2011-2012 ANNUAL REPORT MOBILE MUSEUM OF ART
2011-2012ANNUAL REPORT
M O B I L E M U S E U M O F A R T
TABLE OF CONTENTS2
THE MISSION OF MOBILE MUSEUM OF ARTis to provide a place
where people enrich
their lives through
interaction with
the visual arts in
thought-provoking
and creative ways
that nourish and
delight the mind
and spirit. For
the fundamental
purpose of
education, the
Museum collects,
conserves, exhibits,
interprets and
researches art.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
MMOA BY THE NUMBERS ............................................................................ 3
FROM THE DIRECTOR ..................................................................................... 4
EXHIBITIONS ..................................................................................................... 5
CURRICULA-BASED EDUCATION .............................................................. 10
COMMUNITY OUTREACH ............................................................................ 12
GIFTS & ACQUISITIONS ............................................................................... 14
GIFTS & CONTRIBUTIONS ........................................................................... 16
DONOR CIRCLE............................................................................................... 17
STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION ................................................... 18
MMOA DOCENTS & STAFF ......................................................................... 19
cover, A young art enthusiast waits his turn to talk with artist and MMofA member Tut Altman Riddick.
MMOA BY THE NUMBERS 3
MMOA BY THE NUMBERS
93,212.........................Number Of Sculpture Trail Visitors
41,432....................................Number Of Onsite Visitors
30,981.................................... Number Of Website Visits
22,177 .........Number Served Through Traveling Exhibitions
7,000 .....Number Of Students Who Attended Guided Tours
30,151 ..........................Number Served Through Outreach
4,430 ................................. Number Of Art Blast Attendees
170 ....................Number Of Spring Break Camp Attendees
1,062 ................................. Number Of Free Day Attendees
2,144 .................. Number Of Attendees At Adult Programs
710 ....................................................Number Of Members
1,152 ............ Number Of Home School Program Attendees
344 ...................Number Of Students Attending Art Classes
161 .....................Number Of Curricula-Based Guided Tours
330 ..............Number Of Woody’s Song Program Attendees
207 ................................ Number Of Gifts And Acquisitions
128 .......................................... Number Of Adult Programs
41 ..............................................Number Of Facility Rentals
1 (online) .......................Number Of Catalogues Produced
FROM THE DIRECTOR4
FROM THE DIRECTOR
Dr. W. Allen OaksChairman
Mr. G. Tim GastonVice Chairman
Mr. F. Michael JohnsonTreasurer
Mrs. Tammy SmithSecretary
Mrs. Wanda ChalhubMrs. Buffy DonlonMr. Tyrone Fenderson, Jr.Mr. Lowell J. FriedmanDr. J. Russell Goodloe, Jr.Mrs. Katie H. HassellMrs. Susan O. HelmsingMrs. Yuko T. Jordan
Mrs. Rosalie P. LockhartMrs. Austill S. LottDr. Arnold LutermanMrs. Lucy McVayMrs. H. Taylor MorrissetteMrs. Geri S. MoultonMr. James F. WatkinsMrs. Sheri N. Weber
2011–2012BOARD OF DIRECTORS
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Mrs. Nan AltmayerMrs. Karen Outlaw AtchisonDr. Robert J. BantensMrs. Patrice BaurMrs. Linda H. CooperCity Council Pres. Reggie Copeland
Dr. Fred Cushing, Jr.Mr. Michael C. DowMr. Gilbert F. Dukes, Jr.Mrs. Patricia EdingtonMrs. Marilyn FoleyState Rep. Victor Gaston
Mrs. Billie F. GoodloeMs. Ansley G. GreenCity Council Mbr. Gina GregoryDr. and Mrs. Rhodes HavertyMr. Vivian G. Johnston, Jr.Mayor Samuel L. JonesDr. Jerry D. JordanMr. James E. KennedyMrs. Freida Maisel
Mrs. Arlene MitchellMrs. Edna RiversMrs. Nancy T. SledgeMrs. Teresa M. SmithMs. Sarah C. TeagueMrs. Ann Marie TerryMr. Charles Duke Zucker
This Annual Report includes many wonderful programs, exhibitions, gifts
and acquisitions that preceded my tenure as the Museum’s Director (which
began Oct. 1, 2012). As I review those achievements in the following pages,
I am reminded of what a dedicated, talented group of Board members,
staff and volunteers we have! The Annual Report is a clear indicator of
ongoing, dedicated activity by many good folks; it also communicates our
commitment to arts education – the heart and soul of our core mission. Our
Education department is thriving in its enrichment of lives at every age.
