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Saturday, November 7, 2015 Hotel Murano Heartfelt Gratitude to our Marvelous Volunteers

TAM80 GALA COMMITTEE Alice Kaltinick, Committee Chair Clara Ladd, Committee Co-Chair Kathy McGoldrick Linda Hansen Lisa Quigg Cindy Rush-Grady Connie Willis

Board of Trustees Jeffrey Atkin Gary Severson Drew Bamford Dianne Stoehr Steve Barger Janine Terrano John Barline Maidee Watson Anthony Chen Jeff Williams Bill Driscoll Connie Willis Matt Gnau Stuart Grover Life Trustee Andy Fagan Wendy Griffin Susan Russell Hall Richard Moe Steve Harlow William Street Liliane Haub Rita Herrera Irvin Emeritus Alice Kaltinick Dale Chihuly Clara Ladd Peter Darling Elizabeth Lufkin John Folsom Pam Mayer Anne Gould Hauberg Xan McCallum Erivan Haub Jemima McCullum Helga Haub Laure Nichols Bobby Street Neel Parikh Peter Petrich Non-Resident Lisa Quigg Lori Uddenberg Richard Remmert Merrill Wagner Presenting Sponsor

Platinum Sponsors

Gold Sponsors The Boeing Company J.P. Morgan Chase Murray Pacific Northern Trust U.S. Oil & Refining Company Weyerhaeuser Company

Silver Sponsors Bank of America Brantley Janson Yost & Ellison Brown and Brown Davies Pearson DaVita Healthcare Partners Doty, Beardsley, Rosengren, & Co. Gordon Thomas Honeywell McKinley Irvin Moss Adams Olson Kundig Architects Sprague Pest Solutions Tacoma Laser Clinic Union Bank

Partner Sponsors Olympic Eagle Distributing (Advertisements) Acco Engineered Sellen Construction Wane and Flitch

In-Kind Donors Vangard Inc. Fourbloc Films LLC Our heartfelt appreciation to tonight’s generous wine donor, Alice and Paul Kaltinick. In 1935, the Tacoma Art Association was created by a small group of civic leaders. In 2015, those leaders would be amazed at the dramatic expansion, evolution, and impact that TAM has had on our community.

Tonight, we recognize our community who has grown with us and supported TAM over the years. We raise a glass to all in attendance who have shared in our development and growth. You have affected change and play a significant role in aiding our mission. Whether you are a volunteer, donor, member, artist, or friend, you are an influential part of the museum family and I thank you in advance for your generosity tonight.

TAM 80 Gala will raise funds for the museum’s extensive education programs. Each year, TAM provides opportunities for more than 30,000 students, teachers, youth, and families to engage in meaningful art experiences.

On behalf of the students who experienced the museum through our School Tour program, campers that took part in the Art Adventure Summer Program, and the thousands of attendees at the museum’s free community festivals, thank you for your advocacy and dedication to transforming the lives of our youth.

We are thrilled to celebrate with you and toast to 80 years of connecting people through art. Again, thank you for your past support and continued support, from everyone at the TAM family, we hope you enjoy yourselves tonight! Happy Bidding,

Stephanie Stebich, Executive Director Auction Rules

Tacoma Art Museum (TAM) has attempted to describe and catalogue all items correctly. All items are sold “as is.” TAM neither warrants nor represents, and shall in no event be responsible for, the accuracy of the description or the condition of the item or package. Dates for all trips and similar events must be mutually arranged with donor unless otherwise noted. No refunds are permitted for canceled, lost, or unused tickets and/or accommodations. We request that all items be removed the night of the auction, unless otherwise indicated. All sales are final. No exchanges or refunds are allowed unless otherwise indicated.

In accordance with IRS code, the amount paid on a winning bid excess of the fair market value (as provided in the catalog or on the bid sheet) is considered to be a charitable contribution. TAM does not appraise the value of the auctioned items and all statements of value appearing in the catalog were provided by the donors.

