FY2015–16 Annual Report - Museum of New Mexico Foundation

MUSEUM OF NEW MEXICO FOUNDATION | WINTER 2016
Leaders in Preserving
Our Cultural Heritage
The Year in Review
Table of Contents
LETTER TO MEMBERS 1
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
2
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
3
ADVOCACY6
Cover: Directors of the Museum of New Mexico,
including, from left to right: Khristaan Villela,
Museum of International Folk Art; Mary Kershaw,
New Mexico Museum of Art; Andrew Wulf, New
Mexico History Museum and Palace of the
Governors; Della Warrior, Museum of Indian Arts
and Culture; and Patrick Moore, New Mexico
Historic Sites. Photo © Daniel Quat Photography.
Below: Eric Blinman, director of the Office of
Archaeological Studies. Photo © Daniel Quat
Photography.
THE CENTENNIAL CAMPAIGN
7
NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART
8
NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM/
PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS
10
MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE
12
MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART
14
OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES
16
NEW MEXICO HISTORIC SITES
18
FOUNDERS SOCIETY
19
ENDOWMENTS20
DONORS AND MEMBERS
21
THE SCOOP
28
WAYS TO GIVE
29
Our Mission
The Museum of New Mexico Foundation supports the
Museum of New Mexico system through fund development for exhibitions and education programs,
financial management and advocacy.
The Foundation serves the following state cultural
institutions:
• Museum of Indian Arts and Culture/
Laboratory of Anthropology
• Museum of International Folk Art
• New Mexico History Museum and Palace of the Governors
• New Mexico Museum of Art
• New Mexico Historic Sites
• Office of Archaeological Studies
Member News Contributors
Mariann Lovato, Director, Membership and
Communications
Carmella Padilla, Writer and Editor Alex Hesbrook, Writer
Bram Meehan, Graphic Designer
Daniel Quat, Photographer
Correction
In our profile of Museum of International Folk Art supporter Spider Kedelsky
(Fall 2016, page 5), we incorrectly stated that part of Kedelsky’s collection was
from “Southern Africa below Sharia.” The statement should have read “Africa
south of the Sahara.” We regret the error.
Dear Members,
Welcome to the Annual Report edition of Member News. We take
this opportunity every December to review the membership,
development and retail activities of the Museum of New Mexico
Foundation during the prior fiscal year.
Our 2015–16 fiscal year (July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016) showed solid
gains in the private financial support and other resources we
bring to benefit our 12 partner institutions in the Museum of New
Mexico system. Their cultural offerings have been sustained and
strengthened, thanks to the extraordinary generosity of our
members and donors.
With help from your gifts, the talented staff at these institutions — the directors, curators, educators, administrators,
designers, fabricators and others — organized and presented
world-class exhibitions, educational programs and public outreach
projects this past year. You will read about many of their incredible
undertakings in the following pages.
The impact of this work is wide-ranging. Our four Santa Fe
museums and seven statewide historic sites attract more than
350,000 visitors a year. Along with the Office of Archeological
Studies, whose educational outreach programs are nationally
lauded, all 12 divisions serve more than 40,000 schoolchildren in all
33 counties of New Mexico.
Our museum system is also a catalyst for economic development.
Indeed, a recent study by the New Mexico Department of Cultural
Affairs showed that the state’s arts and cultural industries have a
$5.6 billion annual economic impact. We can all take pride in the
vital role that the Foundation and Museum of New Mexico play in
making this possible.
As always, The Foundation is engaged in the important work of
moving our cultural institutions forward. For the immediate
future, we are spearheading The Centennial Campaign for the
New Mexico Museum of Art, a $10 million capital effort to expand
the museum into a second location — the Halpin Building in
Santa Fe’s Railyard District — devoted to contemporary art. We
are also working with the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture to
raise $3 million to renovate its core permanent exhibition Here,
Now and Always.
“Our 2015–16 fiscal year showed
solid gains in the private financial
support and other resources we
bring to benefit our 12 partner
institutions in the Museum of New
Mexico system,” says Jamie
Clements, Foundation President/
CEO. “Their cultural offerings have
been sustained and strengthened,
thanks to the extraordinary
generosity of our members and
donors.” Photo © Daniel Quat
Photography.
During these challenging times for state funding, the Foundation is
committed as never before to raising the private funds needed to
keep the exceptional exhibitions, programs and projects of our
cultural institutions alive and thriving. Everything you can do to
make this possible is more meaningful than ever.
From all of us at the Foundation, best wishes to you and your family
this holiday season.
Sincerely,
Jamie Clements
President/CEO
museumfoundation.org1
Museum of New
Mexico Foundation
Board of Trustees
2016–17
J. Scott Hall is the newly elected chair of the
Museum of New Mexico Foundation’s Board
of Trustees. “I am encouraged and motivated
by the Foundation’s positive fundraising results
in the 2015–16 fiscal year,” Hall says. “I look
forward to working with fellow board members,
and Foundation and museum staff to strengthen
and build further support for our 12 partner
institutions this fiscal year.” Photo © Daniel Quat
Photography.
TRUSTEES
ADVISORY TRUSTEES
J. Scott Hall, Chair
Pat Hall, Vice Chair
Dan Perry, Vice Chair
John Rochester, Treasurer
Harriet Schreiner, Secretary
Charmay B. Allred
Keith K. Anderson
JoAnn Balzer
Bob Bauernschmitt
Cynthia Bolene
Lynn Brown
Rosa Ramirez Carlson
Robert L. Clarke
Liz Crews
Joan Dayton
Jim Duncan Jr.
Leroy Garcia
Jim Goodwin
Bud Hamilton
Catherine M. Harvey
Barbara Hoover
Cathy Kalenian
Kent F. Jacobs, M.D,
Candace Jacobson
Connie Thrasher Jaquith
Janis Lyon
Doris Meyer
Patty Newman
Jane O’Toole
Michael Pettit
Judy Sherman
Marian Silver
J. Edd Stepp
Suzanne Sugg
Patty Terrell
Nancy Meem Wirth
Claire Woodcock
Donald F. Wright
John Young
Robert Zone, M.D.
Victoria Addison
Catherine A. Allen
Anne Bingaman
Dorothy H. Bracey
Jane Buchsbaum
Frieda Simons Burnes
Daniel Burrell
Jack Campbell
Rebecca Carrier
Sharon Curran-Wescott
Christie Davis
Sherry Davis
Rosalind Doherty
George Duncan
Kirk Ellis
Carlos Garcia
Steve Harris
Susie Herman
Nicole A. Hixon
Stephen Hochberg
Frank H. Hogan
Rae Hoffacker
Peggy Hubbard
Jim Kelly
Bruce Larsen
Lawrence Lazarus, M.D.
John Lenssen
Martin Levion
Jim Manning
David Matthews
Christine McDermott
Helene Singer Merrin
Beverly Morris
Mark Naylor
Dennis A. O’Toole, Ph.D.
Kathleen Pugh
Pat Rehorn
Jerry Richardson
Marshall Sale
Wilson Scanlan
Nan Schwanfelder
Courtney Finch Taylor
Carol Warren
HONORARY TRUSTEES
Lloyd E. Cotsen
Anne and John Marion
Edwina and Charles Milner
Bob Nurock
J. Paul Taylor
Eileen A. Wells
TRUSTEES EMERITI
John Berl
Thomas B. Catron III
Saul Cohen
Alan Rolley
James Snead
2museumfoundation.org
The Year in
Review
July 1, 2015–
June 30, 2016
$3,840,000 in
membership and
designated gifts
$3,861,000
in retail and
licensing
$7,701,000 in
total revenues
PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: COURTESY JEMEZ HISTORIC SITE;
© DANIEL QUAT PHOTOGRAPHY; © CAITLIN ELIZABETH; © ANDREW
KASTNER; © VIC MACIAS. MIDDLE PHOTO © ANDREW KASTNER.
The Museum of New Mexico Foundation, the private non-profit
partner of the four state museums in Santa Fe, seven statewide
historic sites and the Office of Archaeological Studies, generated total
revenues of $7,701,000 during the 2015–16 fiscal year.
The Foundation thanks and recognizes the thousands
of generous members and donors who contributed
$3,840,000 in membership dues and designated gifts
to support our divisions during this period.
The Foundation also earned revenues of $3,861,000
through sales at our museum shops, royalties from our
licensing program, endowment distribution and more.
“We thank our generous donors and salute the
directors and staff of the Museum of New Mexico
system, all of whom contributed to the excellence of
our institutions during the fiscal year,” says Foundation President/CEO Jamie Clements. “This combination of private resources and tremendous talent
brings our cultural institutions to life and extends
their reach to thousands statewide.”
Support for our 12 affiliated cultural institutions
relies on a critical public-private partnership.
Responsibility for funding building operations and
staff salaries falls to the State of New Mexico. The
rest — exhibitions, public programs and educational
initiatives — are all funded by your private donations
through the Foundation.
In addition to raising funds for each division, the
Foundation manages a dynamic membership
program with four distinct member groups. Our
retail operations program includes five museum
shops, two online stores and a licensing program. As
the fiscal agent for our partner institutions, we also
manage 31 endowments, administer grants, and cut
more than 7,000 checks annually. Finally, the Foundation advocates for critical funds from the New
Mexico State Legislature and provides other valuable
advocacy and support services.
The following is a summary of how your generosity
impacted the Museum of New Mexico during the
2015–16 fiscal year. (All figures are rounded to the
nearest hundredth).
Membership and Designated Gifts = $3,840,000
MEMBERSHIP = $1,492,000
Providing Critical Foundation Operating Support
DESIGNATED GIFTS BY DIVISION = $2,348,000
Sustaining Our Cultural Institutions
The Foundation boasts the largest arts membership
program in New Mexico, with more than 14,000
members in 7,400 households in New Mexico and
beyond. Members from the following membership
groups collectively contributed $1,492,000 in
membership dues to fund the Foundation’s development efforts on behalf of our partner museums,
historic sites and the Office of Archaeological Studies:
Hundreds of individual donors made designated gifts
and intended gifts to support individual Museum of
New Mexico divisions. These include contributions
for exhibitions and related programming; income
received through grants, special events and Friends
group dues; education programs, endowment
payouts and more. Total support by division includes:
 General
membership = $678,000
 The Circles = $651,000
 Business Council
and Corporate
Sponsorship = $90,000
 Friends Groups = $73,000
Designated
Gifts by
Division =
$2,348,000
4museumfoundation.org
PHOTO © ANDREW KASTNER
Membership =
$1,492,000
 Museum of Indian Arts
and Culture = $625,000
 Museum of International
Folk Art = $459,000
 New Mexico History
Museum and Palace of the
Governors = $547,000
 New Mexico Museum
of Art = $282,000
 New Mexico Historic
Sites = $82,000
 Office of Archaeological
Studies = $136,000
 Museum Resources
Division = $217,000
Museum Shops, Licensing and Other Earned Income = $3,861,000
MUSEUM SHOPS (GROSS SALES) = $3,129,000
Showcasing Exhibition-Related Items
More than $3.1 million in gross sales was generated
at the five museum shops and two online stores
(shopmuseum.org and worldfolkart.org), providing
vital operating income for the Foundation. Collectively, the shops hold an inventory from more than
2,000 vendors. These exhibition-inspired items,
apparel, furniture, jewelry, books, folk art, textiles,
note cards and other unique products significantly
enhance the visitor experience.
manufacturers to create collections-inspired design
adaptations of the Museum of New Mexico’s historic
and contemporary holdings. Program royalties
provide operating support for the Foundation.
