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FINE ARTS WORK CENTER in Provincetown A LOOK BACK AT A YEAR OF ACCOMPLISHMENTS ANNUAL REPORT 2016

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Page 1: ANNUAL REPORT 2016 - FINE ARTS WORK CENTER in … · 2016-2017 Fellows. 7. Visual Arts Fellows – 2016 Accomplishments. 10. ... printmaking, sculpture, photography, multi-media,

FINE ARTS WORK CENTER in Provincetown

A L O O K B A C K A T A Y E A R O F A C C O M P L I S H M E N T S

ANNUAL REPORT 2016

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1 The Fine Arts Work Center

2 Programs

2 Buildings & Grounds

4 Letter From the President & Director

5 Dedication – Michael Prodanou

6 2016-2017 Fellows

7 Visual Arts Fellows – 2016 Accomplishments

10 Writing Fellows – 2016 Accomplishments

16 Exhibitions

18 Ways to Give

20 Supporters

32 Financial Summary

34 Membership

36 Leadership

37 Acknowledgments

I N S I D E T H E W O R K C E N T E RThe FINE ARTS WORK CENTER was founded in 1968 by a group of artists, writers, and patrons, including Stanley Kunitz, Robert Motherwell, Hudson D. Wallker, Fritz Bultman, Salvatore and Josephine Del Deo, Phil Malicoat, Myron Stout, Jack Tworkov, among others. The founders envisioned a place in Provincetown, the country’s most enduring art colony, where artists and writers could live and work together in the early phases of their careers. The founders believed that the freedom to pursue creative work within a community of peers is the best catalyst for artistic growth. The Work Center has dedicated itself to this mission for almost 50 years.

Today the Work Center is a renowned long-term residency program for emerging artists and writers. Each year the Work Center offers residencies – the gift of time, space, and community – to twenty Fellows. In addition to this flagship program, the Work Center offers an open-enrollment Summer Workshop Program in visual arts and creative writing and online writing workshops through 24PearlStreet.

Sustaining the year-round vitality of Provincetown as an historic art colony lies at the heart of the Work Center’s mission. All of our programs are dedicated to enhancing this heritage. Throughout the year, the Work Center’s active public programming brings nationally recognized artists and writers to Provincetown for lectures, readings, and exhibitions – all free and open to the public – enjoyed by thousands of residents and visitors in the community.

FAWC .O R G

THE WORK CENTER’S BUILDING & GROUNDS The Fine Arts Work Center is centrally located in Provincetown on the site of the historic Days Lumberyard, home to working artists since 1914. Work Center facilities include 25 apartments, 14 large working studios/classrooms, a state-of-the-art print shop, woodworking shop, digital media lab, student lounge, computer lab, an auditorium, art gallery, and administrative and program offices.

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T H E F E L LOWS H I P S The Work Center is one of the country’s most renowned long-term residency programs for emerging artists and writers. Each year the Visual Arts and Writing Committees, composed of internationally recognized artists and writers and working with the participation of distinguished jurors, select twenty Fellows (ten visual artists and ten writers) from 1,600 applications from around the world. The selection process is rigorous, and the Fellows are accepted entirely on the excellence of work submitted. Since its inception, the Work Center has awarded almost 1,000 Fellowships.

For the seven-month period of October 1 to April 30, the selected fiction writers and poets and 2D, 3D, and time-based media artists come to Provincetown to work on their creative endeavors. The Fellows receive a living and studio space and a modest stipend; their only responsibility as Fellows is to their work. Writing Fellows present public readings in the Stanley Kunitz Common Room; Visual Arts Fellows exhibit their work at the Work Center’s Hudson D. Walker Gallery and in a group show at the Provincetown Art Association and Museum; and all Fellows can participate in FAWC’s community outreach program by teaching workshops in local schools and senior centers.

Fellows have made an enormous impact on American arts and letters, publishing hundreds of books of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry, and exhibiting in countless museums and galleries worldwide. Past Fellows have won every major national award in their fields including the Pulitzer, MacArthur, Whiting, Pollock-Krasner, Tiffany, Prix de Rome, Guggenheim, National Endowment for the Arts, and the National Book Award.

FAWC .O R G/ F E L LOWS H I P S

OT H E R R E S I D E N C Y P R O G R A M S The Returning Residency Program encourages former Fellows, Collaborative Residents, past Summer Program faculty, and students to return to Provincetown by offering apartments and studios at discount rates during the spring and fall. This is a great opportunity for Work Center affiliates to escape energy-sapping routines, recharge their creative batteries, and once again live and work surrounded by other artists and writers in the Work Center community.

The Long-Term Residency Program is for former Fellows and extends the opportunity to live in Provincetown for up to three years at below-market rents. The Work Center offers five live/work spaces in an affordable housing development in Provincetown to former Fellows who meet the affordable rental guidelines; each unit is approximately 1,000 square feet with separate studio space.

In collaboration with other arts organizations around the country and abroad, the Fine Arts Work Center hosts one- to three-month Collaborative Residencies in the spring, summer, and fall. Writers or visual artists are selected on the merit of their work by the collaborating organization and are given an apartment, studio space, and stipend. The Work Center provides the space and, perhaps most importantly, a community of like-minded peers with whom to share and discuss ideas, the very essence of collaboration.

The Pollock-Krasner Mid-Career Artist Residency and Stephen and Palmina Pace Foundation both award a month-long residency to mid-career artists. The Ohio Arts Council sends a writer and visual artist for three months every summer.

FAWC .O R G/A D D I T I O N A L- P R O G R A M S

P R O G R A M S

S U M M E R WO R K S H O P S The Work Center’s Summer Program offers nearly 90 week-long workshops in creative writing and visual arts annually. The wealth of workshops taught by our extraordinary faculty, both new and returning, includes poetry, fiction, memoir, essays, graphic novel, songwriting, screenwriting, young adult fiction, painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, photography, multi-media, and filmmaking/video. The faculty and location have established this writing and creative arts program among the nation’s finest and most attractive. Nightly readings and artist talks offer students a rare opportunity to learn from and interact with faculty at the highest levels of their disciplines. This aspect of the Work Center’s program is distinctive, offering a community where students, staff, and faculty are devoted to creative practice and conversation. Each summer more than 500 enrollees participate in this program which raises funds for the Work Center’s distinctive Fellowship program.

FAWC .O R G/ S U M M E R

P O E T RY F E S T I VA L Poetry has always drawn students to the Summer Workshop Program. Each year, hundreds of poets arrive at the Work Center to refine their technique with some of the most talented poets as faculty and mentors. 2016 saw the establishment of a now annual Poetry Festival which enlivened the campus with a week-long concentration in poetry that included workshops and readings by renowned poets. The week included an opening keynote by Inaugural poet Richard Blanco; workshops by Blanco, as well as 2015 Pulitzer Prize winner for poetry Gregory Pardlo; National Book award finalist Ada Limón; Lannan Literary Fellow Natalie Diaz; and poet/photographer Rachel Eliza Griffiths. Other cross-genre workshops were held by eminent artists Richard Baker and Daniel Heyman and songwriter Patty Larkin. The Festival also presented benefit concerts by U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky (PoemJazz) and Patty Larkin.

FAWC .O R G/ P O E T RY F E S T I VA L

2 4 P E A R L S T R E E T – O N L I N E W R I T I N G WO R K S H O P S Building on the Fine Arts Work Center’s tradition of creative excellence and community, 24PearlStreet offers its literary riches to the global community through innovative online writing workshops. Program faculty include our Summer Program teachers, former Work Center Fellows, and a wide net of personal and professional colleagues who are among today’s most accomplished poets and writers. At 24PearlStreet, poetry, fiction, and nonfiction workshops are available year round to writers on every level. Writers can focus on doing their best work under the guidance of exceptional faculty, no matter where they are or what their schedule.

FAWC .O R G/ 2 4 P E A R L S T R E E T

P R O G R A M S CONTINUED

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F R O M T H E P R E S I D E N T & D I R E C TO R D E D I C AT I O N – M I C H A E L P R O D A N O U

This report details another year in which the Fine Arts Work Center has nurtured the talents of hundreds of gifted writers and artists in the uniquely beautiful locale of the Outer Cape. Preeminently, we welcomed our 48th group of 20 Fellows, whose achievements are already making a vivid mark in their literary and artistic fields. Both our summer and online workshop programs drew unprecedentedly large numbers to work with distinguished faculty. Making it all possible were the generous contributions of the individuals identified in the pages that follow.

The 2015-16 Fellows were drawn from the largest-ever pool of applicants, and their residency kicked off an exceptional year for prizes and recognition of past holders of the Fellowship: 4 Guggenheims, a Cullman, the Rome Prize, and a Pulitzer; also Whiting Writers’ and Rona Jaffe Awards, 3 NEA Fellowships, and a National Humanities Medal. Several recent visual arts Fellows enjoyed well-received solo shows; one Fellow’s public art project received a $1M grant from Bloomberg Philanthropies; and past writing Fellows were Finalists in 3 of the 4 categories of National Book Awards.

Over 500 students joined us last summer for workshops in creative writing and visual arts, and more than 200 students tuned in to online writing classes. A new feature of the summer was a Poetry Festival highlighted by former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky, Inaugural poet Richard Blanco, and National Book Award Finalist Ada Limón. More than 5,000 visitors attended some 100 free public events, talks and readings throughout the year.

Other special events included New York City celebrations of Pulitzer Prize winners Jhumpa Lahiri and N.Y. State Poet Laureate Yusef Komunyakaa; a celebration of esteemed Writing Committee Chair Roger Skillings at Boston’s ACME Gallery; and a festive Summer Awards evening in Provincetown featuring poet and novelist Eileen Myles and writer and actor James Lecesne, both perennially popular Summer Workshop faculty. The record-breaking 40th Annual Auction featured a solo show in the Hudson Walker Gallery of work by beloved artist Varujan Boghosian curated by Berta Walker.

The Fine Arts Work Center approaches its 50th anniversary in 2018 as the arts in America face a darker prospect for public support than at anytime since this organization was founded. The visionary optimism of a decade that saw the birth of both the Work Center and the National Endowments of the Arts and Humanities seems distant indeed. But we remain confident that the generosity of friends and supporters will carry the Work Center into a prosperous second half-century. We thank all of you who help to sustain the creativity and community for which our town is known.

TED CHAPIN MICHAEL ROBERTSPresident Executive Director

Three decades ago, Board Chair Ruth Hiebert asked architect Michael Prodanou to conjure – on a shoestring! – ten artist studios from the ramshackle coal bins and lobster trap sheds of Days Lumberyard. Working with multiple Directors over 20 years, he envisioned and realized the Pearl Street compound we know today, including studios and lounge, Mazur Print Shop, Kunitz Common Room, and the cluster of 7 Fishburn Court apartments. No one has done more to create the beautiful yet practical facilities we now cherish.

As Work Center architect of record and chair of the Board Building Committee, Michael oversaw successive phases of invention and renovation, culminating in the rehabilitation of the main Lumberyard building and Barn. His designs reimagined elements of the old structures, adding a new and special ambiance to a rusticity in keeping with the informality of the Outer Cape. The result honors the hundred-year history of one of America’s most important art-making spaces.

A less evident but typical aspect of his participation has been an unfailing personal generosity, usually spontaneous as well as anonymous. When a staff member had trouble making a rent payment, or new furniture was urgently needed, Michael often stepped forward inconspicuously. When painting workshops were providing rickety easels, a dozen were delivered to the Work Center, gratis. Michael has also played an important role as a co-chair of the Annual Auction, bringing an artist’s eye to the selection of featured works and donating generously from his private collection.