The auction bank will be open beginning at 9 pm. Payment arrangements must be finalized this evening. You may make a pledge or pay by cash, check, VISA, MasterCard, American Express, or Discover.

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Wine from George Weyerhaeuser’s Cellar

Wine lovers will not want to miss this chance to sample a diverse collection of fine wines. This lot features twelve deluxe vintages, which are sure to be an exclusive and celebratory accompaniment to any special occasion. Enjoy with friends and family as you elevate a simple get-together to a night-to-be-remembered!

2003 Roederer Estate L’Ermitage Brut Champagne 2010 Leonetti Cellars Cabernet Sauvignon 1996 Robert Mondavi Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 Le Pont des Soupirs, Domaine du Paradis 1995 Chateau Margaux 1999 Casanova di Neri, Brunello di Montalcino 2000 Chateau Angelus 2004 Robert Karl Cabernet Sauvignon 2005 Gevrey-Chambertin, Domaine de la Guyonne 2007 Barons V Cabernet Sauvignon 2003 Arietta Cabernet Sauvignon 2001 Chateau d’Yquem Half Bottle

Donor: Kathy McGoldrick Value: $1,400 2

Susan Russell Hall Allure, 2013. Encaustic, 12 × 12 inches.

“Looking beyond the surface has always been a very important part of my artistic practice. I spent twenty-seven years documenting over 6,500 individual heart surgeries in the operating room, more than anyone in the world.

Because of this experience, my current practice continues to relate directly and metaphorically to the heart. By using the labor- intensive technique of encaustic, with the layering and melting of wax and applying pigment, I can achieve depth that looks like polished stone, cracked clay or ethereal space.

I work with these layers of imagery and spatial planes, attempting to connect with people on a deep personal and emotional level. I strive to capture the quiet moments of life through art.”

Hall is a Northwest artist and medical illustrator whose artworks have been exhibited nationally, as well as internationally.

Donor: Susan Russell Hall Value: $1,650 3

Victoria Adams Lowlands #128, 2015. Oil on panel, 24 × 24 inches.

Victoria Adams is an American Contemporary Landscape painter working in oil and wax on linen. She finds inspiration for her primary subject matter—the sky, weather, panoramic land vistas, reflective waters, and deep atmospheric space—in the natural world of the Pacific Northwest where she lives and works, near , WA.

“My paintings of the landscape, offering panoramic views of the sky and land, follow in the western European landscape tradition, as expressed by early Dutch, then English and French, and eventually American Luminist and Hudson River School painters. I use elements from that tradition, recombining and exaggerating them in the paintings. Through my work I hope for the effect of an elegy for nature—elegy both as a lament for a tragic loss, but also as a reaffirmation of the importance of viewing landscape as an essential human need.”

Donor: Victoria Adams Value: $5,000 4

Seattle Getaway!

Experience the city anew with a romantic weekend! Start your day by enjoying the ultimate test drive experience in a Tesla Model S. Once in the Seattle, visit the fantastical blown glass creations at Chihuly Garden and Glass. Learn more about the inspiration and influences that informed the career of famed artist Dale Chihuly. Then it’s a quick jaunt downtown to enjoy a delectable dinner for two (2) at Tom Douglas’s, Dahlia Lounge. Next, head on over to the Seattle Repertory Theatre for an imaginative stage production. Cap your adventure with a luxurious two (2) night hotel stay at the Sheraton Seattle Hotel. Package Includes:

• Dinner for two (2) at Dahlia Lounge and a Tom Douglas cookbook. • Two (2) Tickets to a Seattle Repertory Theatre production. • Chihuly Garden and Glass Tickets for Four (4). • Two (2) consecutive nights accommodations at Sheraton Hotel. • Tesla Model S Driving Experience, 24 Hours, must be 25 to drive.

Donor: Chihuly Garden and Glass, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Sheraton Hotel, Tesla Motors, and Tom Douglas Restaurants. Value: $1,573 5

Pohlman Knowles Studio Tapestry Element, Blown and sculpted glass, beads, copper, and steel, 21 × 13 x 5 inches. Signed.

