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College of
Visual & Performing Arts Presents
The Winthrop University
Medal of
Honor in the Arts
Friday,
October 19, 2007
Awards
Ceremony and Benefit Performance
8 p.m.
Johnson Hall
Proceeds from ticket sales to the
Winthrop University Medal of Honor in the Arts go
to a merit scholarship fund that supports talented students from the Carolinas
who
purse careers in the visual arts, dance, music, or
theatre at Winthrop University.
New Sponsorship and
Ticket Prices
Individual ticket/Friend $75
1 ticket to the benefit performance and champagne finale
Individual ticket/Patron $250
1 preferred seating ticket to the benefit performance and champagne finale
Recognition
in program
1 ticket to the Presidents buffet reception with honorees
Benefactor $5000
8 choice seating tickets to the benefit performance and champagne finale
Sponsorship of a performance during the Medal of Honor in the Arts
Recognition in program
2 tickets to the Presidents buffet reception with honorees
Leadership $10000
10 premier seating tickets to the benefit performance and champagne finale
Sponsorship of a performance during the Medal of the Honor in the Arts
Sponsorship of a CVPA performance during the scheduled season
Recognition in program and other CVPA season collateral
4 tickets to the Presidents buffet reception with honorees
For tickets and information please call 803.323.2399 or 803.323.2323
2007 Honorees
Mark
Coplan ~
private
collector and advocate of South Carolina fine and outsider art
Beryl
Dakers ~
Emmy nominated filmaker and journalist
Carlisle
Floyd ~ nationally renowned
composer and librettist of opera
Betty
Plumb
~ leader and advocate for the arts
and art education
Dan
Wagoner ~ internationally
known choreographer and professor of modern dance
Pictures from the Benefit Performance and
Champagne Reception October 20, 2006
PAST SCHOLARSHIP
RECIPIENTS
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2006 KATHERINE
LLOYD
sculpture major
2005
JESSICA DANDENEAU
dance major
2004 AUSTIN
HERRING
theatre
major
2003 FRANCIS "MAC" McDOUGAL
choral
music education major
The Award
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The Winthrop University Medal of Honor in the Arts
acknowledges and recognizes the unique roles of individuals and
groups who have made a significant contribution to the arts, as well
as those who have positively impacted the quality of the cultural
life in communities across the Carolinas. First established in 2001,
The
Winthrop University Medal of Honor in the Arts is not limited to a single arts discipline or
area of artistic endeavor. This award honors those who have encouraged the arts and offered
inspiration to others either through their distinguished
achievements, artistic excellence, support, or patronage.
The President of the University
authorized the College of Visual and Performing Arts to award this important
Medal of Honor "to individuals or groups who, in the President's judgment, are
deserving of special recognition by reason of their outstanding contributions to
the excellence, growth, support, and availability of the arts" at Winthrop
University and across the state of South Carolina and beyond. The President of the
University selects the recipients of the Winthrop University Medal of
Honor in the Arts. The Dean on the College of Visual and
Performing Arts and the Winthrop University Medal of Honor in the Arts Steering
Committee annually assist with the selection process by soliciting
nominations for the medal. These nominations are reviewed by the
Steering Committee. A list of the most highly qualified candidates
is then forwarded to the President for final consideration along with
candidates of his own choosing.
The community is invited to
attend the benefit performance which takes place in the college's
state-of-the-art main stage in Johnson Hall. The proceeds go to a
scholarship fund to help support talented students who have an interest in pursuing careers in the visual
arts, dance, music, or theatre at Winthrop University.
The Medal
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Alf
Ward, Winthrop University Professor of Art and Design and an
internationally renowned gold smith who created Winthrop University mace,
among numerous other important commissions, designed and makes the
Medals. Born in London, Ward studied silversmith at Canterbury
College of Art and completed his National Diploma in Design at Birmingham
University in 1963.
As a consultant designer
to Spink & Sons in London, and by Appointment to Her Majesty the
Queen, he designed many presentation pieces for The Royal Air Force, The
Royal Family of Saudi Arabia, Revlon of Paris and individual awards for
Margo Fontaine and the Covent Garden Opera House.
Since his arrival at
Winthrop in 1989, among other commissions, Ward has designed and produced
silverware for the American Crafts Council, ceremonial maces for the
University of Tennessee, Coastal Carolina and designed brooch pins for the
last 10 First Ladies of South Carolina.