Michael has in recent years devoted himself with passion to drawing and painting figures in charcoal and oil. His work has been shown at the Schoolhouse Gallery, Rossetti Fine Arts in Florida, the Work Center, and PAAM, which is planning a retrospective in the near future. We are also pleased to announce that this summer our own Hudson D. Walker Gallery will present an exhibition combining Michael’s work with that of his partner of over 50 years, distinguished Magnum photographer Constantine Manos. Michael’s long service to the Work Center has been matched by Costa’s generous participation as a teacher in the Summer Program and a faithful member of the Board of Advisors. Together they represent what is uniquely great about the Work Center and our town.

With deepest appreciation, we dedicate this Annual Report to Michael Prodanou.

TED CHAPIN, President

TEACHING A SUMMER PROGRAM WORKSHOP

MICHAEL PRODANOU, Untitled (detail), oil on canvas, 36” x 30”

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B E T SY D E F U S CO (2012-2013), “Summer Ponds – New Works by Betsy DeFusco,” Ohio State University Faculty Club, Columbus, OH.

A DA M F R E L I N (2005-2006), “Breathing Lights,” Public Art Project in Schenectady, Albany and Troy, NY.

C H R I S T Y G EO R G (2007-2008), Currents International New Media Festival, Santa Fe, NM; Gardner Art Gallery, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK.

A L E JA N D R O G U Z M Á N (2013-2014), “Ganggang: Creative Misunderstanding Series,” Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY, performace; “Disguise: Masks and Global African Art,” Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY.

H E I D I H A H N (2015-2016 and 2014-2015), “ALPHACHANNELING,” Jack Hanley Gallery, New York, NY.

E L L I OT T H U N D L E Y (2001-2002), “There Is No More Firmament,” Regen Projects, Los Angeles, CA.

JA N E L L E I G L E S I A S (2007-2008), “Mestizo,” Bullet Space Gallery, NYC; “My Brother is a Liar,” 601 Artspace, NYC; “seesaw / seasaw,” 1708 Gallery, Richmond, VA; “Even a Simple Call Can Turn Into a Complex Racket,” UC Boulder Art Museum, Boulder, CO.

L I SA I G L E S I A S (2012-2013), “My Brother is a Liar,” 601 Artspace, NYC; “seesaw / seasaw,” 1708 Gallery, Richmond, VA; The Fuel and Lumber Company, Tuscaloosa, AL.

M A L A I Q BA L (1999-2000 and 1998-1999), “Hello, Stranger,” Ulterior Gallery, NYC, solo exhibition; “Sheherzade’s Gift: Subversive Narratives,” Center for Book Arts, NYC; “Be Home Here,” Twelve Gates Arts, Philadelphia, PA.

G EO R G E J E N N E (2016-2017 and 2014-2015), “Southern Accent: Seeking the American South in Contemporary Art,” Nasher Museum of Art, Duke University, Durham, NC; “Southern Accent: Seeking the American South in Contemporary Art,” Speed Art Museum, Louisville, KY.

VICTORIA-IDONGESIT UDONDIAN New York City, NY / Lagos, Nigeria

B EC K Y S E L L I N G E R Richmond, VA

JAG D E E P R A I N AGuelph, Ontario, Canada

A A R O N R I C H M O N D Montreal, QC, Canada | Second Year

SA B L E E LYS E S M I T HNew York City, NY

H I L A RY VAU G H N D O B E L Poetry | Brookline, MA

L E I L A C H AT T I Portey | East Lansing, MI

A . H . J E R R I O D AVA N T Poetry | Longtown, MS | Second Year

J O S E P H C A S SA R A Fiction | Iowa City, IA

M I C H A E L D E AG L E R Fiction | Philadelphia, PA

SA M R O S S Poetry | New York City, NY

TO M M AC H E R Fiction | Los Angeles, CA | Second Year

CO R N E L I U S F I T Z PAT R I C KFiction | Westfield, NJ

A K I L K U M A R A SA M YFiction | Edison, NJ

P H I L I P M AT T H E WSPoetry | St. Louis, MO

G EO R G E J E N N E Chapel Hill, NC | Second Year

W I L D E R A L I S O N Milton, VT

AU S T I N BA L L A R D Charlotte, NC

T R OY M I C H I EBrooklyn, NY

A B R A H A M M U R L E Y Seattle, WA

2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7 F E L LO W SV I S UA L A RT S W R I T I N G G O L N A R A D I L I (2011-2012 and 2010-2011),

“Language Landscape,” Kentler International Drawing Space, Brooklyn, NY.

E L L E N A LT F E S T (1999-2000), “Hey You, Who Me?,” curated by Robert Storr, 32 Edgewood Gallery, Yale School of Art, New Haven, CT.

A L I C E M I C E L I D E A R AU J O (2013-2014), “Basta!,” The Anya and Andrew Shiva Gallery at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, NYC.

L I Z AWA LT (1982-1983 and 1981-1982), group exhibition, Caldbeck Gallery, Rockland, ME.

F I R E L E I BÁ E Z (2013-2014), “Black Pulp!,” 32 Edgewood Gallery, New Haven, CT; “Patterns of Resistance,”Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, Salt Lake City, UT; “Bloodlines,” Pérez Art Museum Miami, Miami, FL.

BA I L E Y B O B BA I L E Y (1991-1992 and 1989-1990), “Cave Ore Bridge,” Provincetown Art Association and Museum (PAAM), Provincetown, MA.

JA R R O D B EC K (2013-2014 and 2011-2012), “THE MOON,” Smack Mellon, Brooklyn, NY; “Chewing Tar,” Lichtundfire Gallery, NYC; “Jarrod Beck and Per Kesselmar,” Inde/Jacobs Gallery, Marfa, TX.

B E R N I E B EC K M A N (1968-1969), Maine Open Juried Art Show, Waterville, ME.

L I N DA B O N D (1978-1979), “Up in Arms,” Brattleboro Museum & Art Center, Brattleboro, VT.

J U L I A B R OW N (2010-2011 and 2008-2009), “Julia Brown: The Swim,” Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita, KS; “Skin Trade,” Devin Borden Gallery, Houston, TX.

K AT E C L A R K (2006-2007), “Kate Clark: Mysterious Presence,” Hilliard Museum, Lafayette, LA, solo show (traveling from the Newcomb Museum; “Kate Clark: Mysterious Presence,” Newcomb Art Museum of Tulane, New Orleans, LA; “Dead Animals or The Curious Occurrence of Taxidermy in Contemporary Art,” David Winton Bell Gallery, Brown University, Providence, RI.

JA N E CO R R I GA N (2012-2013), “EvilActivity123,” Feuer/Mesler Gallery, New York, NY.

V I S U A L A R T S F E L LO W S 2 0 1 6 S E L E C T E D E X H I B I T S

ABRAHAM MURLEY, Untitled (fair weather walker), (detail), 2017, oil on linen, 90” x 130” Visual Arts Fellow 2015-2016

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TROY MICHIE, Disruptive Patterns, 2017, paper, photograph, magazine cut-outs, clothing, and acrylic on panel, 23” x 21.5” x 2” Visual Arts Fellow 2016-2017 9 8

C A N D I C E L I N (2011-2012), “Bodily Imaginaries,” Koenig and Clinton, NYC.

DAV I D LO N GW E L L (1976-1977 and 1975-1976), “A Slow Read...,” Tubac Center for the Arts, Tubac, AZ.

TA L A M A DA N I (2006-2007), “First Light,” MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge, MA.

R O B I N M A N D E L (2009-2010), Boston Cyberarts Gallery, Jamaica Plain, MA, her installation, “Siren” is part of the group show, “Constructed Video.”

M I C H A E L M E N C H AC A (2015-2016), “Perrenial Boundaries,” Ruiz-Healy Art, San Antonio, TX; “West Mexico: Ritual and Identity,” Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa, OK; “Estampas De La Raza: Contemporary Prints From the Romo Collection,” National Mexican Museum of Art, Chicago, IL; “State of the Art: Discovering American Art Now,” Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis, MN; “Tales From the Tomb: Life, Death, and Ritual in Ancient West Mexico,” Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa, OK.

N AT H A L I E M I E BAC H (2007-2008 and 2006-2007), “Intersections: Artists Master Line and Space,” Akron Art Museum, Akron, OH.

JA S O N M O N E S (2008-2009), “Force and Fumble,”TSA Gallery, Los Angeles, CA.

B R I D G E T M U L L E N (2014-2015 and 2010-2011),“Don’t Avoid Voids,” Roswell Museum and Art Center, Roswell, NM; solo show, “Strange Loop,” Satellite Contemporary, Las Vegas, NV.

A B R A H A M M U R L E Y (2016-2017), group show, “American Painting Today,” The old Value Village on Capitol Hill, Seattle, WA.

A L I S O N O ’ DA N I E L (2012-2013), “The Tuba Thieves” on a two-channel digital billboard, hosted by West Hollywood Arts and the Idea Foundation on Sunset Blvd; group show, “The Invisible Ear,” Bergen Assembly, Bergen, Norway; group perfomances “In Real Life,” The Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; “Let’s Show Moving Images,” Topkino, Vienna, Austria; solo exhibition, “Room Tone,” The Knockdown Center, Maspeth, NY; group show, “Siren,” 5 Car Garage, Venice, CA.

SA R A H O P P E N H E I M E R (1995-1996),“Sarah Oppenheimer: S-281913,” Pérez Art Museum Miami, Miami, FL.

J E N N I F E R PAC K E R (2015-2016 and 2014-2015),“Breathing Room,” Sikkema Jenkins & Co, NYC.

P I E T E R PAU L P OT H OV E N (2013-2014), group show, “From a Painter’s Perspective pt. 2,” Arti & Amicitiae, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

JA N I C E R E D M A N (1993-1994 and 1992-1993),“2016 Invitational Exhibition,” American Academy of Arts and Letters, NYC.

B E V E R LY R E S S (1990-1991), group show, “Cut,” Greater Reston Arts Center, Reston, Virginia; “100 Works on Paper Benefit,” Kentler International Drawing Space, Brooklyn, NY; group show, “Ladies First,” Neptune Fine Art, Washington, DC; group show, “Insecta,” Haber Space/Central Booking, NYC; group show, “Form and Line,” Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, Stony Brook University, NY; “Beverly Ress: Before and After Follow Each Other,” Chroma Projects, Charlottesville, VA; drawing included in the WPA Auction Gala, Washington, DC.

JA M E S R I E L LY (1984-1985), “Thinking Things Through,” New Art Projects, London; “We Lived Our Lives In The Spiritual Not The Material World,” GE Galería, Nuevo León, Mexico.

K A R E N S C H I FA N O (1979-1980), pop-up exhibition, “Of an Urban Nature,” Theodore Art, Brooklyn, NY; “Color, Shape & Form III,” Galerie Gris, Hudson, NY; “Thru the Rabbit Hole,” Sideshow Gallery, NYC; “In This Place,” c2c Project Space, San Francisco, CA.

M I N A KO S H I R A K U R A (2008-2009 and 2007-2008), “Transition: ECA Glass Alumni Exhibition,” Edinburgh Collage of Art (ECA) Sculpture Court, Edinburgh; exhibition “Walking Poets: Wordsworth and Basho,” Kakimori Bunko, Hyogo, Japan; group show, “Places: The Wednesday Group,” The Cohen Center for the Arts Gallery, Alfred University, Alfred, NY.

R O N S H U E B R O O K (1969-1970), group show, “RED,” Renann Isaacs Contemporary Art, Guelph, Ontario; solo exhibition, Olga Korper Gallery, Toronto, Ontario; group show, “Deliberately Ambiguous,” Harbourfront Gallery, Toronto, ON.