“Designing, creating, and assembling contemporary forms from molten glass inspired by the ancient, universal language of symbols, we have been visually storytelling for 23 years. Our work is in the collection of numerous museums and prestigious private collections nationwide. We have received many awards and residencies including Pratt Fine Art Center’s Service in the Arts award, Bay Area Glass Institute’s Saxe Fellowship award and residencies at the Wheaton Arts, , and Pilchuck Glass School.”

Donor: Jenny Pohlman and Sabrina Knowles Value: $2,400 6

Mark Tobey The Grand Parade, 1974. Lithograph, XXVI/L, 28 × 22 inches. Signed and numbered.

Tobey, best known for his calligraphic “white writing” style, became one of the best known and internationally respected American artists during the 1950s and 60s. Tobey was predominantly self-taught despite attending some classes at the Art Institute of Chicago. Tobey moved to New York in 1911, worked as an artist for McCall’s magazine, and had some success as a portrait painter. Around 1918, Tobey was introduced to the Bahai World Faith, a religion that ultimately changed his art. In both his life and work, Tobey expressed an interest in mystical states of mind. In 1923 he moved to Seattle to teach art, where he learned Chinese calligraphy. This experience, coupled with numerous trips to Europe and the Near East, played a pivotal role in developing his signature allover calligraphic style.

The Grand Parade is from a portfolio of three (3) original etchings and three (3) original lithographs.

Donor: Woodside/Braseth Gallery Value: $4,750 7

Artful Evening on Vashon Island

Enjoy a relaxing summer evening filled with fine wine, wonderful food, and the best views that Vashon Island has to offer. You’ll join renowned local artist Victoria Adams, her husband Tom, and seven other lucky couples for a delicious four course catered dinner with wine pairings. This unforgettable evening will be hosted at the home of Jeff Williams and Mark Pinto, where you might even catch a glimpse of their resident bald eagle. Not to be missed.

Specifications: For up to Seven (7) Couples. Date: Saturday, August, 20th, 2016

Donor: Jeff Williams and Mark Pinto Value: Priceless 8

Dale Chihuly Dakota Macchia, 2008. Blown glass, 9 × 10 × 10 inches.

Chihuly’s Macchia series is renowned for its innovative use of color and extravagant design. Macchia, from the Italian word for “spotted,” have brilliant and wildly contrasting color palettes, inside and out, that are separated by a layer of white glass “clouds” to maintain the vibrancy of the colors.

“When we unloaded the ovens in the morning, there was a rush of seeing something I had never seen before. Like much of my work, the series inspired itself. The unbelievable combinations of color became the driving force.”

The 2008 Chihuly Workshop Studio Edition Dakota Macchia bursts forth in a kaleidoscope of color. The rich blue exterior is accentuated with luminous spots of green and yellow, and fine lines of reddish- orange. The striking magenta interior provides an alluring contrast, and the entire form is edged with a warm yellow lip wrap.

Donor: Dale Chihuly and Chihuly Studios Value: $8,500 9

Dale Chihuly Blue and Red Circles, date unknown. Original work on paper, 30 × 32 inches.

“Drawing is a fluid process, like glassblowing is a fluid process.”

Drawing holds a unique place in the art of Chihuly. What may have begun for him as a pragmatic tool of communication in response to particular circumstances in the studio became and has remained much more than that: an ongoing process of discovery and a form of thought symbiotically connected to his sculpture and his person. Chihuly’s drawings, like his glass sculptures, are about the process of their own creation.

In circular fashion, discoveries made through drawing are incorporated into sculpture and vice versa. Yet the two remain distinct. Chihuly’s drawings over the past thirty-five years constitute a parallel visual world as compelling and original as that of his amazing sculptures.

Donor: Greg Kucera Gallery Value: $16,000 10

TAM Studio Art Tables

Become a part of ’s history!

Have your name engraved on the new TAM Studio art tables! The TAM studio inspires members of all ages from our community and asks visitors to pause and reflect on their experiences in the galleries by making their own personal creation.