PAST
RECIPIENTS
of the Winthrop University
Medal of honor in the arts award
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2002
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MacArthur Goodwin
President of the National Art
Education Association, he is an educational
consultant in the arts. He retired in
May 2000 from the South Carolina
Department of Education, where he
helped develop arts academic
achievement standards, established the
Arts in Basic Curriculum Project based
at Winthrop and established a center
for dance education. He gained national
recognition for South Carolina as a
leader in arts education reform and
is a recipient of the 1994
Elizabeth O’Neill Verner Award for Arts Education.
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William Ivey Long
This Tony Award
winning costume designer
has four shows running on Broadway
and has been
involved in providing costumes
to more than a dozen plays, rock concert
performances and other events. From a theatre family, Long is the son of
William Long, who established the theatre program at Winthrop.
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Loonis McGlohon
This internationally
acclaimed jazz musician
and composer (posthumous award) stayed
in his home
state of North Carolina despite
the allure of big entertainment centers. The
Charlotte resident was known as a gifted
pianist and composer who wrote
songs
recorded and performed by such great
entertainers as Frank Sinatra,
Rosemary Clooney, Eileen Farrell
and Jose Ferrer. More than 40 artists have
recorded his song, “Blackberry Winter,”
written with Alec Wilder. |
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Lib Patrick
This philanthropist and arts patron grew up in
Rock Hill and graduated from
Winthrop in 1958. She and her family, the late Wayne Patrick,
and
daughters, Trish McGuinn and
Kathy Wilson, have supported the
university’s
arts programs and sports teams. One of
Winthrop’s three
exhibition spaces
is named for her -
the Elizabeth Dunlap Patrick Gallery.
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Dolores Lewandowski
This patron of the Winthrop University
Galleries is a long-time supporter of the
Department of Art. Her late
husband,
Edmund Lewandowski, chaired the
department and worked as a mosaic
artist, a painter of marine and
coastal views and a community activist.
The Edmund D. Lewandowski
Gallery is the main gallery space for the
university’s student exhibitions. |
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2003
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Guy and Margaret Lipscomb
As founding members
of the
Lipscomb Family Foundation,
the Lipscombs have established an
endowment
in the Department of Art and Design
at Winthrop University. The
name Lipscomb
is synonymous with the visual arts
in the state of South
Carolina.
Mr. Lipscomb, an artist himself, helped
found the South Carolina Watercolor
Society
in 1977 and wrote a watercolor instruction
book, Go With the Flow.
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Mary Mintich
Ms. Mintich has been a pioneering art
educator
and artist whose work has helped to establish an understanding
of
sculpture in the region. She has been a steadfast supporter and
advocate of
Winthrop University Art and Design students,
the Department of Art and
Design, and the Winthrop University Galleries.
In addition, she has
established a scholarship for students
majoring in sculpture or
jewelry/metals design.
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Robert Manson Myers
Dr. Myers has a
colorful history. He is
an historian, playwright, author, and winner
of the
National Book Award for
The Children of Pride, an archive of
letters
from the Civil War. As an educator,
Dr. Myers has
taught English at the
University of Maryland, the University of
London, and a number of other institutions.
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B.S. Plair
As a jazz musician and founder of the
family-based band “Plair,” Mr. Plair has
“years of
music writing and performing
experience that is unique to the world of
contemporary music”. He has spent over
30 years as a music educator and band
director in the public school system.
Mr. Plair has been a vital member of
the
Rock Hill community.
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David and
Diane “Tweedie” White
The Whites have long been advocates
of Winthrop
University
and the arts in York County. Mr. White served as
both member and chair for the Winthrop University Board of Trustees and Mrs.
White has served
on various committees and has been involved with multiple
arts organizations.
Through their generous sponsorship, the Department of
Music
has been able to establish a new series of departmental
recordings on
compact discs entitled Eagle Editions.
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2004 |
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Vivian
Anderson
Mrs. Anderson, a native of
Spartanburg County, S.C.,
graduated from Winthrop in January, 1945. She
taught home economics
at both Reidville and Roebuck high schools in the
Upcountry of the Palmetto State before devoting her talents and
time to
raising four children. One of her children, Elaine Anderson Sarratt,
graduated from Winthrop as well. The College of Visual
and Performing Arts
at Winthrop is honored to be the home
of the Vivian Brockman Anderson
Endowed Scholarship in Interior Design.