A L E X A N D R I A S M I T H (2014-2015 and 2013-2014), Prizm Art Fair, Miami, FL; “Black Pulp!,” International Print Center (IPCNY), NYC; “i found god in myself: the 40th Anniversary of Ntozake Shang’s for colored girls,” African American Museum Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA; “Cultural Landscapes,” The Fed Galleries at KCAD, Grand Rapids, MI; two-person show, “Fraught Imaginaries,” Corridor Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; “Black Pulp!,” 32 Edgewood Gallery, New Haven, CT.

B E T H A N Y S P I N G E R (2001-2002), group show, “Nunca Pasa Nada,” Gallery of Windgate Art & Design, University of Arkansas, Fort Smith, AR.

J E N N I F E R S U L L I VA N (2012-2013), “Bunnicula,” Marvin Gardens, Ridgewood, NY; “My Skin is My Krustle (Pink Marble),” Guggenheim Gallery at Chapman University, Orange, CA; solo show, “Revenge Body,”5 Car Garage, Los Angeles, CA; group show, “Siren,” 5 Car Garage, Venice, CA, “Super Sketchy,” DCTV, NYC.

B E RT YA R B O R O U G H (1977-1978 and 1976-1977 and Chair, Visual Arts Committee), “The Faculty Curates,” Marian Graves Mugar Art Gallery, Colby-SawyerCollege, New London, NH; “Lost Cat,” Cape Cod Museum of Art, Dennis, MA; “Fine and Performing Arts Faculty Exhibition,” Colby-Sawyer College, New London, NH; “Thar She Blows,” Berta Walker Gallery, Provincetown, MA.

L I SA Y U S K AVAG E (1986-1987), “Hey You, Who Me?,” curated by Robert Storr, 32 Edgewood Gallery, Yale School of Art, New Haven, CT.

F I R E L E I BÁ E Z (2013-2014), was awarded the 2016 Chiaro Award at the Headlands Center for the Arts.

L I N DA B O N D (1978-1979), was awarded the Artist’s Resource Trust, The Foundation for Contemporary Art and the Brandeis Women’s Study Research Center for a collaborative installation with women from Afghanistan.

B R U N O C A N Ç A D O (2014-2015), was awarded a residency fellowship from the Sacatar Foundation in Bahia, Brazil.

ERIN DIEBBOLL (2015-2016), was awarded a Container Artist Residency in collaboration with ZIM70 – culminating in a series of international exhibitions.

A N G E L A D U F R E S N E (2003-2004 and 2002-2003), was awarded a 2016 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in Fine Arts.

E L L E N GA L L AG H E R (1996-1997 and 1995-1996), was selected as a 2016 recipient of the “Trailblazers: Women in the Arts,” Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY.

C H R I S T Y G EO R G (2007-2008), was awarded an Arts/Industry Residency at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI.

A K I KO JAC K S O N (2013-2014), was awarded a 2016 Tulsa Trust Artist Fellowship, Tulsa, OK.

G EO R G E J E N N E (2016-2017 and 2014-2015), was awarded a residency at MacDowell Colony, Peterborough, NH.

J E N N Y LY N N M C N U T T (1983-1984), received a Pratt Faculty Grant 2015; was awarded a residency at the European Ceramic Center, EKWC, The Netherlands.

B R I D G E T M U L L E N (2014-2015 and 2010-2011) was awarded a residency at The Lighthouse Works, Fall/Winter 2016; was awarded a residency at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Summer 2016.

H E L E N O ’ TO O L E (1991-1992), was awarded a 2016 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in Fine Arts.

GA B R I E L P I O N KOWS K I (2013-2014), was awarded a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant.

JA N I C E R E D M A N (1993-1994 and 1992-1993),received the American Academy of Arts and Letters’s Art Purchase Award (the Academy purchased four pieces, which will be donated to museums in the United States). The work purchased by the Academy will be included in the Academy’s Ceremonial Exhibition from May through until June.

B E V E R LY R E S S (1990-1991), received a 2016 Individual Artist Award from the Maryland State Arts Council for Works on Paper.

JACO L BY SAT T E RW H I T E (2012-2013 and 2011-2012), won a 2016 Fellowship Award from United States Artists (USA), unitedstatesartists.org.

R O N S H U E B R O O K (1969-1970),was elected to the Woodstock Art Gallery Advisory Board, the public art gallery in Woodstock, Ontario.

A L E X A N D R I A S M I T H (2014-2015 and 2013-2014), was awarded a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant for 2016-2017.

B E RT YA R B O R O U G H (1977-1978 and 1976-1977 and Chair, Visual Arts Committee), received a Civitella Ranieri Visual Arts Fellowship which consists of a residency at the Civitella Ranieri Center in Italy during the 2017 or 2018 season.

2 0 1 6 S E L E C T E D AWA R D S2 0 1 6 S E L E C T E D E X H I B I T S CONTINUED

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W R I T I N G F E L LO W S

AUSTIN BALLARD, Dappled Dune 7 (Black and White on Traditional), 2017, cane webbing and resin, Visual Arts Fellow 2016-2017

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B I L L C A RT Y (2013-2014) was awarded a 2016 Literary Fellowship from the Artist Trust in Seattle, WA.

P E T E R H O DAV I E S (1994-1995) was awarded a 2016 Prose Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.

T H O M A S SAY E R S E L L I S (1995-1996) had a poem, “Vernacular Owl,” featured in 2016 Pushcart Prize XL - Best of the Small Presses.

LO U I S E G LÜ C K (1969-1970) was awarded a National Humanities Medal by President Barack Obama.

PAU L H A R D I N G (2000-2001) was awarded a 2016 Prose Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.

A DA M H A S L E T T (1996-1997) received the Mildred and Harold Strauss Livings Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

TO N Y H OAG L A N D (1985-1986) had a poem, “Song for Picking Up,” included in 2016 Pushcart Prize XL - Best of the Small Presses.

C Y N T H I A H U N T I N G TO N (1978-1979 and 1982-1983) was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in Poetry.

V E D R A N H U S I Ć (2013-2014) was awarded a 2016 Prose Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.

G R EG JAC K S O N (2013-2014) was selected as one of 2016’s “5 Under 35” by the National Book Foundation.

T Y E H I M BA J E S S (2004-2005) won a 2016 Lannan Literary Award from the Lannan Foundation.

Y U S E F KO M U N YA K A A (1980-1981) was appointed the 11th State Poet of New York by Governor Andrew M. Cuomo.

PAU L L I S I C K Y (1992-1993 and 1991-1992) was awarded a 2016 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in General Nonfiction.

S O P H I E M C M A N U S (2009-2010 and 2008-2009) was long-listed for the National Book Critic Circle’s John Leonard Prize for her debut novel, The Unfortunates.

M I C H A E L M O R S E (2009-2010 and 2008-2009) was a finalist for the 2016 Kate Tufts Discovery Award for his poetry collection, Void and Compensation.

V I E T T H A N H N G U Y E N (2004-2005) won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for his debut novel, The Sympathizer, and was selected as a finalist for the 2016 National Book Awards in Nonfiction for his book, Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War.

M AT T H E W N E I L L N U L L (2011-2012) won a Joseph Brodsky Rome Prize from the American Academy of Arts & Letters for 2016-2017.

SA LVATO R E S C I B O N A (2002-2003 and 2001-2002) was awarded a Fellowship from the New York Public Library’s Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers.

M A RT I N S E AY (2005-2006) won a 2016 Book of the Year Award from the Chicago Writers Association for his debut novel The Mirror Thief, which was also named one of the best fiction titles of the year by Publisher’s Weekly and one of the notable books of 2016 by the New York Times Book Review.

T I M S E I B L E S (1991-1992) was named Poet Laureate of Virginia by Governor Terry McAuliffe.

A SA KO S E R I Z AWA (2015-2016) received a 2016 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writer’s Award.

S O L M A Z S H A R I F (2011-2012) was awarded a 2016 Lannan Foundation Fellowship for Poetry and was selected as a finalist for the 2016 National Book Awards in Poetry for her poetry collection, Look.

FA I T H S H E A R I N (2008-2009, 1994-1995 and 1993-1994) won the Dogfish Head Poetry Prize for her fifth book of poems, Orpheus, Turning.

JACO B S H O R E S - A R G Ü E L LO (2010-2011) won the inaugural Canto Mundo Poetry Prize from the University of Arkansas Press for his poetry collection Paraíso.

SA F I YA S I N C L A I R (2015-2016) won a 2016 Whiting Award for Poetry from the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation.

JACQ U E L I N E WO O D S O N (1991-1992) was selected as a finalist for the 2016 National Book Awards in Fiction for her novel, Another Brooklyn.

K E I T H A LT H AU S (1970-1971), Cold Storage, poems, Grid Books.

A R I BA N I A S * (2013-2014 and 2011-2012), Anybody, poems, W.W. Norton.

B R I A N B O O K E R * (2009-2010), Are You Here for What I’m Here For, Bellevue Literary Press.

L EO P O L D I N E CO R E (2012-2013), When Watched, stories, Penguin Books.

C A R O L I N E C R U M PAC K E R * (2001-2002), Astrobolism, poems, Belladonna.

P E T E R H O DAV I E S (1994-1995), The Fortunes, novel, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

A L I S O N D E M I N G (1984-1985), Stairway to Heaven, poems, Penguin, and Death Valley: Painted Light (with photographer/astronomer Stephen Strom), University of Arizona Press.

M I C H A E L D I C K M A N (2006-2007), Green Migraine, poems, Copper Canyon.

T I M E A R L E Y (2002-2003 and 1998-1999), Linthead Stomp, poems, Horse Less Press.

B O R I S F I S H M A N (2010-2011), Don’t Let My Baby Do Rodeo, novel, HarperCollins.

M I R I A M B I R D G R E E N B E R G * (2012-2013), In The Volcano’s Mouth, poems, University of Pittsburgh Press.

A DA M H A S L E T T (1996-1997), Imagine Me Gone, novel, Little, Brown and Company.

M A R I E H OW E (1983-1984), Magdalene, poems, W.W. Norton.

R E B ECC A GAY L E H OW E L L (2014-2015 and 2010-2011), American Purgatory, Eyewear Publishing.

C Y N T H I A H U N T I N G TO N (1982-1983 and 1978-1979), Terra Nova, poems, Southern Illinois University Press.

G R EG JAC K S O N * (2013-2014), Prodigals, stories, Farrar, Straus and Giroux.T Y E H I M BA J E S S (2004-2005), Olio, poems, Wave Books.

J H U M PA L A H I R I (1997-1998), The Clothing of Books and In Other Words, nonfiction, Vintage.

PAU L L I S I C K Y (1992-1993 and 1991-1992), The Narrow Door, memoir, Graywolf Press.

J O N LO O M I S (2000-2001 and 1994-1995), The Mansion of Happiness, poems, Oberlin College Press.

SA R A M A J K A* (2009-2010), Cities I’ve Never Lived In, Graywolf.

L AU R A M A R E L LO (1981-1982), Balzac’s Robe and Other Poems, Finishing Line Press and Maniac Drifter, novel, Guernica Editions.

F I O N A M C FA R L A N E (2007-2008 and 2006-2007), The High Places, stories, Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

K AT M E A D S (1978-1979 and 1977-1978), In This Season of Rage and Melancholy Such Irrevocable Acts as These, novel, Mongrel Empire Press.

V I E T T H A N H N G U Y E N (2004-2005), Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War, Harvard University Press, and The Refugees, stories, Grove Press.

M AT T H E W N E I L L N U L L (2011-2012), Allegheny Front, Sarabande Books.

A N N PATC H E T T (1990-1991), Commonwealth, novel, HarperCollins.