OTHER EARNED INCOME = $590,000
Generating Additional Support
PHOTOS: LEFT © DANIEL QUAT PHOTOGRAPHY; RIGHT © ERIC LAINGEL
LICENSING PROGRAM (ROYALTIES) = $142,000
Creating Collections-Inspired Items and Design
Other
Earned
Income =
$590,000
 Legacy Society Gifts
Realized = $298,000
 Foundation Endowment
Distribution = $269,000
 Other (Foundation) = $23,000
The Foundation’s licensing program continued to
build the museum brand by partnering with major
Total Revenue FY 2015–16 = $7,701,000
The Foundation thanks all of its supporters who helped make the 2015–16 fiscal year a success. Audited
financials for all Foundation fundraising efforts are available at museumfoundation.org.
To make a gift in the current fiscal year, call 505.982.6366 or visit museumfoundation.org.
museumfoundation.org5
Cultural Advocacy
‘Everyone Can Help’
During the 2015–16 fiscal year, the Museum of New
Mexico Foundation advocated for additional support
from the New Mexico State Legislature for essential
structural upgrades and repairs at several Museum of
New Mexico divisions.
• Fort Selden = $50,000
To preserve and stabilize the fort’s adobe walls.
• Taylor-Barela-Reynolds-Mesilla = $25,000
For critical roof repairs, as well as heating, ventilation and air conditioning system upgrades.
Below is a summary of the project requests that were
funded:
Museums = $612,175
New Mexico Historic Sites = $190,000
• Bosque Redondo Memorial at
Fort Sumner = $50,000
To repair and enhance the site’s visitor’s center,
including parking lot lighting improvements,
landscaping of the center’s entrance, and brush
control to improve visitor accessibility to the River
Walk Trail.
• Coronado = $70,000
To reconstruct the Ruins Footprint, which outlines
the original first-floor rooms of Kuaua, the prehistoric Tiwa Indian village where the site is located.
Landscaping, erosion and other planning issues
will also be addressed.
• Museum of Indian Arts and Culture = $50,000
To support renovation of the museum’s permanent
exhibition Here, Now and Always.
• New Mexico Museum of Art = $195,000
To restore the courtyard of the museum’s historic
1917 building to its original condition.
• Palace of the Governors = $417,175
In early 2015, the National Trust for Historic
Preservation committed to a three-year effort to
advocate for $1.5 million needed to make improvements to the Palace, which the trust has designated
a National Historic Treasure.
This year’s appropriation brings the total raised (to
date) to $1,097,175. A portion of the funds have been
used to remove cement stucco from the Palace
courtyard walls and to replace it with breathable
lime plaster. Future improvements include roof
repairs and door replacement in various areas of
the museum and the Palace.
Additional Funding = $73,000
Ongoing advocacy efforts are critical, says Foundation trustee Bruce Larsen, chair of the Advocacy
Committee.
“Everyone — all trustees and members — can at some
point help,” Larsen says. “Call, visit, or send a letter to
state representatives encouraging their continued
support of our state treasures.”
6museumfoundation.org
PHOTO COURTESY NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS
The legislature also designated capital outlay funds
as part of the New Mexico Department of Cultural
Affairs’ annual budget, including the following
appropriations:
• Museum Hill Campus Improvements = $60,000
• Palace of the Governors Photo Archive
Equipment = $13,000
The Centennial Campaign
Expanding the New Mexico Museum of Art
Launched at the close of the 2015–16 fiscal year, the
Museum of New Mexico Foundation’s Centennial
Campaign for the New Mexico Museum of Art is well
under way.
The goal: to raise $10 million over the next three
years to expand the museum to a second location at
the Halpin Building in Santa Fe’s Railyard District.
The result: to create a vibrant new community space
devoted to contemporary art and to secure a strong
and vibrant future for the New Mexico Museum of Art.
The campaign also will fund the expansion of the
Eugenie Shonnard House as a permanent home for
the Foundation.
The Foundation thanks the following donors for their generous support of The Centennial Campaign:
AS OF NOVEMBER 1, 2016
Cathy Allen
Ann Griffith Ash
Anne and Jeff Bingaman
Sharon Curran-Wescott and
Earle “Skip” Wescott
George Duncan and Sheryl Kelsey
Lawrence Fodor and John Rochester
Bobbie Foshay
Ed and Maria Gale
George Goldstein
Chris and Scott Hall
Pat and Jim Hall
Roddie and Steve Harris
Nicole Hixon
Rae Hoffacker
Peggy and Tom Hubbard
Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen
Dana and Jim Manning
Cindy Miscikowski
Yvonne A. Montoya
Kay and Bill Neuhaus
Bob Nurock
Ashlyn and Dan Perry
Michael Pettit
Jerry Richardson
Jenna and Wilson Scanlan
Nan Schwanfelder
CENTENNIAL CAMPAIGN
LEADERSHIP CABINET
Ashlyn Perry, Co-Chair
Dan Perry, Co-Chair
Pat Hall, Vice Chair
Eileen A. Wells, Advisor
Cathy Allen
Dan Burrell
Sharon Curran-Wescott
George Duncan
George Goldstein
Veronica Gonzales
Steve Harris
Rae Hoffacker
Peggy Hubbard
Charlotte Jackson
Jim Kelly
Bill Neuhaus
John Rochester
Susan York
For more information about The Centennial Campaign, please contact Yvonne Montoya at 505.982.6366 ext. 102 or
[email protected].
PHOTO © ANDREWPHOTOS
KASTNER
©
museumfoundation.org7
New Mexico
Museum of Art
Director
Mary Kershaw
Member News asked New Mexico
Museum of Art Director Mary
Kershaw to briefly describe her
professional background and
ideals, as well as her vision for
the museum.
Here’s what Kershaw has to say:
I started my career as a curator and
have been a museum director since
1992, with responsibilities for
museums and nationally designated
collections in England.
Art is for everyone at the New Mexico
Museum of Art where excellence and
access go hand in hand.
We empower visitors to experience
art at their own pace, from a deep
dive to a brief encounter, and to be
inspired, enlightened and stimulated
to think in new ways.
Expanding Artistic
Experiences
Fiscal Year Brings More Art of New
Mexico to the World
The New Mexico Museum of Art received $281,787 for exhibitions,
education and related programming in the 2015–16 fiscal year. The
museum benefited from support from private donors, granting
institutions and endowment earnings via the Museum of New
Mexico Foundation, which strengthened the museum’s work to
bring the art of New Mexico to the world and a worldwide audience
to New Mexico.
“On behalf of the New Mexico Museum of Art, I extend my heartfelt
thanks to the Foundation and its donors for supporting the
museum this past year,” says director Mary Kershaw. “Your generosity has enabled us to bring wonderful artistic experiences to
Santa Fe and enrich the lives of all who visit us.”
Below are some of the exciting exhibitions that took place last
fiscal year:
Exhibitions
• That Multitudes May Share: Building the Museum of Art reviewed
the history and process of creating the museum’s iconic 1917
Pueblo Revival–style building.
8museumfoundation.org
PHOTO FAR LEFT: © DANIEL QUAT PHOTOGRAPHY
Scott Greene, Bear Market, 2015. Oil on canvas and panel. Courtesy of the artist
and Catharine Clarke Gallery. From the exhibition Alcoves 16/17 at the New Mexico
Museum of Art.
Members peruse the exhibition Medieval to Metal: The Evolution of the Guitar at the New Mexico Museum of Art. Photo © Brandon Soder.
• An American Modernism presented more than 50
works from the museum’s collections to illustrate
how the American style in the early years of the
20th century came to be.
• O’Keeffe In Process articulated the working practice and technique of this 20th-century master,
featuring 36 oil paintings, 15 works on paper and
supporting materials.
• Gustave Baumann in New Mexico explored
Baumann’s life in New Mexico and the region’s
influence on the artist’s evolving subject matter
and shifting color palette.
• Looking Forward Looking Back highlighted
historic works by significant women artists, while
looking at new projects by contemporary women
artists.
• First Folio! The Book that Gave Us Shakespeare,
the first complete collected edition of Shakespeare’s plays, drew scores of visitors to the
museum, the only venue in New Mexico to host the
1623 folio.
• Stage, Setting, Mood: Theatricality in the Visual
Arts examined the formal means that artists
employ to impart a sense of drama and setting in
their compositions.
• Medieval to Metal: The Art and Evolution of the
Guitar, a traveling exhibition from the National
Guitar Museum, explored the history of the guitar.
• Alcoves 16/17 continued the museum’s founding
tradition of exhibiting works by living New Mexico
artists. The ongoing exhibition series presents five
new artists every seven weeks.
• Assumed Identities: Photographs by Anne Noggle
showcased self-portraits and portraits of elderly
women by Noggle, a noted photographer who
served as the museum’s first photography curator.
• Self-Regard: Artist Self-Portraits from the Collection highlighted more than 20 paintings, photographs, drawings and prints of artist self-portraits.
• Con Cariño: Artists Influenced by Lowriders
celebrated the unique influence of northern New
Mexico’s lowrider car culture in art.
• Finding a Contemporary Voice: the Legacy of Lloyd
Kiva New and IAIA included work from the Institute of American Indian Art’s faculty and alumni
from the 1960s to the present.
Education
In addition to serving as an inviting and vibrant
cultural hub, the museum continued to provide
these innovative opportunities for lifelong learning:
• New educational programming reached nearly
4,000 children at the museum and 1,700 off site.
The year’s events included six family and community days.
• Artworks with Gonzales Community School
hosted students at the museum. The program is
designed to keep them involved as they move to
upper grade levels, encouraging them to develop a
relationship with the museum.
To support exhibitions, programs or The Centennial Campaign at the New Mexico Museum of Art, contact
Yvonne Montoya at 505.982.6366 ext. 102 or [email protected].
museumfoundation.org9
New Mexico History Museum
Palace of the Governors
Director
Andrew Wulf
Member News asked New Mexico
History Museum Director Andrew
Wulf to briefly describe his professional background and ideals, as
well as his vision for the museum.
Here’s what Wulf has to say:
I identify first and foremost as a
museum professional who sustains
an insufferable attachment to, and
fascination with, the history of
creative human endeavor.
An idea guiding my study, curation
and interpretation of history comes
from the author of Ecclesiastes who
writes, “All rivers run to the sea. Yet
the sea is never full.”
There is still so much more history to
tell, to share. And as the reality of
New Mexico lives on, so will the
stories we cannot even imagine, told
by those who will come after us.
‘A Place of Conversation’
Fiscal Year Brings Compelling Stories of
History to Life
Museum of New Mexico Foundation donors and grantors, plus
proceeds from special events and endowment distributions,
contributed $547,243 to support exhibitions and public programming at the New Mexico History Museum and the Palace of the
Governors during the 2015–16 fiscal year.
This support helped make the museum “a place of conversation,
analysis and resolution,” says director Andy Wulf. “I look with
intense pride at our exhibitions and public programs over this time.
It is only through the support of individuals that we can bring all of
New Mexico’s compelling stories to life. Thank you for your most
generous support.”