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Andie MacDowell
Ms. MacDowell is a native of
Gaffney, S.C., and attended Winthrop in the 1970's before establishing
herself as an accomplished actress that has resulted in worldwide
recognition. She recently completed filming "Beauty Shop" with Queen
Latifah and the CBS telepic "Riding the Bus with My Sister" directed by
Angelica Huston. She also starred in the poignant drama "Harrison's
Flowers, " about photojournalists behind the scenes in the war-torn Balkans
with Adrien Brody. She earned praise for her performance as a
repressed young wife in Steven Soderbergh's "sex, lies and videotape."
The film won the Palme D'or at Cannes and garnered MacDowell the Los Angeles
Film Critics' Award for Best Actress as well as a Golden Globe Nomination.
Additionally, MacDowell was presented with the coveted Cesar D'honneur for
her body of work and the Golden Kamera Award from Germany's Horzu
Publications.
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John and Jane
Spratt, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Spratt both hail
from York County and are Winthrop Gallery Patrons. Born in Filbert, S.C.,
Mrs. Spratt received her B.A. in history from Winthrop and an M.A.T. from
Smith College. She also studied fine arts at the Corcoran School of
Art. She began her career as a history and English teacher in the Fairfax
County Schools of Virginia and for the past 15 years has been a practicing
visual artist. Her work has been shown in galleries and museums in
Washington, DC, and Philadelphia, PA, Maryland, Virginia, and in the
Carolinas.
Mr. Spratt has been in the U.S. Representative for the 5th District of South
Carolina since 1983. The Honorable Congressman from York, S.C. is currently
the assistant to the Democratic Leader in the U.S. House of Representatives.
As a member of the Congressional Arts Caucus, John Spratt has supported,
every year since his first joining Congress, an increase for Federal Funding
for the arts and for the arts in education. This past year, he signed onto a
letter supporting funds for American Masterpieces, a new initiative of the
National Endowment for the Arts. Congressman Spratt's annual 5th District
Congressional Art Competition highlights the visual arts of high school
students in the region.
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Leo Twiggs
Dr. Twiggs received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Claflin Unicersity,
a Master of Arts from New York University, and his doctorate from the
University of Georgia in 1970 where he was the first African American to
receive an Ed.D. in art. Twiggs served on the task force that helped
establish the Smithsonian Institution's National African-American Museum,
and he chaired the planning committee for the African-American Museum
Association. Twiggs' Accomplishments and honors include the first visual
artists bestowed with the Elizabeth O'Neill Verner Award, and inductions
into the Claflin University Hall of Fame, the South Carolina Black Hall of
Fame, and the National Black Alumni Hall of Fame in Atlanta. Twiggs'
career and a visual artist has brought his work to the Studio Museum in
Harlem, American embassies in Decca, Togoland, Sierra Leone, Rome, and to
Winthrop. His unique batik paintings and other artworks are currently
touring the eastern United States in the exhibition, "The Art of Leo Twiggs:
A Retrospective." Twiggs serves as a member of the Steering Committee
of the Arts in Basic Curriculum, a project of Winthrop's College of Visual
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Virginia Uldrick
Dr. Uldrick is a native of Greenville, S.C. She earned a Bachelor of Fine
Arts from Furman University and a Master of Arts in Music Education and
Administration from Columbia University. Uldrick taught choral music,
theatre and stage productions in every level of elementary and secondary
education and was the supervisor of music and director of fine arts for the
Greenville County School District, as well as the founding director of the
Fine Arts Center of Greenville County. She was appointed by the Honorable
Carroll A. Campbell, governor of South Carolina, as the founding president
of the South Carolina Governor's School for the Arts and Humanities.
Uldrick's awards and honors are extensive. She most recently was
honored with the Jim Bray and Lillian Press Distinguished Service Award in
recognition of her dedicated service to governor's schools and gifted
education in South Carolina. She received the Elizabeth O'Neill Verner
Award and was presented honorary doctorates from both Furman University and
Columbia College. Uldrick also has a distinguished career as a
musician, singer, and conductor.
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2005
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Ray Doughty
Born in Columbia SC, Ray Doughty earned his Bachelor in Music Education degree from the University of South Carolina,
a Master Degree in Music Education from East Carolina University, and an Education Specialist Degree in School Administration from Western Carolina University.
Mr. Doughty has been an influential music educator and arts education advocate throughout his professional career.
