 |
|
William Draper’s portrait of Winton “Red” Blount will be
unveiled March 4 at The University of Alabama. It will hang
in the main room of Oliver-Barnard Hall, one of two Academic
Houses in UA’s Blount Undergraduate Initiative, which was
named for Blount and his wife, Carolyn.
|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A portrait of the late Alabama businessman
Winton M. “Red” Blount, painted by the artist of kings
and U.S. presidents, will be unveiled March 4 at The University
of Alabama. The unveiling will take place at 6:30 p.m. in Oliver-Barnard
Hall on the UA campus, as part of the annual Benefactors Dinner
hosted by UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences.
Kay Blount Pace, the late philanthropist’s daughter, and
University President Robert E. Witt will speak at the ceremony,
which will mark the installation on the UA campus of the painting
by William F. Draper, often called the “dean of American
portrait painters.”
The portrait was a gift to the University made by Pace’s
brother, Joseph W. Blount, of Miami Beach and Southhampton, N.Y.
It will hang in the main room of Oliver-Barnard Hall, one of two
Academic Houses in UA’s Blount
Undergraduate Initiative, a program named in 1999 for Blount
and his wife Carolyn. Winton Blount died Oct. 24, 2002 and his
wife, Carolyn, died earlier this year on Jan. 24.
“Dad loved The University of Alabama and the Blount Undergraduate
Initiative,” Pace said. “He felt very honored to be
able to kick off funding for such an innovative and important program.”
The Blount Undergraduate Initiative was established with a $14
million private endowment provided by 27 Alabamians, including
the Blounts and the Blount Foundation of Montgomery. Oliver-Barnard
is one of the two historic academic buildings housing the innovative
four-year liberal arts program in UA’s College of Arts and
Sciences.
Joseph Blount purchased the oil-on-canvas portrait from the Blount
Foundation of Montgomery, Pace said. “My brother wanted it
to be a permanent reminder to all Blount Scholars of his belief
that a superior education comes with the responsibility to use
that knowledge for the good of all,” the Birmingham resident
said.
Draper painted Blount in the mid-1990s, Pace said. The artist,
who died in 2003, has work displayed in the National Gallery of
Art and the National Portrait Gallery.
The Massachusetts native’s subjects include former presidents
John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon, John D. Rockefeller, the
Shah of Iran, financier Paul Mellon and author James Michener.
During World War II, Draper was selected as one of five official
Navy combat artists. National Geographic published the scenes he
produced from 1943-1945, during which time Draper completed portraits
of U.S. Navy Admirals William F. Halsey and Chester W. Nimitz.
The Benefactors Dinner is held in appreciation of corporations
and individuals who have supported UA’s College of Arts and
Sciences with scholarships, endowments, and other gifts.
Winton Blount was U.S. Postmaster General 1969-71 and served as
a president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
He founded Blount Inc., now Blount International, and served as
chairman of the manufacturing and construction company. Its projects
have included the nation’s first atomic energy plant, launch
pads for the NASA moon launch and a $2 billion university built
in Saudi Arabia.
Blount donated $21.5 to build the Carolyn Blount Theatre, home
of the Alabama Shakespeare Festival complex and donated the 200
acres where it and the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts have been
built.
The College of Arts and Sciences is Alabama’s largest liberal
arts college and the University’s largest division with 355
faculty and 6,600 students.
|