LY D I A P E E L E * (2006-2007), The Midnight Cool, novel, HarperCollins.

DAV I D R I VA R D (1986-1987 and 1985-1985), Standoff, poems, Graywolf.

M A RT I N S E AY * (2005-2006), The Mirror Thief, novel, Melville House.

S O L M A Z S H A R I F * (2011-2012), Look, poems, Graywolf.J O H N S KOY L E S (1975-1976 and 1974-1975) Suddenly It’s Evening: Selected Poems, and Inside Job: New Poems, Carnegie-Mellon University Press.

C A R R I E S M I T H (1981-1982), Forgotten City, novel, Crooked Lane Books.

J U S T I N T U S S I N G (1999-2000), Vexation Lullaby, novel, Catapult.

J O S H UA W E I N E R (1993-1994), The Berlin Notebook, e-book, The Los Angeles Review of Books.

SA R I W I L S O N * ( 1999-2000), Girl Through Glass, novel, HarperCollins.

E L L E N W I T T L I N G E R (2002-2003 and 2001-2002), Local Girl Swept Away, YA novel, Merit Press.

JACQ U E L I N E WO O D S O N (1991-1992), Another Brooklyn, novel, HarperCollins.

JA S O N Z U ZGA (2001-2002), Heat Wake, poetry, Saturnalia Books.

*denotes first book

2 0 1 6 S E L E C T E D AWA R D S R E C E N T P U B L I C AT I O N S

JAGDEEP RAINA, Punjabi deli puth-os, 2017, mixed media on paper, 26” x 40” – Visual Arts Fellow 2016-2017

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JACO B S H O R E S - A R G Ü E L LO (2010-2011), Paraíso, University of Arkansas Press.

B I L L C A RT Y * (2013-2014), Huge Cloudy, poems. Octopus Books.

J O S E P H C A S SA R À* (2016-17), The House of Impossible Beauties, HarperCollins.

L AU R A E V E E N G E L* (2014-2015), Things That Go, poems. Octopus Books.

A JA GA B E L* (2012-2013), In Common Time, novel, Riverhead Books.

M AT T H E W K L A M (1992-1993), Who Is Rich?, novel, Random House.

A K I L K U M A R A SA M Y * (2016-2017), Half Gods, stories, Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

TO M M AC H E R * (2016-2017 and 2011-2012), Halfway, memoir, Scribner.

V I C TO R I A R E D E L (1986-1987), Before Everything, novel, Viking.

TO M S L E I G H (1981-1982 and 1979-1980), The Land Between Two Rivers: Poetry in an Age of Refugees, nonfiction, and One War Everywhere, poems, Graywolf.

*denotes first book

FO RT H CO M I N G

DANIELLE DIMSTON, Ear, 2016, oil on canvas, 28” x 30” 2016 Stephen and Palmina Pace Foundation Artist-in-Residence

EXCERPT FROM HIS NOVEL,

“ H A L F WAY ”TOM MACHER (Writing Fellow 2016-2017 and 2011-2012)

We got Dress Nice Task, where we had to tuck our shirts into our slacks, couldn’t wear jeans or tees, have any tears or frays, or Dress Down Task, where we had to wear jeans and tees. Sloppy guys got Garbage Man Task and had to drag all their belongings around the Property in a trash-bag. Winers got Cry Baby Task, and sucked their thumbs. Non-confrontational or overly confrontational Brothers got Sheriff Task. Sheriffs wore a gun belt, carried cap gun, a small notebook, and wrote tickets for shitty behavior such as talking back to Staff, swearing, war-storying, anything. Tickets brought fines, a quarter or fifty cents, deposited in the Confo jar. This was me. I was Sheriff.

We were drama queens, dilettantes, psycho and sociopaths, head cases, grandiose, delusional, bipolar, suffering from depression, anxiety, ADHD, schizophrenia. We were fatally hip, King Baby all, habitual, practiced, cool. Dudes blew O-rings when they exhaled. Everyone smoked. We called each other fool, fellow, sicko, motherfucker or bitch, yet except in Group swearing was prohibited, a ticketable offense. Which just made us do it more. Every goddamn thing was a motherfucking bitch. Failure to make three meetings a week led to Hours. Over three Hours meant Stricts until Saturday Work Detail. Hours and Hours, Hours for everything – too much beard in your goatee, sideburns past your earlobe, leaving off the AM or PM when signing out, even when clear as day, ashes on the slab, shoes untied in Group – no one ever had zero Hours. We had to belong to home groups, have sponsors, know the steps, be working a step, employed or in school, maintain that job or school, or we got Stricts, no hope of getting out soon.

We needed permission for everything and nothing, all of it suggestion, failure to follow suggestion subject to consequence. No one said you can only carry x-amount cash but carry more than x-amount cash and there’d be a conversation. Ditto alone time. Paychecks were signed over to staff and doled out as needed for cigarettes, cold drinks, snack foods, what have you. Weekend passes were unusual, family day rare, visitors less than never. If a female came on the Property it was by mistake or someone had fucked up and was gone and she’d never find him now anyway. Sorry about that, sweetie, Program would say, hands dangling over the porch railing, no idea where he is.

Our Areas rotated daily: Living Room, Kitchen, Bathroom, Porch. Four Brothers lived in each apartment but on Flats beds emptied and empty beds meant multiple Areas. Every pubic hair, piece of lint, dead fly in light fixture, gook on stove or crust in microwave, anything in the trashcan, got you a Mark. Four Marks equaled an Hour. After three hours we got Stricts.

There was no lights out.

WILDER ALISON, Hello! (detail), 2015, Latex, acrylic, and pigment in acrylic dispersion on wall, dimensions variable Visual Arts Fellow 2016-2017

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2 0 1 6 E X H I B I T I O N S

T H E H U D S O N D. WA L K E R GA L L E RYThe Work Center offers year-round exhibitions in the Hudson D. Walker Gallery including a series of ten solo shows

featuring new work from our resident Visual Arts Fellows. Listed below are selected exhibitions held in 2016.

A P P E A R A N C E S 2 0 1 6P R OV I N C E TOW N G R E E N A RT S F E S T I VA L

S T E P H E N H E N D E E – S O LO E X H I B I T I O NP O L LO C K- K RAS N E R A RT I S T- I N - R E S I D E N C E

T H E L A S T S T R A N D I N G : F R O M T H E B EG I N N I N G

V I S UA L A RT S FAC U LT Y O F T H E S U M M E R P R O G R A M

VA R U JA N B O G H O S I A N – V I S UA L P O E T CO U RT E SY O F B E RTA WA L K E R GA L L E RY, P R OV I N C E TOW N

4 0 T H A N N UA L AU C T I O N P R E V I E WF E AT U R E D A RT I S T – VA R UJA N B O G H O S I A N

P E A K E D H I L L T R U S T A RT S & S C I E N C E S

B E AC H CO M B E R S

V I S UA L A RT S CO M M I T T E E & N E W F E L LOWSA N D

D I A N A K I N G S L E YP O L LO C K- K RAS N E R A RT I S T- I N - R E S I D E N C E

A L L-TOW N E X H I B I T I O NO P E N - I N V I TAT I O N A L F E AT U R I N G T H E WO R K S O F A RT I S T S F R O M T H E O U T E R C A P E

P R OV I N C E TOW N , T R U R O A N D W E L L F L E E T

VARUJAN BOGHOSIAN, Artist at Work, 2008, mixed media construction, Courtesy of Berta Walker Gallery 1716

DIANA KINGSLEY, A better you, 2014, pigment print, 17” x 13” 2016 Pollock-Krasner Artist-in-Residence

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Loyal and dedicated donors – individuals, businesses, corporations, and foundations – provide generous support that enables the Work Center to carry out programs responsive to our mission. Major gifts to the Fine Arts Work Center are made in a variety of ways, including to our Annual Fund, Planned Giving, Named Spaces, and Endowed Fellowship programs. The Work Center also has an active Membership Society, as well as a full calendar of engaging cultural and special events.

FAWC .O R G/ I N V E S T- H U M A N - S P I R I T

A N N UA L F U N D Gifts to the Annual Fund provide essential support to the Work Center’s general operations. Annual giving opportunities range from $100 to $5,000 with matching gifts welcome.

B EQ U E S T S A N D P L A N N E D G I F T S The Walker Society recognizes friends of the Fine Arts Work Center who honor our mission by including the Work Center in their estate planning. The commitment made by Society members helps to ensure that future generations of Fellows will be able to live and work in a community of their peers at the Work Center’s historic site in Provincetown. The Walker Society owes its name to founding patron, Hudson D. Walker, and the philanthropic support provided over the years by the Walker Family and the Archie D. & Bertha H. Walker Foundation. Society members are recognized in the Society’s Honor Roll, the Work Center’s publications and permanent facility signage. Donors may also choose to participate anonymously.

One of the simplest ways to make a planned gift to the Fine Arts Work Center is through a bequest in your will setting aside a portion of your estate. To make a bequest, include a provision in your will designating a fixed amount of assets or percentage of your residuary estate to the Fine Arts Work Center. Bequests are fully deductible from your taxable estate and can therefore represent significant tax savings.

OT H E R P L A N N E D G I V I N G O P T I O N S There are additional ways you can incorporate the Fine Arts Work Center into your financial and estate planning. Many options provide estate tax deductions and include retirement plans, insurance policies, and gifts of real estate, stocks, and securities.

F E L LOWS H I P S , R E S I D E N C I E S , A N D S PAC E S Major gifts to underwrite the Fellowship residencies are essential to our ability to offer them. By design, the Fellowship Program generates limited revenue. Its purpose is to provide, without charge, time and space to emerging artists and writers so they can do new work. To run the program each year, it costs the Work Center nearly $30,000 per Fellow, for a total of approximately $600,000.

Annual Fellowships give recognition to major donors whose contributions help fund one or more residencies in the year the gift is made. Endowed Fellowships give recognition to major donors, and their families and friends, whose contributions to our endowment over the years help provide support in perpetuity, based on investment income, for the cost of a residency each year.

Major gifts may also be recognized through the dedication of studios and other spaces on our historic properties in Provincetown. Spaces have been named for artists, writers and patrons in whose honor major gifts have been made over the years. We thank the donors of these gifts for their generous support of some of our most important resources: the buildings we live and work in.