He founded the instrumental and choral music programs at Southside High School in Florence, SC, was the band director at TL Hanna in Anderson, SC,
and was employed at West Market Elementary School as a music educator until he served as the Anderson District Five Music Coordinator.
Some years later he joined Winthrop University as a professor of music, lecturer in music education, and the project director for
South Carolina’s Arts in Basic Curriculum (ABC) Project - a nationally recognized arts education reform model. Mr. Doughty is a member of the South Carolina Music Educators Hall of Fame, a recipient of the
Elizabeth O’Neill Verner Arts in Education Award and the South Carolina Arts Alliance’s Scottie Award. Currently, he is composing songs for an upcoming play celebrating the history of Fort Mill.
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Harriet Marshall Goode
A native of Rock Hill, and a graduate from Winthrop Training School, Harriet
Marshall Goode is devoted to the community
in which she and her family live. She established the Children's Education
Program at the Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston, SC and has created community
spirited programs locally. She has served on the board of the
Rock Hill Arts Council
and the board of the Culture and Heritage Commission. Currently she is a
member of the Patrons of the Winthrop Galleries and supports the annual undergraduate
juried exhibitions and serves on the Rock Hill Downtown Board of Directors.
She is a recipient of the Rock Hill Arts Council Volunteer of the Year Award,
a Career Achievement Award from Converse College, and the Keeper of the Culture
Award from the Cultural and Heritage Commission. In addition, since 2001,
Harriet has been owner of Gallery 5, a contemporary art-space in Rock Hill.
Harriet's award winning paintings have been exhibited regionally and
nationally and are owned by collectors throughout the US and abroad.
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Charles Randolph-Wright
Charles Randolph-Wright, native of York, SC, has built a dynamic and diversified career in directing, writing, and producing for theatre, television, and film.
Once a pre-medical graduate from Duke University, he turned to the arts after studying acting with the Royal Shakespeare Company in London and dance with the Alvin Ailey School in New York City.
His directorial film debut, ON THE ONE, recently swept the feature film prizes at the ninth annual American Black Film Festival. Credits for theatre include direction of SENIOR DISCRETION HIMSELF (in D.C.), GUYS AND DOLLS (national tour with Maurice Hines)
and ME AND MRS. JONES (starring Lou Rawls, which he also co-wrote). Mr. Randolph-Wright’s play BLUE, starring Phylicia Rashad, broke
box office records at Arena Stage, the Roundabout Theatre in New York City, in Los Angeles and subsequently has had productions throughout the United States. His new play CUTTIN'UP premieres at Arena Stage this fall.
On television, he was producer and writer of Showtime's acclaimed series LINC'S, directed the international Freestyle campaign for Nike, and most recently directed the new series South of Nowhere.
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Walter B. Roberts and
Georgina Wooton-Roberts (posthumous)
Born in Centralia, Missouri, Dr. Roberts studied music at numerous institutions; including New York Institute of Musical Art and Chicago Musical College.
He became Head of Piano and Theory at Kansas State Teachers College, Fort Hayes, where he met his wife Georgina Wooton, then Head of the Art Department. He was Dean of Fine Arts at Phillips College in Enid Oklahoma
and later taught in Los Angeles. David B. Johnson, founder and first
President of Winthrop University, brought Dr. Roberts to the college as Head of Music in 1925.
Dr. Roberts, who remained chair for 38 years, established a master class in piano and voice which ran for
25 years.
He earned a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Missouri,
a master’s degree in music from Columbia University and an honorary doctorate degree from the Birmingham Conservatory of Music. Roberts served as president and board member of the
S.C. Music Educators Association and established the Rock Hill Choral Society.
Georgina Wooton-Roberts, born in Auburn, Indiana, studied art at De Pauw University, Chicago Art Institute, and Church School of Art, Chicago.
She established a career as Professor of Fine Arts at Kansas State Teachers College in Fort Hays and later at California Christian College in Los Angeles.
In 1923 Ms. Wooton-Roberts exhibited in a Tri-State Art exhibit which included Kansas. Ms. Wooton-Roberts also exhibited at Los Angeles Museum of History, Science,
and Art and was a member of the California Watercolor Society. She came with her husband to Rock Hill for him to work at Winthrop but could not be employed at the same college.
