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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - A Fairhope dancer and arts patron, a University
of Alabama graduate and noted poet, and two Alabama arts organizations
will be honored for their contributions to the arts by The University
of Alabamas College of
Arts and Sciences during its annual awards gala Thursday, Jan.
31 at 7:30 p.m. in the Morgan Hall theatre at 7:30 p.m. The gala
will include performances presented by UA fine and performing arts
programs.
The ceremony celebrates the 27th anniversary of the Society for
the Fine Arts and the 19th consecutive year that the arts support
group has recognized Alabamians and UA alumni who have made an impact
on the creative and performing arts in Alabama.
College of Arts and Sciences Dean Robert Olin will present the
awards. Recipients and their awards are:
Gage Bush Englund
Patron of the Arts Award
Gage Bush Englund, a Birmingham native and long-time resident of
Fairhope, will receive the Patron of the Arts Award for her contributions
to dance and to The University of Alabama. Englund, a member of
the board of directors of the American Ballet Theatre of New York,
was instrumental in forming a partnership between that prestigious
national dance company and UA to establish The American Ballet Theater
Summer Intensive at The University of Alabama. In existence since
1997, the program attracts 200 dancers from around the country for
a three-week dance training residency at UA. Seminars are held on
dance history, nutrition and choreography. National demand for entry
into the summer program is highly competitive through auditions
in seven major U.S. cities each spring.
Englund and her late husband, Richard, also founded the American
Ballet Theatre Studio Company, the educational art of the American
Ballet Theatre. She has provided essential support to this program
for 28 years and served as its Ballet Mistress.
The New York Times recently called the ABT Studio Company
one of the great success stories in dance in recent years.
Maurice Manning
The Alabama Shakespeare Festival Alumni Arts Award
Nationally recognized poet Maurice Manning, a native of Kentucky,
will receive the Alumni Arts Award. Manning received his master
of fine arts degree in creative writing from The University of Alabama
in 1999 and held a fellowship at the prestigious Fine Arts Work
Center in Providence, Mass. the following year. He is the author
of the critically acclaimed collection of poems, Lawrence
Booths Book of Visions, winner of the Yale Series of
Younger Poets Competition. The book includes 58 poems featuring
Lawrence Booth, a fictional character described by Publishers
Weekly as equal parts carnivorous nightmare, Freudian pastoral
and deep-fired family romance. Nationally noted poet W. S.
Merwin, who served as the sole judge for the competition, called
Mannings work authoritative and daring with a language
of color and sure movement.
Manning teaches literature and creative writing at DePauw University
in Greencastle, Ind.
Alabama Committee of the National Museum of Women in the Arts
Alabama Image Award
Members of The Alabama Committee of the National Museum of Women
in the Arts will receive the Alabama Image Award for organizing
Voices Risings; an art exhibition featuring Alabama women artists
that was held for four months last year in The National Museum of
Women in Washington, D.C. The exhibition, which is now touring major
city museums in Alabama, offers viewers a diverse and freshly arresting
perspective on the work, philosophies, and original voices of 12
of Alabamas most noted artists who are women. The members
of the committee are Ann W. Reynolds, Catherine Cabaniss, Pauline
Ireland, Alice Williams, Margaret Livingston, Carol Ballard, Mary
Katherine Blount, Susan Reeves, Helen Vaughn and Betty Grisham.
Artists featured in the exhibition are Janice Kluge, Sonja Rieger,
Lucy Jaffe and Melissa Springer of Birmingham; Pinky Bass of Fairhope;
Frances de la Rosa of Uniontown; Susan Downing of Mobile; Dale Kennington
of Dothan; Anne Lucas of Prattville; Mary Ann Pope of Huntsville;
Laura Prange of Lafayette; and Anne Tolliver of Montgomery.
The Alabama Committee of the National Museum of Women in the Arts
will be honored for advancing the arts in Alabama and for bringing
positive recognition to Alabama artists.
The Alabama Shakespeare Festival
Alabama Image Award
The Alabama Shakespeare Festival of Montgomery will also receive
the Alabama Image Award. The Southeasts largest regional theatre,
inspired by the vision of Winton and Carolyn Blount, presents more
than 400 performances each year. As the fifth largest Shakespeare
festival in the world, artists are trained to the highest standards
in the Festivals equity candidate professional acting program
and in the master of fine arts degree program, offered in partnership
with The University of Alabama. The Alabama Shakespeare Festival
will be recognized for opening up the world of theatre to this state
and region with its superior educational programs and for
positively impacting the states reputation in the arts.
The Society for the Fine Arts is a part of the College of Arts
and Sciences Leadership Board. The board consists of 80 alumni and
friends who serve as supporters and advisors to the College.
For more information about the gala, contact Bobbie Rafferty,
coordinator of College advancement, at 348-6698.
The College of Arts and Sciences
is The University of Alabamas largest division with over 6,000
students and 360 faculty members. It is the states largest
public liberal arts college and has Alabamas most comprehensive
undergraduate and graduate programs in the fine and performing arts.
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