs that allowed us to do something with our small family group in a socially distant, safe way! @mojerzgirl
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5 LOOKING TO THE FUTURE: DOCUMENTING A YEAR OF TRANSITION AT TMA TMA Annual Report
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EDWARD DRUMMOND AND FLORENCE SCOTT LIBBEY DIRECTOR AND CEO
NINTH DIRECTOR
TENTH DIRECTOR
ELEVENTH DIRECTOR
Brian P. Kennedy
John Stanley
Adam Levine
The year 2020 was filled with transitions for the Toledo Museum Art — from the departure of its ninth director, Brian P. Kennedy and the special appointment of John Stanley as the Museum’s 10th director, to the selection and return of Adam Levine as the 11th Edward Drummond and Florence Scott Libbey director and CEO of the Museum. The campus of TMA changed too, with the completion of a new sculpture studio at 521 W. Woodruff Avenue, after the demolition of the 50-year-old Glass-Crafts building the previous year. The pandemic left its temporary imprint, from signage directing the sociallydistanced flow of visitors to the appearance of plexiglass partitions and hand-sanitizing stations inside the Museum.
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The TMA campus shown with signage welcoming visitors back. Many areas of the Museum displayed information to help with social distancing and re-opening information.
Inside the Museum, visitors were aided in maintaining social distance by using signage applied to the floors and enjoyed the safety provided by plexiglass barriers.
While change and transformation played a significant role in shaping the events of the year, TMA held onto the reins of progress tightly, staying on course in its execution of the Polishing the Gem campaign. Important strategic goals and plans remained intact, including efforts to invite and encourage new and diverse visitors, the creation of educational programs focused on community outreach, and broadening the narrative of art history through acquisitions and exhibitions.
In a year when so much was difficult and unpredictable, one thing remained clear: the enduring connection between the Toledo Museum of Art and its community, visitors, donors, volunteers and staff. n
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6 EXHIBITIONS & ACQUISITIONS
LEFT Artist Yayoi Kusama’s Fireflies on the Water, a breath-taking installation using water, mirrors and light to create the perception of infinite space.
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GLOBAL CONVERSATIONS: ART IN DIALOGUE March 9, 2019 2019–August — August16, 16,2020 2020 Over the last 50 years, many socioeconomic, political, and technological changes—including the proliferation of independence movements, the fall of Communism in Europe, the rise of China as a superpower, and the advent of the internet—have contributed to an increasingly globalized world. Art has been an essential part of that cultural shift. In the last ten years, the Toledo Museum of Art has sought to expand its collection of global contemporary art, ensuring that our audiences can see some of the most compelling art currently being made by artists from around the world.
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Museum visitors discussing global contemporary art acquisitions.
Global Conversations: Art in Dialogue highlights these acquisitions, many on display for the first time, while placing them in context with global works that have been in the Museum’s collection since the 1980s and 1990s. It also includes examples of older, traditional forms of art that resonate with or inform some of the contemporary
works. The exhibition showcases the breadth of innovative artmaking approaches practiced by contemporary artists from a wide array of geographic regions (including Europe and the United States) and explores the many powerful ways they engage with issues facing the world in the 21st century, such as immigration, the environment, the digital revolution, and responses to history, tradition, and cross-cultural influences.
This exhibition is sponsored by the Ohio Arts Council with additional support from 2019 Exhibition Program Sponsor ProMedica.
Presented together in dialogue with each other, these works offer deeper insight into the interconnectedness of the world around us, the experiences of people of many cultures, and the yearning for creative expression that unites all people in our shared humanity.
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“EVERYTHING IS RHYTHM”: MID-CENTURY ART AND MUSIC April 6, 2019 — February 23, 2020
Music and visual art have long shared close affinities, often inspiring each other trading motifs and philosophies. Both forms of expression are brought together in harmony in this multisensory exhibition, which pairs 14 masterpieces from the collection with carefully selected musical compositions. The majority of the paintings presented here are from the 1950s to the 1970s, an era when artists boldly experimented with abstraction, pushing the boundaries of what constituted painting. The musical companions to these works similarly embrace a range of ideas and questions about the nature of music.
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Everything is rhythm—everything. Larry Poons
The visual and musical works have been purposefully paired for a variety of reasons— in some instances, the composer and artist were known to one another and shared a special bond; in others, the musical composition and artwork may share similar formal concerns about space, time, harmony, and rhythm. Presented together, the art and music engage the senses in a way that simultaneously engenders close looking, contemplation, and a consideration of the connection between visual and auditory art forms.
This exhibition was inspired by EARIEYE: Listening and Looking, Contemporary Music and Art; the Museum’s ongoing collaborative performance program with composer Marilyn Shrude and Bowling Green State University’s College of Musical Arts.
“Everything is Rhythm”: Mid-Century Art & Music is sponsored by the Ohio Arts Council, additional support from 2019 Exhibition Program Sponsor ProMedica, and a gift from the estate of Rachel Merrill.
Museum visitors experiencing the multisensory impact of exhibition: Everything is Rhythm: Mid-Century Art & Music
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GLOBAL LIFE IS ACONVERSATIONS: HIGHWAY: ART AND ARTAMERICAN IN DIALOGUE CAR CULTURE March June 15,9,2019 2019–August — September 16, 2020 15, 2019
Americans have always been on the move. Decades before the automobile’s invention, the notion of mobility became firmly instilled in the collective imagination of the U.S. as a defining feature of the 19th-century doctrine of Manifest Destiny (the belief in the nation’s “God-given” right to territorial expansion). By the early 20th century, the symbolic role once played by the railroad, which had offered the opportunity for escape and adventure, had been inherited by the automobile—along with the promise of mobility and freedom and the possibility of changing one’s life by simply “moving on.”
Artists presented diverse perspectives of the role cars have played in American life.
Life Is a Highway: Art and American Car Culture celebrates the rich inventiveness and wide variety of artistic approaches inspired by the automobile as an evolving symbol of American identity. Treated in four thematic groupings (Emergence of the Automobile; On the Road; Environments: The City, The Suburbs, and Auto Terrains; and Car Therapy), the exhibition presents car culture’s deeply entwined relationship with American society through more than 150 works that span the 20th century.
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Unfolding chronologically, Life Is a Highway charts three phenomena that artists have pursued within American car culture’s relatively brief history. Initially embraced as a symbol of technological progress, by the 1920s the automobile had become closely attached to notions of labor and community values that were deeply rooted in the Midwestern manufacturing regions that gave rise to the auto industry, an association that intrigued many artists. After World War II, the car kindled an explosion of visual imagery that drew upon it as an icon of postwar middle-class prosperity, freedom, and individualism in order to invoke a sense of personal and cultural identity. As the century advanced, artists’ attention migrated to how the forces of automotive culture altered city life, contributed to suburban sprawl, and indelibly transformed the American landscape. The diverse perspectives presented by the artists in this wide-ranging exhibition highlight the central role the car has played in American life. Offering both a celebration and a critique of its history, their varied accounts invite us to consider what role we wish automobile culture to play in our future.
Life is a Highway: Art and American Car Culture is presented by BP America with additional support from Taylor Cadillac, the Ohio Arts Council and 2019 Exhibition Program Sponsor ProMedica.
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ANILA QUAYYUM AGHA: BETWEEN LIGHT AND SHADOW
October 19, 2019 — February 9, 2020 Pakistani-American artist Anila Quayyum Agha (born 1965) uses light and cast shadows to create awe-inspiring spaces that reference her personal experiences with exclusion and belonging. Lit from within, the laser-cut steel sculptures project intricate patterns onto the surrounding walls. The patterns Agha uses are inspired by Islamic design motifs like those in the mosques of her childhood in Lahore, Pakistan— spaces of prayer that also operated as the center of community and creativity, which often excluded women. Each of the three installations exhibited here is a product of Agha’s own experience, both as a woman and as a migrant at the border of different faiths, cultures, and national identities.
Shadows cast by light passing through Anila Agha’s sculpture reflecting on Museum visitors.
Agha describes her work as “a contemplation on the nature of boundaries and alienation, and on the power of dialogue to transcend the barriers of gender, race, [and] religion…that prevent the true intersections and exchanges between cultures.” These immersive works create inclusive environments of meditation and wonder. The three installations, on loan from the artist, are displayed in individual galleries. The Greys in Between, 2018 Agha explores a sense of harmony among differences in The Greys in Between through two geometric shapes—a tetrahedron and octahedron—which project their shadows onto the surrounding walls as they slowly rotate around each other in midair. Intersections, 2013 Intersections draws inspiration from Agha’s visit to the Alhambra palace in southern Spain, a site initially built in 889, where Islamic and Western cultures intersect and co-exist. This is NOT a Refuge! 2, 2019 This is NOT a Refuge! 2 provokes a conversation about the loss of family and land due to displacement and resettlement. The warm light of a shelter beckons from afar. Upon close encounter, however, viewers find no entry, but have instead been cast as outsiders occupying the space between light and shadow. Soundscape This is NOT a Refuge: Voices: directed by Anila Agha; production and music by Harrison Edwards. Streamable at anilaagha.com/voices.
Anila Quayyum Agha: Between Light and Shadow is sponsored by KeyBank, the TMA Ambassadors, the Ohio Arts Council, Lathrop, and Gross Electric with additional support from 2019 Exhibition Program Sponsor ProMedica.
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AN INSPIRED AGE: SELECTIONS OF 18TH-CENTURY EUROPEAN ART FROM THE COLLECTION
November 2, 2019 — January 5, 2020 Since the August 2015 transition from a European painting gallery to exhibition space, many of TMA‘s 18th Century paintings have remained in storage.
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Under the guidance of University of Toledo professor Thor Mednick, liaising with the Museum’s Curatorial staff, the students of his Art Museum Practices course installed 15 paintings and sculptures of Italian, Dutch, French and British origin for this delightful exhibition.
EXPANDED VIEWS II: NATIVE AMERICAN ART IN FOCUS October 25, 2018 — April 28, 2019 The works of art by Native North American artists on display in this exhibition, offering a glimpse into the variety of traditions, practices, and voices that together inform Native American art, in both historical and contemporary forms.
soon after its founding in 1901, in recent years TMA has increased its efforts to broaden the scope of its acquisitions of singular works of art from cultures that traditionally have been underrepresented. Of particular interest for the Museum is enriching the collection with works of Native American art, presented in this recently renovated gallery in conversation with the other adjacent galleries of American art.
To highlight the historical reality that these artists have not always been the primary voices representing their own cultures, the installation was supplemented by works by non-Native artists that feature Native American themes from the Museum’s collection of 19th- and early 20thcentury American paintings.
Of note in the new display, which follows on the original installation of Expanded Views that opened in 2018 with three recent acquisitions—a beaded bag and a handwoven basket, both contemporary, and a remarkable example of early 20th-century Southwestern pueblo pottery—along with a rotating selection of Navajo textiles, on generous loan from the Crane American Indian Collection at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.
While the collection and promotion of outstanding examples of American art was an important focus of the Toledo Museum of Art’s curatorial strategy since
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YAYOI KUSAMA: FIREFLIES ON THE WATER July 21, 2020 — January 3, 2021
The Toledo Museum of Art was fortunate to share a special presentation of Yayoi Kusama’s Fireflies on the Water, one of Kusama’s awe-inspiring Infinity Mirror Rooms. TMA’s installation made possible through generous loan from the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Born in Japan in 1929, Yayoi Kusama’s artistic practice spans seven decades, and her paintings, sculptures, performances, and installations have left an indelible mark on both the art world and popular culture at large. Fireflies on the Water is
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part of Kusama’s ongoing investigation into the relationship between ourselves, the space that we occupy, and the ungraspable concept of infinity. An installation in an enclosed space featuring lights, water, and mirrors, Fireflies on the Water transports you to a space that seems endlessly expansive, allowing you to connect with the boundless creativity and singular vision of one of the most significant artists of our time.