After completing my first year in Mobile, I am pleased to report I am very
happy to be here and honored to be associated with this fine Museum. I
look forward to building upon the successes of the past as we begin year-
long preparations and activities for our 50th Anniversary, culminating in
celebrations in early November 2014.
It’s been a good year... and we expect an even better year to cite in our next
Annual Report!
Deborah Velders
Mobile Museum of Art Director
EXHIBITIONS 5
EXHIBIT IONS
JOHN JAMES AUDUBON: American Artist and Naturalist
John James Audubon (American, 1785-1851), Passenger Pigeon (Ectopistes Migratorius), Plate #62, 1829, hand-colored copper plate engraving. On loan from the Collection of the John James Audubon Museum, Henderson, Kentucky.
Reflections and Projections: A
Collaboration of Music and Art
Sally Wood Johnson (American, b. 1933), Silence, 2007, digital photograph.
JOHN JAMES AUDUBON: American Artist and Naturalist
October 14 to January 8, 2012
John James Audubon’s (1785-1851) accomplishments as a naturalist and artist
were chronicled in this exhibition. His written journals kept over a lifetime
stand as an unsurpassed contribution to the world of fine art, natural science,
American history and literature. The exhibition featured 51 Double Elephant
Folio size, hand-colored engravings from his masterwork, The Birds of
America, printed in England between 1826 and 1838.
The Birds of America consists of four volumes containing 435 hand-
colored plates portraying 1,065 birds. Life-size images of the birds, from
the snowy owl to the blue heron, were printed on sheets of J. Whatman
Double Elephant laid paper measuring 26 1/2 inches by 39 inches, the largest
size available. Fewer than 200 of the complete four-volume sets were ever
printed.
The exhibition also presented original works by Audubon, including
oil paintings, a drawing and watercolors with his field notes, as well as
comparative prints and a portrait of Audubon by his contemporaries, original
letters, documents, personal items, rare books and photographs.
Reflections and Projections: A Collaboration of Music and Art
October 14 to January 8, 2012
Birmingham artist Sally Johnson and Miami-based composer Dorothy
Hindman collaborated to create this installation of projected and still images
in an environment of ambient “aleatory” music. The inspiration for this
project was a conversation Johnson had with legendary avant-garde musician
John Cage (1912-1992). Aleatory music, as Cage employed it, incorporates
random or accidental elements and has been an important contribution to
modern music, dance and drama. The exhibition was conceived to involve
the viewer in an experience of chance interaction with the projected and
still images produced by Johnson and with Hindman’s music, which came
from nine separate music sources playing individual lines of music begun in
random fashion.
This exhibition was organized by the Mobile Museum of Art and Sally
Wood Johnson and was supported by a grant from the Alabama State Council
on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.
EXHIBITIONS6
Celebrating Our Maritime Heritage: A Coastal Holiday
December 9 to January 8, 2012
Juror Ben Shamback selected this display of works by local artists on the
theme of coastal and maritime life from well over 100 submissions. Shamback
is a highly accomplished realist painter and instructor at the University of
South Alabama. Works in the show depicted the picturesque waterfront
and estuaries of the Mobile area as well as wildlife fishing boats and other
water-based activities. Best of Show honors went to William C. Morris for
his incredibly detailed and evocative scene of a snowy egret flying over the
Mobile Delta as the sun sets behind a bank of clouds.