Below are highlights of the exhibition and educational happenings
hosted by the museum and the Palace in the past year:
Exhibitions
• Fading Memories: Echoes of the Civil
War explored the tragedy of war and
the fragility of memory through
various artifacts, including image
portraits of wartime soldiers and
their families, a tattered flag and
post-war lithographs.
• The Book’s the Thing: Shakespeare
from Stage to Page, a collaboration
between the Palace Press at the New
Mexico History Museum and the
New Mexico Museum of Art,
featured facsimiles of a page from
Shakespeare’s 1623 First Folio
printed on a replica wooden Gutenberg hand press. Handmade books
by contemporary artists inspired by
Shakespeare were also displayed.
President Abraham Lincoln
memorial mourning ribbon,
1865. Courtesy of Ambassador
William Itoh. Photo by Blair
Clark. From the exhibition
Fading Memories: Echoes of
the Civil War.
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PHOTO FAR LEFT: COURTESY NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM
Complementary programming, in
conjunction with the Santa Fe Opera,
reached 2,557 visitors and culminated with a three-day symposium,
“Echoes from Cold Mountain: The
Living Legacy of the American Civil
War,” held July 31 to August 1, 2015.
• Lowriders, Hoppers & Hot Rods: Car Culture of
Northern New Mexico brought New Mexican car
culture to the museum through photographs and a
rotating selection of lowriders and hoppers.
Public programming, held in partnership with the
New Mexico Museum of Art and City of Santa Fe,
included the May 22 Lowrider Day, which drew an
estimated 3,000 people to the museum and the
historic Plaza to view a procession of 130 cars and
25 lowrider bikes.
• Fractured Faiths: Spanish Judaism, The Inquisition, and New World Identities revealed the
history of the Spanish Sephardim in New Mexico
and the struggle of the stalwart converts and
hidden Jews for cultural identity and survival. A
year-long series of public programming, including
a free two-day symposium September 9–10, 2016,
deepened visitors’ understanding of Jewish life in
the Americas and New Mexico.
Education and Public Programming
• Families Make History provided exhibition-related
programming every third Sunday of the month,
including hands-on calligraphy in conjunction
with The Book’s the Thing: Shakespeare from Stage
to Page.
• The museum’s new Hochberg Early Childhood
Education Academy brought children from Santa
Fe County Head Start centers and Early Childhood
Learning at United Way of Santa Fe County to the
museum to participate in exhibition-related activities.
• Family Days drew a total of 234 children, 72
parents and 36 teachers to the Hochberg Academy
between January and May 2016.
• Creative Mornings, a bimonthly adult education
project that is part of an international program
hosted in more than 140 cities, explored broad
cultural themes. Guest lecturers who appeared at
the museum included Los Alamos astrophysicist
Ed Fenimore and Santa Fe Opera Production
Manager Paul Horpedahl.
To support exhibitions or education programs at
the New Mexico History Museum and Palace
of the Governors, contact Karen Kelly DuBroff at
505.982.6366 ext. 109 or [email protected].
Top, left to right: Gabe Martinez, Gabriel Martinez and Orlando
Martinez Jr. Photo by Vic Macias.
Bottom: Visitors explore the Fractured Faiths exhibition.
Photo © Andrew Kastner.
museumfoundation.org11
Museum of Indian
Arts and Culture/
Laboratory of Anthropology
Director
Della Warrior
Member News asked Museum of
Indian Arts and Culture Director
Della Warrior to briefly describe
her vision for the museum.
Here’s what Warrior has to say:
I love my job and enjoy working with
the curators to develop exhibition
concepts and to see the exhibitions
open. I love transitioning ideas into
plans and products.
The collections here are rich in
beauty and knowledge. MIAC is
proud to share the collections with
those seeking to learn more about the
Native peoples of this land.
After completing the new Here, Now
and Always exhibition, I want to
refurbish the Laboratory of
Anthropology and transform the
Avanyu Trail into an outdoor
exhibition space.
Advancing Knowledge of
Native Culture
Fiscal Year Inspires and Educates
In the 2015–16 fiscal year, the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture
worked with the Museum of New Mexico Foundation to generate
$624,855 in private funding from individuals, grants, endowment
distributions and special events. These contributions helped the
museum team advance knowledge of Native culture through
unique exhibitions, education and public programming.
“Friends and private donors encouraged our institution to embark
on creative and innovative endeavors,” says director Della Warrior.
“Thanks to all for your spirit of generosity and encouragement of
our mission. We look forward to another year of excellent programs
and exhibitions.”
Following are highlights from the past fiscal year that engaged
visitors of all ages in the past, present and future of Native peoples
of the Southwest:
Exhibitions
• Landscape of an Artist: Living Treasure Dan Namingha highlighted the career of Namingha (Hopi-Tewa), this year’s Native
Treasures: Indian Arts Festival Living Treasure.
• Oblique Views: Archaeology, Photography, and Time juxtaposed
photographs by Adriel Heisey and Charles and Anne Lindbergh.
Shot 80 years apart, the photos revealed the impacts of human
occupation, development and natural forces on the region’s
iconic archaeological landscapes.
• A New Century: The Life and Legacy of Cherokee Artist and
Educator Lloyd “Kiva” New commemorated the 100th anniversary of New’s birth through a survey of his art, fabrics, fashion
designs, photos, sketches and archival documents.
12museumfoundation.org
PHOTO FAR LEFT: © DANIEL QUAT PHOTOGRAPHY
Left to right: Aysen B. New, curator of ethnology Tony Chavarria, and museum
director Della Warrior at the member preview of A New Century: The Life and Legacy
of Cherokee Artist and Educator Lloyd “Kiva” New. Photo © Brandon Soder.
• Into the Future: Culture Power in Native American
Art presented more than 100 contemporary works
in a range of media to examine how indigenous
artists employ visual imagery to express their
unique cultures.
• Here, Now and Always, the museum’s permanent
exhibition in the Amy Rose Bloch Wing, continued
the groundbreaking collaboration between Native
elders, artists, scholars, writers and museum
professionals in presenting the diverse stories of
the Southwest’s Native peoples.
The fiscal year also saw plans move forward for the
exhibition’s $3 million renovation and renewal,
including $1.6 million in public and private funds
raised for the project by the State of New Mexico
and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.
Education and Public Programming
In addition to offering inspiring exhibitions, the
museum continued to provide innovative opportunities for lifelong learning and cultural connection,
including:
• Living Traditions Education Program drew nearly
1,000 students at off-site school visits and on-site
tours.
• Arts Alive!, the museum’s annual summer outdoor
workshop program, inspired 455 participants with
hands-on activities, including loom weaving and
pottery making.
• Native Youth Film Camp hosted 12 students,
ages 14 to 18, who explored themes related to Native
history, arts and culture. The students also worked
together in pairs to create short films.
• The Native Arts and History Project offered on-site
mentoring, access to the museum’s photo archives,
and other educational resources to Native American children and teachers in Santa Fe County for
collaborative school-museum projects.
• ElderWISE served 500 seniors through informal,
interactive presentations by museum docents at
retirement communities.
Tile, Tewa Tales of Suspense No. 44, Jason Garcia (Okuu Pin),
Santa Clara, 2015. Clay with natural pigments. Featured in Into the
Future: Culture Power in Native American Art at the Museum of
Indian Arts and Culture.
• The 2016 docent class graduated 14 new docents.
A total of 30 active docents contribute more than
400 hours a month at the museum. During the past
fiscal year, nearly 3,500 visitors took advantage of
docent-led tours.
• Native Treasures: Indian Arts Festival generated
more than $70,000 to support museum programs
and exhibitions while providing economic development opportunities for Native artists. During
Native Treasures weekend, museum educators
hosted a new information booth and spoke with
hundreds of attendees.
To make a gift to the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, contact Laura Waller at 505.982.6366 ext. 116 or
[email protected].
museumfoundation.org13
Museum of
International Folk Art
Director
Khristaan Villela
Member News asked Museum of
International Folk Art Director
Khristaan Villela to briefly describe
his professional background and
ideals, as well as his vision for the
museum.
Here’s what Villela has to say:
I grew up in a home filled with
Mexican folk art, and it is amazing
now to be at the helm of the premier
museum for the study and exhibition
of global traditional arts.
A longtime resident of Santa Fe, I am
aware of our community’s hopes and
aspirations and the needs of artists in
the folk community here and
internationally.
I am very much looking forward to
our upcoming exhibitions of tramp
art and of the quilts of Southwest
China.
Fostering a Forward Trajectory
A Fiscal Year of Ambitious Endeavors
For 10 years, Santa Feans have voted the Museum of International
Folk Art “Best Museum” in the Santa Fe Reporter’s annual “Best of
Santa Fe Reader’s Choice.” With such online visitor comments as
“defies imagination,” “blown away,” “fun for the whole family” and
“fantastic,” it’s no wonder.
These accolades testify to the generosity of Museum of New Mexico
Foundation donors. In the 2015–16 fiscal year, gifts from private
donors and grantors, plus special event proceeds and endowment
payouts, generated $459,201 to benefit exhibitions and public
programs at the museum. This figure includes approximately
$48,000 from sponsorships and sales at the 7th annual Folk Art
Flea, hosted by the museum’s dedicated Friends of Folk Art
volunteers.
“I thank you for your generous support of all the museum’s ambitious endeavors,” says director Khristaan Villela “I will be developing plans and programs with our curators and other staff that
continue the museum on its amazing forward trajectory.”
Following are highlights from the past year that celebrated human
creativity and fostered the museum’s mission of building multicultural understanding through folk art:
14museumfoundation.org
PHOTO FAR LEFT: © DANIEL QUAT PHOTOGRAPHY
Detail from The Morris Miniature Circus, by W.J. “Windy” Morris, Amarillo, TX,
1930s–70. Collection Museum of International Folk Art (A. 1984.4331V). From the
exhibition The Morris Miniature Circus: Return of the Little Big Top at the Museum of
International Folk Art. Photo © Kitty Leaken.
Exhibitions
• The Red That Colored the World demonstrated the
little bug’s outsized power in producing dyes of
brilliant red hues. Unprecedented media attention
attracted record attendance, and Red is now
traveling to three other U.S. museums.
• Pottery of the U.S. South showcased outstanding
examples of pottery by artisans from North
Carolina and the adjacent Georgia hill country.
• The Morris Miniature Circus: Return of the Little
Big Top opened with a parade, jugglers and stilt
walkers, all to the delight of an audience of nearly
1,000 visitors. The tiny traveling circus model
created by W.J. “Windy” Morris features more than
100,000 pieces.
• Flamenco: From Spain to New Mexico — ranked by
USA Today as #12 in “must-see” exhibitions in the
U.S. — showcased more than 25 stunning
costumes, 150 costume sketches, guitars, castanets, photography, paintings and videos of live
performances.
• Sacred Realm: Blessings and Good Fortune Across
Asia explored ways in which those living within
the vast, culturally diverse Asian continent seek
and secure blessings and good fortune.
• The Mark Naylor and Dale Gunn Gallery of
Conscience invited visitors to help shape and
participate in the creation of two unique exhibitions: Between Two Worlds: Folk Artists Reflect on
the Immigrant Experience and Under Pressure:
Choices that Folk Artists Make.