Yayoi Kusama: Fireflies on the Water is presented by Taylor Cadillac and ProMedica with additional support from Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick, LLP and the Ohio Arts Council.
ONE EACH: STILL LIFES BY PISSARRO, CÉZANNE, MANET & FRIENDS
January 18, 2020 — August 23, 2020
This focus exhibition places in context one of the Toledo Museum of Art’s most important paintings, Camille Pissarro’s Still Life of 1867. TMA’s Pissarro painting was displayed with five other still lifes, painted in the 1860s by French artists Paul Cézanne, Gustave Courbet, Henri Fantin-Latour, Édouard Manet, and Claude Monet, many of whom would later be labeled “Impressionists and “Post-Impressionists.” Still lifes enjoyed renewed stature by the 1860s, in part the result of the revival of appreciation for the 18th-century French master of the genre, JeanBaptiste Siméon Chardin (1699–1779). The 1860s was also the decade in which the careers of many of these artists commenced.
“The Louvre will burn,” wrote the artist Antoine Guillemet in 1866, using incendiary language to describe and endorse the artistic revolution that Pissarro and Cézanne were unleashing with the shocking canvases they painted in the mid- to late 1860s. It was their goal to breathe into their art an audacity that reflected individuality, which they termed “sincerity.” The subject of the still lifes by these artists is as much the insistent display of how the paintings were created, as it is what is represented. Moreover, their legacy was their ambition to examine the aesthetics of solid forms as well as intangible space, a legacy evident in the Cubist creations of Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) and other Modernists at the outset of the 20th century.
This exhibition is organized by the Toledo Museum of Art and the Cincinnati Art Museum. ONE EACH: Still Lifes by Pissarro, Cézanne, Manet & Friends is sponsored by 2020 Exhibition Program Sponsors Taylor Cadillac and ProMedica, with additional support from the Ohio Arts Council and Galerie Coatalem, Paris, France.
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MIRROR, MIRROR: THE PRINTS OF ALISON SAAR
June 23, 2020 — July 26, 2020 From the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation
A retrospective exhibition, Mirror, Mirror: The Prints of Alison Saar showcases Saar’s extraordinary 35-year career as a printmaker. Like her corresponding sculptures (six are featured in this exhibition) that incorporate a love of found objects, the more than 30 vibrant graphic works displayed employ an unconventional approach towards materials and processes. A visual storyteller, her longtime engagement in printmaking centers most often on a single, human figure, usually female, to address the history of the African diaspora and related issues of gender, heritage, and spirituality. The artist’s multi-layered narratives build upon a combination of historical and literary references borrowed from various cultural traditions and periods, including African art and ritual, Greek mythology, and the sculptural traditions of both ancient Greek art and German Expressionism.
Artist Alison Saar’s sculpture: Mirror, Mirror; Mulatta Seeking Inner Negress
Saar’s expansive treatment extends to her use of materials and experimentation with printmaking in almost all of its forms. Referring to her prints as “quasi-sculptural,” Saar will print an image on used linen seed sacks, stained cotton rags, or vintage cotton handkerchiefs instead of traditional paper to make tangible the imagined events she depicts. In other cases, she incorporates collage elements, hand-applied pigments, shellac, and chine-collé (a layer of thin paper applied during printing). This practice is analogous to her sculptures that also are notable for their combination of materials, including ceramic, cotton bolls, wood, tar, wax, tin ceiling tiles, stone, silk, and cast bronze. Ranging from themes of social and political inequities to the inner realm of the spirit and her own experiences as a biracial woman, Saar’s buoyant, mixed-media prints offer the viewer an evocative, personal account of the black experience and its rich cultural and historical legacy.
Mirror, Mirror: The Prints of Alison Saar is sponsored by 2020 Exhibition Program Sponsor ProMedica with additional support from the Ohio Arts Council.
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THORNTON DIAL: TRIP TO THE MOUNTAINTOP Jun. 23, 2020 — Jul. 26, 2020
One of the best-known 20th-century artists from the southern United States, Thornton Dial (1928–2016) lived and worked in Bessemer, Alabama. After decades of employment as a metalworker at the Pullman Standard Plant, Dial began seriously pursuing his art in the early 1980s. Rooted in the vernacular tradition of yard arts that arose in the post-Civil War rural South, his large-scale mixed-media works and assemblage sculptures incorporate found materials and discarded objects. “I only want materials that have been used by people,” Dial has said, “but once they got the service out of them, they throwed them away.” Dial repurposes these materials to explore sociopolitical issues, from human rights and racism to war and natural disasters. Standing at eleven feet tall, Trip to the Mountaintop (2004) is an imposing presence, constructed from broken pieces of painted wood, yard furniture, plastic bags, scraps of torn work clothes, wire, and other found materials. Traversing these objects is a black velvet sash—a visual pathway that guides the viewer’s gaze up the mountain and through this difficult terrain. Dial’s sculpture references Martin Luther King, Jr.’s famous “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop” speech, which he gave in Memphis, Tennessee on April 3, 1968, just one day before his assassination. Calling for unity and nonviolent protest during a sanitation strike, King’s speech gave hope to those committed to the fight for Civil Rights and equal labor rights, but also foreshadowed his own death the following day.
Filled with debris and detritus that challenge the viewer and convey a sense of physical obstruction, Dial’s Trip to the Mountaintop—like King’s speech—expresses the continued struggle toward equality.
Thornton Dial: Trip to the Mountaintop is sponsored by 2020 Exhibition Program Sponsor ProMedica with additional support from the Ohio Arts Council.
We’ve got some difficult days ahead. But it really doesn’t matter with me now, because I’ve been to the mountaintop. And I don’t mind. Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. … But I’m not concerned about that now. I just want to do God’s will. And He’s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land! And so I’m happy, tonight. I’m not worried about anything. I’m not fearing any man!
Martin Luther King, Jr.
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PICTURE ID: CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN AMERICAN WORKS ON PAPER
August 4, 2020 — January 18, 2020 Picture ID featured the works of artists Glenn Ligon, Howardena Pindell, Adrian Piper, Martin Puryear, John Rozelle, Lorna Simpson, Kara Walker, Carrie Mae Weems, and Fred Wilson made in response to artistic developments and cultural debates prevalent throughout the late 1980s and 1990s in the United States.
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Kara Walker (American, born 1969), Exodus of Confederates from Atlanta, from the portfolio Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated). Offset lithograph with silkscreen, 2005. Purchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, 2016.75c
Invoking the rise of multicultural activism, concerns surrounding the AIDS crisis, conservative social and economic policies, rapid gentrification, and increasing urban crime during this time, each artist utilizes a mixture of text and image to tackle cultural stereotypes and to challenge oppressive racial characterizations. In an open-ended manner they manipulate fragmented or borrowed texts, words, and phrases related to race, combining them with photographic or invented imagery to consider the meaning and interpretation of individual identity through the overlapping perspectives of gender, race, ethnicity, and sexuality.
PICTURE ID: Contemporary African American Works on Paper is sponsored by 2020 Exhibition Program Sponsors Taylor Cadillac and ProMedica with additional support from the Ohio Arts Council.
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Phillip K. Smith III (American, born 1972), Flat Torus 4. Acrylic, plywood, LED lighting, electronic components, unique color program, 2019. Purchased with funds given by Richard and Dolly Flasck and with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott, 2020.22.
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Acquisitions
FISCAL YEAR JULY 1, 2019–JUNE 30, 2020 With Sincere Gratitude To Our Members
Katherine Gray (Canadian, born 1965), A Rainbow Like You. Blown glass, acrylic, lighting, 2015. Purchased with funds from the Anderton Bentley Fund, Gift of Friends of Carl Staelin, Gift of Doreen C. Spitzer in memory of Mr. and Mrs. Ward M. Canaday, and Gift of Rabi Raffi Soleimani in memory of Raffi Soleimani, by exchange, 2019.23.
Sibylle Peretti (German, born 1964), Mississippi Banks. Glass, mixed media, 2018. Purchased with funds given by Rita Barbour Kern, 2019.22. Mary Beth McKenzie (American, born 1946), Ivy (Reclining with Blue Shirt). Oil on canvas, 2015. Gift of the artist, 2019.24. Jeffrey Gibson (Mississippi band of Choctaw/Cherokee, born 1972), One for the Other. Six color lithograph of Rives BFK white paper, 2008. Purchased with funds given by Edith Rathbun, 2019.26.
Mt. Washington Glass Works (American), Royal Flemish Vase with Medallion. Machine mold-blown glass, gold, enamel, 1893-1895. Purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott, by exchange, 2019.27. Tiffany Chung (Vietnamese American, born 1969), Charles River Editors, ISW – The Battle for Ancient Palmyra. Acrylic, ink, and oil on vellum and paper, 2018. William J. Hitchcock Fund in memory of Grace J. Hitchcock, 2019.28.
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Matthew Day Jackson (American, born 1974), There Will Come Soft Rains. Portfolio of 12 four-color, four plate etchings with colophon, published by Collaborative Art Editions, Christopher Creyts, Master Printer, 2015-2016. William J. Hitchcock Fund in memory of Grace J. Hitchcock, 2019.29A-N. Amy Cutler (American, born 1974), Aidia. Graphite on paper, 2019. Purchased with funds given by Rita Barbour Kern, 2019.30. Amy Cutler (American, born 1974), Pike. Gouache on paper, 2017. Purchased with funds given by Rita Barbour Kern, 2019.31. Sosui (Japanese, 1911-1972), Seated Frog (Kagru). Ebony wood, 20th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.32A-B. Nick Lamb (English), Ashinaga and Tenaga. Wood, late 20th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.33A-B.
Japanese, Shoki, the oni slayer. Ivory, 18th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.34. Masatoshi aka Jikishi-in (Japanese, 1915-2002), Lotus Leaf Badger. Wood with yellow inlaid eyes, 20th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.35A-B. Japanese, Seated monkey holding octopus tentacle. Ivory, late 19th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.36. Kihodo Ryuko (Japanese, 1868-1912), Disappointed Rat Catcher. Ivory, 1868-1912. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.37. Japanese, Ryusa with tengu holding branch in beak. Ivory, late 19th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.38. Kano Tessai (Japanese, 1845-1925), Dried Salmon Fish. Baleen, late 19th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.39A-B.
Wendy Red Star (American, Crow, born 1981), iilaalée = car (goes by itself) + ii = by means of which + dáanniili = we parade. Nine color lithograph on Somerset Satin whitepaper with chine colle archival pigment ink photographs on Moab, 2015. Purchased with funds given by Edith Rathbun, 2019.25.
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Michael Birch (English, 1926-2008), Kappa. Staghorn antler, with mollusk pearl eyes, late 20th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.40. Miyazi Joso (Japanese), Seated Karako (child) at desk practicing calligraphy. Ivory, late 19th or early 20th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.41. Masatsugu (Japanese), Seated Monkey Holding a Peach. Ivory, mid 19th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.42. Kaigyokusai Masatsugu (Japanese, 1813-1892), Shi-Shi resting paw on coral brocade ball. Ivory, mid 19th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.43. Soju (Japanese, born 1918), Slug on a Log. Ivory, late 19th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.44. Japanese, Bearded Ainu Warrior. Wood, 18th-20th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.45. Gyokuso (Japanese), Standing foreigner holding a monkey. Ivory, late 19th-early 20th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.46A-B Rensai (Japanese), Emperor and Empress in Kimonos as standing Tachi-Bina dolls. Ivory, mid 19th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.47. Kyoto School (Japanese), Seated Dog (inu) holding an awabi (abalone) shell in its paws. Ivory, 18th century. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.48. Japanese, Container. Ceramic. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.49.
Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company (American, 1892-1902), Flower Form Vase. Blown glass, 1900-1903. Given in honor of Brian and Mary Kennedy, for their friendship which is beyond measure, by Debbie and Tony Knight, 2019.51.
Shiko Munakata (Japanese, 1903-1975), Geometrical Pattern (Buddhist Poem). Woodblock, 1959. Gift of Daniel and Fala Powers, 2019.50.
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Gio Pomodoro (Italian, 1930-2002), Necklace. Yellow and white gold with emeralds, 1964. Purchased with funds given by Georgia E. Welles, 2019.52.
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Polly Apfelbaum (American, born 1955), Atomic Mystic Cosmic 17. Woodblock monoprint on Fuji DHM-11 Kozo Misumi 536gsm paper, published by Durham Press, 2017. William J. Hitchcock Fund in memory of Grace J. Hitchcock, 2019.53. Polly Apfelbaum (American, born 1955), Atomic Mystic Aura 4. Woodblock monoprint on Fuji DHM-11 Kozo Misumi 536gsm paper, published by Durham Press, 2017. William J. Hitchcock Fund in memory of Grace J. Hitchcock, 2019.54. Polly Apfelbaum (American, born 1955), Atomic Mystic Aura 9. Woodblock monoprint on Fuji DHM-11 Kozo Misumi 536gsm paper, published by Durham Press, 2017. William J. Hitchcock Fund in memory of Grace J. Hitchcock, 2019.55. Jacob Hashimoto (American, born 1973), The Calamitous Yet Normal Circumstances of the Universe. Color woodblock print on Fuji DHM-11 Kozo Misumi 536gsm paper, published by Durham Press, 2017. William J. Hitchcock Fund in memory of Grace J. Hitchcock, 2019.56. Jacob Hashimoto (American, born 1973), The Blurred Mystical Affirmations of the Universe. Color woodblock print on Fuji DHM11 Kozo Misumi 536gsm paper, published by Durham Press, 2017. William J. Hitchcock Fund in memory of Grace J. Hitchcock, 2019.57. Kikuo Saito (Japanese American, 19392016), Beggar’s Pond. Acrylic on canvas, 2002. Gift from the Estate of Kikuo Saito and Leslie Feely Gallery, 2019.59.
William Villalongo (American, born 1975), Beautiful Boys. Acrylic, cut velour paper, and pigment print collage, 2019. William J. Hitchcock Fund in memory of Grace J. Hitchcock, 2019.58.
Ken Williams Jr. (American, Arapaho, Seneca, born 1983), Beauty in Dreams. Vintage and new glass beads, silk ribbon, porcupine quills, wool, shell, seed pearls, hubble glass beads, brass thimbles, deer hide, brass beads, brass bells, vintage Swarovski sew downs, cow hide latigo, brass rings, human hair, 2019. Purchased with funds from the Art Acquisition Endowment Fund, 2019.60.
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Martina Vigil (American, San Ildefonso, 1856-1916) and Florentino Montoya (American, San Ildefonso, 1858 – 1918), Polychrome Storage Jar. Native clay, pigment, c. 1902-1910. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Barber Art Fund, 2019.61. Eugène Verboeckhoven (Belgian, 1798-1881), Barnyard. Oil on panel, 1863. Given in honor of Katherine A., Nancy R., and Thomas J. Fairhurst by Thomas M. Fairhurst, Virginia Fairhurst Keller, and William Fairhurst, 2019.65. Jose Clemente Orozco (Mexican, 1883-1949), Zapatistas (Generals). Lithograph, 1935. Gift of Elsa Nadler, Sarah Fleisher, and William Nadler, 2019.66. Shan Goshorn (American, Eastern Band Cherokee, 1957-2018), Swept Away. Handwoven basket. Arches watercolor paper splints printed with archival inks, acrylic paint, artificial sinew, 2016. Gift in memory of Loren G. Lipson, M.D. and Shan Goshorn, honoring their mission to bring dignity to the underrepresented, 2019.67. Sean Scully (American, born 1945), Landlines and Robes. Portfolio of ten aquatints with sugarlift and spitbite printed on Hahnemühle Copperplate Bright White 300 gsm paper, 2018. Gift of the artist in honor of Brian Kennedy, 2019.68A-L. Joseph Kosuth (American, born 1945), The way in which language signifies is mirrored in its use. Neon, 2019. Purchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, 2019.69A-R.
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Rebecca Louise Law (British, born 1981), Dust #33, 34, 35, 36. Floral dust swept from the floor of "Community" encased in flat glass (four panels), 2019. Gift of the artist, 2019.70A-D. R.B. Appleby (American, active c. 1850-1859), Seated Couple, Half Plate Daguerreotype. Half-plate daguerreotype, c. 1850-1859. Gift of Howard Bond 2019.71. Etienne Carjat (French, 1828-1906), Portrait of Gioachino Rossini. Woodburytype, 1862, printed 1876. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.72. David Octavius Hill (Scottish, 1802-1870), Robert Adamson (Scottish, 1821-1848), and James Craig Annan (1864 – 1946), Portrait of Hill. Photogravure, c. 1843-1847 (negative), photogravure printed c. 1905 by James Craig Annan. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.73. Carlo Naya (Italian, 1816-1882), Ponte di Rialto, Venice. Albumen print, negative: c. 1857-1864; print c. 1875. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.74. Charles Scowen (British, 1852 – 1948), Ficus Bengalensis (Banyan Tree), Sri Lanka. Albumen print, c. 1876-1890. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.75. Giorgio Sommer (Italian, 1834-1914), The Lion of Lucerne, Switzerland. Albumen print, c. 1880s. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.76. William England (English, 1816-1896), Meiringen, Switzerland. Albumen print, c. 1863-1865. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.77.
Frederick Henry Evans (British, 1853-1943), Bourges Cathedral, France. Platinum print, c. 1900. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.78.
Kim Harty (American, born 1983). Old Venetian Glass. Framed digital print, 2013. Winthrop H. Perry Fund, 2020.3.
James Valentine (Scottish, 1815-1879), Where Twines the Path, in the Trossachs, Scotland. Albumen print, c. 1870s. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.79.
Deborah Czeresko (American, born 1961), Oh God/Martina 59/9. 10 mm Italian neon, argon gas, outdoor BBQ, vintage women's trophy, blow glass briquettes, concrete, 2019. Purchased with funds given by Ann W. Hartmann and Frank Snug, with funds given in memory of Larry Thompson by his children and grandchildren, and the Museum Art Fund, 2020.4.
George Washington Wilson (Scottish, 1823-1893), Stonehenge, England (Verso: Wilton Church, England). Albumen print, 1886. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.80. Peter Henry Emerson (English, 1856-1936), A Winter’s Morning from Pictures from Life in Field and Fen (Plate I). Photogravure, 1887. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.81. Frank Meadow Sutcliffe (British, 1853-1941), The Ingathering. Carbon print, c. 1885. Gift of Howard Bond, 2019.82. Katsuyo Aoki (Japanese, born 1972), Trolldom Teku Maku Maya Kon. Glazed porcelain with cobalt underglaze, 2017-2018. Purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott, 2019.83. Shari Mendelson (American, born 1961), Animal with Net. Repurposed plastic, hot glue, resin, acrylic polymer, mica paint, 2016. Gift of Florence Scott Libbey, by exchange, 2020.1.
Arthur L. Werger (American, born 1955), As We Were. Mezzotint printed on Hannemuelle Copperplate paper, 2012-2013. Gift of Ray W. Clarke in honor of Marilyn C. and Wilbur F. Hesselbart, 2020.7. Jaume Plensa (Spanish, born 1955), Without Title. Set of two etchings on Hanji Handmade Korean paper, 2019. William J. Hitchcock Fund in memory of Grace J. Hitchcock, 2020.8A-B. Libbey Glass Company, an operating division of Owens-Illinois Glass Company (American), 1988 Kentucky Derby Mint Julep Glass (Premium Giveaway). Colorless glass, machine mold-blown; decorated, 1987. Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.9. Libbey Glass Company, an operating division of Owens-Illinois Glass Company (American), The Miracle of Glass (Decorated Commemorative Glass). Colorless glass, machine mold-blown, 1957. Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.10.
Kim Harty (American, born 1983). Plate 44. Direct digital print on aluminum dibond, 2013. Orion Fund, 2020.2.
Aleksandra (Sasha) Stoyanov (Ukrainian, born 1957), Silence. Wool, sisal, silk, cotton threads, 2006. Purchased with funds given by Georgia Welles Apollo Society members Joseph V. and Judith M. Conda, Bill and Pam Davis, Louise and Greg Gregory, Ann W. Hartmann, Eileen Kennedy and Robert Heim, Jeffery and Inge Klopping, and Mrs. Philip G. Simonds, with additional support from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, 2019.62.
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LaToya Ruby Frazier (American, born 1982), 2 photographs from the series, Flint is Family: a. Shea at work driving bus 38, Route 45 for Flint Community Schools Transportation, First Student Co. b. Shea Zion departing Flint MI for Mississippi at 4 a.m. on June 25th, 2016. Gelatin silver prints, 2016-17. Purchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, 2019.63-.64.
Hugo Simberg (Finnish, 1873-1917), A Sea View. Oil on panel, about 1907-1917. Purchased with funds given by Dr. John and Marja Dooner, 2020.6.
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Libbey Glass Company, an operating division of Owens-Illinois Glass Company (American), Bicentennial Set (Premium Giveaway). Colorless glass, machine mold-blown; decorated, 1976. Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.11A-C. Libbey Glass Inc. (American), Genuine Tumbler, Coca-Cola. Light-green glass, machine mold-blown, 2017-2018 (designed 1929). Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.12. Libbey Glass Inc. (American), Chemistry Lab Set. Colorless glass, machine moldblown, 2017-2018. Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.13A-J. Libbey Glass Company, an operating division of Owens-Illinois Glass Company (American), Wilson Tennis Tumbler. Colorless glass, machine mold-blown; decorated, 1970s. Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.14. Libbey Glass Inc. (American), Farm-to-Shaker Dispenser and Drinking Jars. Colorless glass, machine mold-blown, 2017-2018. Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.15A-C. Libbey Glass Company, an operating division of Owens-Illinois Glass Company (American), Martini Glass, Stardust Pattern. Colorless glass, machine mold-blown, 1950s (designed). Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.16. Libbey Glass Company, an operating division of Owens-Illinois Glass Company (American), Jetsons Set (Premium Giveaway). Colorless glass, machine mold-blown; decorated, early 1980s. Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.17A-D.
Philippe de Champaigne (French, 1602-1674), The Dead Christ on the Cross. Oil on canvas, c. 1654. Purchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, 2020.5.
Libbey Glass Inc. (American), Rocks Stackables for the Bar. Colorless glass, machine mold-blown, 2017-2018. Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.18A-E. Libbey Glass Company, an operating division of Owens-Illinois Glass Company (American), Star Wars and Return of the Jedi (Premium Giveaway). Colorless glass, machine moldblown; decorated, 1977. Gift of Libbey Glass, 2020.19A-B.
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Arie de Vois (Dutch, about 1632-1680), Minerva and the Nine Muses. Oil on canvas, 1662. Purchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, 2020.24.
Sharyn O’Mara (American, born 1966), Trio of Chandeliers. Canine noseprints on glass; digital print on Lexjet Sunset Photo Metallic paper, 2018. Purchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, by exchange, 2020.20A-C. Josiah McElheny (American, born 1966), Impurities. Hand-blown glass, wood, low-iron sheet glass, brass mounting hardware, drawings and hand lettered text, 1994-2012. Purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott, 2020.23A-U. Leroy Alman (American, 1938-1997), The New Heaven. Mixed media (carved wood, light bulbs, artificial pearls, glue, glitter, plastic Letters, paint), 1984. Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.25.