These beautifully crafted work tables play and integral role in facilitating personal connections with art. Designed with exceptional style, the glass tops allow users to view educational materials and objects in the trays below. The tables were made with creativity in mind and are used daily, supporting learning as visitors engage in meaningful art activities.

Three naming opportunities available.

Donor: Tacoma Art Museum Value: $3,500

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Photo of Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art

Two Reservations on the Sold Out Patron Trip

Each year, our Patron members are invited to travel with knowledgeable Tacoma Art Museum staff and other art enthusiasts, exploring destinations in the Northwest and around the country. In 2016, we visit Kansas City, Missouri and Bentonville, Arkansas with TAM Executive Director, Stephanie Stebich and Curator of Collections and Special Exhibitions, Margaret Bullock.

Be a part of this exclusive tour to Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art and the Crystal Bridges Museum of Art. The group will also visit some outstanding art galleries, amazing home collections, and experience fine dining that the cities have to offer. Our tours are guided by art curators and provide exclusive, behind-the-scenes experiences unavailable to the public.

Specifications: For Two (2) Guests. Date: Thursday, April 28 – Sunday, May 1, 2016 Airline: Alaska Airlines roundtrip coach tickets.

Donor: Tacoma Art Museum and Alaska Airlines Value: $7,000 12

Roger Shimomura Oriental Type, 2003. From the Stereotypes and Admonitions series. Acrylic on canvas, 24 × 24 inches.

Shimomura was recently featured at TAM in the exhibition: —An American Knockoff. His paintings, prints, and theatre pieces address sociopolitical concerns around race and identity. Shimomura spent several years as a young child incarcerated along with his family at Minidoka Relocation Center (Idaho), one of 10 internment camps for Japanese Americans during WWII. This experience deeply informs his art.

Shimomura was born in Seattle, . He received a BA degree from the University of Washington, Seattle; and a MFA from Syracuse University, New York. He has had over 130 solo exhibitions of paintings and prints and his work is among the permanent collections of more than 90 museums nationwide. He is represented by Flomenhaft Gallery, New York City, and Greg Kucera Gallery, Seattle.

Donor: Greg Kucera Gallery Value: $7,200 13

Preston Singletary Tlingit Basket—Elderberry, undated. Blown and sand carved glass, 9 × 9 inches.

The art of Preston Singletary has become synonymous with the fusion of European glass blowing traditions and Northwest Native art. His artworks feature themes of transformation, animal spirits, and shamanism through elegant blown glass forms and mystical sand carved Tlingit designs.

Singletary learned the art of glass blowing by working with Seattle artists Benjamin Moore and Dante Marioni. He also had opportunities to work with Venetian glass masters Lino Tagliapietra, Cecco Ongaro, and Pino Signoretto. In 2010, Singletary was awarded an honorary Doctor of Arts degree from the University of Puget Sound. Now recognized internationally, Singletary’s artworks are included in the collections of The British Museum, London, UK, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA, and , among others.

Donor: Preston Singletary Value: $8,000

Every year Tacoma Art Museum connects thousands of people with art—people of all ages and backgrounds—through our collections, free community festivals, school tours, Gates Foundation Resource Library, Open Art Studio, free TAM Studio, and more.

You have joined us tonight because you believe in the power of the arts and art education. You understand the arts are essential to our young people and act as a forum for safe expression, cultural and historical understanding, communication, exploration, and imagination. Visual arts encourage critical thinking useful in subjects from math and science to language arts and geography. Many of you have seen firsthand that art nurtures creativity and supports children in developing healthy self-esteem, self-discipline, and self-motivation.