• Between Two Worlds focused on immigration and
its many related issues. Works by traditional artists
from the around the world articulated the hopes,
fears and challenges that newcomers face in
unfamiliar and often unwelcoming places.
• Under Pressure examined the relationships
between contemporary artists and their patrons,
buyers and collectors. Participating artists
discussed how to keep traditions alive amid
technological advances and consumer demands.
Detail of Barong mask by Ida Bagus Anom Suryawan (2015), Bali,
Indonesia. From the exhibition Sacred Realm: Blessings and Good
Fortune Across Asia at the Museum of International Folk Art. Photo
© Blair Clark.
Education and Public Programming
• Folk Art to Go! served approximately 4,000
northern New Mexico students with classroom
visits, exhibition tours and hands-on art projects.
New this year, students were invited to discover
the hidden treasures in Multiple Visions: A
Common Bond through creative writing. Day-long
teacher in-service sessions featured curator
presentations and hands-on projects.
• The MOIFA After School Program served six
elementary schools and four Boys and Girls Club
sites in Santa Fe, Santa Cruz and Chimayo.
Museum educators offered 199 on-site classes to
3,125 students and hosted three museum visits.
• Arts Alive! inspired 1,336 visitors, including 801
children, with hands-on projects using highquality art materials. Summer 2015 focused on
cochineal-related projects.
• Día de Los Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrated
the traditional Mexican festivities with food, a
participatory ofrenda (altar) and other art-making
activities, and performances by local cultural
groups.
To make a gift to the Museum of International Folk Art, contact Steve Cantrell at 505.982.6366 ext. 106 or
[email protected]
museumfoundation.org15
Office of
Archaeological Studies
Director
Eric Blinman
Member News asked Office of
Archaeological Studies Director Eric
Blinman to briefly describe his
professional background and ideals,
as well as his vision for his division.
Here’s what Blinman has to say:
I’ve been involved in archaeology
since a high school class in the
summer of 1967, so it’s pretty easy to
conclude I’m passionate about the
subject.
A lot of today’s archaeology is profit
driven, and I’m really happy to be in
a not-for-profit museum setting.
I am convinced that the more we
know about human histories, the
more creative we can be about
understanding our own social and
economic challenges.
Making Archaeology Matter
Fiscal Year Marks 25 years of Educational
Outreach
In fiscal year 2015–16, Museum of New Mexico Foundation donors
grantors, and endowment earnings collectively provided $135,919
to support the Office of Archaeological Studies’ public outreach,
education and research initiatives.
A not-for-profit enterprise, the office worked on more than 30
public, private and tribal development projects while marking the
25th anniversary of its nationally recognized educational outreach
program.
“Philanthropic gifts allow us to identify, interpret and share information about prehistoric and historic sites across New Mexico,”
says director Eric Blinman. “Your support advances archaeology in
New Mexico and helps save the past for the future.”
Below are some of the year’s highlights:
Education
• The office celebrated the 25th year of its award-winning educational outreach program, reaching nearly 12,500 participants
statewide, including 5,300 children. Two hundred program
offerings took place in 13 New Mexico counties, while partnerships with the New Mexico Historic Sites and the New Mexico
State Library reached other distinct audiences.
• Since 1991, the education program has reached more than 162,000
New Mexicans. Sixty-five of the program offerings this fiscal year
were delivered to predominantly Native American audiences.
• The office also provided training, support and teaching materials for teachers statewide. This included crash courses in New
Mexico history and prehistory, as well as video clips and graphics
for teachers at all grade levels.
Research Development Fund and Endowments
Private funding through the Foundation’s Research Development
Fund and endowments enabled the office to continue innovative
research in a variety of areas during the fiscal year.
16museumfoundation.org
PHOTO FAR LEFT: © DANIEL QUAT PHOTOGRAPHY
• The office again partnered in Project Archaeology, a formal
classroom curriculum prepared by the Bureau of Land Management. The office customized the curriculum using photographs,
vocabulary, landscape, climate, food and cultures that relate to
New Mexico archaeology.
White House, a site in Canyon de Chelly, 2008. From the exhibition Oblique Views: Archaeology, Photography, and Time at the Museum of Indian
Arts and Culture. Photo © Adriel Heisey.
• The Radiocarbon Sampling Laboratory continued
its cutting-edge research on both radiocarbon
sampling and the behavior of different types of
organic materials when subjected to low energy
plasma oxidation. Thanks to support from the Dr.
Don E. Pierce Endowment for Archaeology and
Conservation and a grant from the National Center
for Preservation Technology and Training, the lab
gained a residual gas analyzer. The analyzer will
enable scientists to characterize the types of
organic molecules that are contributing to the
radiocarbon date.
• A collaboration with New Mexico tribal representatives documented the life histories of individuals, communities and regions while achieving
repatriation of human remains. In cases where
tribal consultations about burials have not been
completed under state statutes, the office is
working with the New Mexico Historic Preservation Division to take responsibility for orphan
burials scattered across the state. This ongoing
collaboration will reinvigorate consultations about
repatriation while improving the quality of observations and the archiving of existing data.
• In the Archaeomagnetic Dating Laboratory,
nearly 2,000 samples and data from the Dr. Robert
DuBois archive were inventoried to support a
reconstruction of variation in the intensity of the
earth’s magnetic field over the past 2,000 years in
the Southwest. The project is supported through
the Dr. Don E. Pierce Endowment for Archaeology
and Conservation.
Community Events
The office also participated in community events
that enhanced the public’s knowledge of
archaeology.
• International Archaeology Day, a collaboration
with the Santa Fe Chapter of the Archaeological
Institute of America and other organizations in
northern New Mexico, reached 250 visitors of all
ages who learned about New Mexico’s 12,000-year
cultural heritage via hands-on activities, demonstrations and interactions with archaeologists.
• Visitors to the Office of Archaeological Studies
information booth at the Festival of the Cranes at
the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge
discovered the magic of turkey-feather blankets
and learned how to make cordage from yucca.
To make a gift to the Office of Archaeological Studies, contact Laura Waller at 505.982.6366 ext. 116 or
[email protected]
museumfoundation.org17
New Mexico
Historic Sites
History on the Ground
A Fiscal Year of Preserving the State’s Past
New Mexico Historic Sites Director
Patrick Moore
In partnership
with the
Museum of New
Mexico Foundation, the New
Mexico Historic
Sites raised more
than $82,236
during the
2015–16 fiscal
year to support
programming
and educational
initiatives at
seven historic
sites statewide.
through a combination of visitation and public
outreach programs, including guided tours. In
August, Lincoln celebrated its annual Old Lincoln
Days with a pageant of reenactors portraying Billy
the Kid’s last escape and the notorious Lincoln
County War, plus a parade, food and live music.
• El Camino Real Historic Trail Site reached 4,548
people through public outreach programs and
visitation. On November 21, 2016, the Festival of the
Trail marked both the 300-year anniversary of El
Camino Real and the 10th anniversary of the
historic site. Highlights included cooking demonstrations, crafts, churro sheep, reenactments of life
in frontier New Mexico and demonstrations of
early weaponry.
Each site organized events, lectures, educational
opportunities and exhibitions. These preserved the
past by showcasing each site’s unique history, and
engaging new and returning visitors in their mission.
Following are highlights of the year’s activities:
• Fort Stanton Historic Site hosted 19,033 visitors. New
this year, the site’s School Hands-On Tours Program
encouraged learning through hands-on activities for
third- to fifth-graders. Students participated in mock
military drills, discovered the fort’s kitchen garden
and explored an archaeological pit.
• Bosque Redondo Memorial at Fort Sumner
Historic Site reached 6,117 people through public
programming and visitation. The first annual
Mescalero Apache Tribe and Navajo Nation Gourd
Dance on May 14, 2016, featured dancers, drummers, gift giving and crafts to promote site reconciliation and healing.
• Coronado Historic Site drew 22,422 visitors. More
than 60,000 artifacts, including archaeological
notes, historical records and high-resolution
photographs, were scanned and reviewed as part
of the second digitization phase of artifacts recovered from Kuaua Pueblo.
• Jemez Historic Site attracted 16,454 individuals
through a mix of on-site visitation and public
outreach programs. Staff helped organize the 2016
Archaeological Society of New Mexico Conference,
held April 29 to May 1 in Santa Fe.
• Fort Selden Historic Site engaged 4,312 people
through a combination of visitation and public
outreach. On January 28, 2016, staff presented a
lecture at New Mexico State University about Fort
Selden’s impact on the expansion and development
of the Mesilla Valley.
For information about how to support the New Mexico Historic Sites, contact Karen Kelly DuBroff at 505.982.6366
ext. 109 or [email protected]
18museumfoundation.org
PHOTO © DANIEL QUAT PHOTOGRAPHY
• Lincoln Historic Site reached 29,704 people
Founders Society
AS OF JUNE 30, 2016
The Founders Society honors donors who have given more than $100,000 in cash and planned gifts to our four
museums, seven statewide historic sites, the Office of Archaeological Studies and the Museum of New Mexico
Foundation. Together these donors have contributed more than $68 million to support our cultural
institutions.
GRAND BENEFACTOR
$ 2,000,000 AND ABOVE
Anonymous (2)
Margit and Lloyd Cotsen
Institute of Museum and
Library Services
Sallie Ritter and
Kent Jacobs, M.D.
Connie Thrasher Jaquith
Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen
National Endowment for the
Humanities
Bob Nurock
Dr. Don E. Pierce*
Mara and Charles* Robinson
City of Santa Fe Arts
Commission
Sue* and Felix Warburg
Eileen A. Wells
BENEFACTOR
$1,000,000 TO
$1,999,999
Anonymous
Bob Blommer and
Lowell Soucie
The Andrea Waitt Carlton
Family Foundation
J.B.L. Goodwin*
Valerie and Bud Hamilton
Albert and Ethel Herzstein
Charitable Foundation,
Houston, TX
Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Hogan
Maggy Ryan*
Vicki and Ron Sullivan
PATRON
$ 500,000 TO $ 999,999
Anonymous (2)
Lewis Barker*
Nancy and Richard Bloch
Bureau of Land Management
The Frost Foundation
Eddie* and Phyllis Gladden
W.K. Kellogg Foundation
The Kresge Foundation
Dana and Jim Manning
Edwina H. and
Charles P. Milner
I.A. O’Shaughnessy
Foundation
Louisa Stude Sarofim
Rosemarie Shellaberger*
Thaw Charitable Trust
Joan H. Vernick
Milton* and Adele Ward
Robert* and Carol Warren
PARTNER
$ 250,000 TO $ 499,999
Anonymous (2)
Carl M. Allen*
Charmay Allred
The Ames Family
Foundation
John Berl and Bob
Bauernschmitt
Edwin Bewley*
Dorothy and Rolfe Black
Dorothy Bracey and Tom
Johnson
The Brown Foundation, Inc.
of Houston
Mr. and Mrs. Bob L. Clarke
Linda and John Comstock
William W. Cunningham*
Doug* and Joan Dayton
Rosalind and Lowell Doherty
R.D. Erwin*
The Ford Foundation
Robert Frazer*
Karen Freeman
Pat and Jim Hall
Mickey Inbody*
International Folk Art
Alliance
Austin Lamont*
Diane and John Lenssen
Nance and Ramón José
López y Familia
Janice* and Dave Matthews
Seymour Merrin* and Helene
Singer Merrin
State of New Mexico
New Mexico
Humanities Council
Joan Higgins Reed*
Arnold and Doris Roland
Frauke and Keith Roth
Celia D. Rumsey*
Helen Spuhler*
Michael and Anita Stevenson
The Stockman Family
Foundation
Marilynn and Carl Thoma
Thornburg Foundation
The Wallace Foundation
FOUNDER
$100,000 TO $ 249,999
Anonymous (4)
Cathy Allen and Paul Rooker
M. Carlota Baca, Ph.D.
Sam* and Ethel* Ballen
Ann Baumann*
BF Foundation
Sallie Bingham
Elizabeth and Duncan*
Boeckman
Brindle Foundation
Lynn G. and Norman Brown
Jane and Bill Buchsbaum
June E. Catron and Thomas
B. Catron III
Jordie M. Chilson*
Ronald Costell and
Marsha Swiss
Helen and George* Cowan
Benjamin F. Crane
Valerie and Charles Diker
Ruth Dillingham
Dobkin Family Foundation
Sheryl Kelsey and George
Duncan and James H.