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Louisiana Bendolph (American, born 1960), “Housetop” Variation. Quilt (cotton and cotton blends), 2003. Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.26. Thornton Dial (American, 1928-2016), Reaching Out with Love and Fear. Carpet, rocks, soil, Spash Zone compounds, enamel, and spray paint on canvas on wood, 2001. Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.27. Thornton Dial Jr. (American, born 1953), Home Sweet Home. Enamel on wood, 1990. Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.29.
Mary Cassatt (American, 1844-1926), The Fitting. Drypoint and 10-color aquatint on laid paper, 1890-1891. Prudence and Edward Lamb Fund, 2020.21.
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Thornton Dial (American, 1928-2016), Trip to the Mountaintop. Wood, clothing, wire screen, rope, steel, wire, and plastic, 2004. Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.28.
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Martha Pettway (American, 1911-2005), “Housetop”—”Half-Log Cabin” Variation. Quilt (cotton), 1930s. Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.34.
Richard Dial (American, born 1955), The Comfort of the First Born. Mixed media (welded steel, plastic tubing, paint), 1988. Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.30. Mary Elizabeth Kennedy (American, 1911 – 1991), "Housetop" SingleBlock "Log Cabin" Variation. Quilt (cotton, polyester, nylon, wool-blend), c. 1965. Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.31.
Jessie T. Pettway (American, born 1929), "Log Cabin"—Sixteen-Block "Courthouse Steps" Variation (local name: "Bricklayer"). Quilt (cotton, silk, acetate), 1953, Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.32. Lucy T. Pettway (American, 1921-2004), "Four-Way Star"—Four-block variation. Quilt (cotton, cotton/polyester blend), 1970. Gift of Arthur J. Secor, by exchange, purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, 2020.33.
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7 IMPACT & DONORS
LEFT Conservation Technician Jeff Boyer inpainting on the frame Agony in the Garden by El Greco (c. 1590 – 1595).
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Numbers of Note FISCAL YEAR JULY 1, 2019–JUNE 30, 2020 With Sincere Gratitude To Our Members
269,728
24,137
Museum visits
Family Center visits
119 150
Public programs
Art classes offered
16,354
1,670
Visitors participating in public programs
Students attending art classes
14
441
Public program tours
Art scholarships awarded
678
395 Public glassblowing demonstrations
2 GAPP artists/residencies
5 Master glass classes
Visitors on public program tours
226
12
School tours offered 176 docent led, 50 self-guided
Loans to other institutions
96 Works added to the collection
58
10,462
318
Students and teachers on school tours
Volumes added to the library
8,528 docent led, 1,934 self-guided
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Financial Summary
FISCAL YEAR JULY 1, 2019–JUNE 30, 2020 With Sincere Gratitude To Our Members
Pooled Investments Charitable Trusts
Total
$171,829,703
TOTAL REVENUE & SUPPORT
$71,495,688
$243,325,391
Earned Income
21.2%
Revenue
$15,688,681
Expenses
$15,623,291
Operating Surplus (Deficit)
$65,390
Endowment and Investment Income
$9,179,026
Contributions
$3,183,245
Earned Income
$3,326,410
Total Revenue & Support
$ 15,688,681
58.5% 20.3%
Endowment & Investment Income
Contributions
TOTAL EXPENSES Fundraising & Development
Art Education & Programs
8.8%
Art Collection
$5,407,554
Art Education & Programs
$5,967,538
Management & General
$2,876,919
Fundraising & Development
$1,371,280
Total Expenses
38.2%
18.4% 34.6% Management & General Art Collection
$15,623,291
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Major Donors FISCAL YEAR JULY 1, 2019–JUNE 30, 2020 With Sincere Gratitude To Our Members
FOUNDER’S CIRCLE $25,000+
Mr. and Mrs. George L. and Leslie A. Chapman Randy and Barbara Oostra Cynthia and Ronald Thompson Mr. and Mrs. David K. Welles Jr. Mrs. David K. Welles, Sr. Anonymous (1)
DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE: PLATINUM $10,000 - $24,999
Mr. and Mrs. Richard* P. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Patrick E. Bowe Joseph V. and Judith M. Conda Sara Jane and William DeHoff Ann W. Hartmann Mr. and Mrs. Dennis G. Johnson Dr. David Kouba Mrs. Kathleen Magliochetti Mrs. Ann Meier Mrs. Anne Palmer Susan F. and Thomas Palmer Mary Ellen Pisanelli Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Savage Margy and Scott* Trumbull
DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE: DIAMOND $5,000 - $9,999
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Anspach John Bearss and Julia Tobias-Bearss Gill W. Bentley Tom and Betsy Brady Mr. and Mrs. James Burmeister Mark and Barbara Dangler Bill and Pam Davis Anthony and Gay Deiger Gregory and Susan Denny Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Donnell Hope and Larry* DuCharme
*deceased
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Melissa Gleespen Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Herb Dianne and Thomas Klein Ken and Chris Koch Mr. and Mrs. Harley J. Kripke Jean and Kenneth Lovejoy Judy McCracken Michael and Susie McLoughlin Mrs. Carolyn Metzger Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Moran Nicholas F. and Susan Hartman Muska Mrs. Donna Peters Richard and Gloria Reynolds Mr. Sam L. Rice, III Mr. and Mrs. Kevin J. Sauder Priscilla and Fred Schwier Mr. and Mrs. James Jay Secor, III Mr. and Mrs. Spencer D. Stone, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer D. Stone Mr. Mike Thaman and Mrs. Lisa Gathard The Boeschenstein Family Foundation Mrs. Christine B. Turnbull Tom and Gretchen Ziems
DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE: CRYSTAL $2,500 - $4,999
Anonymous James* and Patricia Appold Mrs. Karen Baither Ms. Emily Bennett Mrs. Carol H. Bentley* Joel S. and Linda K. Beren Mr. and Mrs. David A. Bryan Mr. and Mrs. Keith Burwell Mr. John M. Carey* and Ms. Ann M. McCauley Mr. and Mrs. William Carroll Deborah R. Chapman William S. Cosgrove and Kimberlee A. Collins Mrs. Elvah T. Donald Dr. and Mrs. John J. Dooner, Jr. Sandra Drabik Collins
George and Pat Eistetter Mr. Lars Eller Christopher and Beth Eperjesy Mr. and Mrs. Scott Estes Sanda and Jim Findley Michael Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Flasck Paul Goldner and Sandy Soifer Douglas and Charlotte Guyman Mrs. George W. Haigh Karen E. Hakel Shirley W. Hancock James and Kristine Hoffman Mr. Paul Holewinski and Mrs. Susan Cole Michael and Tina Hylant Ms. Sandra M. Hylant Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Julius Cynthia and Andrew Kalnow Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Kearns Brian P. and Mary Kennedy Mr. Jeffery and Dr. Inge Klopping Harvey and Ellen Knell Mr. Keith Knueven David and Cynthia Krock Arleen and Jon Levine Dr. David M. Lewis and Dr. Nadine C. Kassis Mrs. Linda Liber Glenn Lipscomb and Jan Hartley Mrs. Lacey Lybarger Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Maurer Ms. Paula Mayes Kevin McGreevy and Jennifer Foster Mr. and Mrs. Michael McMurray Johnna and Philip McWeeny Mr. Donald F. Melhorn, Jr. Ms. Jolene Miller and Ms. Donna Steppe Sharmon and John Minns Annette and Joseph D. Napoli Dr. and Mrs. Douglas C. Neckers Mr. Norman C. Nitschke* Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Pletz Dr. and Mrs. R. Daniel Rigal Mr. Marvin A. Robon and Dr. Nancy C. Robon
Beau Rochte Ms. Janet C. Rogolsky Mr. Norman L. Sandfield Claire and Fred Schaefer William and Carol Sluhan Mr. Carter Smith Ms. Eleanor Sonntag Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Staelin John S. Stanley Mr. Daniel N. Steinberg Dr. and Mrs. R. Jeffery Stephens Mr.* and Mrs. Duane Stranahan, Jr. Ms. Rhonda Stratton and Mr. Joe Klingler Mrs. Patricia Timmerman Mr. Albert A. Vargo, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hans Vetter Mr. and Mrs. Richard Walinski Ms. Beverly Weidendorf Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Winston Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Young Mr. Wayne J. Zitkus
PRESIDENT’S COUNCIL $1,500 - $2,499
Ms. Leslie Adams Amy Craft Ahrens and Todd Ahrens Mrs. Jean E. Allen Sharon and Darryl Allen Charles and Janice Antal Dr. and Mrs. Celso Antiporda Mr. Gregory Armstrong The Honorable Vernelis Armstrong Ms. Diana C. Attie Kathleen Attwood Mr. and Mrs. John Bachey Kate and Tom Backoff Marianne Ballas Dr. and Mrs. Frank Barone Mr. and Mrs. John C. Barron Connie Barron-Smith and Art Smith Bob and Maithri Baxter
Mr. Eric L. Beach Ms. Linda Beall Ms. Joan M. Beck Mr.* and Mrs. David C. Beekley Ms. Donna J. Bogan and Mr. Ralph Cairl Mrs. Annette L. Boice Mr. Suzanne Bond Mr. William Bostleman and Ms. Evy Jarrett Carole A. Bradford Mr. and Mrs. James H. Brennan, Jr. Leslie Brookman and Michael Brookman Drs. Chris and Aparna Brown Doug and Lisa Brown Mary Anne Brown Robert and Jenelle Buschur Mr. and Mrs. Mike Calabrese Mr. and Mrs. John Calderonello Archie and Chey Call Drs. Earl and Thurid Campbell Elaine Canning and Daniel Kory Peter and Peggy Casey Steven and Tiffany Cavanaugh Walter and Lois Churchill Mr. and Mrs. Anthony R. Clark Jeffrey and Judy Cohen Susan L. Conda Eileen Conlon and Naran Burchinow Mr. and Mrs. Nick Conrad Brent and Pamela Cousino Mrs. Susan Croci Dora E Crowther Dr. and Mrs. Paul V. Daverio John and Jane Day Dr. Carlos A. de Carvalho and Ms. Carol Greenberg Mr. and Mrs. Bruce A. DeBoer Mr. and Mrs. Gary Delman Ruth and Ralph Delman Mr. and Mrs. Peter Demczuk James DeVilbiss Mr. and Mrs. Clyde A. Dilley
Dr. Brian and Mrs. Dee Dolsey ANONYMOUS Dr. and Mrs. Rod W. Durgin Edwin and Audrey Durivage Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas M. Dye John* and Margaret Eldred Dr. and Mrs. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. James C. Roberts and Nancie Entenmann Roberts Joel and Davie Epstein Ms. Carol Ann Fadell Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Faist Paula H. and C. William Fall Dr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Farber Mary and John Fedderke Charles* and Elizabeth Ference Mary and Jim Foote Robin and David Frank Janice and Thomas Gagnet Mary E. Galvin Rocky and Andrea Gardner Mr. Mathias J. Gaynor and Mrs. Judy L. Stone-Gaynor Mrs. Brenda Geiger Dr. and Mrs. James D. Geiger Mr. and Mrs. Terrance G. Gerken Rose and Greg Geswein Ms. Barbara Gill Desmond and Joanne Gillen Dr. Mary J. Gombash and Mr. Bud Crosby Dr. and Mrs. Joel Gorski Judy Gorun Ms. Adrienne J. Green Louise and Greg Gregory Mr. and Mrs. Douglas G. Haag Mr. and Mrs. John R. Hadley John and Carol Hall Peter* and Claudia Handwork Steve Hanson Harbaugh Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Gene M. Hardy Jake and Susan Harms Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Harrington
STEPHEN AND JULIE TAYLOR Stephen and Julie Taylor believe the Toledo Museum of Art is for everyone, and they make that possible through their corporate and personal philanthropy. Stephen and Julie, along with the Taylor Automotive Group, supported many experiences at TMA, including the Great Art Escape and Fireflies on the Water exhibition, which attracted more than 46,000 visitors to the Museum. TMA Annual Report