We are committed to connecting people of all ages and backgrounds through the power of visual arts. Yet, the museum cannot pursue this critical work alone; TAM needs the power of the community behind it. Please raise your paddles high tonight to ensure that TAM can continue to design innovative teaching programs and advocate for the practice of free thinking and creativity within our community. Raise the Paddle Support Levels

$20,000 Funds five free community festivals including performances and supplies

$10,000 Funds an entire year of community outreach to one Boys and Girls Club

$5,000 Supports steeply discounted admission for 385 EBT card holders and increases arts access to TAM’s economically diverse community

$2,500 Supports bus stipends for six schools, making a museum visit possible for up to 540 school children

$1,000 Funds supplies for Youth Connect, an intensive month-long internship program developed in partnership with Tacoma School of the Arts (SOTA) that provides free art education for 150 elementary students.

$500 Funds one Workshop for Educators

$250 Funds transportation for one class field trip

$100 Funds supplies for a station in TAM Studio 14

Bill Schenck 14a. Deep Into the Desert, State I. 14b. Deep Into the Desert, State II. 2013, Serigraph, 33 × 19 inches.

Bill Schenck attended the Columbus College of Art from 1965 to 1967. He first came into contact with pop art when he took a spring break trip to New York in 1966 and joined Andy Warhol’s Factory crowd. After his return to Columbus, Schenck transferred to the Kansas City Art Institute, finding it a better fit for his unconventional style. He earned a BFA in 1969 and began making photorealist works with a pop aesthetic using film stills from western b-movies. Schenck gained recognition with these works, which connect the world of pop art with the myth of the West. He spearheaded a “pop western” sub-genre and strives to continually challenge myths and preconceptions about the American West in his work.

Schenck lives and works at his home, the Double Standard Ranch, outside Santa Fe. When he is not painting he competes as a rodeo rider in ranch sporting events under the name Billy Famous.

Donor: Bill Schenck Value: $1,600 15

Christopher Hoppin Dragon Fly, 2015. Stoneware and laser cut wings, 6 × 4½ × 1 feet.

A beloved Northwest artist, Hoppin has shared his exuberant sculpture throughout the Puget Sound region. His works are in a number of collections, including the White House, Montana State University, and Rotarua Museum of Art in New Zealand. Hoppin’s work captures his whimsy, love of color, and “don’t take yourself so seriously” attitude.

As an artist and teacher, Hoppin develops his witty visual commentary with the help of his brilliant wife, imaginative students, and the stunning environment of the Puget Sound.

This one of a kind sculpture was hand carved and finished by Hoppin.

Donor: Christopher Hoppin Value: $5,000 16

Progressive Dinner

You and seven special guests will be treated royally in a night to remember! Start off with bubbles, spirits, and hors d’oeurves hosted by Clara Ladd and David Graves. They will have you relaxed and ready to sail on the Tucci’s luxurious Gravelly Lake party barge as you make your way to the enchanting home of Kathy McGoldrick, where an enticing and delectable dinner awaits. After dinner embark on a scenic tour of the lake accompanied by a final dessert course. This fabulous, timeless way to spend an evening is made new again, by land and by sea! Ahoy, and bottoms up!

Specifications: For up to Eight (8) Guests. Date: Saturday, August, 6th, 2016

Donor: Clara Ladd and David Graves, Kathy McGoldrick, Tim and Barbara Tucci

Value: Priceless 17

Jeremy Mangan Alpine Scene, 2012. Oil and acrylic on panel, 9 × 12 inches.

Jeremy Mangan received a MFA in painting in 2005 from Hunter College, New York, as a Jacob Javits Fellow. He has received numerous awards, grants, and fellowships, including a Fulbright Fellowship, Artist Trust Fellowship, Artist Trust Grant for Artist Projects, and the Foundation of Art Award from the Greater Tacoma Community Foundation. His work was featured in TAM’s 10th NW Biennial exhibition. Mangan is represented by J GO Gallery in Park City, Utah. He lives and works in Tacoma, Washington.

“My paintings operate in a landscape where myth must contain fact, where promise and beauty continually grapple with melancholy and isolation. Strongly influenced by my native Pacific Northwest, as well as the American West in general, I aim to capture moments of a story of motivations and activities, always in tension: strange yet familiar, haunting yet beautiful, mournful yet celebratory.”