FACING SOUTH: Portraits of Southern Artists by Jerry Siegel
January 13 to April 1, 2012
This series of portraits by Jerry Siegel is the result of more than 15 years of
traveling to visit the homes and studios of the South’s most significant artists.
As a young man, Siegel had become acquainted with many artists through
his namesake uncle’s Selma gallery, which was one of the first to collect and
promote Southern artists. This project began as Siegel was photographing
some of his friends who happened to be older artists and realized the value a
more complete record would have for art historians.
In all, 100 intimate, sympathetically composed portraits of the artists
– potters, sculptors, photographers, painters and writers – were presented.
A book by the same name was released with the opening of the exhibition.
Co-published by The University of Alabama Press and the Jule Collins Smith
Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University, Facing South includes brief
biographies of these remarkable artists and essays by Marilyn Laufer, Dennis
Harper and Julian Cox. The exhibition was organized by the Jule Collins Smith
Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University.
The American Society of Marine Artists 15th National Exhibition
January 20 to April 8, 2012
Since its founding in 1978, the American Society of Marine Artists has brought
together some of America’s most talented contemporary artists in the marine
art field. Their most highly anticipated exhibition is the national juried
EXHIBIT IONS
FACING SOUTH: Portraits of Southern Artists by Jerry Siegel
Jerry Siegel (American, 20th century), Jonathan Green, South Carolina, 2010, color digital print.
Celebrating Our Maritime Heritage: A Coastal Holiday
William C. Morris (American, b. 1945), Dust on the Delta, acrylic on paper.
EXHIBITIONS 7
exhibition, which is held every three years. In this, their 15th show, the 122
paintings, sculptures and scrimshaw pieces carry the centuries-old traditions
of maritime art into the 21st century and demonstrate the continuing vitality
of the art form.
Organized by the American Society of Marine Artists, the exhibition
was accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue. The exhibition was
supported locally by a grant from The C. D., Helen and Jeff Glaze Foundation.
BOXES AND THEIR MAKERS
April 6 to July 1, 2012
An international selection of world class artists / woodworkers was invited
to create the objects for this exhibition. Variously playful, elegant, beautiful,
whimsical, sculptural or conceptual, the work of the 33 craftspeople in this
show defies the common notion of what a box is. For the purpose of this
exhibition, a box was defined as a container (however little it might hold)
that would fit on a tabletop and be made primarily of wood (although
the box by Kip Christensen was mostly antelope antler). The works in this
exhibition were selected by three curators. Oscar Fitzgerald is an author,
furniture historian and decorative arts consultant. Toni Sikes is Founder,
Artistic Advisor, Board member and former CEO of The Guild, a Wisconsin
company dedicated to helping artists market and sell their work. Kevin
Wallace is Director of the Beatrice Wood Center for the Arts in Ojai,
California.
This exhibition originated at the Messler Gallery of the Center for
Furniture Craftsmanship, Rockport, Maine. It was sponsored in part by IRWIN
Tools and Accessories.
TODAY’S VISUAL LANGUAGE: Southern Abstraction, A Fresh Look
April 20 to September 16, 2012
Accomplishments in abstract art over the last 20 years were featured in
this exhibition of work by 37 artists with ties in heritage or training to
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee,
South Carolina and Virginia. The genre of abstract, non-representational
art was shown as a living, vibrant form of expression for these artists with
Southeastern ties. The works encompassed a variety of media including
BOXES AND THEIR MAKERS
Ray Jones (American, b. 1955), Omega V, 2008, mahogany, pommele bosse and ebony.
TODAY’S VISUAL LANGUAGE:
Southern Abstraction, A Fresh Look
Herb Jackson (American, b. 1945), Water Source, 1998, acrylic.
The American Society of Marine Artists 15th National Exhibition
Michael J. Woodard (American, 20th century), Del Sol, 1988, oil on canvas.
EXHIBITIONS8
painting on canvas and paper, drawings on paper, glass, fiber/mixed media
and collage materials. This range of materials is suggestive of the diversity of
approaches to creating abstract art today – stylistically ranging from neo-
expressionism, post-painterly abstraction, pattern and decoration through
areas of indefinable individualism and experimentation. Organized by the
Mobile Museum of art, the exhibition was curated by Paul W. Richelson and
Donan Klooz. The exhibition catalogue was produced as a digital document
that can be viewed at the Museum’s website.