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Jeanie and John Hayward Mrs. Mary Hibbert Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Hileman Mr. and Mrs. Taber H. Hinkle Anne and Carl Hirsch Mr. Gerald Hoeffel Edward L. Hoffman David and Ellen Hoover Dr. and Mrs. William L. Horvath Kimberly Howard and John Howard Ms. Bette E. Hudnutt Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hull Dr. S. Amjad Hussain Marjorie M. Hutton* Ms. Jeannie Hylant Zac and Dee Isaac Deb and Tom Isley Frank and Lynn Jacobs Marvin and Marilyn Jacobs Mary Lynch Jarrell and Paul A. Jarrell Mrs. Billie Johnson Darlene Johnson Stephanie Johnstone and Kent Reecer Craig and Michelle Joseph Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kabat Mary M. Karazim Dr. and Mrs. Greg Kasper Dr. and Mrs. Blaine A. Keigley The Honorable and Mrs. Reeve W. Kelsey Eileen Kennedy and Robert Heim Patrick and Maureen Kenney Dr. and Mrs. Allan B. Kirsner Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Kistler, Jr. Karen and Tom* Klein Mary Ann and Jim Kline Milton Ford and Deborah Knight Mr. and Mrs. Zale Kohler Ms. Georgeann Kohn Mr. and Mrs. Michael S. Koralewski Peter and Mary Koury Mrs. Carol A. Kraus Mr. and Mrs. Justin Kruse Mark and Susan Kruse
Randy Kuklinski Dr. Sandra Laas Scott and Lisa Langenburg Patricia D. Levey Dr. Adam Levine Marla R. and Gordon I. Levine Mr. and Mrs. Joel A. Levine John and Peggy Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Allan Libbe Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Lineback Mr. and Mrs. Leslie P. Lipski Jennifer and Rick Logan John H. Luscombe and Carol Imes-Luscombe Mrs. Julia A. Mahoney Marsha A. Manahan and Thomas P. Killam Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Mancini Dr. Maurice Manning and Mrs. Carmel Manning Ms. Rita Mansour Tom Marino Dr. Allen and Hindea Markowicz Elizabeth and Bryce Marshall Jude Aubry and Susan Martin John M. and Colleen McGoldrick Sarah McHugh and David Hart* Matthew and Kirsten McNulty Mark McQuillan and Bernice Mathews Karen Merrels Dr. Hollis Merrick, III and Mary Russell Merrick Anonymous Molly and Geoffrey Meyers Jon P. Miller and Kathryn Whitta Miller Mrs. Elizabeth Boren Millhon Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Mintun Jay and Gail Mirrow Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Mitchell Andrea and John Monoky James C. Moore and Tim R. Valko Ms. Susan E. Morgan Mrs. Geraldine M. Mowery Dr. and Mrs. Richard Munk
Dr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Murtagh, Sr. Mrs. Elsa G. Nadler Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Navarre, Jr. Ms. Sheri Neufeld Gary and Suellen Newnham Dr. and Mrs.* John J. Newton Mrs. William Niehous Catherine Noble David and Katherine O’Connell Joseph T. and Ann P. O’Leary Mr. Jonathan F. Orser Mr. Walter R. Palicki Diane and Jerome Phillips Nancy Phlegar Miss Dana Pienta Dave and Dottie Pienta Tony Plath Dr. Susan A. Pohlod Douglas and Cinda Pontsler Dr. Gina Pope Meredith M. Prime Mr. Roger L. Radeloff Terri and Jack Radke Dr. and Mrs. Suresh Ramnath Steven Andrew Rank Dr. and Mrs. James G. Ravin Mr.* and Mrs. Frazier Reams, Jr. Mrs. Barbara B. Reed Mr. Robert F. Reichert Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Reichle Mrs. Jane Revenaugh David and Leslie Risley Dr. Steven and Kathryn Robinson Gretchen Rohm and David Ensing Suzanne and J.B. Rorick Mr. and Mrs. John Roth Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Rothschild Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. Rothschild Amy Rounds Dr. and Mrs. Allan Rubin Mrs. Arlene T. Rubinoff Bill and Laura Rudolph Ken and Nancy Rusk James and Jane Ruvolo
GEORGIA WELLES APOLLO SOCIETY The Georgia Welles Apollo Society was founded in 1986 and its members have collectively added more than 50 works of art for the Museum throughout the past 35 years. In 2020, this esteemed group of 99 donors focused on 20th Century Modern and Contemporary Works on Paper and purchased Pablo Picasso’s Still Life with Glass Under the Lamp (1962). 64
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Saddemi Ruth Ann Sailstad Georgianna S. Saloff Ms. Ann Sanford Linda and Loren Sattler Ann Savage and Paul Verdell Mr. Scott J. Savage Dorothea and Stanley Sawicki Mrs. Lewis W. Saxby Mrs. Barbara R. Schlatter Mrs. Angelike Schreder Mr. Kenneth C. Schumaker Mr. Robert R. Seeman and Ms. Karin A. Jacobson Judi and Phil Selden Ms. Carol Semersky Dr. Joseph Sferra and Mrs. Chrisann Sferra Mr. and Mrs. Craig Sheets Mr. and Mrs. James P. Silk, Sr. Mr. Richard R. Silverman* Cheryl and Hank Silverman David and Kathy Simko Mrs. Philip G. Simonds Cynthia Skaff and Rob Fredrick, MD Ms. Diana Sluhan Ms. Courtney Smotherman and Mrs. Susan Smotherman* Mrs. Nancy L. Smythe Mr. and Mrs. James D. Snyder Dr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Sodeman Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence Spetka Constance Spevak Ms. Sharon Speyer and Mr. Dean Monske Dean Kasperzak and Patrice Spitzer Mr. and Mrs. David Stafford Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. Stewart Ted and Megan Stone Mr. and Mrs. John L. Straub Ann and David Strickler Mr. Thomas J. Swigart John and Yolanda Szuch Ms. Linda Tallman Michael Tamor and Helen Michaels Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Taylor, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Taylor, II Mr. Charles Alter and Ms. Terry Teufel Mr. Norman R. Thal, Jr. Anne and Brian Bennett Dr. and Mrs. Warren S. Tipton Dr. and Mrs. James A. Tita Mr. Louis E. Tosi Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Trumbull Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. Ulrich Thomas P. and Nancy M. Verner Anonymous Mrs. Theodore R. Vogt* Rose and Robert Wagner Mr. and Mrs. Timothy E. Walsh
Mike and Terri Ward Mr. and Mrs. David F. Waterman Mr. and Mrs. Steven Weiss Lynnette and Dave Werning Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Wheeler Mr. James F. White, Jr. Mrs. Polly White Dr. and Mrs. Peter J. Wilson Ms. Susan E. Wilson Mrs. Robert Winzeler, Jr. Patrick and Ellen Wise Dr. Richard J. and Sandra Wiseley Ms. Elizabeth T. Wolfe Terry and Tom Wolfe Donna Woodson, MD Ms. Sara Worley and Mr. Eric D. Britton Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Young Susan and Steven Zirkel Mr. Robert L. Zollweg Mark Zyndorf
SUPPORTING $600 - $1,499
Mrs. Jean Areddy John and Rebecca Aubry Ms. Kay L. Baker Mrs. Julie A. Barnes Susan and Chris Barry Jenifer Belt and Jason Finn Mrs. Marilyn Bennett Sally L. Binard Mr. and Mrs. R. Jeffrey Bixler Ms. Diana Block and Mr. Christopher Kiehl Mr. and Mrs.* William K. Block, Jr. Mrs. Mary Lou Bollin Konni Bostleman Lawrence C. and Janet S. Brach Ms. Susan L. Brotje Mrs. Eleanor Brunner Nancy and Mark Burton Mr. Dennis J. Burzynski Dr. Candilee Butler Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Byers Mrs. Doris Campbell Mr. William J. Carpenter Dr. Ronald A. Charles Dr. and Mrs. John T. Chiles Mrs. Lorraine Coe Mr. Pariss M. Coleman, II and Dr. Traci Watkins Dr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Cox Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Cromer Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dawson Mr. and Mrs. John E. Day Dr. Karl Deluga and Dr. Gretchen Tietjen Mr. Bruce M. Denman Mr. Michael M. Dorn
Ms. Elizabeth A. Emmert and Mr. John S. Henzler Dr. and Mrs. Paul Fenton Charles* and Elizabeth Ference Mr. Blake Fillion Jim and Sally Friend Mr. and Mrs. Philip Gaines Mr. and Mrs. John A. Galbraith Dr. and Mrs. Steven S. Gale Dr. Mary Ann Gawelek and Mr. Frank Kleshinski Mr. and Mrs. Mathias J. Gaynor, III Ira Gottlieb and Marcy Winograd Richard and Andrea Grazzini Mr. Robert A. Haaf Mel Harbaugh Helene and Charles B. Helburn Mrs. Margaret J. Hiett* Mr. Edward T. Hill John and Alice Hoff Dr. Judith and Dr. Peter Hruschka Mrs. Kristine Hudec Mr. and Mrs. David G. Huey Mr. John L. Jacobson and Ms. Carol J. Hargreaves Mr. Joseph C. Jarvis and Mr. Michael L. Craig Mr. Paul Jednak Dr. John Jones Phillip and Jennifer Kajca Rev. Kent Kaufman Virginia and Steven Keller Michael and Janet Killam Leo and Sharon Knox Mr. and Mrs. John S. Kobacker Karen Koester and Richard Hall Jim and Jennifer Kovacs Mr. Charles L. Kreutz Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kripke Katrina Kuhn and Angela Kuhn Mr. Michael Kunkel and Mr. Henry Cox Thomas and Mary Kunz Mr. and Mrs. Ron Lang Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Leininger Carolyn and Gerald Lemieux Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Leupp Jennifer and Rick Logan Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Marsa Ken and Marja Martin Mrs. Dawn McCaghy Dr. Thomas E. Meiring Frank and Catherine Merritt Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Mewhort, III Constance and Gary R. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Muto Mr. Joseph A. Myers Mr. Andrew Newby and Ms. Kristin Kiser Anonymous Jason and Comfort Ofori
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Ms. Patricia O’Toole Chelle Parker and David Parker Jon and Helen Patton Judy and Gene Pearson Mr. Donald G. Pennell Mr. and Mrs. Mandar Phadke Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pilkington Mr. and Mrs. Michael Poole Mr. and Mrs. Mario Procaccini Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Purinton, II Nancy E. Quandt Mr. and Mrs. Paul Patrick Rega Ms. Nora S. Romanoff and Dr. Eli Abramson Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Rubini Mr. and Mrs. Rodney and Rupp Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Sabin, Jr. Ms. Sarah Schendel Dr. and Mrs. John L. Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. William D. Searles Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Seibenick Mr. Stephen F. Sewell Mrs. Joyce Shultz Anonymous Ed and Tima Simon Keith B. Sparrow* and Suzanne L. Smitley Dr. Bethanne Snodgrass Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Solomon Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Srinivasan Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stephens Mr. and Mrs. J. Scott Stewart Jack and Gloria J. Stiles Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Stocking Millard and Joelyn M. Stone Olivia and Eric* Summons Mrs. Claudia D. Sundberg Dianne and Robert Tankoos Peter and Cynthia Taylor The Searles Family Foundation Mrs. Teri Thomas Miss Roberta M. Thornton Thomas and Patricia Tuschman Paula W. Tuschman Tim Wade and Chris Wade S. Elizabeth Weaver Mr. and Mrs. Richard Weisfelder Mr. Henry Werner and Mrs. Jacqueline Rousseau-Werner Hilary and David White, Jr. Mrs. Valerie Wiley Marc and Carol Williams-Young Mr. and Mrs. Dwight D. Wittenberg Irma L. and Edwin A. Wolf, Jr. Stacey Yonce and Benjamin Yonce Dr. and Mrs. Anoar Zacharias
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BUSINESS COUNCIL: GOLD $5,000+
Christie’s Dana Foundation Fifth Third Bank FirstEnergy Foundation/Toledo Edison Huntington Bank Keybank Libbey Inc. Madhouse Creative LLC Mercy Health Midwest Church Design and Construction Owens Corning Owens-Illinois Inc. ProMedica Signature Bank Taylor Automotive Group The Andersons, Inc. Toledo Mud Hens
BUSINESS COUNCIL: SILVER $2,500 - $5,000
American Frame Corporation Associated General Contractors Bartz Viviano Flowers & Gifts, Inc. Focus CFO Hafner Florist Kripke Enterprises Inc. Mosser Construction Inc. OCP Contractors Inc. OmniSource Corporation PNC Bank Rudolph Libbe Group Safeguard Security Service Inc. Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP Spartan Chemical Company Inc. The Lathrop Company Toledo Business Journal
BUSINESS COUNCIL $1,500 - $2,499
Applied Imaging Area Office on Aging Arlington Rack & Packaging Art Iron Foundation Asset Protection Corporation BP-Husky Refining, LLC Brown & Brown of Ohio CliftonLarsonAllen Communica Inc. Complete Refrigeration, LLC DMC Technology Group, Inc.