WAY S TO G I V EF E L LOWS H I P SA N N UA L F E L LOWS H I P S The Whiting Foundation Fellowship in Fiction The Whiting Foundation Fellowship in Poetry

E N D OW E D F E L LOWS H I P S Elise Asher Visual Arts Fellowship Iva Kaplan Ashner Creative Writing Fellowship Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation Fellowship Louise Bourgeois Visual Arts Fellowship Alan Dugan/Judith Shahn Fellowship in Creative Writing/Visual Arts Richard Florsheim Visual Arts Fellowship Robert C. Graham Visual Arts Fellowship Stanley Kunitz Fellowship in Poetry Christine Fairchild Magriel Visual Arts Fellowship Robert Motherwell Visual Arts Fellowship Margaret Murphy FellowshipHunter O’Hanian FellowshipGrace Paley Creative Writing Fellowship George Rickey Visual Arts Fellowship Alix Ritchie and Marty Davis Fellowship in Creative Writing/Visual Arts David Shainberg Visual Arts Fellowship Myron Stout Visual Arts Fellowship Kenneth Stubbs Visual Arts Fellowship Hudson D. and Ione Walker Fellowship in Creative Writing/Visual ArtsBill Webb Fellowship for Fiction

N A M E D S PAC E S 2 4 P E A R L S T R E E T Louise Walker Davy Studio (Studio #4) Graham Foundation Studio (Studio #10) James Hansen Studio (Studio #5) Hans Hofmann Studio Level (Apt. #1-7) Stanley Kunitz Common Room Michael Mazur Printmaking StudioJudith Shahn-Alan Dugan LibraryJack Tworkov Studio (Studio #8) Frances E. Upham Studio (Studio #1) Hudson D. Walker Gallery

4 B R E WS T E R S T R E E T Edwin Reeves Euler BuildingDavid Shainberg Studio (#6)

5 1 6 CO M M E R C I A L S T R E E T Gerrit Hondius Studio

C A P I TA L G I F T S We also recognize the generosity of the following private and public donors who made capital gifts or grants to the Fine Arts Work Center as part of our multi-year Building for the Future capital campaign:

Marty Davis and Alix RitchieRenate, Hans and Maria Hofmann TrustJames and Stephania McClennenStephen Mindich, Phoenix Legacy TrustMassachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund

CO L L A B O R AT I V E R E S I D E N C I E SOhio Arts CouncilPollock-Krasner FoundationStephen and Palmina Pace Foundation

F O U N DAT I O N A N D G OV E R N M E N T G R A N T S Aeroflex FoundationArchie D. & Bertha Walker FoundationArts Foundation of Cape CodBydale FoundationCape Cod Five Cents Savings BankCommunity Foundation of Greater MemphisDorothy Antoinette LaSelle FoundationHerman Goldman FoundationMassachusetts Cultural CouncilMilton and Sally Avery Arts FoundationNational Endowment for the ArtsProvincetown Cultural CouncilProvincetown Visitors Services BoardSeamen’s Bank Long Point Charitable FoundationWhiting Foundation

WAY S TO G I V E CONTINUED

COMMUNITY ARTS PARTNERS IN EDUCATION (CAPE) The CAPE Program provides free creative writing and visual arts workshops for students in local schools and for senior citizens through the Provincetown Council on Aging (COA). CAPE workshops are designed and led by Fellows in residence at the Fine Arts Work Center – artists and writers of exceptional talent offering one-of-a-kind classes based in their fields of unique expertise. We wish to thank Nancy Flasher of Provincetown Schools and Chris Hottle of the COA, as well as our public and private donors – Michael Field and Jeffrey Arnstein, Arts Foundation of Cape Cod, and the Cape Cod Five Cents Saving Bank Charitable Foundation Trust – without whom this popular and growing program could not exist.

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D O N O R S $ 2 0,0 0 0 A N D U PNeal Balkowitsch and Donald Nelson / MAX UltimateTed Chapin and Torrence BooneMarty Davis and Alix RitchieJohn and Yvette DubinskyJohn and Alison Ferring / Ferring Family FoundationGagosian GalleryBarbara Kapp and Paul MitarachiNational Endowment for the ArtsOhio Art CouncilMichael Roberts and Jay CorcoranDaniel RocheArchie D. and Bertha H. Walker Foundation

D O N O R S $ 1 5 ,0 0 0 A N D U PJames and Stephania McClennen / Wequassett Resort and Golf ClubMaxine Schaffer and Sharon Fay / Fay-Schaffer Family FoundationWhiting Foundation

D O N O R S $ 1 0,0 0 0 A N D U PDavid and Amy AbramsThe Aeroflex FoundationDavid Altarac and Brian KollJames Bennette and David CowanChristian DrazMichael Fernon and Kenneth WeissMiranda Cowley HellerMassachusetts Cultural Council

D O N O R S $ 7, 5 0 0 A N D U PGabby Hanna and Marcy FellerJaimy GordonDaniel A. MullinPollock-Krasner Foundation

D O N O R S $ 5 ,0 0 0 A N D U PThe Bydale FoundationCEC ArtslinkCommunity Foundation of Greater MemphisTom Donegan and Mark WeinressHerman Goldman FoundationAndré Gregory and Cindy KleineElliott HundleyLynne KortenhausMartin Michaelson and Anne TaylorMargaret Murphy and Lauren EwingMichael Prodanou and Constantine ManosMilton and Sally Avery Arts FoundationJohn and Louisa TroubhDorothy Palanza and Tina Trudel

D O N O R S $ 2 , 5 0 0 A N D U PDominic Cioffoletti and Christopher ScintoJohn Clark / Boston FoundationKay Knight ClarkeGregory ConnorsRobert Cummings and Dennis CondonNicholas and Elena DelbancoDorothy Antoinette LaSelle FoundationMichael FieldJohn FrishkopfKen FulkLucas Garofalo and Jeff SwansonBen HustonJames KeoughTerrence Meck and Breton AlbertiRobert NicosonProvincetown Visitors Service BoardSeamen’s Long Point Charitable FoundationRichard SimeUnited Health GroupBette Warner and Patty LarkinCarol Warshawsky

D O N O R S $ 1 ,0 0 0 A N D U PKevin Miller and Herbert AcevedoACME Fine Art and Design, Inc.Alan AlbertBrzezicki FoundationBerta Walker GalleryKathleen BiroChristopher BuddCape Associates, Inc.Cape Cod Five Cents Savings BankLuceil CarrollCentral Park GroupColdwell Banker Pat Shultz Real EstateBruce DanzerDavid DatzCarol DeaneBarry DeCosta and Heather WellsNick Flynn and Lili TaylorKenneth FreedRussell and Betty GaudreauMartha Zinn and Paige GilliesBarbara Lemperly GrantJohn Guerra and Jay CoburnAdam Moss and Daniel KaizerNicholas LawrenceDanielle LemmonSarah Lutz and Jon Van RensGail MazurAnita McGahanMaria Lopez and Stephen MindichAndrew Mockler and Jennifer MarshallKelly MonnahanAlan NaylorEllen O’NeilLydia PeelleDaniel Perlman and Jane KatimsJack PiersonMario Pinho

Fred Ramos and Bob StarmerVictoria Redel / Redel FoundationPaul ScheufeleSeashore Point Deaconess, Inc.Bradley SeemanRobert SpeiserRandall StoneGregory ThompsonGary UrgonskiEllyn WeissRyan WelchGreg Welch and Doug DolezalJohn Taylor Williams

D O N O R S $ 5 0 0 A N D U PJoy AbbottBetsy AldermanElizabeth AwaltNeil BakerLori BooksteinThomas BurkeGloria CataldoJim CoffmanJames Connors and Robert RindlerSteven CorkinKenneth DietzDon DiRoccoJohannes EijmbertsDonna FarrellyLou FicocielloHatty Walker Fitts and Bill FittsFrederick Design GroupDavid GoldmanJerome GreeneCharles GriggRichard GrossmanErnest Hadley and Annie MullinsPejman Hanafi and Marc MarinRobert Henry

Jane HiscockDerek HoweRebecca Christine Howey John and Consuelo IsaacsonMimi JigarjianKaplansky InsuranceRichard KeelingPaul Kelly and Edward DusekRonald KollenTony Kushner and Mark HarrisMarianne Lampke and Lisa Linneham / Tern FoundationJane LeavyRobert LenziRichard Levy and Lorraine GallardFred LiangPaul LynchEdward MaloneJohn MilliganRenate MotherwellSteven NasonEllen NennerLaird NolanSarah O’HaganJane ParadiseGlenn PasanenAnne PeretzJeff PetersMark Phillips and Richard SalmonRobert and Ellen PinskyProvincetown Cultural CouncilWilliam RawnCary Raymond and Jon GoodeRosalind RosenbergSchoolhouse GalleryFay SchutzerJanet SilverRoger SkillingsSharon Stoliaroff and John Stewart

Stone Family Charitable FoundationManil SuriDavid ThielensJeffrey TrachtmanJames UlakUrvashi VaidKarl and Ann Vandevender-PatchettMichel WallersteinBert YarboroughYardarm Liquors

D O N O R S $ 2 5 0 A N D U PScott AllegrettiJohn AllisonJosh AronsonBarbara BakerVivian BowerChris Busa and Ingrid Aue / Provincetown ArtsSusan Warren and Roger CampRob CaroBonnie CatenaKate ClintonMarc CroteauSavanna D’AmatoDerian Kavita D’AndradeRobert DavisEdward DelucaAlice DenisonJohn DouhanEllen DriscollAlan DugganMichael EkmanMaureen FernandezJohn FlippenAnthony FouracreRalph and Miriam FreidinLeon FriedmanMichael Gallagher and Roxi MarsenKathleen GearMichael Geisser

S U P P O R T E R S OCTOBER 1, 2015 - SEPTEMBER 30, 2016

FAWC .O R G/ B E N E F I T- E V E N T S

N E W YO R K C I T YA N N UA L B E N E F I T

“ F O R C E D AWA K E ”A N E V E N I N G I N C E L E B RAT I O N O F P O E T

Y U S E F KO M U N YA K A A

M A R I E H OW EI N T R O D U C T I O N

C H A I R ST E D C H A P I N A N D TO R R E N C E B O O N E

JAC K S H A I N M A N GA L L E RY – T H U R S DAY, M A R C H 2 4 , 2 0 1 6

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Laurie Glassman and Carla BettanoLynn GoldbergElizabeth T. Gray Jr.Carol GreenKatherine HazzardBen HuLaurence HughesMary InceKate JacobsonJosephine JohnsonMaryalice JohnstonJeffrey and Cheryl KatzPeter KazonEugene KelleyDavid KirchnerJohn Krajovic and Kevin TuckerNeil KorpinenJane Larsson and Annette FiondaWayne LawsonKate LearMargaret LevineStephen Magliocco and Mike CarrollMatthias MaguireArthur MahoneySophie McManusDermot MeagherSam MesserSusan MitchellEdward MooreJeannie MotherwellNaomi MulvihilllRobert MurrayNew England Independent BooksellersDawn NidyMo OgrodnikJennifer PasanenJonathan PiersonBerit Pratt and Betsy SmithLynne Raughley

Candice ReffeDavid ReichartMilbrey RennieCarole RidkerDavid RivardPhilip Rosenthal and K.A. MeadsJohn RussellMariann SayerMelvin SchorinMichael SchutesSalvatore ScibonaJames and Regina ShakinDan SheibDaniel SilverMarilyn SobelAllen SperlingRobert SteinbergSteve TaitFrank ThompsonVicky TomaykoJustin TorresWayne van GemertJosh Weiner and Sarah BlakeHeather WellsPhilip WongLisa Yuskavage

D O N O R S U P TO $ 2 5 0Mark AbeMarc AdlerAinsworth CottagesSusanne Allen Amazon SmileNorma Jean AndersonHelen AnneRosanne AnnoniLouis AsekoffJane and John AttanucciBruce Aufhammer

Bailey Bob BaileyDan BancroftCynthia BargarDonna BarkmanJulie BatalJonathan and Barbara BeckwithDavid BeitzelKathryn BellasDebbie BermanPaulette BetteMichael BiddleJoy BlakeSusan BlakeRichard BlancoJane BloomLinda BondAnn BookmanMladen BozicSusan BrandLee BriccettiScott Bricher and Mary TerrizziJessica BrownRebecca BruynNancy BryanJP CarlinTeresita CastilloKim ChandlerJennifer CogswellJoan Lebold CohenLizabeth Cohen and Herrick Eaton ChapmanJeremy CohnJames and Patricia ColeMartha CollinsBrenda ConlanBetsi CoreaRobert CoreyKaren CraigoCathy CramerDavid Cugnasca