Duncan Jr.
Garcia Automotive Group
Natalie Fitz-Gerald
Mr. Gayle D. Fogelson
Jane and Charlie Gaillard
The Getty Foundation,
Los Angeles
Gail and Jim Goodwin
Roddie and Steve Harris
Pauline and Bert Heil
Nicole Hixon
Barbara and Bud Hoover
Jeanene and Ron Hulsey
International Folk Art
Foundation
Miryam and Bob Knutson
La Fonda on the Plaza
Margot and Robert Linton
The Henry Luce Foundation
Terese Lyons and Anthony
Foltman
Anne and John Marion
Dr. and Mrs. James
McCaffery
Maureen McCarthy and
John Schoemer
Scott* and Dee Ann McIntyre
The Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation
Doris Meyer and
Richard Hertz
Hutson-Wiley and
Echevarria Foundation
Inc.
The Mill Atelier Foundation
National Endowment for the
Arts
Mark Naylor and Dale Gunn
Newman’s Own Foundation,
Patty and Arthur Newman
Ernestine O’Connell*
Kathryn O’Keeffe
Ambassador Frank V.* and
Dolores* Duke Ortiz
Jane and Tom O’Toole
Trudy and Dennis O’Toole
Ashlyn and Dan Perry
Eugenia Cowden Pettit*
Pettit Family Charitable
Fund
Gifford* and Joann Phillips
Jerry Richardson
Doug Ring* and Cindy
Miscikowski
The Rockefeller Foundation
Ann and Alan Rolley
Don* and Bergit Salazar
William and Salome Scanlan
Foundation
Jacqueline and
Richard Schmeal
Beth and Richard Schnieders
Lety and Stephen Schwartz
Judith and Robert Sherman
Marian and Abe* Silver Jr.
Barbara and Albert Simms
Thornburg Charitable
Foundation
Tanya J. Van Bergh Estate
Warren von Preissig
Gilbert Waldman and
Christy Vezolles
Judy and Gordon Wilson
Wells Fargo
Claire and Jim Woodcock
Sharon and Don Wright
*Deceased
museumfoundation.org19
Endowment Funds
AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2015
Endowment funds provide ongoing support to our cultural institutions for acquisitions, exhibitions, education and operations. Donors designate a gift to an existing fund, or establish a new one, to benefit a specific
Museum of New Mexico division or the Museum of New Mexico Foundation. The Foundation currently
manages 31 endowments valued at more than $21 million.
NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM AND PALACE OF
THE GOVERNORS
Robert W. Frazer Fund for the Palace of the Governors Library:
$419,957
Phyllis and Edward Gladden Endowment Fund for the Palace
of the Governors and New Mexico History Museum:
$182,463
Herzstein Family Endowment Fund for the Palace of the
Governors and New Mexico History Museum: $370,362
Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the
Palace of the Governors and New Mexico History Museum:
$420,552
The Ambassador Frank and Mrs. Dolores Ortiz Palace of the
Governors Preservation Fund: $101,469
Marianne and Michael O’Shaughnessy Endowment Fund for
the Palace of the Governors and New Mexico History
Museum: $378,599
Palace of the Governors and New Mexico History Museum
Endowment Fund: $843,767
NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART
Boeckman Acquisition Fund for the New Mexico Museum of
Art: $108,284
Jean and Robert L. Clarke Endowment Fund for the New
Mexico Museum of Art: $325,157
Herzstein Family Art Acquisition Fund for the New Mexico
Museum of Art: $349,507
Clinton King Purchase Award: $41,908
Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Endowment Fund for the New
Mexico Museum of Art: $1,997,556
Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment for the New
Mexico Museum of Art: $395,067
Doris and Arnold Roland Endowment Fund for the New
Mexico Museum of Art: $125,586
MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE
Museum of Indian Arts and Culture Acquisition Endowment
Fund: $257,773
Museum of Indian Arts and Culture Endowment for Youth
Programs: $93,307
Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the
Museum of Indian Arts and
Culture: $497,196
MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART
Cotsen Family Foundation Fund #1 for the Neutrogena
Collection of the Museum of International Folk Art:
$2,203,217
Cotsen Family Foundation Fund #2 for the Neutrogena
Collection of the Museum of International Folk Art:
$1,095,264
Margot and Robert Linton Endowment Fund for
Contemporary Hispanic Folk Art: $123,486
Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the
Museum of International Folk Art: $427,534
NEW MEXICO HISTORIC SITES
Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the
New Mexico Historic Sites: $414,359
OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES
Friends of Archaeology Endowment Fund: $112,626
Dr. Don E. Pierce Endowment for Archaeology and
Conservation: $861,154
MUSEUM OF NEW MEXICO FOUNDATION
Thomas B. Catron III Endowment Fund: $53,828
Chairman’s Endowment Fund: $68,046
Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund:
$2,118,499
Museum of New Mexico Operating Investment Fund:
$4,529,424
Museum of New Mexico Acquisition Endowment Fund:
$511,979
Museum of New Mexico Foundation Endowment Fund for the
Women’s Board of the Museum of New Mexico: $10,329
Starkweather Docent Program Endowment Fund: $70,006
20museumfoundation.org
PHOTO © ANDREW KASTNER
Benefiting all Four Museums
Legacy Society
AS OF JUNE 30, 2016
The Legacy Society recognizes donors who have made an estate gift to sustain our cultural institutions in the
future. An estate gift can be in the form of a will, trust, IRA, gift annuity, charitable trust, art, real estate or
other arrangement. Collectively, 198 donors have established legacy gifts.
PHOTO © CAITLIN ELIZABETH PHOTOGRAPHY
Ann Neuberger Aceves
Carl M. Allen*
Charmay B. Allred
Keith K. Anderson and
Barbara G. Lenssen
M. Carlota Baca, Ph.D.
Nancy Ballenger*
Rhoda H. Barkan*
Louisa Barkalow
Lewis Barker*
Ann Baumann*
Karen F. Beall and
Dale K. Haworth
Dr. Barry and Natalie Beller
Susan and Lee Berk
Edwin E. Bewley*
Eric Blinman
Robert H. Blommer
Bill Bohnhoff *
Dorothy Bracey
Emily Bristow
Harold Brown* and
Norma C. Brown*
Lynn G. Brown
Gladys and Selig Burrows*
James Lee Byars*
Lawrence Calcagno*
Beverly M. Carl
Barbara Carmichael
Charles D. Carroll*
Mel Carter*
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B.
Catron III
Caroline T. Chavez*
Samuel Chell*
Jordie M. Chilson*
Joan and Richard Chodosh
Ronald Costell and
Marsha Swiss
Sarah* and Benjamin Crane
Anne Croy*
William Wallace
Cunningham*
Helen M. Derbyshire*
Ruth H. Dillingham
Richard Dillingham*
Rosalind and Lowell Doherty
George Duncan and
Sheryl Kelsey
James Duncan Jr.
Ardith Eicher
Robert C. Ellis*
R.D. Erwin *
Eva Feld*
Natalie Fitz-Gerald
Joseph O’Kane Foster*
Robert Frazer*
Karen Freeman
Sheilah Garcia
Murray Gell-Mann
Robert H. Glaze
Rod Goebel*
J.B.L. Goodwin*
Gail and Jim Goodwin
Gilda M. and
Norman C. Greenberg
Jacquelyn Hall
Jim and Pat Hall
Valerie and Bud Hamilton
Henriette Harris*
Dorothy S. Harroun
Pat Haueter
Mildred N. Healy*
Bertram and Pauline Heil
Sandra Herzon
Nicole Hixon
Joan Ashley Hodgell*
William Hoffman*
Frank and Ruth Hogan
Barbara and Bud Hoover
Jeanene and Ron Hulsey
Mickey Inbody*
Connie Thrasher Jaquith
James R. Johnson*
Eleanore B. Joseph
David Kaplan and
Glenn Ostergaard
Spider Kedelsky
Clinton and
Narcissa Swift King*
Judith Kingsley
Ronald P. Klein and
Doris Rosen
Walter and Allene Kleweno
Patricia Kuhlhoff
Greg LaChapelle*
Henry and Judith Lackner
Charitable Remainder
Trust
Bruce and Mary Anne Larsen
Louise and Joseph Laval
David Levine and
Pamela Wolfe
Barbara H. Lidral*
Ronald S. Lushing
Terese Lyons and Anthony
Foltman
Janice* and David Matthews
Eileen A. Maynard*
Maureen McCarthy and John
Schoemer
Susan McGreevy
Seymour Merrin* and
Helene Singer Merrin
Doris Meyer
Edwina Hawley Milner and
Charles P. Milner
Mary Sue Mize*
Edgar H. Mueller
Jerome Munday*
Scott Murray and Mihail Lari
Mark Naylor and Dale Gunn
Patricia Newman
Bob Nurock
Dr. Ernestine O’Connell*
Claudia O’Keeffe*
Frank V. Ortiz* and
Dolores Duke Ortiz*
Jane and Tom O’Toole
William* and Mindy Paquin
Melinda Miles Phister*
Dr. Don E. Pierce*
Aline Porter*
Binnie Postelnek*
Margery Clark Primus*
Richard C. Pritzlaff*
Joan Higgins Reed*
Jerry Richardson
Sallie Ritter and Kent F.
Jacobs, M.D.
Mara Robinson and Charles
Robinson*
Paul Rosenberg
Keith Roth
Celia D. Rumsey*
Maggy Ryan *
John Sadd and Maggie
Alexander
Henry A. Sauerwein*
Jacqueline and Richard
Schmeal
Harriet and Karl Schreiner
Gertrude Schweitzer*
Rosemarie Shellaberger*
Eugenie Shonnard*
Abe* and Marian Silver
Albert and Barbara Simms
Sue Ann Snyder
Helen McKaig Spuhler*
Jack Stamm*
Helen L. Starbuck*
Virginia E. and Douglas
Starkweather*
Carole and J. Edd Stepp
Michael and Anita Stevenson
Vicki A. and
Ronald L. Sullivan
J. Paul Taylor
Fredric and Caroline
Thompson
Lore K. Thorpe
Robert W. Uphaus and
Lois M. Rosen
Tanya VanBergh*
Warren von Preissig
Sue Warburg * and
Felix Warburg
Johnette Ward
Carol H. Warren and
Robert A. Warren*
Eileen A. Wells
Stacey Frederick Wilson
Ray and Corinne Willison
and those who wish to
remain anonymous
*Deceased
museumfoundation.org21
Director’s Leadership Fund
AS OF JUNE 30, 2016
Director’s Leadership Fund donors contribute $10,000 or more to support exhibitions and institutional advancement at our four affiliated museums, seven statewide historic sites and the Office of Archaeological Studies.