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Scott Shanklin-Peterson
Scott Shanklin-Peterson has a Bachelor of Art Degree in Visual Arts
from Columbia College and graduated from Harvard University's Institute of Arts Administration.
Her work in the arts and arts education has advanced the area of policy at both the state and national levels.
Ms. Shanklin-Peterson’s service as Executive Director of the South Carolina Arts Commission from 1980 to 1994 and as Senior Deputy Chairperson of the
National Endowment for the Arts from 1994 to 2001 made an impressionable impact upon the arts community by broadening arts excellence and opportunities.
Currently Ms. Shanklin-Peterson serves as Director of the Arts Management Program at the College of Charleston.
Her present service includes the South Carolina Arts Alliance, Creative Spark, Southern Arts Federation, the American Craft Council,
International Arts & Artists, and the International Advisory Board of the Arts Council of Mongolia.
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2006
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Harry and Becca Dalton
Harry and Becca Dalton are known throughout York County for their generosity
and volunteer efforts. The two Charlotte, N.C., natives helped save Nanny's
Mountain near Clover and the Worth Mountain area on the Broad River; participated
in the restoration of two historic buildings on Main Street in Rock Hill;
and provided funding for the Dalton Gallery at the Rock Hill Center for the
Arts, Clinton Junior College library art gallery, Winthrop University Galleries
and Winthrop's Department of Theatre and Dance. They are participating
sponsors for the new Dalton Downtown Arts Initiative to encourage collaboration
among area galleries.
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Shirley Fishburne
Music and Winthrop have both played a major role in the life of Shirley Fishburne.
She earned a bachelors degree and masters degree in organ performance
at Winthrop before earning an Ed.D. from the University of North Carolina
at Greensboro. She also attended the Haarlem Organ Academy in Holland and
is a certified Orff instructor to teach music to children.
Fishburne taught music at Winthrop for 17 years, in addition to teaching
at other area colleges and schools. She served as co-chair for the steering
committee to restore the D.B. Johnson Memorial Organ in Byrnes Auditorium,
volunteering her time to present eight organ recitals throughout South Carolina
and Georgia to raise awareness of the organ.
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Roy Fluhrer
Roy Fluhrer, who was “born in a trunk” in Chicago to parents touring with the Federal Theatre Project in the latter stages of the Great Depression,
has spent his life in the arts. He won an acting scholarship to Northwestern University as a junior in high school,
earning a degree from there and later a master’s degree and Ph.D. from Bowling Green State University.
He worked as artistic and managing director of a theatre in Ohio, as chair of the theatre department at the
University of Idaho and as vice chancellor of the N.C. School of the Arts. Since 1989,
he has headed the Fine Arts Center in Greenville, S.C. the State’s first secondary school
for gifted students in the literary, visual and performing arts.
For the nearly 17 years he has spent in South Carolina, including part of the time as president of the S.C. Arts Alliance,
he has worked on various local, state and national committees to lend his voice to fulfilling the belief in the power of the
arts to transform not only our lives and our educational system but the very fabric of our culture. He is a long-time member of the Arts in Basic Curriculum Project housed at Winthrop.
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Pearl Fryar
Since 1984, Pearl Fryar has not stopped molding the shcrubs and trees in
his 3-acre yard in Bishopville into topiary art with a gas-powered hedge
trimmer. The first recognition of his talents came in the mid-1990s when
Fryar was included in a series of art exhibitions at Winthrop and the South
Carolina State Museum to spotlight self-taught artists.
With an exhibition at Spoleto USA in 1997 and a feature in Art in America,
Fryars reputation grew. Tour buses began arriving at his garden by
the dozens. He has since appeared on ETV and Home & Garden Television
and also has been featured in Sandlapper and Southern Living magazines. Fryar
has won numerous awards including being named a S.C. Ambassador for Economic
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Susie Surkamer
For more than 30 years, Susie Surkamer has dedicated her career to the development of a thriving
arts environment in South Carolina. Her work with the S.C. Arts Commission began in 1974 when
she joined the agency as dancer-in-residence. She moved to the areas of arts development and a
dministration before being named executive director in 1994.
Since then, the S.C. Arts Commission has earned a national reputation as a
leader in arts education reform, rural arts development, design arts and other initiatives.
Surkamer’s work in strengthening partnerships has led to her service on numerous state, regional and
national boards and alliances, including Winthrop’s Board of Visitors. She has served on several panels
for the National Endowment for the Arts and for other organizations.
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