Duket Architects Planners Inc. Dunbar Mechanical Inc. Eastman & Smith Ltd. Farmers and Merchants State Bank Genoa Banking Company Gross Electric Inc. Hafner Florist Harold Jaffe Jewelers Heidelberg Distributing Company Hull & Associates, Inc. Jones & Henry Engineers Ltd. Kingston HealthCare Company Kuhlman Corporation La-Z-Boy Lewandowski Engineers, LLC Marathon Petroleum Company LLC Marshall & Melhorn Muir Print & Marketing Munger Munger & Associates Architects Inc. New Era Technology Nordmann Roofing Company, Inc. O’Neal Interiors Oswald Companies Pilkington North America Rick’s City Diner RMF Nooter Romanoff Electric Corporation Romanoff Industries Inc. Savage & Associates Inc. SSOE Inc. State Bank The Collaborative Inc. Thompson-Williams-Donahue Group Thread Marketing Group Toledo Building Services Toledo Business Journal Toledo Federation of Art Societies True North Energy Trust Company Family Offices Universal Metals LLC USI Insurance Services Waterford Bank N.A. Weber & Sterling LLC William Vaughan Company
CORPORATE PARTNER
A&A Engineering Aero Filter, Inc. Beaverson Machine, Inc. Betco Corporation Black Swamp Bird Observatory Brenda A. Ray Law Offices Burk and Company Byrne Paint Company Chapel-Romanoff Technologies, LLC. Children’s Discovery Center Clark Schaefer Hackett Clearview Tinting Crow Executive Air Inc.
Dental Health Associates of Sylvania DMD Environmental, Inc. Enterprise Holdings Findley Davies Inc. Impact Employment Solutions Jamiesons’ Audio/Video JDRM Engineering Inc. Kiemle-Hankins Company LaSalle Cleaners, Inc. Lee Terry Holdings, LLC. Manos Greek Restaurant Maumee Chamber of Commerce McGuire Group LLC Insurance Agency N.E.C.O.,LLC Nichols Nysus Solutions Oravecz Consulting and Engineering Services Pathway Inc. Paul Davis Restoration of WLE PERRY proTECH Peter Basso Associates, Inc. Plastic Technologies, Inc. Polaris Logistics Group, Inc. Provideo Systems, Inc. Sam Okun Produce Company Shidler & Wilder Wells & Pumps, Inc. Snowie Summers, LTD Superior Uniform Sales Incorporated The Capital Alliance Corporation The Employers’ Association The Original Gino’s Inc. Toledo Mirror & Glass Company Triple Diamond Plastics, LLC V&A Risk Services, LLC Vistula Management Company
GEORGIA WELLES APOLLO SOCIETY
Mr. and Mrs. Richard* P. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Anspach Kathleen Attwood John Bearss and Julia Tobias-Bearss
William* W. Boeschenstein Family Mr. and Mrs. Patrick E. Bowe Mr. and Mrs. John Calderonello Elaine Canning and Daniel Kory Mr. and Mrs. William Carroll Deborah R. Chapman Mr. and Mrs. George L. and Leslie A. Chapman Mr. and Mrs. Anthony R. Clark Joseph V. and Judith M. Conda William S. Cosgrove and Kimberlee A. Collins Dora E Crowther Dr. and Mrs. Paul V. Daverio Bill and Pam Davis Sara Jane and William DeHoff Anthony and Gay Deiger Mr. and Mrs. Peter Demczuk Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Donnell Dr. and Mrs. John J. Dooner, Jr. Hope and Larry* DuCharme Dr. and Mrs. Rod W. Durgin Dr. and Mrs. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. Paula H. and C. William Fall Mary and Jim Foote Mrs. Brenda Geiger Dr. and Mrs. Joel Gorski Louise and Greg Gregory Ann W. Hartmann Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Herb Mr. and Mrs. Taber H. Hinkle Anne and Carl Hirsch James and Kristine Hoffman Zac and Dee Isaac Mary Lynch Jarrell and Paul A. Jarrell Anonymous Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Julius Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kabat Mr. Dean Kasperzak Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Kearns Dr. and Mrs. Blaine A. Keigley Eileen Kennedy and Robert Heim Patrick and Maureen Kenney Mr. Jeffery and Dr. Inge Klopping Mark and Susan Kruse
Patricia D. Levey Mrs. Linda Liber Mrs. Kathleen Magliochetti Ms. Rita Mansour Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Maurer Michael and Susie McLoughlin Johnna and Philip McWeeny Mrs. Carolyn Metzger Anonymous James C. Moore and Tim R. Valko Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Moran Dr. and Mrs. Douglas C. Neckers Randy and Barbara Oostra Susan F. and Thomas Palmer Nancy Phlegar Dave and Dottie Pienta Meredith M. Prime Dr. and Mrs. James G. Ravin Mrs. Barbara B. Reed Robert F. Reichert Mrs. Jane Revenaugh Bill and Laura Rudolph Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Savage Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Schlatter Mr. and Mrs. James Jay Secor, III Mr. and Mrs. James P. Silk, Sr. Mrs. Philip G. Simonds Mrs. Nancy L. Smythe Mr. and Mrs. James D. Snyder Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence Spetka John S. Stanley Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stranahan, Jr. John and Yolanda Szuch Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Taylor, Sr. Cynthia and Ronald Thompson Mrs. Patricia Timmerman Margy and Scott* Trumbull Mrs. Theodore R. Vogt* Mr. and Mrs. David K. Welles Jr. Mrs. David K. Welles, Sr. Dr. Richard J. and Sandra Wiseley Ms. Elizabeth T. Wolfe Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Young Mark Zyndorf
JOHN AND MARJA DOONER John and Marja Dooner’s passion for art history and collecting inspired them to become avid supporters of the Toledo Museum of Art. They share the Museum’s desire to broaden the narrative of art history and generously purchased “The Sea View,” a Finnish painting by Hugo Simberg, to expand TMA’s collection.
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LIBBEY CIRCLE
Amy Craft Ahrens and Todd Ahrens Sharon and Darryl Allen Ms. Maureen Anderson Anonymous Ms. Kay L. Baker Mrs. Catherine J. Bates* Robert Bell Mrs. Sally Bergsmark Rhoda L. and Roger M. Berkowitz Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Birndorf Mr. and Mrs.* William K. Block, Jr. Margaret and Howard Bond Lee Terry Holdings, LLC. (Terry L. Bossert) Mrs. Judith Brown Mrs. Eleanor Brunner Mr. and Mrs. John Calderonello Mrs. Lois Chandler Deborah R. Chapman Dr. and Mrs. John T. Chiles Walter and Lois Churchill Mr. Paul J. Churdar Mr. and Mrs. Steven R. Coffin Mr. Frederick D. Cohn* Joseph V. and Judith M. Conda Susan L. Conda William S. Cosgrove and Kimberlee A. Collins Brent and Pamela Cousino Dora E Crowther Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Croy Dr. Carlos A. de Carvalho and Ms. Carol Greenberg Sara Jane and William DeHoff Mr. David Donley and Ms. Karen E. Wood Mrs. Maureen Donnell Dr. and Mrs. John J. Dooner, Jr. Mr. Byron S. Dunham and Mr. Richard J. Hanna Mr. Wilson G. Duprey* Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas M. Dye
George and Pat Eistetter Anonymous Dr. and Mrs. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. James C. Roberts and Nancie Entenmann Roberts Charles* and Elizabeth Ference Mary and Jim Foote Mrs. Caroline Fraser* Robert and Josette Freeman Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence M. Friedman Mr. and Mrs. James E. Funk, Jr. Mary E. Galvin Mr. S. Bradley Gillaugh Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Glowacki Mrs. Blanche Greenwald* Mr. and Mrs. Douglas G. Haag Mr. John R. Hadley Mrs. George W. Haigh Sharon Hanna Mr. James R. and Barbara E. Harris Ann W. Hartmann Mrs. Nancy Heymann Mrs. Margaret J. Hiett* Mr. Edward T. Hill Barbara Sunderman Hoerner James and Kristine Hoffman Marjorie M. Hutton Mrs. Karen Isgrig Frank and Lynn Jacobs Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Dennis G. Johnson Mr. Dean Kasperzak Mr. and Mrs. Jon K. Kerl Mrs. Mildred E. Kern Ms. Mary E. Kincaid Mrs. Maureen Kirkby Mr. Joseph J. Klein Mr. and Mrs. Harley J. Kripke Floy M. Kroeplin Mark and Susan Kruse Mr. Gary B. Kuehnle Kurt Landig Dr. and Mrs. Dennis P. LeGolvan Mr. and Mrs. David R. Lindke
Jean and Kenneth Lovejoy Mr.* and Mrs. Roger Mandle Tom Marino Mrs. Helen McMaster* Rev. John O. Meloy* Karen Merrels Florence Metzger Mrs. Patsy Meyers Mr. and Mrs. Duke Mitchell Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Moran Mr. and Mrs.* John Newton Mrs. William Niehous Richard and Cheryl O’Connor Mr. Peter R. Orser Miss Elizabeth Papps Mr. Donald G. Pennell Mr. Jack E. Petersen Mary Ellen Pisanelli Meredith M. Prime Carolyn and Richard Putney Ms. Shelly Reber Mrs. Barbara B. Reed Robert F. Reichert Ms. Carrol Lee Rice Ms. Janet C. Rogolsky Mr. Walter D. Rosengarten Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Rothschild Adrienne Rudolph Mr. Gerald-David Runkle Mr. Norman L. Sandfield Ms. Ann Sanford Mrs. Dorothy Saxe Mr. Thomas A. Schmitt Priscilla and Fred Schwier Mr. George B. Seifried Mrs. Joan L. Sepessy* Mr. John Shelly Ms. Patricia Sill Mr. Richard R. Silverman* Mrs. Philip G. Simonds Mr. and Mrs. David A. Snavely Mr. John W. Snow Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Solomon Mrs. Suzanne Speck
The Toledo Museum of Art Ambassadors impact many areas of the Museum’s work. In 2020, the Ambassadors voted to allocate their combined impact to support exhibitions, the Master Series, and as sponsors of the Family Center. Despite TMA’s closure for part of 2020, the Family Center implemented virtual programs including monthly visiting artist experiences.