MUSEUM OF INDIAN
ARTS AND CULTURE
Howard and Joy Berlin
Bureau of Land Management
John Duncan and
Anita Sarafa
First Peoples Fund
Hutson-Wiley and
Echevarria Foundation,
Inc.
Institute of Museum &
Library Services
Smithsonian National
Museum of the
American Indian
MUSEUM OF
INTERNATIONAL FOLK
ART
NEW MEXICO HISTORY
MUSEUM AND PALACE
OF THE GOVERNORS
Katherine D. Ortega
Valvoline
Gordon and Judith Wilson
E. Rhodes and Leona B.
Carpenter Foundation
El Farol
International Folk Art
Alliance Inc.
National Endowment for the
Humanities
Newman’s Own Foundation
Jane and Tom O’Toole
Daniel Greenberg and Susan
Steinhauser
Suzanne and Joel Sugg
Courtney and Scott Taylor
Joan Vernick
Ann Baumann Trust
Jeff and Anne Bingaman
Jane and Charlie Gaillard
Heritage Hotels/Hotel
Chimayo and Low ‘n Slow
Lowrider Bar Santa Fe
Albert and Ethel Herzstein
Charitable Foundation
The Hochberg Early
Childhood Education
Academy
The Hubbard Broadcasting
Foundation
Los Compadres del Palacio
The Maurice Amado
Foundation
McCune Charitable
Foundation
The Elsie L. Nolan Trust
NEW MEXICO MUSEUM
OF ART
Friends of Contemporary Art
and Photography
Daniel Greenberg and
Susan Steinhauser
Pat and Jim Hall
Dana and Jim Manning
NEW MEXICO HISTORIC
SITES
Diane and John Lenssen
OFFICE OF
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
STUDIES
Dr. Sherill L. Spaar
Exhibitions Development Fund
AS OF JUNE 30, 2016
Exhibitions Development Fund donors contribute $1,000 to $9,999 to support exhibitions and related
programming at our four partner museums in Santa Fe.
MUSEUM OF INDIAN
ARTS AND CULTURE
Brenda Whorton
Sharon and Don Wright
Anonymous
Ann Griffith Ash
JoAnn and Bob Balzer
Dorothy and Rolfe Black
John Berl and Bob
Bauernschmitt
Gail and Joel Bernstein
Dorothy Bracey and Tom
Johnson
Buffalo Bill Center of the
West & Plains Indian
Museum Advisory Board
John M. Campbell Jr.
Susan and Conrad De Jong
Sharon Curran-Wescott and
Earle Wescott
Joan Donner
Candace and Bert Forbes
Andrew Freeman and Jo
Margaret Mainor
Helen C. Gabriel
Constance and Malcolm
Goodman
Calvin B. Gross
Miryam and Bob Knutson
Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen
Beverly and Mike Morris
Beth and Richard Schnieders
Carol Warren
12th Annual Native
Treasures: Indian Arts
Festival Sponsors
Blue Rain Gallery
Dr. Roger Carasso and
Roberta Corwin Robinson
Kathy and David Chase
Janet W. Colt
Sharon Curran-Wescott and
Earle “Skip” Wescott
Ardith Eicher and David
Rashin
Ambassador and Mrs. David
Girard-diCarlo
Toni and James Kaplan
Macy’s
Sara McKenzie
Beverly and Mike Morris
Sandy Nachman
Niman Fine Art
Jennifer Padilla Public
Relations
Ashlyn and Dan Perry
Ildiko and Gary Poliner
Sallie Ritter and Kent Jacobs
Santa Fe New Mexican
Beth and Rick Schnieders
Harriet and Karl Schreiner
Tourism Santa Fe
University of New Mexico
Comprehensive Cancer
Center
Eileen A. Wells
Here, Now and Always
Supporters
Charmay B. Allred
JoAnn and Bob Balzer
John Berl and Bob
Bauernschmitt
Gail and Joel Bernstein
Nancy and Richard Bloch
Lynn G. and Norman Brown
Jane and Bill Buchsbaum
Benjamin Crane
Valerie and Charles Diker
Dobkin Family Foundation
in honor of Leroy Garcia
Rosalind and Lowell Doherty
Ardith Eicher and David
Rashin
Karen Freeman
Friends of Indian Art
Helen C. Gabriel
Mary and Thomas James
Susan and Philip Marineau
Maureen McCarthy and
John Schoemer
Newman’s Own Foundation
Ashlyn and Dan Perry
Cindi and Michael Pettit
Governor and
Mrs. Bill Richardson
Doris and Arne Roland
Kathleen and Morton Sachs
Harriet and Karl Schreiner
Judy and Bob Sherman
Joan and Michael Snader
Gil Waldman and
Christy Vezolles
Carol Warren
Eileen A. Wells
MUSEUM OF
INTERNATIONAL FOLK
ART
Keith Anderson and Barbara
Lenssen
JoAnn and Bob Balzer
Linda W. Dillman
Rosalind and Lowell Doherty
Martha Egan
Sheila and Kirk Ellis
Andrea Fisher
Edelma and David Huntley
International Coalition of
Sites of Conscience
Miryam and Bob Knutson
Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen
22museumfoundation.org
Hank Lee
Nance and Ramón José López
Martha Manier
Mark Naylor and Dale Gunn
Melinne Owen and
Paul Giguere
Susan Pollard
Penny and Armin Rembe
Santa Fe Community
Foundation(or Brindle?)
Frauke and Keith Roth
Mr. James R. Seitz Jr.
J. Edd and Carole Stepp
Allan Swartzberg and
Josh Swartzberg
Laurel and
Michael Vander Velde
Londa Weisman
Beverly and John Young
NEW MEXICO HISTORY
MUSEUM AND PALACE
OF THE GOVERNORS
ALH Foundation
Charmay B. Allred
Anonymous
Barbara and Ronald Batory
Lance and Julia Bell
Dorothy Bracey and Tom
Johnson
Helen and Richard Brandt
Eleanor P. Brenner
Susan and Alfred Chandler
Kathryn and Robert Clemens
Sherry and Jim Davis
Josef Diaz and Malcom Purdy
Nancy Sue Dimit
Thelma Domenici
Marilyn and Paul Duncan
Joel Goldfrank
Paul Golding and
Bonnie Ellinger
Pat and Jim Hall
Valerie and Bud Hamilton
Charles F. Harvey, M.D.
Kay Harvey
Barbara Hays
Historical Society of
New Mexico
Margaret Hoban
Candace Jacobson
Jewish Federation of
New Mexico
Susan and Sam Keith
Miryam and Bob Knutson
La Fonda on the Plaza
La Rueda
Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen
Fran Levine and Tom Merlan
Kathy Longinaker
Los Alamos National
Laboratory Foundation
Susan and David Lummis
Dave Matthews
Maryann and Jim McCaffery
Terry and Walter Melendres
Doris Meyer and
Richard Hertz
Pamela McCordick and
Josef F. Traub
Julia and Richard Moe
Yvonne A. Montoya
New Mexico Humanities
Council
Newman’s Own Foundation
Sandy and Russ Osterman
Trudy and Dennis O’Toole
Barry and Jacqueline Panter
Sally Pettit Wimberly
Ildiko and Gary Poliner
Lauren Eaton Prescott
Caren Prothro
Jerry Richardson
Sandee and Jon Rudnick
Santa Fe Community
Foundation
Santa Fe Concorso
Helen and Frederick
Spiegelberg
Jeanne and Sidney Steinberg
Jane and Charles Stringfellow
Allan Swartzberg
Joseph F. Traub
Felix Warburg in memory of
Susan Warburg
Leslie and Sheldon Weinstein
Marcia Wolf
Dr. and Mrs. Robert M. Zone
NEW MEXICO MUSEUM
OF ART
Anonymous
Jim Baker and
Victoria Addison
Emy Lou and Jerry Baldridge
Cynthia and Bruce Bolene
Dorothy Bracey and Tom
Johnson
William and Caroline
Burnett Charitable Fund
JoBeth and Berry Cash
Barbara and Jack Cochran
Sharon Curran-Wescott and
Earle “Skip” Wescott
George Duncan and
Sheryl Kelsey
David T. Frank and
Kazukuni Sugiyama
George Goldstein and
Elizabeth Hahn
David Hawkanson
Thomas Higley and
Alan Fleischauer
Nicole Hixon
Ruth and Frank Hogan
Honkey Kat Fund, Santa Fe
Community Foundation
Barbara and Bud Hoover
Peggy and Tom Hubbard
Julia Hunkins
Miryam and Bob Knutson
Ron Lushing and Dan Reid
Christine and Drew
McDermott
Pamela and Don Michaelis
Bill Miller
National Endowment for the
Humanities
New Mexico Humanities
Council
Bob Nurock
Michael Ogg and
Barbara Doroba-Ogg
Peters Family Art
Foundation
David Rosen and
Christopher Rocca
Irene and Kevin Rowe
Lety and Stephen Schwartz
Courtney and Scott Taylor
Andrew Wallerstein and
Mary Sloane
Eileen A. Wells
Claire and Jim Woodcock
NEW MEXICO
HISTORIC SITES
Thelma Domenici
Miryam and Bob Knutson
Trudy and Dennis O’Toole
OFFICE OF
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
STUDIES
Eric Blinman and
Melissa Hagstrom
Calvin B. Gross
Education Funds
AS OF JUNE 30, 2016
Education Fund donors contribute $1,000 or more to support educational programs at the division of their choice.
MUSEUM OF INDIAN
ARTS AND CULTURE
Vision Maker Media
Carol Warren
Suzanne and Joel Sugg
Courtney and Scott Taylor
Joseph and Lynne Horning
Janis and Dennis Lyon
Enid Margolies
Beverly and Mike Morris
Ashlyn and Dan Perry
San Manuel Band of
Mission Indians
Southwestern Association for
Indian Arts
MUSEUM OF
INTERNATIONAL FOLK
ART
NEW MEXICO HISTORY
MUSEUM AND PALACE
OF THE GOVERNORS
Janis and Dennis Lyon
Patricia Arscott La Farge
Foundation
J. Edd and Carole Stepp
Kay Harvey
Candace Jacobson
Trudy and Dennis O’Toole
St. Vincent Hospital
Foundation
OFFICE OF
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
STUDIES
Nancy Gardner
Fund for Museum Education
AS OF JUNE 30, 2016
Fund for Museum Education donors of $1,000 or more are recognized for their support of education and outreach
programs at our four affiliated museums, seven statewide historic sites and the Office of Archaeological Studies.
Anonymous
Brindle Foundation
Melissa and Tom Alexander
Julanna Gilbert and
Robert Coombe
Rosalind and Lowell Doherty
Pat and Jim Hall
Valerie and Bud Hamilton
James and Dana Manning
The Media Foundation
Bob Nurock
Nan Schwanfelder
Eileen A. Wells
museumfoundation.org23
The Circles
AS OF JUNE 30, 2016
Members of The Circles contribute from $1,500 to more than $10,000 annually to enhance the Museum of New
Mexico Foundation’s work in delivering essential support services to our cultural institutions. Members enjoy
exclusive benefits and cultural opportunities. More than 275 member households contributed more than
$650,000 in the 2015-16 fiscal year.