Allison CunninghamAnn D’ErcoleSienna DahlenHenrietta DavisChristiane DelessertKaren DePalmaKatherine DevineBrit DeweyStephen and Ellen DickinsonDavid DiroccoDavid DolbashianSusan DowningJoerg DresslerTim DudleySamuel DuncanEastern BankEileen Fisher, Inc.Ann FeitelsonHarriet FinkelsteinLynn FitzerMargery GansSharon GeslerEdward and Susan GierejPeggy GillespieBill GoettlerEdward and Eugene GogginIvy GoodmanDenise GranowitterJohn GreenePauline GrockiChristopher HagerAvital HahnJulia HarmatzAdam HaslettJoseph HawkinsBenjamin and Grace HayesNancy HechingerHancy HeiserThomas and Susan Henderson

Marcie HershmanSusan HineRichard HopkinsSharon HorvathMaureen HourihanEdward HowerMary HughesGloria Sue HyattMajor JacksonLiz JanikRobert Fleming JeffriesKevin JenningsWendy KaminerNancy Modlin KatzMargaret KeenanDaniel KelmanSusan KeownColette KingAnthony KirkBarry KittermanSharon KleinmanDavid Daniel KlipperCaroline KnoxKohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. L.P.Patricia P. Irgens Larsen Charitable FoundationFrancesca LaVecchiaDiane LedermanJoan LiPumaJeffrey LittleClarissa LongRobert LongleySusan LymanFrank MacGroryJanice MaddenStephen MagnottaKaren Magnuson BeilJaime MalzmanStephen MandesKenneth Manning

Fred Marchant and Stefi RubinHelen Rachel MartinGenevieve MartinAndreas MaternMary MaxwellAnne McHughMaryjanet McNamaraJanet MendelsohnJeanne MeredithJudith MichaelsRichard MillerLawrence MitchellKayla MohammadiElizabeth MondryCatherine MoroccoMichael MorseNina MortellitoNaomi MulvihilllDavid MunroRichard NesterHunter O’HanianPaul OberstDion OglesbyDaniel and Rebecca OkrentNancy Rahnasto OsborneBernard PalchickMichael Peregon Pfizer FoundationKathleen PhippsRosaria PisaEllen PossAdele PressmanJoan PrughAlice PrussinJohn PynchonMari Anne QuigleyDave QuigleySusan Rand BrownMelissa Range

S U P P O R T E R S CONTINUED

A N E V E N I N G O F F O O D & CO N V E R SAT I O N

FAWC .O R G/ B E N E F I T- E V E N T S

N E W YO R K C I T YAU T H O R S A N D A RT I S T S

S E R I E S

J H U M PA L A H I R I P U L I T Z E R P R I Z E -W I N N I N G AU T H O R

H O S T E D BY PAT R I Z I A A N D K I M BA L L C H E N

T H U R S DAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

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24

Ellen O’Donnell RankinMichael RataczakPaul and Blair ResikaThomas and Mary RishelGlen RizzoAnthony RizzutoBarbara RodricksPamela RossSusan Jo RussellJulia SalingerJack SansoloDavid SassoonStephanie SassoonBrian ScalesKaren SchifanoStephen Schmidt and Janet MacfaydenChristine SchuttCharles ShawOren ShermanDeborah SiegelEllen SimonsBrenda SkarpholKurt SlyeGayle SmalleyCornelia SmithHarry SteinbergPaul StopforthJeff SugarmanPeter Sullivan and Robert KearyMichael SyersUniversity of North DakotaTabitha VeversKaren WatkinsKathryn WeillDavid WhitneySusan WilliamsonEllen WittlingerBarbara and Kenneth YoungDawn Zimiles

FAWC .O R G/ B E N E F I T- E V E N T S

2 0 1 6 B O S TO N S P R I N G E X H I B I T I O N P R E V I E W & B E N E F I T

“ P R OV I N C E TOW N VO I C E S ”L E S T E R J O H N S O N I N P R OV I N C E TOW N

A N E XC LU S I V E B O S TO N P R E V I E W R O G E R S K I L L I N G S

A N D H I S N E W B O O K SUMMER ’S END

CO - C H A I R SJ I M B E N N E T T E & DAV I D COWA N, LY N N E KO RT E N H AU S ,

DAV I D A LTA RAC & B R I A N KO L L

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AC M E F I N E A RT – T H U R S DAY, M AY 1 9, 2 0 1 6

STEPHEN HENDEE, Untitled (detail), 2016, digital print, 16.75” x 23” 2016 Pollock-Krasner Artist-in-Residence

“ L E T T E R TO OA K L A N D ”For all my northerly CaliforniansHILARY VAUGHN DOBEL (Writing Fellow 2016-2017)

Who has time to be afraid when the guitar sounds yellowas the color-corrected California light in your favorite movie, the one you told me I should see? It’s winter here, and all my clementines have succumbed to rot. I’ve thrown themin the trash and burnt a candle that smells like clementines instead because so often scent is the next best thing to having what we want—bonfire, corduroy, the woods beside a highway where the buttons of your shirtleft an imprint in my cheek. A friend I loved—you knew her, too—told me she wrote fear with the shape of her body, and I have never taken the time to learn what word I made with mine. I know it is regarded with suspicion, the impulse to choose absence over pain— why the woman with the amputated leg is always left alone to explain herself.It has been years since I’ve seen you. And there are so many ways not to be alone—when I got lost and found the abandoned treehousethe broken glass scattered there told me others have been here before. Remember when we were students, standing in our dress code violations holding hands while the rain pelted down like we’d personally offended it, and now from across this ragged continent we see red together, wondering how much of this weight we can take for each other, how much of this can be taken.

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E V E N T S P O N S O R SS E A S O NArtscopeMAX Ultimate FoodProvincetown BannerWequassett Resort and Golf Club

N YC B E N E F I TJack Shainman GalleryTim McCarthy Video

B O S TO N S P R I N G B E N E F I TACME Fine ArtCarroll and SonsMAX Ultimate FoodPerry’s Wine & LiquorsTim McCarthy VideoTROY BostonMiller Yezerski Gallery

SUMMER AWARDS CELEBRATIONArtscopeBerta Walker GalleryCape AirCape Associates, IncCape Cod BeerColdwell Banker Pat Shultz Real EstateD & A Interior Design ServicesKaplansky Insurance AgenciesLand’s End InnMAX Ultimate FoodTim McCarthy VideoOuter Cape Health ServicesPerry’s Wine & LiquorsProvincetown BannerThe Fernon Group at Merrill Lynch

The Schoolhouse GalleryWequassett Resort and Golf ClubWHATYardarm Liquors

4 0 T H A N N UA L AU C T I O NArtscopeCape AirProvincetown BannerStanhope FramersFar Land ProvisionsMAX Ultimate FoodNew MuseumRoger Smith HotelWequassett Resort and Golf Club

CO M M I T T E E S , VO LU N T E E R S , A N D H O N O R E D G U E S T SN YC B E N E F I T & E X H I B I T I O NHONORED GUEST Yusef Komunyakaa

CHAIRSTed Chapin and Torrence Boone

HOST COMMITTEERichard Baker* and Liz FodaskiJames Bennette and David Cowan Charles Bergman and Stuart LevyLori Bookstein Stephanie Buhmann Stephen McCoy Cadwalader Patrizia Chen Michael Cunningham* Marty Davis and Alix Ritchie

Edward De Luca and Edward GallagherTom Donegan and Mark WeinressYvette and John DubinskyAlison and John FerringNick Flynn* and Lili Taylor André Gregory and Cindy Kleine Gabby Hanna and Marcy Feller Marie Howe*Major Jackson* Ron Kollen and Mark WisneskiTony Kushner and Mark Harris Patty Larkin and Bette Warner Andrew Mockler* and Jennifer MarshallJack Pierson* Victoria Redel* Michael Roberts and Jay Corcoran Daniel Roche Maxine Schaffer and Sharon Fay Jack Shainman

PREVIOUSLY HONORED GUESTSMichael Cunningham* Jack Pierson*Marie Howe*André Gregory

B O S TO N S P R I N G E X H I B I T I O N P R E V I E W A N D B E N E F I TCELEBRATING Lester JohnsonRoger Skillings

CHAIRSDavid Altarac and Brian KollJames Bennette and David Cowan Lynne Kortenhaus

*Fine Arts Work Center Fellows

HOST COMMITTEEKeith Althaus*Elizabeth Awalt*Neal Balkowitsch and Donald NelsonChris Busa and Ingrid AueJoseph CarrollKay Knight ClarkeMarty Davis and Alix RitchieAlice Denison Nick Flynn* and Lil TaylorMajor Jackson*Barbara Kapp and Paul MitarachiPatty Larkin and Bette Warner Susan Lyman* Gail MazurCallum McPherson Ellen MillerDaniel MullinMargaret Murphy and Lauren EwingRobert PinskyCary Raymond and Jon GoodeDavid Rivard and Michaela Sullivan Michael Roberts and Jay CorcoranEllen RolliSalvatore Scibona*Carol Warshawsky Heather Wells Howard Yezerski

SUMMER AWARDS CELEBRATIONHONOREESEileen MylesJames Lecesne

HOST COMMITTEE HONORARY CHAIRDaniel Mullin

VICE CHAIRSAlison and John FerringGabby HannaLynne Kortenhaus

HOST COMMITTEEJames Bennette and David CowanTed Chapin and Torrence BooneKay Knight ClarkeRob Cummings and Dennis CondonMarty Davis and Alix RitchieKen DietzDon DiRoccoDoug Dolezal and Greg WelchTom Donegan and Mark WeinressJohn DowdAlan DugganLou Ficociello Ken FulkLucas Garofalo and Jeff SwensonAndré Gregory and Cindy KleineEugene KellyPaul Kelly and Edward DusekPatty Larkin and Bette WarnerMaria Lopez and Stephen MindichMargaret MacNeilGail MazurJames and Stephania McClennenMike MinoreDonald NelsonMichael Roberts and Jay CorcoranDaniel RocheMaxine Schaffer and Sharon FayChristopher Scinto and Dominic CioffolettiDan Sullivan and Roberto VasquezTina Trudel and Dorothy PalanzaBerta Walker

EXHIBITION – THE VISUAL ARTS FACULTY OF THE SUMMERPROGRAMARTISTSMark Adams Amy Arbus Richard Baker Linda Bond Paul Bowen Adam Davies Angela Dufresne Joanne Dugan Juan Pablo Echeverri Robert Henry Daniel Heyman Catherine Kehoe Kevin King Fred Liang Siobhan Liddell Constantine Manos Andrew MocklerCatherine Mosley Josh Neufeld and Sari Wilson Pat Oleszko Jim Peters Marjorie Portnow Marian Roth James Everett Stanley Paul Stopforth James Stroud Rob Swainston Vicky Tomayko Bert Yarborough

FAWC .O R G/ B E N E F I T- E V E N T S

2 0 1 6 S U M M E R AWA R D SC E L E B RAT I O N

H O N O R E E SE I L E E N M Y L E S

C E L E B RAT E D P O E T. N OV E L I S T. P E R FO R M E R . JA M E S L EC E S N E

D I S T I N G U I S H E D W R I T E R . AC TO R . S TO RY T E L L E R .