THE HEART OF ECHIZEN: Wood-Fired Works by Contemporary Masters
April 13 to July 28, 2012
Ceramic craftsmen working in the Echizen, in the Fukui prefecture near the
Sea of Japan, are heirs to a tradition of families there producing utilitarian
ware for the last 800 years. This exhibition highlighted work from 20 potters
of the region. Using locally dug clay, they produce work largely unadorned
except for the residues of wood ash that are a product of the wood-fired
kilns traditionally used. The warm color of the native clay combined with the
swirling deposits and drips of the firing create an earthy, natural appearance,
which has long been prized in Japan. The exhibition was the occasion for a
demonstration given at the Kiln Studio and Gallery in Fairhope, Alabama,
by Echizen artist Tetsura Baito, whose hand-built elephant was among the
most delightful of the works shown. Jointly curated by Christopher Kelly and
Preston Saunders, the exhibition was made possible by the Japan Foundation,
Echizen City, Bridgewater State University and Piedmont College.
Masters of Graphic Art: From the Collection of Gerald Swetsky
April 13 to September 16, 2012
This exhibition of 32 works from the collection of Gerald Swetsky featured
both European 20th-century masters and their predecessors in graphic
expression such as Francisco de Goya, as well as American artists in a range of
stylistic areas. Artists such as Picasso, Chagall, Miro and Dali are most famous
for their work in painting but translated many of their important works
into print media. Often, though, they followed the example of Goya, whose
etching in the collection, The Little Prisoner, was designed specifically as a
print. American artists with iconic images in this exhibition include Norman
Rockwell and Alexander Calder as well as animator Ralph Bakshi, who is
EXHIBIT IONS
Masters of Graphic Art: From the
Collection of Gerald Swetsky
Marc Chagall (French, born Russia, 1887-1985), Crossing of the Red Sea from the Bible series, 1956, hand-colored etching.
THE HEART OF ECHIZEN: Wood-Fired
Works by Contemporary Masters
Mitsuo Kasatsuji (Japanese, b. 1947), Tea Bowl, 2011, wood-fired ceramic.
EXHIBITIONS 9
represented by a cell from his famous animated movie Heavy Traffic. The
exhibition was organized by the Mobile Museum of Art.
I AM YORK Tut Altman Riddick My People and Places
July 13 to September 23, 2012
“I am York” was Dorothy “Tut” Altman Riddick’s emphatic reply to a
disparaging remark made about the rural Alabama town where her ancestors
were among the first settlers and where she spent most of her childhood. This
effectively silenced the critic and also expresses her feelings of identification
with York, the predominantly African-American town where she grew up
with her grandmother, her aunt and their housekeeper. Tut was allowed a
degree of freedom that was unusual at the time as far as the books she read,
and she was often in the company of her housekeeper and members of the
community. Through these experiences, Tut learned to value people for their
humanity and wisdom regardless of color or social standing, which led her to
work actively for the civil rights movement in Alabama in the 1960s. Personal
relationships have defined much of the artwork she has created over the past
60-plus years, whether they are expressed in portraits or in books featuring
quotes from her friends. Tut’s belief in art as a bridge inspired her to lead a
grassroots effort culminating in the Coleman Center, which opened in York
in 1985. The center fulfills a need she identified in the town. It nurtures
the creativity of town residents and facilitates social change through its
programs, such as an artist-in-residence facility that hosts artists to work on
community-based projects. After graduating from the University of Alabama,
Tut studied at the Art Students League in New York City and was encouraged
to stay there to pursue a career as an artist. Instead, her strong ties to
Alabama brought her back and she became a teacher in Mobile. She enrolled
at Spring Hill College to study printmaking so that she could keep her art
and share it as well. For more than 30 years, Tut took classes at the Penland
School of Crafts in North Carolina, enhancing her skills in almost their entire
catalogue of offerings.