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MR. TOM ISLEY
David and Carol Rawle
Mrs. George W. Haigh Anne and Carl Hirsch John Hoover and Kelly Hoover Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Julius Mr. Dennis Kelsey Ms. Janet Laplant Ms. Susan L. Martin and Mr. Jude T. Aubry Mr. and Mrs. William Michalak James Mohler Owens Corning Susan F. and Thomas Palmer Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Pawlecki Kathy Peters Ransom Family Foundation Dr. James and Nancy Ravin Dr. Don Rowney and Dr. Susan Carlton Mr. Myrl Sauder Scoular Foundation Mr. and Mrs. James P. Silk, Sr. Mrs. Bonnie Smith Rick And Nicole Swank Margy and Scott* Trumbull Ina and James Tuschman UBS Financial Services Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Weber Mrs. David K. Welles, Sr. Mrs. Mary Wittenberg
MR. ROBERT BARON
MS. FRANCES TSAI
Ms. Janet C. Rogolsky
Second Tuesday Gallery Group
MR. JAMES APPOLD*
MRS. RHODA BERKOWITZ
MS. DIANE ZITZELBERGER
Dr. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. and Mrs. Helen H. Emmert
Anonymous Ms. Carol Thomas
MRS. DORA E CROWTHER Mamie Kalliel
In Memory of
DR. JOHN DOONER, JR.
MR. RICHARD D. ANDERSON*
Mr. and Mrs. Spencer D. Stone Mr.* and Mrs. Duane Stranahan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Taylor, Sr. Mrs. Patricia Timmerman Thomas P. and Nancy M. Verner Mr. Jules* L. Vinnedge*, Jr. Rose and Robert Wagner Dr. F. Michael Walsh Mr. Prosser M. Watts, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Weber Debi Weiker Mr. and Mrs. David K. Welles Jr. Mrs. David K. Welles, Sr. Lynnette and Dave Werning Mr. and Mrs. Byron L. West Ms. Patricia J. Whitesides and Donald Bauman Michael and Mary Beth Wielgopolski Mrs. Helen M. Williamson* Mrs. Victoria Williamson Ms. Carol Lynn Wilson Mr. Roger E. Wyman Ms. Diane M. Zitzelberger Mark Zyndorf
TRIBUTES
In Honor Of
Jon P. Miller and Kathryn Whitta Miller
DR. GREGOR EMMERT, SR. Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Weber
MR. RICHARD E. GELLOTT Mr. Adam Levine
MS. JUDITH HADLEY Nancy Hopko
MS. KAREN HAKEL Ms. Gretchen Rohm and Mr. David Ensing
MR. SCOTT J. HEACOCK Kent Heacock
MR. AND MRS. KENNETH HILEMAN Scott Veidenheimer
MR. AND MRS. CARL HIRSCH Mr. and Mrs. Larry L. Dill
Owens Corning
MRS. DORIS MCEWEN Ms. Jessica Grau
MS. LUCILLE PAWLOWICZ Kendal at Oberlin
MRS. BARBARA REED Paula H. and C. William Fall
MS. GRETCHEN ROHM Mrs. and Dr. Karen Klein Mr. and Mrs. Philip Selden
MS. AMANDA SCASNY Kendal at Oberlin
MS. LOUISE SCHLATTER SSOE Inc.
MR. JOHN S. STANLEY Mr. and Mrs. Gregory B. Denny
MR. BEN STEINGASS Kendal at Oberlin
MRS. CYNTHIA B. THOMPSON
Mr. Todd M. Ahrens and Mrs. Amy Craft Ahrens Sharon and Darryl Allen Ms. Karen Battles Ms. Barbara Berebitsky Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. and Ruth Ann Boehk Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Brady, Jr. Mrs. Mary C. Carr Sharon Clark Mr. and Mrs. Brent L. Cousino Mrs. Mary Dawson and Mr. Ian Dawson Dr. and Mrs. John J. Dooner, Jr. Eastman & Smith Ltd. O. Ralph Edwards and Nancy D. Edwards Mrs. Jean Emery Dr. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. and Mrs. Helen H. Emmert Mr. and Mrs. Joel P. Epstein Mr. Cecil Gillen Douglas and Christine Gulgin John Haeflinger and Sharon Haeflilnger
Mrs. Mary M. Karazim
MRS. ELIZABETH BAILEY* Carolyn and Richard Putney
MRS. JANET BARLEY* Roberta and Garrett Crane Maralon Haviland
MR. IRVING BAYER* Mr. Samuel Bayer
MRS. CAROL BENTLEY* Rhoda L. and Roger M. Berkowitz Mrs. George W. Haigh Sue and Larry Mullins Mrs. William F. Niehous Carolyn and Richard Putney Mr. and Mrs. James J. Secor, III Mr. Carter Smith Thomas W. and Susan F. Palmer Charitable Fund
MRS. CAROLE BOOTH* Carolyn and Richard Putney
MS. BARBARA BRENNER* Jan Leutz and Don Leutz
MRS. ALETA BRUGGEMAN* Mr. Joe Kowalski and Ms. Lynne A. Cusick
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MRS. LIGA DAIGA*
MR. ROGER LICTENWALD*
MRS. JEAN VOSS*
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Lowenstein
Mrs. Mary M. Karazim
Mr. and Mrs. David S. Barrie
MR. PAUL DITMYER*
MR. AND MRS. CLINTON MAUK
MR. THOMAS WALBRIDGE*
Dr. E. Ford Crider Dr. and Mrs. Donald A. Doneff Dr. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. and Mrs. Helen H. Emmert Mrs. Eleanor Gibbs Marjorie And Pa Holcomb Mr. and Mrs. Dennis R. Isabell Mrs. Sue Pokorney Mrs. Kay Saxby Mr. and Mrs. James P. Silk, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Staelin Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stout Bonnie Thrailkill Mrs. Kathleen Vanderveer Mrs. Marilyn Wheeler
Elizabeth Harris and Francis Harris Jeffrey Mauk John and Diane Mauk Caroline Walsh and Martin Walsh
Mr. James F. White, Jr.
MRS. NANCY FAIRHURST*
MRS. VIRGINIA SCHROEDER*
Margy and Scott* Trumbull
Joy Anhalt
MRS. JOYCE QUINLIVAN*
MR. DONALD SEEMAN*
Dr. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. and Mrs. Helen H. Emmert Mr. Blake Fillion
Ms. Ann M. Desmond Mrs. Mary M. Karazim Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Lawless Mr. and Mrs. Jay Lowenstein Mr. and Mrs. James P. Silk, Sr.
MS. SUSAN KAPLIN GOLDSTEIN*
MRS. LOIS SHELLY*
MRS. ELEANOR FILLION*
Dr. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. and Mrs. Helen H. Emmert
MS. PEGGY GRANT* Mrs. Mary M. Karazim
MRS. SUZANNE GUINIVERE*
Mrs. George W. Haigh
MR. JOSEPH D. MYER* Toledo Museum of Art Docents
MRS. DOROTHY RICE* Mrs. Mary M. Karazim
MR. JOSEPH ROSHE* Mrs. Lois Slotterbeck
Carolyn and Richard Putney
MS. DOROTHY SIEGEL* Mr. and Mrs. Norman Shapiro
MR. RICHARD SILVERMAN*
Mr. David B. Bowes and Dr. Rosemary Bowes Mrs. Elizabeth Boren Millhon Constance S. Wadsworth Ms. Patricia J. Whitesides and Donald Bauman
Gail Guggenheim Mark Lindschin Andrea Nyers and Brian Nyers Carolyn and Richard Putney Mrs. Jane Rayman Ms. Patricia J. Whitesides and Donald Bauman
MRS. MARION HALLAUER*
MS. ANNALOU SIMONS*
Ms. Laura Ellen Hurd Ms. Josephin VanWagner
MRS. MARGARET HIETT* Ms. Fanny P. Effler Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elias Dr. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. and Mrs. Helen H. Emmert Mrs. George W. Haigh Mrs. Irene A. Kaufman Margy and Scott* Trumbull
MS. JOY HINES* Mary Rayburn
MRS. BERNICE KATZ* Anthony Polito
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FR. EDWARD J. MATTIMOE, S.J.*
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. and Barbara S. Flexner
RABBI ALAN SOKOBIN*
MRS. MARGARET WERNER* Mr. Robert Bell Anna Wasylyshyn
MRS. SUSAN WHITE* Mrs. Patricia Frechette Mrs. Barbara B. Reed
DR. JOHN WILEY* Mrs. Janice L. Baker
MR. PHILIP WILLIAMS* Mrs. George W. Haigh Anne and Carl Hirsch Marjorie M. Hutton Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Savage
MR. FREDERIC D. WOLFE* Mr. and Mrs. George L. and Leslie A. Chapman Sara Jane and William DeHoff Dr. Gregor K. Emmert, Sr. and Mrs. Helen H. Emmert Mrs. Ann W. Hartmann
GRANTS, FOUNDATIONS & SPONSORSHIPS $100,000+
Hearst Foundations Estate of Bigelow Kinsey Estate of John F. Libbe Ohio Arts Council Ohio Facilities Construction Commission ProMedica Rita Barbour Kern Foundation The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Estate of Richard Saxe Mrs. David K. Welles, Sr. Estate of Gary W. Wilker Estate of W. Paul Zimmerman
Susan F. and Thomas Palmer
$50,000 - $99,999
MRS. ICA SUTTER*
Clement O. Miniger Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Flasck H. L. Thompson, Jr. Family Fund Anne and Carl Hirsch Estate of Rachel Merrill Nettie Poe Ketcham Trust
Mrs. Mary M. Karazim
MS. JAYNE TURSICH* Andrew Morris Charity White
MR. JULES VINNEDGE, JR* Ms. Patricia J. Whitesides and Donald Bauman
$25,000 - $49,999 Dr. and Mrs. John J. Dooner, Jr.
Landman-Goldman Foundation Mercy Health Mr. and Mrs. George W. Ritter Trust National Endowment for the Arts Owens-Illinois Inc. Estate of Edith B. Rathbun Samuel H. Kress Foundation Mr. and Mrs. E. Fred Schaefer Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Taylor, Sr. Taylor Automotive Group The France Stone Foundation The LaValley Foundation Greater Toledo Community Foundation
$10,000 - $24,999 Buckeye Broadband Joseph V. and Judith M. Conda Elizabeth C. Heckert Charitable Endowment Fund Fifth Third Bank Louise and Greg Gregory HCR Manor Care Ruth Mareta Heyn Trust KeyBank Mr. Jeffery and Dr. Inge Klopping Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP Speyer Foundation Mrs. Patricia Timmerman The Andersons Fund Supporting Organization Toledo Museum of Art Ambassadors Walter H. Christen Charitable Trust Webster Sturdivant Trust Mr. James F. White, Jr. Yark Automotive Group Inc. Anonymous (2)
$5,000 - $9,999 American Frame Corporation The Andersons, Inc. Art Alliance for Contemporary Glass Elsie and Harry Baumker Charitable Foundation Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. George L. and Leslie A. Chapman Mr. and Mrs. John K. Clement, Jr. Bill and Pam Davis Mary and Jim Foote Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence T. Foster Mr. Darrell* H. Fox* Frederick B. and Kate L. Shoemaker Trust Galerie Eric Coatalem Gross Electric Inc. Ann W. Hartmann Hylant John and Virginia Hankison Foundation Eileen Kennedy and Robert Heim The Lathrop Company Mosser Construction Inc. Mrs. Philip G. Simonds Cynthia and Ronald Thompson
Eastman & Smith Ltd. The Electric Quilt Company Fredi Heywood Ms. Rita Mansour Ms. Beverly S. Meyer Morgan Stanley National Philanthropic Trust Network For Good Nancy Phlegar David and Carol Rawle Robert L. Fondessy Family Fund J. Mark Robinson and Beverly Meyer Scoular Foundation Mr. William P. Short, III
$2,500 - $4,999 Mrs. Margaret Baranoski Tom and Betsy Brady Mr. and Mrs. David A. Bryan Eric Ederer and Kathleen Opperwall McIntosh Family Mrs. Geraldine M. Mowery Anne Palmer Mr. Norman L. Sandfield Toledo Rotary Club Foundation Mr. and Mrs. David K. Welles, Jr.