F I N E A RT S WO R K C E N T E R – SAT U R DAY, J U LY 9, 2 0 1 6

2 0 1 6 E V E N T S & C O M M I T T E E S

H O N O R A RY C H A I R DA N I E L M U L L I N

CO - C H A I R S M A R GA R E T M U R P H Y A N D N E A L BA L KOW I T S C H

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A N N UA L AU C T I O NCHAIRHatty Walker Fitts

HOST COMMITTEEDavid Altarac and Brian KollBailey Bob BaileyJim Bennette and David CowanCid BolducNaya BricherBetsi CoreaMarty DavisYvette DubinskyPaige GilliesGabby HannaBarbara KappLeslie ParsonsCary RaymondJanice RedmanRobert RindlerBette WarnerBert YarboroughMartha Zinn

AUCTIONEERJames Bakker

PARTICIPATING ARTISTSMark AdamsBailey Bob BaileyRichard BakerSusan BakerJames BallaRose BasileDonald BealJarrod BeckConstance BlackVarujan BoghosianLinda Bond

Paul BowenNaya BricherShirley BrownTom BurkhardtAlexander CalderTed ChapinWilliam CiccarielloCarmen CiceroKay Knight ClarkeArthur CohenBarbara CohenJay CritchleyRomolo Del DeoSalvatore Del DeoAlison DellJohn DowdYvette Drury DubinskyRob DutoitLauren EwingEmily FarnhamNathalie FerrierBill FittsGilbert FranklinJoe Ramiro GarciaRachel GeleniusJerome GreeneHeidi HahnStephen HendeeRobert HenrySharon HorvathJoel JanowitzEunju KangJoseph KaplanKevin KingLynne KortenhausRobert KushnerFred LiangIrene Lipton

Sarah LutzSusan LymanPeter MaddenNorman MailerFrank MalafronteMichael MazurJoel MeyerowitzPasquale NataleNathan OlivieraTherese OultonDorothy PalanzaAnna PoorDeidre PortnoyJanice RedmanPaul ResikaAaron RichmondMarian RothRob SwainstonVicky TomaykoDavid TrueLibby TrynzTabitha VeversMitch VillaniBert YarboroughDawn Zimiles

GALLERY SUPPORTERSACME Fine ArtAdam Peck GalleryAlbert Merola GalleryAMP GalleryBerta Walker GalleriesBlue GalleryCarroll and SonsClark GalleryCortile GalleryDorian GalleryEgeli Gallery

Gaa GalleryJulie Heller GalleryKent GalleryKobalt GalleryLori Bookstein GalleryPierogi GalleryRice/Polak GallerySchoolhouse GalleryTibor de Nagy GalleryThe William Scott Gallery

BUSINESS CONTRIBUTORSAdmiral’s LandingAerie House & Beach ClubAli Waldo Angel FoodsArt’s Dune ToursAtlantic Spice CompanyBayside Betsy’sBen & Jerry’sBig Daddy’s BurritosBirdie Silkscreenblu day spaBodybodyBookstore & RestaurantBox Lunch, WellfleetCafé EdwigeCafé HeavenCanteenCape Art TilesCape Cod OilCape Rep TheatreCape Tip SportswearChristina’sCurio CoffeeDavid Shick SilkscreenDevon’s Deep Sea DiveDolphin Fleet Whale Watch

29FAWC .O R G/ B E N E F I T- E V E N T S

T H E 4 0 T H A N N UA L A RT AU C T I O N

F E AT U R E D A RT I S T – VA R U JA N B O G H O S I A N S C U L P TO R . AS S E M B L E R . CO N S T R U C T I O N I S T. B E AC H CO M B E R .

S C AV E N G E R . CO L L EC TO R . CO N S E RVATO R .

F I N E A RT S WO R K C E N T E R – SAT U R DAY, AU G U S T 2 0, 2 0 1 6

CO U RT E SY O F B E RTA WA L K E R

C H A I R H AT T Y WA L K E R F I T T S

P R OJ EC T CO O R D I N ATO R S JA N I C E R E D M A N A N D B E RT YA R B O R O U G H

“ TA R OT ”PHILIP MATTHEWS (Writing Fellow 2016-2017)

At sunrise, the angels arrivewith their diet of crabs and clamsto crash against the breakwater, bridge of rocks. Hundredsshatter, are takenbehind the frenzy, and after —the divining pools of shellwater,shells of broken fire, violet and white, wet feathers, red legs, birdshit. I take my mother

as a memory downthis bridge, sure-footedwith healthy knees, jointsshifting in their tissue as they should. There is a visionin which seven legsrelate to each other on rock —There will be a book, but no grandchildren. There will be a husbandlike four birds low over earth. There will be a skinto be in, sword pulledfrom a crane’s heart, sack of meat. As my mother is vertical on seawater. And now kneeling.

We have been talking about prophecy, the delicate balanceof inhabiting somebody’s consciousness,fire in a glass. One holds the other downto her chair, saying,“Don’t get up.” There is work here, the floorof the sandswept room to be swept,glass doors opento the seaside. The access of lit windconsistently. Mother in her robe of whitedaggers, tending the curtains,smoothing the bed, unhookingthe neck of the crane. This is a gift. This is to be a gift.

VICTORIA-IDONGESIT UDONDIAN, Installation (detail), 2017, Visual Arts Fellow 2016-2017

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P R O F E S S I O N A L S E RV I C E SACME Fine Art & Design Jim Bennette and David CowanFlower Power, Tim Callis Hogan Lovells US LLPIDPR Group, Cary RaymondKAF GroupKortenhaus Communications Lynne KortenhausLamb, Mason, Bulger & Co. IncMichael Prodanou ArchitectShields Business Services, LLC

We have made every effort to provide an accurate listing of donors and supporters. We realize, however, that errors may occur in a listing of this length. If we have made an error regarding your listing, we sincerely apologize. Please let us know by contacting Michael Roberts, Executive Director, (508.487.9960 x102 or at [email protected]) or Bette Warner, Associate Director/COO (508.487.9960 x109 or at [email protected]). We appreciate your help in keeping our donor files accurate. Please note that the preceding list includes gifts received between October 1, 2015 and September 30, 2016.

30

Exuma Fine JewelryFar Land ProvisionsFlyer’s Boat RentalFrank A. Days & Sons, Inc.Friends of HeartGo FishGood ScentsGovernor Bradford RestaurantGrab N’ Go Health BarHot Chocolate SparrowHuntington Theatre, BostonInn at the MoorsJewelry Studio of WellfleetJoe Coffee & CaféJohn’s Foot Long Hot DogsKiehl’sKiss and MakeupJack KrumholzLand’s End InnLaughing Hearts Healing ArtsLewis Brothers Homemade Ice CreamLisa Ventre HatsLittle Capistrano Bike ShopLobster PotMAPMabel D. OrrMac’s SeafoodMain St. BooksMarc by Marc JacobsMass MoCA, North Adams, MAMitch VillaniMojo’sMuir MusicMussel BeachNamaste SpaNapi’sP-Town BikesPJ’s Family Restaurant, Wellfleet

Paws and WhiskersPayomet Performing Arts CenterPenney Patch Candy StorePerry’s Wine & LiquorsPilgrim Monument and Provincetown MuseumPops in the ParkProvincetown Art Association and MuseumProvincetown Book ShopProvincetown FloristProvincetown Fudge FactoryProvincetown GymProvincetown House of PizzaProvincetown InnProvincetown International Film FestivalProvincetown TheaterPuzzle Me ThisQivanaRed InnRelishRoom 68Rosemarie & Ken PeelleRuby’s Fine JewelrySage Inn & LoungeScargo Café, DennisScott CakesShor Home FurnishingsSixty Special Home StoreThe Chatham SquireTim’s Used BooksTim-ScapesToys of ErosUnder Glass FramingVintage in VogueWaves Hair SalonWellfleet Harbor Actor’s Theater (WHAT)West End SalonWhite Horse InnWicked Oyster Restaurant, Wellfleet

Willy’s GymWinslow’s Tavern, WellfleetWomencraftsYardarm LiquorsZinnia Jewelry

WORK CENTER INTERNSGenie IImenevNora MillerLucas MocklerAidan O’BrienKatie PaglieraniFlannery RollinsJindalae Suh

VOLUNTEERSBarbara BakerCid BuldocTerry CatalanoDavid ChickBetsi CoreaMarty DavisYvette DubinskyHatty Walker FittsKenneth FreedPaige GilliesLiz GrantGabby HannaKatherine HazzardWill Heron Bruce Heron Sarah HerseyDavid LindstromSarah LutzNette OlsenLeslie ParsonsDeirdre PortnoyJanice RedmanRobert Rindler

Maria RiceDavid SchickDebbie Taylor Martha Zinn

S U M M E R WO R K S H O P S A D H O C A DV I S O R SDean AlbarelliBailey Bob BaileyLinda BondYvette DubinskyAlison FerringJerome GreeneKelle GroomMajor JacksonCatherine KehoeLynne KortenhausPeik LarsenGail MazurMatthew Neill NullCary RaymondMichael RobertsMartha RhodesJohn SkoylesAlan ShapiroJames Everett StanleyDawn WalshBette WarnerBert Yarborough

E V E N T S & C O M M I T T E E S CONTINUED

A S P EC I A L T H A N K YO UThe Work Center would also like to give an extra shout out and huge thanks to TIM MCCARTHY for his extraordinary help in documenting so many of the wonderful people, events and stories that make the Work Center so uniqueand special.

TIM MCCARTHY

31AARON RICHMOND, Hinge Frame 3: Pommel Horse (detail), 2014, Silk screen ink and milk paint on reversed masonite, 80” x 70” Visual Arts Fellow 2016-2017 and 2015-2016

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F I N A N C I A L S U M M A RY SELECTED FINANCIAL INFORMATIONO C TO B E R 1 , 2 0 1 5 - S E P T E M B E R 3 0, 2 0 1 6

SABLE ELYSE SMITH, Episode 1 Excerpt Mirror/Echo/Tilt (still frame from video), 2016, mp4 Visual Arts Fellow 2015-2016

This is a summary of the Fine Arts Work Center’s operating income and expenses for the fiscal year Oct. 1, 2015 – Sept. 30, 2016 based on the Work Center’s 2015-16 audited financial statements. Operating expenses reflect depreciation, a non-cash item, of $133,008.

Endowment as of 9/30/16:

The Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Inc. is organized under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Contributions to the Fine Arts Work Center are tax-deductible to the full extent allowed by applicable law. A copy of our audited financial statements, which include the unqualified opinion of Cintrin Cooperman, may be obtained upon request to the Fine Arts Work Center, 24 Pearl Steet Provincetown, MA 02657 (508.487.9960).

A Earned from programs $674,245B Contributed 553,892C Events 188,907D Investment Income 147,320TOTAL $1,564,364

O P E R AT I N G I N CO M E

C

B

A

D

O P E R AT I N G E X P E N S E S

A

B

C

DE

A Programs $791,135B Buildings and Grounds 385,229C General and Administration 296,930D Fundraising 132,230E Interest 59,395TOTAL $1,664,919

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Unrestricted  $ 476,755Permanently Restricted $ 1,152,570TOTAL $ 1,629,325

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FAWC .O R G/ M E M B E R

The Fine Arts Work Center invites you to become a FRIEND of our creative community and receive a variety of benefits, including tuition and special event discounts,

as well as discounts at participating arts organizations.

B E C O M E A M E M B E RFRIENDS OF THE WORK CENTER MEMBERSHIP PROGRAM

- The Fellowship Program for emerging writers and visual artists- The Summer Workshop Program in creative writing and visual arts - 24PearlStreet online writing workshops - Free cultural events including year-round artists talks and gallery openings - Student scholarships and Summer Intern Program - Fellow stipends - Bringing Fellows to schools and senior centers (CAPE Program)

$50 INDIVIDUAL (Student $25 - 12-18 or Senior – over 65) - 10% off Work Center books & merchandise - Discounts at participating arts organizations - Invitation to all exhibitions and special events, including Fellowship Open Studios- Recognition in our annual report

$85 DUAL - All the benefits of the Individual Membership, times two!