The retrospective features paintings, prints, handmade books,
photography and ceramics created in collaboration with Mobilian Charles
Smith. The exhibition was organized by the Mobile Museum of Art.
I AM YORK Tut Altman Riddick My
People and Places
Tut Altman Riddick (American, b. 1928), Gotta Serve Somebody from Musician Series, Bob Dylan,c. 1990s, acrylic on canvas. On loan from the artist.
CURRICULA-BASED EDUCATION10
CURRICULA-BASED EDUCATION
PACE
The PACE (Pursuing Academic and Creative Excellence)
program in 2011-2012 emphasized geography. Serving
approximately 500 students, Museum educators
presented a grid map and compass rose art activity,
with a focus on longitude and latitude. The interactive
activity was a dance lesson teaching the Highland Fling
with background information. Gallery tours included
artworks that represented different areas of the world
with particular geographic features.
ART BLAST
The Museum’s summer camp, Art Blast, was well
attended in 2012, with 85% capacity enrollment. New
to the program was a partnership with the Mobile
Botanical Gardens, NatureBlast, in which third and
Curricula-based education continues to meet the needs of many in Mobile and surrounding counties. Receiving
positive feedback from parents and teachers alike, the Education department has developed programs that reflect
the Discipline-Based Arts Education principles of history, criticism, aesthetics and production.
fourth graders learned about nature through art
projects. New classes included Arts Extravaganza, Mixed
Media Mania with Music, Travel with Art and Small
Steps to Save the Planet: Recycled Art. With 886 spots
taken out of a possible 1,047, the classrooms were full
with students and inspiration.
Home School Days
Home School Art School provided an opportunity for
homeschooled students in the area to experience a
quality art education. For two semesters, 134 students
had the chance to create original works of art while
learning about art history and art appreciation, both
in the classroom and through the galleries. Three
age levels allow students to move up and learn more
sophisticated principles and techniques each year.
CURRICULA-BASED EDUCATION 11
School Tours
School tours provided an excellent opportunity for area
students to experience art on a firsthand basis. In an effort
to fill a need in the community for more arts education,
the Education department developed 11 themed tours,
four special education tours and five special exhibit tours
that included a docent-led gallery tour and complementary
studio art class. Nearly 5,000 students visited the Museum
over the course of the school year, with positive feedback
from teachers about the quality of the programs. For the
Audubon exhibit, students created their own Audubon-
inspired botanical drawing, and for the American
Society of Marine Artists exhibit, they learned to paint a
seascape. Annual collaborative programs included Mobile
International Festival, Mobile Society of Model Engineers
and Celebrate Black History Month with Gloria Petite
Williams’ Processional Dance event.
Woody’s Song and the Junior League of Mobile
The Junior League of Mobile continued its very generous
support of $2,000 for the art program Woody’s Song
here at the Museum. With enrollment up to 20 this year,
hands-on projects stimulate creativity and communication
in the autistic students who attend. Mobile Museum of
Art Educator Susan Baker and volunteer Carol Wiggins, a
speech pathologist, continue to be vital components of the
program.
After-School Classes
Fall, winter and spring term classes were offered in the
afternoons on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Forty-three
students took advantage of the small class sizes and
excellent opportunity to learn about and do art in a
Museum setting. Elements and principles of art, along with
a variety of mediums, were part of the curricula. Young
artists created portraits, landscapes and still lifes, ending
each term with a reception and art show for family and
friends.
Spring Break Art Camp
The second Spring Break Art Camp, offered April 16-
20, 2012, was successful, with 22 students enjoying art
activities during both morning and afternoon sessions.
With an eye to spring-themed activities, students created
garden décor, as well as fine art and arts and crafts. On
Friday, the older class was treated to a field trip to the
University of South Alabama’s glassblowing studio, where
Rene Culler created a magnificent vase from beginning to
end. Ms. Culler later generously donated the vase to the
Education Wing.