$1,000 - $2,499 Goncalo Abecasis and Cristen Abecasis Arrangements Abroad Inc. Mr. Samuel Bayer Sally L. Binard Mr. and Mrs. John Calderonello Stephen Callaway David Camp Dr. Carlos A. de Carvalho and Ms. Carol Greenberg Diamond Tours, Inc.
ASSOCIATED GENERAL CONTRACTORS Business Council members are vital partners for the Toledo Museum of Art and provide critical operating support that allows free admission, world-class exhibitions, and meaningful and engaging community outreach. Seventy-four organizations supported TMA as Business Council members, totaling $127,240 in funding. Associated General Contractors are dedicated supporters of the Toledo community, and have been loyal Business Council members for 17 years. TMA Annual Report
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Gifts of Time FISCAL YEAR JULY 1, 2019–JUNE 30, 2020 With Sincere Gratitude To Our Members
BOARD OF DIRECTORS Allan Block Pat Bowe Betsy Brady Sara Jane DeHoff Rodney Eason Dr. Sharon Gaber Judith Herb Jim Hoffman Mike Hylant George Jones Harley Kripke David Krock Rita Mansour Joe Napoli Randy Oostra Susan Palmer Mary Ellen Pisanelli Gretchen Rohm Jay Secor Sharon Speyer John Szuch Stephen D. Taylor Mike Thaman Cynthia Thompson Scott Trumbull* Deke Welles Thomas Winston Ellen Wise
EMERITUS DIRECTOR Richard Anderson*
HONORARY DIRECTORS Darryl F. Allen Vernelis Armstrong Don Bacigalupi Molly P. Chiles Thomas B. Donnell Helen Emmert Barbara Kaplin Helen McMaster* Susan E. Morgan Susan Reams Richard Reynolds
Dorothy Saxe Duane Stranahan* Edward F. Weber Georgia Welles Sandra Wiseley Frederic D. Wolfe*
DIRECTOR/CEO EMERITI Roger Berkowitz Roger Mandle*
COMMITTEE MEMBERS Bill Carroll Pariss Coleman Kim Collins Jarman Davis Matthew Faltys William Foster Mary Geiger Michael Hanf Ann Hartmann Dee Isaac Zac Isaac Billie Johnson Inge Klopping Susan Kruse Jon Levine Roger Mandle* Bob Moran Trina Secor April Smucker Ben Trumbull Margy Trumbull Georgia Welles
DOCENTS
Michele Alexander Lisa Alleman Jan Baker Colleen Barron Jone Catchings Judy Clay Michael Coomes Mimi Creutz Dora Crowther
Lynne Cusick Adele Dahlin Pamela Davis Andrea Delman M. Carmen Di Tore-Franco Annette Donar Sally Dreier Ann Filipiak Elizabeth Gabehart Janice Gagnet Mary Galvin Albert Geha David Guip Karen Hakel Rose Hampton Sharon Hanna Ruth Hanson Chris Harrington Deanna Harwell-Baksh Karen Hasenfratz Bonita Hay Lisa Holman Deb Isley Tom Isley Joseph (J.C.) Jarvis Suzanne Jennens Mary Karazim Karen Kerr Helen Kirk Dianne Klein Shirley Kohler Stacey Kripke Elaine Kunz Cynthia La Plant Tim Langhorst Patricia Lenortavage Shere Lichtenwald Louise Lowenstein Barbara Machin Kathleen Magliochetti Julia Mahoney Christine Mannes Marilee McSweeny Kim Mendel John Momenee Jerry Morse Mary Anne Muller
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Ann O’Leary Susan Palmer Ginny Peterson Dianna Reamsnyder Denise Robins Vickie Roemer Gretchen Rohm Jeanne Rudski Amy Russell Won Ryu Cathy Sautter Carol Schoen Carol Schwartz Judi Selden Marene Sevilla Kelly Sheehan Kay Silk Gloria Stiles Ann Strickler Joan Szuberla Yvonne Tertel Terry Teufel Patricia Tipton Mary Tita Frances Tsai Nancy Verner Karen Vollmer Alex Wagner Kateri Walsh Tonda Wiles Koszycki Valerie Wiley Anita Witt David Wolfe Judy Yaklin Diane Zitzelberger
AMBASSADORS Cindy Allen Sharon Allen Theresa Andrews Nancy Ankney Jan Antal Marilyn Arbaugh
Nancy Armstrong Kathleen Attwood Becky Aubry Elaine Bachey Carol Bardi Connie Barron-Smith Susan Barry Julia Bearss Cynthia Beekley Anne Bennett Gill Bentley Nancy Beren Barbara Biggs Sherry Bloom Arlene Bodette Suzanne Bond MaryLouise Bowe Jeanette Bradley Raquel Bravo Leslie Brookman Ellie Brunner Lois Burke Jenelle Buschur Sue Cardone Peggy Casey Deborah Chapman Skipper Christen Catherine Clark Judith A. Cohen Susan Croci Dora Crowther Barbara Cutillo Carol Czech Anita Daverio Claudia Day Anna L. Demas Susan Denny Cyndee Detrick Kerry Diehl Carol Dills Maureen Donovan Marja Dooner Hope DuCharme Judy Dye
June Effler Amy Eisenmann Elizabeth Emmert Helen Emmert Carol Esplin Carol Ann Fadell Elizabeth Ference Sanda Findley Bonnie Fumo Ditte Galbraith June Galvin Karen Gauthier Ma Geiger Rose Geswein Teri Giacci Maideh Gore Alison Graff Louise S. Gregory Carol Hall Claudia Handwork Ruth Hanson Mary Jo Hardy Susan Harms Nita Harrington Julie Harris Ann W. Hartmann Fredi Heywood Margie Hiett Ann Jane Hileman Anne Hirsch Kathleen Holmes Jane Hopkins Kate Horner Sue Howe Bette Hudnutt Johanna Hull Phyllis Ide Dee Isaac Deb Isley Darlene Johnson Debra Johnson Stephanie Johnstone Katherine Jones Sheila Jordan
MARC SHERRELL “I am a member of Circle because I truly believe in its mission of creating innovative and inclusive experiences for our community. Circle’s commitment to bringing both new ideas and new audiences to the Museum is easy for me to lend my support to. I am tremendously proud to be a part of the rich and important work done by Circle and the Museum and look forward to continuing my support and engagement.” 74
Nancy Kabat Barbara Kaplin Beverly Karp Irene Kaufman Judith Kehrle Jane Keller Virginia Keller Eleanor Killam Janet Killam Angela P. King Carol Kistler Mary Ann Kline Mary Knake Christina Friedgen Koch Ruby Kowalski Cynthia Krause Stacey Kripke Pixie Krumlauf Susan Kruse Martha Kudner Susan K. Lang Peggy Lewis Lynn Lippman Jean Lovejoy Jean MacMillan Karen Malcolm Susan L. Martin Stephanie Mattoni Judy Maurer Kristi McCarty Doris McEwen Colleen McGoldrick Sarah McHugh Karen Merrels Holly Metzger Sharon Midgley Diane Miller Kathryn Miller Sharmon Minns Marsha Molnar Andrea Monoky Meredith Moore Yolanda Mora-Calderon Judith Ward Moran Geraldine Mowery Sue Mullins Lindy Munn Constance Murphy Stephanie Murtagh Nancy Myers Ellen Navarre Cathy Nelson Suellen Newnham Donna Niehous Barbara Niemiec Catherine H. Noble Carole Nooney Patricia Nowak Janine Ody-Miller Barbara Oostra
Susan Palmer Linda Pawlecki Judy Pearson Diane Phillips Kerry L. Pigott Veronica Pinciotti Carol Pletz Gina Pope Karen Pugh Janet Purinton Nancy Quandt Terri Radke Kiran K. Rai Nancy Ravin Susan Reams Barbara Reed Kathleen Reed Judith Reitzel Karen Ridenour Cindy Rimmelin Leslie Risley Karen Rogalski Gretchen Rohm Melinda A. Romanoff Amy Rounds Laura Rudolph Kathleen Ryan Mary Saddemi Ruth Ann Sailstad Linda Sattler Catherine Scannell Katie Schueler Sue Shaneck Elizabeth Shawaker Linda Shiff Cheryl Silverman Kathy Simko Brooke Simonds Minnie Singh Cindy Skaff Lois Slotterbeck Suzanne Smitley Nancy Smythe Diane Snyder Vickie Souder Lillian Spaulding Penny Staelin Joelyn Stone Prudy Stone Pamela Straub Sarah Ann Strong Claudia Sundberg Paula Suter Ica Sutter Linda Kay Tallman Dianne Tankoos Barbara Thierwechter Patricia Timmerman Margaret Traband Margy Trumbull
Sharlotte Turin Ina Tuschman Patti Tuschman Mary Ann Vogel Dee Wainstein Terri Ward Chris Weber Kay Weprin Kathy Wetli Carmen Wigmans Carol Lynn Wilson Kathy Wilson Susan Wilson Jo Winzeler Ellen Wise Sandy Wiseley Patricia Wittenberg Anne Wolens Elizabeth Wolfe Julia Young Becky Zechman Nancy Zerner Tracey Zimmers Susan Zirkel Frances H. Anderson Rhoda Berkowitz Elizabeth C. Brady Sara Jane DeHoff Amy Gilman Mary Kennedy Gayle Mandle Cynthia B. Thompson Georgia Welles
VOLUNTEERS Anne Abate Dwight Albright Katalin Albring David Amstutz Barbara Apple Vaishnavi Aradhyula Carol Ardner Kathleen Attwood Jennifer Bevington Janet Biblewski Garry Blanchard Sandra Blanchard Alvera Brandt Jerry Brucksieker Gregory Claud Sarah Cohen Annette Colchagoff Jo Ann Coulson Cynthia Covington Michael Croke Patricia Czerminski Marilyn Czerniejewski Todd Donald Davis Dave Dibling Sara Dibling
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Kimberlee Diehr Liliane Dockett Richard Dockett Christina Dominique Kathleen Donahue Amy Doughty Sally Dreier Nancy Elzinga Carole Eppler Sherilynn Fick Sally Finnegan Joy Flansburg Jane Hamilton Alyssa Haring Barbara Heindel Teresa Huftalen Kathleen Kanipe Caroline Keller Elizabeth Kelley John Kuhlman Sheri Kuhlman Patience Kusz Patricia Ligibel Ted Ligibel Kathleen Masters Rhyannen Mattison Diane McCartney Marilee McSweeny (VS) Scott Meinhardt Sara Moore Jonette Moss Elsa Nadler Kathy Nelsen Geraldine Nichols Tara Packard Dominic Pardi Annetta Pawlak Candace Robinson Veronica Ross Johanne Rossi Jennifer Rossol Amy Russell Marilyn Ryder Louise Schlatter Honorata Scott Jalen Scott Thomas L. Sheffler Jim Sielicki Janice Siotkowski Kimberly Swirbul Polly Tate Ann TenEyck Kathleen Traynor Judi Uhrman Ann Weber Kathryn Wesenberg Ruth Westmeyer Christina Yoppolo
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CIRCLE BOARD MEMBERS Laurel Capeles Natalie Gray Shannon Holleran Andre Johnson Brittany Jones Ruben Kappler Kelly McGilvery Emily Numbers Branton Pardee Bradley Piri Heather Plowman Meyling Ruiz Marc Sherrell Amanda Viviano Katie Warchol
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