CHAIRMAN’S CIRCLE
$10,000 AND ABOVE
June and Tom Catron
Sheilah Garcia
Carlos Garcia and
Ashley Garcia
Ed Garcia
Gail and Jim Goodwin
Valerie and Bud Hamilton
James and Dana Manning
Cindi and Michael Pettit
Frauke and Keith Roth
Suzannah and Marshall Sale
Beth and Rick Schnieders
Nan Schwanfelder
Suzanne and Joel Sugg
Marilynn and Carl Thoma
NATIONAL CIRCLE
$ 5,000 TO $ 9,999
Catherine Allen and Paul
Rooker
Keith Anderson and
Barbara Lenssen
Ann Griffith Ash
The Honorable and
Mrs. Jeff Bingaman
Nancy and Richard Bloch
Priscilla and Jordan Braun
James Duncan Jr.
George Duncan and
Sheryl Kelsey
Maria and Edward Gale
Kay Harvey
Nicole Hixon
Jane and Stephen Hochberg
James Hutson-Wiley and
Olga Echevarria
Candace Jacobson
Judy and Henry Lackner
Mary Anne and Bruce Larsen
Susan and Philip Marineau
Joan and Mitchell Markow
Dee Ann McIntyre
Patricia and Arthur Newman
Collins and Jon Redman
Ellen and Richard Sandor
Karen and Marc Still
Donna and Calvin Sugg
Courtney Finch Taylor and
Scott Taylor
Claire and Jim Woodcock
Ambassador and Mrs. David
F. Girard-diCarlo
Chesney and John Gulas
Chris and Scott Hall
Pat and Jim Hall
Henrietta and Terence Hall
Roddie and Steve Harris
Pauline and Bert Heil
Susie and C.T. Herman
Rae Hoffacker and
Peter Pappas
Barbara and Bud Hoover
Joseph and Lynne Horning
Kathleen and William
Howard
Peggy and Tom Hubbard
Gayle Kuldell
Ellen and Charles Lacy
Margot Linton
Janis and Dennis Lyon
Anne and John Marion
Dave Matthews
Ellen McCabe and Richard
Middleton
Maryann and Jim McCaffery
Christine and Drew
McDermott
Joyce Melander-Dayton
Helene Singer Merrin
Doris Meyer and
Richard Hertz
Carol and George Miraben
Cindy Miscikowski
Beth and Steve Moise
Beverly and Mike Morris
Sandy Nachman
Mark Naylor and Dale Gunn
Linda Nelson
Bob Nurock
Jane and Tom O’Toole
Sallyann Paschall
Ashlyn and Dan Perry
Sally Pettit Wimberly and
Erin Wimberly Ward
Ildiko and Gary Poliner
Sandra and Richard Porter
Kathleen and Randy Pugh
Deborah and James Quirk
Lisa and Richard Reichman
Jerry Richardson
Julia and James Roberts
Alan Rolley
Irene and Kevin Rowe
Bill Saubert
24museumfoundation.org
PHOTO © CAITLIN ELIZABETH PHOTOGRAPHY
GOVERNOR’S CIRCLE
$ 2,500 TO $ 4,999
Lori and Edward Adcock
Victoria Addison and James
Baker
JoAnn and Bob Balzer
Lisa and David Barker
Suzanne and
Enrico Bartolucci
John Berl and Bob
Bauernschmitt
Gail and Joel Bernstein
Karen and Stephen Bershad
Marylou and Bob Best
Tana and Roy Bidwell
Elizabeth Boeckman
Cynthia and Bruce Bolene
Dorothy Bracey and Tom
Johnson
Lynn G. and Norman Brown
William and Uschi Butler
Merrilee Caldwell and
Marcus Randolph
Dr. Roger Carasso and
Roberta Corwin Robinson
Honey and Peter Chapin
Elaine and William
Chapman
Robert and Kathleen Clarke
Linda and James Cohen
Elaine and Ken Cole
Mary and David Cost
Benjamin Crane
Liz Crews
Sharon Curran-Wescott and
Earle Wescott
Joan and R. Thomas Dalbey
Stanley Damberger and
Madeleine
Grigg-Damberger
Sherry and Jim Davis
Steve Dayton
Nancy Sue Dimit
Rosalind and Lowell Doherty
John Duncan and
Anita Sarafa
Pam and David Fleischaker
Lawrence Fodor and John
Rochester
Susan Foote and
Stephen Feinberg
Jane and Charlie Gaillard
Stewart Gardner and
Martha Anne Dorminy
Harriet and Karl Schreiner
Mr. James R. Seitz Jr.
Judy and Bob Sherman
Marian Silver
Silvia and
Alexander Speyer III
Frederick Spiegelberg
Carol and James Thomson
Mari and Alex Thornburg
Robert Thorwald
Barbara and Richard Van
Dongen
J. Kevin Waidmann and
Dr. Donald Shina
Gilbert Waldman and
Christy Vezolles
Merja and Axel Weinreich
Eileen A. Wells
Jan and John Wilcynski
Sharon and Don Wright
Dr. and Mrs. Robert M. Zone
The Onota Foundation
REGENTS’ CIRCLE
$1,500 TO $ 2,499
PHOTO © CAITLIN ELIZABETH PHOTOGRAPHY
Ann Aceves
Roberta Aidem
Audrey Allison
Charmay B. Allred
Catherine and John Alsip
Jonathan Altman
Peggy and David Ater
Marsha Bailey
Emy Lou and Jerry Baldridge
Joan and Robert Benedetti
Sandy and Lee Berry
Joyce Blalock
Jane and Richard Borchers
Jo and Horace Bounds
Cristi Branum and
Kathryn Shelley
Charles Braun and
Diane Waters
Victoria and Roy Bridges
Jenne Britell
Barbara and
William Browning
Joseph M. Bryan Jr.
Jane and Bill Buchsbaum
Elva and Robert Busch
Jean and George Callaghan
Georgia and Bill Carson
Kathy and David Chase
Dr. Robert and Mrs.
Christensen
Jamie Clements and Diana
Cauvin-Clements
Mary and David Colton
Q and Phil Cook
Mary Costello
Carole and Philip Coviello
Shane Cronenweth
Darcy and Richard
Davis-Flagler
Raven and Laurel
Davis-Mayo
Joan Dayton and Richard
Curless
Nancy Dickenson
Ann and Richard Donnelly
Greg Dove
Karen Sue and Robert
Drewry
Shannez Dudelczyk and
Benjamin Alaimo-Monson
Mary Dudley and K. Greg
Wortman
Genevieve Duncan
Susan and Cameron Duncan
Pam and Donn Duncan
Karen and Stephen
Durkovich
Carolyn Eason
Martha Egan
Sheila and Kirk Ellis
Martha and Michael Everett
Pat and Walter Farr
Suzy and Gary Fisher
Jo and John Flittie
Jed and Samantha Foutz
Mariana Geer
Rochanya Generous and E.
Nicholas Generous
Carolyn Gibbs and Rick
Nelson
Lisa Goetz
Joel Goldfrank
George Goldstein and
Elizabeth Hahn
Judith Golley
Barbara and Larry Good
Catherine and Guy
Gronquist
Sue and David Halpern
Patricia and John Hamilton
David and Marcia Harris
Margaret Hartman and
Robert Zahary
Robin and John Hendricksen
Holly and Michael Henry
Nora and Robert Hillier
Bob Himmerich y Valencia
and Eva Valencia de
Himmerich
Margaret Hoban
Ruth and Frank Hogan
Christy and Ezra Hubbard
Ellen and Jim Hubbell
Myra and Robert Hull
Ronald Hulsey and Jeanene
Jenkins-Hulsey
Vicki and Clint Hurt
Kay and David Ingalls
Julie and David Itz
Sallie Ritter and Kent Jacobs
Kathryn Jordan
Leslie Nathanson Juris and
Hervey Juris
Cathy and Paul Kalenian
Sherri and Charles Karaian
Daniel “Bud” Kelly
Fiddle and Stuart Kirk
David Lamb and Robbi
Firestone
Lawrence Lazarus
Diane and John Lenssen
Ann and Mark Livingston
Ron Lushing and Dan Reid
Juliet Mattila and Robin
Magowan
Leslea and Frank McCabe
Maureen McCarthy and John
Schoemer
Jackie and Steve McFeely
Susan McGreevy and Herb
Beenhouwer
Claire and French McKnight
Terry and Walter Melendres
Marie Meyer
Bill Miller
Edwina and Charles Milner
Julia and Richard Moe
Linda Morsman
Melinda and
Jack Naumann Jr.
Tom Neff and Lyndon
Haviland
Polly O’Brien and
Barrett Toan
Trudy and Dennis O’Toole
Carmen Paradis and Brian
McGrath
Katie and Gerald Peters
Francine and Fred Pevow
Carol Prins and John Hart
Rose Provan
Elizabeth Raspolic
Mary Lynn Reese
Lewis and Sharyn Ribich
Janet and Carl Russo
Laurie and William Saunders
Jenna and Wilson Scanlan
Susan Selbin
Lynn Sellers-Carr and
David Carr
Stan Sewell and Kenn
Johnson
Eve Simon
Judith Sjoberg
Barbara and Louis Sklar
Andrea Slade
Linda and Gary Smith
Jane M. and Henry J. Smith
Joan and Michael Snader
Georgia and Jim Snead
Carole and J. Edd Stepp
David Frank and Kazukuni
Sugiyama
Melody Taft and
Matthew Moody
Lorlee and Arnold
Tenenbaum
Marge Tillman and
Bill Watson
Bebe Van Arsdale
Joan Vernick
Carol Warren
Florette and Robert Weiss
Pattie White
Judy and Gordon Wilson
Nancy Meem Wirth
Karen Wohlgemuth
Beverly and John Young
Donna Zick
museumfoundation.org25
Corporate Sponsorship and Business Council
AS OF JUNE 30, 2016
Corporate Sponsors and Business Council members provide cash and in-kind goods and services to support
the Museum of New Mexico Foundation and the Museum of New Mexico system. Together, these New
Mexico-based businesses contributed $273,500 in the 2015–16 fiscal year. Corporate Sponsors and Business
Council members enjoy benefits and recognition throughout our cultural community for their contributions.