COMMUNITY OUTREACH12
COMMUNITY OUTREACHCommunity Festivals
The Museum participated in a number of civic and
cultural festivals by offering engaging art activities and
experiences. For Bayfest, Museum educators combined
elements of music in the art activities. Festival of Flowers
in the spring was all about the creation of the garden
hats, but the storybook nook was just as popular. At
Earth Day Mobile Bay, participants got an individual
session with Museum educators in the “Creation
Station,” where all the materials that are used to create
a new artistic masterpiece are recycled items.
Family-Friendly Mardi Gras
This annual celebration focuses on the entire family
and presents the artistry behind the local Mardi Gras
traditions. This year for the first time, presenters
from outside of Mobile were invited to participate. In
addition to free admission to the galleries and various
art activities in the Interactive Gallery, Big Chief Jerry
Butler of the New Orleans Mardi Gras Indian Show
came over to lead the parade through the Museum and
discuss the heritage and cultural traditions of the New
Orleans Mardi Gras Indians. Mobile was still represented
well by the always exciting Excelsior Band and of course
all the parade goers.
Education Gallery Exhibitions
Throughout the school year, the walls along the
Education Gallery welcomed students entering the
Museum with works by student and professional artists.
To see high-quality art produced by their peers has
proven to be the best kind of motivation for many
COMMUNITY OUTREACH 13
first time student visitors to explore their
own creativity, as well as deepening their
appreciation for visual art as they visit the
galleries.
Partnership with Mobile Public Library
In July of each year since 2007, the Museum
has hosted the Finale Celebration for the
Mobile Public Library’s Summer Reading
Program. Through this free event, many new
visitors are introduced to the wonderful art
in the galleries, and the Museum continues to
strengthen another community partnership.
During the school year, Museum educators visit
the Toulminville library branch and the Ben May
main library each month to present art activities
and presentations linking back to the Museum’s
traveling exhibitions.
A Special Enhanced Tour
Building on the existing partnership with
the Alabama Institute for the Deaf and Blind
(AIDB), Museum educators and staff from
AIDB worked together to create an enhanced
tour for the blind/low vision adult community
here in Mobile. Special training was provided
to Museum docents and Museum security by
personnel from AIDB, and Museum curators
provided behind-the-scenes access to the
exhibition Elvis at 21: Photographs by Alfred
Wertheimer. Over 20 blind/low vision adult
visitors and their guests enjoyed the tour,
explored an art materials tactile session in the
art gallery and participated in a video session to
evaluate the program’s effectiveness.
GIFTS & ACQUISITIONS14
GIFTS - 179 TOTALSCULPTURE
2 gifts
WOOD3 gifts
PAINTINGS11 gifts
CERAMICS2 gifts
WORKS ON PAPER139 gifts
GLASS14 gifts
DECORATIVE ARTS8 gifts
PURCHASES - 2 TOTALPAINTING1 purchase
WORK ON PAPER1 purchase
G IFTS & ACQUISIT IONS
GIFTS & ACQUISITIONS 15
left page, clockwise:
Yoshio Taylor (American, b. 1948, Okinawa, Japan, resides in Sacramento),
Tatsumaki, 1987, fired clay, glazes and glaze stains. Gift of the Porter*Price
Collection.
Susan Pfeiffer (American, b. 1958), River Eagles Table, 1994, wood. Gift of
the Porter*Price Collection.
Richard Lindner (American, b. Germany, 1901-1978), Man’s Best Friend,
1970, lithograph on paper. Gift of Bill McPherrin, in Memory of Elizabeth
Duff McPherrin.
Polly Harrison (American, 1946-2007), My Mail 2004, 2004, mixed media.
Gift of Martha Stamm Connell and Pat Connell.
right page, clockwise:
Molly Stone (Swedish, b. 1950), Blue Ice Bowl, 1990, glass. Gift from Elice
Haverty and Dr. Rhodes Haverty.
Victoria Moers (German, n.d.-1947), Female Nude, n.d., chalk on paper. Gift
of David and Brigitte Kelley.