$150 SUPPORTING - All the benefits of an Individual Membership, plus: - $50 tuition discount for Summer Workshops in writing and visual arts - $50 tuition discount for 24PearlStreet online writing workshops

$250 SUSTAINING - All the benefits of a Supporting Membership, plus: - 10% discount on these ticketed events: Boston Spring Benefit, Summer Awards

Celebration, Summer Concert Benefits, and the New York City Annual Benefit

$500 ADVOCATE - All the benefits of a Sustaining Membership, plus: - Autographed First Edition book or print by Fine Arts Work Center Fellow BEST FRIEND MEMBERSHIP – Encourage an artist or writer’s creative spirit. All benefits above.- $550 SCHOLARSHIP – 24PearlStreet Workshop- $650 SCHOLARSHIP – Summer Workshop- $750 SUMMER INTERN HOUSING STIPEND PROGRAM- $1,000 FELLOW ARTS MATERIALS STIPEND- $5,000 FELLOW LIVING STIPEND

LEVELS AND BENEFITS

YOUR MEMBERSHIP SUPPORTS

VICTORIA-IDONGESIT UDONDIAN, Swiss Lace Sample Series, 2014, Swiss lace fabric, ink on Swiss magazine, variable dimensionsVisual Arts Fellow 2016-2017 35

Danielle LemmonRichard Levy and Lorraine GallardSarah Lutz and John van RensSteve Mandes IIIEmily ManiceFred Marchant and Stefi RubinRoxi Marsen and Michael GallagherHelen Rachel MartinAndreas MaternGail MazurMaryjanet McNamaraK.A. Meads and Philip RosenthalTerrence Meck and Breton AlbertiRichard and Joan MillerJohn Milligan and Rob GravisSusan MitchellElizabeth MondryCatherine MoroccoJeannie MotherwellEllen NennerRobert NicosonPaul OberstMo OgrodnikDaniel Okrent and Rebecca OkrentBernard PalchickJane ParadiseGlenn PasanenAnn PatchettLydia Peelle and Jay Ketcham SecorMichael PeregonAnne PeretzDaniel Perlman and Jane KatimsJeff PetersJack PiersonRobert and Ellen PinskyAdele PressmanSusan Rand Brown and Daniel KelmanMelissa RangeLynne Raughley and Peter Ho Davies

William Rawn and John DouhanCandice ReffeCarole RidkerTom Rishel and Mary Ann RishelGlenn RizzoMichael Roberts and Jay CorcoranSusan Jo RussellStephanie SassoonDavid SassoonKaren SchifanoChristine SchuttBradley SeemanSibyl SentersRegina Shakin and Jim ShakinCharles ShawRichard SimeRoger SkillingsCornelia SmithJohn Stewart and Sharon StoliaroffRandall Stone and Jennifer StoneJeffrey SugarmanPeter Sullivan and Bob KearyMichael SyersSteve Tait and Dave CookMary Terrizzi and Scott BricherGregory Thompson and Greg CameronFrank Thompson and Kenneth FruhmanJeffrey TrachtmanUrvashi VaidWayne van GemertBette Warner and Patty LarkinKaren WatkinsJoshua Weiner and Sarah BlakeRobert Weiss and Ellyn WeissJohn Taylor WilliamsSusan WilliamsonEllen Wittlinger and David PritchardLisa Yuskavage and Matvey Levenstein

Alan AlbertRosanne AnnoniElizabeth AwaltBarbara Baker and Graham GieseDan BancroftJonathan and Barbara BeckwithKatie BellasJames Bennette and David CowanJane BloomLinda BondAnn BookmanSusan Brand and Gail HorowitzRoger Camp and Susan Lee-WarrenLuceil CarrollTeresita CastilloGloria and Christopher CataldoBonnie CatenaKim Chandler and Jamie GilletteKate ClintonJoan Lebold CohenLizabeth CohenJeremy CohnMartha CollinsBetsi CoreaAnn D’ErcoleBruce DanzerNicholas and Elena DelbancoKaren DePalmaKatherine DevineKenneth DietzJoerg DresslerEllen DriscollSamuel Duncan and Kate ThorpeAnn FeitelsonHarriet FinkelsteinLynn FitzerRoberta Fleming JeffriesRalph and Miriam FreidinJohn Frishkopf

Margery GansMichael GeisserPaige Gillies and Martha ZinnLaurie Glassman and Carla BettanoDavid Goldman and Jacques AbattoIvy Goodman and Robert LevineJaimy GordonCarol GreenCharles GriggJohn Guerra and Jay CoburnErnest Hadley and Annie MullinsGabby Hanna and Marcy FellerAdam HaslettBenjamin Hayes and Grace HayesRobert HenryMarcie HershmanEdward Hower and Alison LurieRebecca HoweyGloria Sue HyattMary InceLiz JanikMimi JigarjianMaryalice Johnston and Eric PetersDaniel Kaizer and Adam MossWendy KaminerBarbara Kapp and Paul MitarachiJeffrey and Cheryl KatzNancy Modlin KatzPeter KazonRichard Keeling and Eric EngstromMargaret KeenanSusan KeownDavid Kirchner and Scott WarnerAnthony KirkDavid KlipperMarianne Lampke and Lisa LinnehanWayne LawsonKate LearDiane Lederman

2 0 1 6 M E M B E R S

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L E A D E R S H I PB OA R D O F T R U S T E E SHatty Walker Fitts, Co-ChairMarty Davis, Co-ChairTed Chapin, PresidentMichael Cunningham, Vice PresidentAlison Nichols Ferring, Vice President Kay Knight Clarke, TreasurerTom Donegan, ClerkDavid AltaracNeal BalkowitschJames BennetteCharles BergmanNicholas DelbancoChristian DrazYvette DubinskyKenneth FreedJaimy GordonAndré GregoryGabby HannaMiranda Cowley HellerElliott HundleyMajor JacksonBarbara KappCindy KleineLynne KortenhausWayne LawsonChristophe W. MaoJames C.A. McClennenMartin MichaelsonStephen MindichAndrew MocklerDaniel MullinAnn PatchettJack Pierson

Michael ProdanouDaniel RocheMaxine SchafferChristopher SchwabacherLawrence ShainbergTina TrudelCarol WarshawskyBert Yarborough

B OA R D O F A DV I S O R SBarbara BakerStephen BorkowskiVivian BowerChris BusaMichael CarrollEthan CohenMatthew ColeDavid CowanBruce DanzerPat de GrootAlice DenisonAnnie DillardEllen DriscollAlan DugganMichael FernonJoseph Finder Bill FittsJohn FrishkopfCarol P. GreenRick GrossmanJames HabaRobert HenryA. M. HomesJune Kelly

Paul KellyJohn KrajovicBernard LacasseFlorence LaddPeik LarsenFred G. LeebronCecile LemleyMaria LopezEdward MaloneCostantine ManosGail MazurRichard McCannElizabeth McCrackenDermot MeagherVictoria NeelHunter O’HanianRebecca OkrentDorothy PalanzaJarald Lamar PetersonTaylor PolitesEric PriceWilliam RawnJanice RedmanAlix RitchieTed RosenbergNancy RosenblumOren ShermanJanet SilverRoger SkillingsMichele SoudaDonald StantonGerald SternCharles StorerNapi Van Dereck

A.J. VerdelleBerta WalkerClarence WalkerIke Williams

V I S UA L CO M M I T T E EBert Yarborough, ChairJames Everett Stanley, CoordinatorBailey Bob BaileyPolly BurnellKate ClarkAngela DufresneLauren EwingEllen GallagherPat de GrootDavid HumphreyMala IqbalJennie LivingstonSusan LymanDaniel MartinezAndrew MocklerPasquale NataleVictoria NeelItty NeuhausSarah OppenheimerJim PetersLamar PetersonDouglas RitterMira SchorDuane SlickVicky Tomayko

W R I T I N G CO M M I T T E EMajor Jackson, ChairSophia Starmack, CoordinatorDean AlbarelliElizabeth ArnoldLouis Asekoff Susan ChoiJaimy GordonJhumpa LahiriVictor LaValleZachary LazarFred LeebronAda LimónPaul LisickyMaurice ManningCleopatra MathisGail MazurSarah MesserGregory PardloCarl Phillips Robert PinskyClaudia RankineVictoria RedelDavid RivardChristine SchuttSalvatore ScibonaRoger SkillingsJohn SkoylesTom SleighA.J. Verdelle Joshua Weiner

T H A N K YO UWE GRATEFULLY ACKNOWLEDGE THE GENEROUS AND ONGOING SUPPORT FROM OUR SPONSORS

OUR HOUSING PARTNERS

List at time of printing. For an updated list and description of benefits, visit FAWC .O R G/ B U S I N E S S PA RT N E R S

Admiral’s Landing | Moffett House Inn | Ravenwood Inn | Rose Acre | Roux Sage Inn & Lounge | Seaglass Inn and Spa | Secret Garden Inn

Watermark Inn | White Horse Inn | 8 Dyer

FINE ARTS WORK CENTER STAFFMICHAEL ROBERTS Executive Director

BETTE WARNER Associate Director/COOCARY RAYMOND Communications & Marketing

BAILEY BOB BAILEY Building & Grounds ManagerNAYA BRICHER Administration, Technology, and Development Coordinator

KELLE GROOM Summer Program DirectorDAWN WALSH Summer Program & Community Outreach Coordinator

SOPHIA STARMACK Writing CoordinatorJAMES EVERETT STANLEY Visual Arts Coordinator

JILL MCDONOUGH 24PearlStreet Program CoordinatorGEMMA LEGHORN 24PearlStreet Program Manager

DAWN ZIMILES WebmasterMELENIE FLYNN Grantwriter

JEROME GREENE Building & Grounds AssociatePIERCE SUNENBLICK Head of Housekeeping

SCOTT SHIELDS Bookkeeper

WORKBOOK 2017DESIGN Cary Raymond

PRODUCTION Better Warner, Naya Bricher, James Stanley, Sophia Starmack

FAWC .O R G

G I V E A S C H O L A R S H I PT R A N S F O R M A L I F E

The Fine Arts Work Center invites you to give the gift of a scholarship for a SUMMER PROGRAM workshop in creative writing or visual arts or for 24PEARLSTREET,

our innovative online writing program. Your donation will fund a full-tuition scholarship for a writeror artist to participate in a workshop who otherwise would not have the funds to do so.

Scholarships are crucial to increasing the diversity and vibrancy of our community,attracting younger students and fostering a wider range of creative dialogue.

“It takes a village to raise an artist and many artists to raise a village. I can’t help but feel I found my village.” SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT

ART AND LITERATURE MATTER TO THE HUMAN SPIRIT

THE FERNON GROUP

SPONSORS

Page 21: ANNUAL REPORT 2016 - FINE ARTS WORK CENTER in … · 2016-2017 Fellows. 7. Visual Arts Fellows – 2016 Accomplishments. 10. ... printmaking, sculpture, photography, multi-media,

Funding for the Fine Arts Work Center is provided by the Massachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund, a program of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, administered through a collaborative arrangement between MassDevelopment and the Massachusetts Cultural Council.

The Fine Arts Work Center is an equal opportunity provider and employer. If you wish to file a Civil Rights program complaint of discrimination, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, found online at http://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_cust.html, or at any USDA office, or call 866.632.9992 to request the form. You may also write a letter containing all of the information requested in the form. Send your completed complaint form or letter to us by mail at U.S. Department of Agriculture, Director, Office of Adjudication, 1400 Independence

Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410, by fax 202.690.7442 or email at [email protected].

FINE ARTS WORK CENTER in Provincetown 24 Pearl Street | Provincetown, MA 02657 | 508.487.9960 | FAWC.ORG

COVER IMAGE BECKY SELLINGER, Who Tows the Wagon?, 2017, plaster, burlap, chicken wire,

PVC pipe, plywood, moving blanket, straps, hardware Visual Arts Fellow 2016-2017 ANNUAL REPORT 2016