CORPORATE
SPONSORS
PREMIER SPONSOR
$ 25,000 AND ABOVE
Garcia Automotive Group
Heritage Hotels & Resorts
The Santa Fe New Mexican
LEAD SPONSOR
$10,000 TO $ 24,999
Anonymous
Century Bank
Edible Magazine
Hutton Broadcasting
La Fonda on the Plaza
Thornburg Investment
Management
SPONSOR
$ 5,000 TO $ 9,999
Avalon Trust Company
First National Bank of
Santa Fe
Jennifer Padilla Public
Relations
KGB Spirits
Los Alamos National Bank
Santa Fean
Southern Wine & Spirits
The Essential Guide
TOURISM Santa Fe
BUSINESS
COUNCIL
MEMBERS
GOVERNOR’S COUNCIL
$ 2,500 TO $ 4,999
REGENTS’ COUNCIL
$1,500 TO $ 2,499
CB Richard Ellis/Crow
Holdings
Classic Party Rentals
Courtyard by
Marriott Santa Fe
El Rey Inn
Eloisa Catering
Five and Dime General Store
Galpert/Ortega Group of
Wells Fargo Advisors
Gerald Peters Gallery
GF Contemporary
Green Fire Times
Inn of the Governors
Inn on the Alameda
Invisible City Designs
Joseph’s Culinary Pub
Local Flavor Magazine
Lumenscapes
Old Santa Fe Inn
Paper Tiger
PNM
Pronto! Signs and Graphics
Redwood Media Group
Santa Fe Audio Visual
Santa Fe Brewing Company
Santa Fe Print & Images
SantaFe.com
Sign Graphics
Starline Printing
UBS Financial Services,
Daniel Merians
Verve Gallery of Photography
Vivo Studios
Ward Russell Photography
Wells Fargo
BENEFACTOR
$ 500 TO $1,499
20th Century West Art
Appraisal Inc.
Addison Rowe Fine Art
Adobe Gallery
Adobe Rose Theatre
Albuquerque Hispano
Chamber of Commerce
Allan Houser Inc.
Andiamo!
Andrea Fisher Fine Pottery
Arroyo Vino
Beals & Co./Santa Fe Exports
Bellas Artes Gallery
Bode’s Mercantile
C. Michael Spain and
Associates
C.G. Higgins Confections
Carmella Padilla
Communications
Clafoutis French Bakery &
Restaurant
Conron & Woods Architects
Costumes! Limited
Cowgirl BBQ
Creative Santa Fe
D Maahs Construction LLC
Daniel Anthony Studio
Daniel Quat Photography
De La Harpe Holdings LLC
Delancey Street Foundation
Dougherty Real Estate Co.
El Castillo LifeCare
Community
El Farol
Fire Dragon Color
First Citizens Bank
Gallagher & Associates
Georgia O’Keeffe Museum
Gold Leaf Catering
Hotel Albuquerque at Old
Town
Hotel Chimayo de Santa Fe
Hotel Encanto de Las Cruces
Hotel St. Francis
Ink & Images
Inn and Spa at Loretto
Inn at Santa Fe
Jambo Café
Jean Cocteau Cinema
Kelly Koepke Professional
Communication Services
Keshi
La Boca
La Posada de Santa Fe
La Posada de Taos Inn
Laura Sheppherd Atelier
Ma Cherie
Macodo Productions
Museum Hill Café
Nativo Lodge
Nedra Matteucci Galleries
New Mexico Bank & Trust
Ohori’s Coffee Tea &
Chocolate
Palacio de Marquesa, Taos
Payne’s Nurseries and
Greenhouses
Positive Energy Inc.
Pranzo Italian Grill
Precept Wine
Santa Fe Chamber of
Commerce
Santa Fe Culinary Academy
Santa Fe Gallery Association
Santa Fe School of Cooking
Santacafé
Scher Center for Well Being
Simply Social Media
Someone’s In The Kitchen
Southwestern Association for
Indian Arts
Sweetwater Harvest Kitchen
The Bull Ring
The Lodge at Santa Fe
The Santa Fe Espresso
Company
The Shop - A Christmas Store
Todos Santos
Violante & Rochford Interiors
Walter Burke Catering
White & Luff Financial
WinshipPhillips
Zadro Vizualz
26museumfoundation.org
PHOTO © CHERON BAYNA
Adobo Catering
Alliance Audio Visual
Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort
and Spa
Blue Rain Gallery
Casa Cuma B&B
Catron, Catron, Pottow &
Glassman
Hacienda Doña Andrea de
Santa Fe
James Kelly Contemporary
Los Poblanos Inn and
Historic Cultural Center
New Mexico Magazine
Peas ‘n’ Pod Catering, Inc.
Raymond James &
Associates, John Adams
UBS Financial Services,
Hees/Macukas Wealth
Management
Ambassadors
AS OF JUNE 30, 2016
Year-End Giving
Ambassador members contribute
$1,000 to $1,499 annually through their
membership dues to support the
Museum of New Mexico Foundation.
Give Today — Receive a
2016 Tax Deduction
Joy and Howard Berlin
Renee Castagnola
Karen and Donald Clewell
Member Primary Addressee?
Mary and David Cost
Mary de Compiegne
Eve Dorfzaun
James H. Duncan Sr.
Leslie Finegan
Barbara Flicker
J. Arthur Freed
Nancy Gardner
Michael Grissom and Lloyd Nicholas
Gwen and Eugene Gritton
Susan and Karl Horn
David Hundley and Kenneth Burles
Sherry and Adel Kheir-Eldin
Elizabeth and Albert Kidd
Marian and Emil Liddell
Frederick Lutgens
Gwyn and Wilson Mason
Sandy Meseck
Faye Miller
Maura O’Leary
Jay Oppenheimer
Judy and Dennis Reinhartz
Robert Shea and Gloria Zamora
Marjorie Sitter
Jean and Eugene Stark
Leslie and Phillip Stern
Patricia Trumbull
In this season of giving, a contribution to the Museum of New
Mexico Foundation is one of the most meaningful gifts you
can make. Your tax-deductible donation for 2016 will make a
lasting impact on our cultural institutions.
However you choose to give, these payment notes will help
you meet the December 31 deadline:
•Check: Envelopes must be postmarked by December 31 to
qualify as a 2016 gift. The legal date is the date your gift is
postmarked, not the check date.
•Credit Card: The date the charge clears is the legal gift
date, not the date the charge is submitted.
•Stock: In the case of a direct transfer, the legal gift date is
the transfer date, not the date a broker is requested to make
the transfer.
IRA Rollover: It’s Not Too Late
If you are 70½ years or older, you still have time to take
advantage of a charitable rollover for 2016. Donate up
to $100,000 from your IRA or Roth IRA and significantly
reduce your income tax liability. Contact your IRA administrator and request a distribution by early December 2016.
For suggested ways to give, see the inside back cover. To make a
gift, call 505.982.6366 ext. 100 or visit museumfoundation.org.
PHOTOS: LEFT © CAITLIN ELIZABETH PHOTOGRAPHY; RIGHT © ANDREW KASTNER
museumfoundation.org27
Give the Gift of Membership
The holidays are upon us and you need a meaningful
gift for someone special. A Family membership
provides your gift recipient a year full of unique
cultural benefits and memorable experiences,
including:
• Free, unlimited admission to four Santa Fe
museums and seven statewide historic sites
• Ten percent discount at our five museum shops
and the Museum Hill Café
• Complimentary subscriptions to El Palacio,
Member News and Member E-News
• Invitations to member-only events
• And much more!
For a limited time, a gift membership at the
Individual/Dual level is only $50 (regularly $75).
Available at all five museum shops. Offer ends
December 31.
Great Grants
U. S. Bureau of Land Management to support the
office’s award-winning educational outreach
program.
The New Mexico Museum of Art and Museum of
International Folk Art received a joint $9,000 grant
from the Brindle Fund of the Santa Fe Community
Foundation to collaborate on The Sharing Time Art
and Reading Together (START) program, a pilot
parent-child project focusing on literacy, including
visual literacy.
The City of Santa Fe Arts Commission awarded a
$45,000 grant to support marketing of the Museum of
New Mexico and promote the arts in Santa Fe.
The Museum of Indian Arts and Culture received a
$15,000 grant from the Smithsonian Institution’s
National Museum of the American Indian to support
museum education and development.
The Office of Archaeological Studies received a
$20,000 grant, renewable over five years, from the
28museumfoundation.org
PHOTOS © LEFT: ERIC LANGIEL. RIGHT: ANDREW KASTNER.
The Institute for
Museum and Library
Services awarded a
$249,858 National
Leadership Grant to the
Museum of Indian Arts
and Culture to support
the Indigenous Digital
Archive. The groundbreaking three-year
project, implemented in
partnership with the
Indian Pueblo Cultural
Center and State Tribal Libraries program, will bring
together leaders in information technology systems.
They will establish an online digital platform giving
Native communities unprecedented access to records
related to their history, arts and culture.
Ways to Give
Membership
Provides revenues that support the Foundation’s
ability to deliver essential services to our 12 partner
cultural institutions while offering members a
number of enjoyable benefits.
Director’s Leadership Fund and
Exhibitions Development Fund
Supports exhibitions, related programming and
institutional advancement at the museum or division
of your choice.
The Circles
Planned Gift
Leadership-level membership that gives members
access to a series of exclusive events.
Provides a lasting impact on our cultural institutions
through an estate gift, bequest, charitable gift
annuity or gift of art.
Corporate Sponsorship and Business
Council
Aligns your business as a supporter of the museums,
provides community recognition, and awards
benefits to your business, clients and employees.
Fund for Museum Education and
Education Funds
Endowment
Establishes a new fund, or adds to the principal of an
existing fund, to provide a reliable source of annual
income that sustains a variety of cultural programs
and purposes.
Directly funds museum education and outreach
programs at our four museums, seven statewide
historic sites and the Office of Archaeological Studies.
Museum of New Mexico Foundation Staff
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
Jamie Clements
[email protected]
Jessica Calzada
505.982.6366 ext. 103
[email protected]
DEVELOPMENT
NEW MEXICO
MUSEUM OF ART
Yvonne Montoya
505.982.6366 ext. 102
[email protected]
Lindsay Jaeger
505.982.6366 ext. 120
[email protected]
MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS
AND CULTURE
OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL
STUDIES
Laura Waller
505.982.6366 ext. 116
[email protected]
NEW MEXICO HISTORY
MUSEUM
PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS
HISTORIC SITES
Karen DuBroff
505.982.6366 ext. 109
[email protected]
MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL
FOLK ART
Steve Cantrell
505.982.6366 ext. 106
[email protected]
ALL INSTITUTIONS EXCEPT
NEW MEXICO MUSEUM
OF ART
Alex Hesbrook
505.982.6366 ext. 119
[email protected]
GRANTS
Jack Price
505.982.6366 ext.108
[email protected]
MEMBERSHIP
Mariann Minana-Lovato
505.982.6366 ext. 117
[email protected]
Paul Stuart
505.982.6366 ext. 112
[email protected]
OPERATIONS
Brittny Wood
505.982.6366 ext. 107
[email protected]
Marylee McInnes
505.982.6366 ext. 111
[email protected]
Cara O’Brien
505.982.6366 ext. 118
[email protected]
Sachiko Hunter-Rivers
505.982.6366 ext. 104
[email protected]
FINANCE
SHOPS
Patrick Ranker
505.982.6366 ext. 101
[email protected]
John Stafford
505.982.3016 ext. 25
[email protected]
Georgine Flores
505.982.6366 ext. 114
[email protected]
LICENSING
Jeanne Peters
505.982.6366 ext. 115
[email protected]
Pamela Kelly
505.982.3016 ext. 27
[email protected]
Art Inspired Accessories
Two Tone Square Drops
Necklace $58.00
Three Tone Stick
Necklace $58.00
Triangular Necklace in
holiday red! $58.00
North-South Leather Crossbody
Handbag $58.00
“Beckham” Scarf —
100% Luxurious Silk $68.00
New Mexico Museum of Art
MUSEUM OF NEW MEXICO FOUNDATION
nma.shopmuseum.org