Miriam Beerman (American, b. 1923), Soutine Hiding, 1987, oil on
canvas. Purchased with Funds Generously Contributed by Jerry and Paula
Gottesman.
SUPPORT FROMCORPORATIONS, FOUNDATIONS,
BEQUESTS & GOVERNMENT
GIFTS & CONTRIBUTIONS16
CORPORATE GRANTS
BP Economic & Property Damages Promotional Fund
Larson & McGowin, Inc.
PRIVATE FOUNDATION GRANTS
The Crampton Trust
The Hearin-Chandler Foundation
Jewish Community Foundation of Greater MetroWest New Jersey
The J. L. Bedsole Foundation
The Community Foundation of South Alabama
Clyde C. Snyder Art & Classical Music Field of Interest Fund
The C. D., Helen and Jeff Glaze Foundation
The Mary Josephine Larkins Charitable Foundation
Center for Furniture Craftsmanship
Lillian C. McGowin Foundation
Walmart Foundation
The Moses Foundation
GOVERNMENT GRANTS
City of Mobile
Mobile County
Alabama State Council on the Arts
Alabama Tourism Department
Alabama Arts License Tag Committee
BENEFACTOR
Dr. and Mrs. J. Russell Goodloe, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor H. Lott, Jr.
PATRONMrs. I. Patricia Barr
Mr. and Mrs. David J. Cooper, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Crawford
Inger and David Duberman
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell J. Friedman
Mr. and Mrs. G. Tim Gaston
Mrs. Harold S. Grehan, Jr.
Dr. Edward A. Hyndman, III
Mrs. Sharon Johnson
Mrs. Betty Wilson Kerth
Dr. and Mrs. Paul Maertens
Dr. and Mrs. W. Earl Monroe
Dr. and Mrs. W. Allen Oaks
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Pischek
Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Parkman
Dr. and Mrs. Charles B. Rodning
Dr. and Mrs. Otha C. Salter
Ms. Kristen Stevens
Mrs. Ann Marie Terry
SUPPORTER
Dr. Robert J. Bantens
Mr. Jimmie J. Duet
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Frank, Jr.
Dr. Charles Hamm and Dr. Clara Massey
Mrs. Frederick G. Helmsing
Mr. and Mrs. Lyman F. Holland, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. F. Michael Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Ladd
Drs. Martha and Joseph LoCicero
Mrs. Rosalie Lockhart
Mrs. Herman Maisel
Mr. and Mrs. Ben McMillan
Dr. and Mrs. Leon McVay, III
Mrs. Arlene Mitchell
Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Otts, III
Dr. Charles L. Rich
Mr. Michael A. Smith
Mrs. Phyllis Springen
Mr. Melvin Stein
Mrs. Anna F. Swider
Mrs. Sarah C. Teague
Dr. and Mrs. James K. V. Willson, III
ASSOCIATEMr. and Mrs. James E. Atchison
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. H. Babington
Dr. and Mrs. William E. Barrick
Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Baur
Ms. Anne Boettcher
Dr. and Mrs. Philip J. Butera
Ms. Norma Calder
Dr. and Mrs. Lanier S. Cauley
Dr. and Mrs. Elias G. Chalhub
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Cleverdon
Dr. Albert S. Coker, Jr.
Maj. Gen. & Mrs. J. Gary Cooper
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Damson
Mr. Jonathan Dick
Mrs. Elizabeth K. Eastman
Ms. Ansley Green
Mrs. Robert A. Guthans
Dr. John H. Hafner
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Hassell
Drs. Jorge and Alma Herrera
Mr. Nicholas H. Holmes, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Houston
DONOR CIRCLEThe Donor Circle of the Mobile Museum of Art represents the highest levels of cumulative family and individual
support given to the Museum throughout the calendar year. The generous contributions of these donors help
provide vital operating funds that enable the Museum to offer innovative educational and artistic experiences
while ensuring financial stability.
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Hyndman, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Jeffery
Yuko and Jeff Jordan
Judge and Mrs. G. B. Kahn
Dr. Virginia Ann Kerth
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Lang
Mr. and Mrs. L. Keville Larson
Mr. and Mrs. John N. Leach
Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Luterman
Mrs. Ruth Macnamara
Dr. P. Graham McClintock, Jr.
Mrs. Lawrence J. McKinney
Dr. and Mrs. Earl S. McLaughlin
Mrs. H. Taylor Morrissette
Mrs. Norman A. Nicolson
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Norris
Mrs. Arthur R. Outlaw
Mr. and Mrs. David M. Pearsall
Dr. and Mrs. Allen Perkins
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey E. Quinnelly
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Riddick
Dr. and Mrs. Leroy Riddick
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Saunders
Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Sledge, III
Cdr. and Mrs. Marven M. Smith
Mr. Samuel L. Stockman, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Weber
Ms. Erin R. Wheeler
DONOR CIRCLE 17
BENEFACTOR - $2,500 - $4,999
PATRON - $1,000 - $2,499
SUPPORTER - $500 - $999
ASSOCIATE - $250 - $499
STATEMENT OFFINANCIAL POSIT ION
STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION18
EXHIBITIONS,
PROGRAMS AND
EDUCATION
COLLECTIONS
AND
CONSERVATION
PURCHASES OF
ARTWORK
MANAGEMENT
AND GENERAL
FUNDRAISING
$2,272,558$307,999
$48,712
$248,714
$40,953
78%11% 2%
8%
1%
Total Operat ing Budget$2,918,936
Audited f inancia ls avai lable upon request
MMOA DOCENTS & STAFF 19
MMOA DOCENTS & STAFFDEBORAH VELDERSDirector
MARY LEE MONTGOMERYAssistant to the Director
MARLENE BUCKNEROperations Manager
PAUL W. RICHELSONManager of Curatorial Affairs
TONY POTAPENKODirector of Finance
DONAN KLOOZCurator of Exhibits
KURTIS THOMASCurator of Collections
HOWARD P. MCPHAILCurator of Education
KIM WOODCurator of Education
MEREDITH IVYSpecial Events Coordinator
RACHEL YOUNGRegistrar
JANET WELLSStore Sales
SHARON SOKOLArt Teacher
CARREN QUINNArt Teacher
TERRI BAKERArt Teacher
SUSAN BAKERArt Teacher
LOREN BURROUGHSAdmissions Desk Receptionist/Store
WENDI HATHORNOutreach Assistant/Education
GLENN BINGHAMStore Sales/Photographer
STAN HACKNEYStore Manager
GERI MITCHELLAdministration Desk Receptionist
JEFF REINSMITHExhibit Technician
JOHN VACCAROFacilities Manager
THERESA EDWARDSMuseum Guard Supervisor
HARRIET HORNMuseum Guard
KERCHEVAL KINGMuseum Guard
LUCILLE ROBINSONMuseum Guard
DANNY J. GOODWINMuseum Guard
LYNDELL JONESMuseum Guard
JACQUELINE PORTERMuseum Guard
ULRIC L. RILEYMuseum Guard
EULANDA WATTERSMuseum Guard
ALAN WEISSMuseum Guard
JACQUELINE PETTAWAYCustodian
NORRIS TURNERCustodian
PATRICIA G. WAREFinance Assistant
MITTIE WINGFIELDAdmissions Desk/Store Sales
Lexie Barnett
Elaine Blount
Debra Bridges
Tiffany Dotson
Mary Frances Hallet
June Harter
Wendi Hawthorn
Dorinda Hilbun
Sharon Johnson
Betty Kerth
Virginia Kerth
Catherine King
Patricia King
Martha LoCicero
Ethel Lomas
Ruth MacNamara
Andrew David Marshall
Mary Jane Sisson
Marianne Testin
Bobba Turley
Judy Vajgrt
Betty Vella
Carol Wiggins
Elaine Williams
Lin Wilson
VOLUNTEERS
MM AofM O B I L E M U S E U M O F A R T
MM AofM O B I L E M U S E U M O F A R T
4850 Museum Drive
Mobile, AL 36608
251.208.5200