Donor: Jeremy Mangan Value: $950

LET’S Presents Circle, 2015. Video and sound installation, dimensions variable.

LET’S is a Seattle-based art collective made up of Andy Arkley, Courtney Barnebey, and Peter Lynch. LET’S has been collaborating for over 10 years on musical projects, performances, animations, and interactive light and sound sculptures. Their work has been seen at SOIL Gallery, Bumbershoot, The Hedreen Gallery, Seattle Art Museum, and Gallery4Culture. David Nelson #1, #2, #3, 2015. EMT conduit, fluorescent tube, wire, 77 × 26 × 37 inches.

Originally from Dallas, Nelson is an emerging contemporary artist living and working in Seattle. He received a BA from Cornish College of the Arts in 2015 where he focused on sculpture and design. Nelson’s practice engages with abstract thinking to extract ideas and information by reflecting on experiences. This prompts questions about our surroundings and the dynamics of those interactions. These concepts of thought are explored through the use of common materials, systems, and formal aesthetics to create sculptures, objects and installation.

Nelson’s material choices, in addition to the combination of conceptual and formal principles, lends the work to not discriminate against the viewer’s knowledge of art but rather accepting their experience and thoughts in the conversation that’s generated. Nelson’s belief is that the value of art is to engage you in meaningful thought. Mandy Greer Honey Moon, Silver Lake, 2015. Fabric, keys, chains, bells, buttons, and brooches, dimensions variable.

Greer is a Seattle-based multi-disciplinary artist who creates heightened narrative space through fiber-based installation, photography, performance, and film. In 2011, she was awarded the prestigious Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award; and completed an installation at Centro di Cultura Contemporanea at Palazzo Strozzi in Florence, Italy, for the exhibition “American Dreamers”.

She has been awarded 4Culture Individual artist grants, City Artist grants, and Artist Trust GAP grants, as well as an Artist Trust Fellowship. In 2012, she was awarded the Arts Innovator Award from Artists Trust/The Dale and Leslie Chihuly Foundation. In the Northwest, she has shown at tye , Bellevue Art Museum, Tacoma Art Museum, , Seattle Art Museum, and Roq la Rue Gallery. Nationally, she has shown at Bucheon Gallery and The Lab Contemporary Art Center in San Francisco, Tampa Museum of Art, Museum of Contemporary Craft in Portland, and Aqua Art Miami. Joey Veltkamp TAM Rainbow Party, 2014–2015. Fabric, batting, and thread, 132 × 60 inches.

Veltkamp is a queer folk artist based out of Seattle. His soft paintings (flags, blankets, banners) are meant to provide comfort to the marginalized. He is overly fond of rainbows and bourbon.

His work has been shown at Tacoma Art Museum, Frye Art Museum, Henry Art Gallery, Greg Kucera Gallery, SOIL Gallery, and many more. Seattle Art Museum recently acquired his quilt, Glacier. Tyna Ontko Lit from Underneath, 2015. Stone lithography, cut paper sculpture, and frottage, dimensions vary.

Characterized by the act of privately gathering disparate objects and congealing them into singular forms, Ontko’s work mines a landscape for sloughed off materials, and reinvigorates them through story and metaphor, using a combination of traditional and contemporary mediums. The finished works exist simultaneously as a utilitarian object, an image, and an idiosyncratic form, ultimately proposing questions of individual perception, and categorization.

Ontko was raised in Bremerton, WA, known as the home of Bangor Naval Base and the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. Ship building business booms during war time and suffers economic hardship during times of relative peace, the objects she makes seek ties to her homeland tradition, through a nonpartisan purpose. Ontko currently lives and works out of Portland, OR, where she is a member of Seattle Print Arts, and Print Zero Studios. Allison Hyde Ghosts, 2015. Serigraphy on chiffon, 10 × 12 × 5 feet.

Ghosts is a new installation piece inspired by Hyde’s recent travels in Europe. The deep black images of old wood floors, collapsing rock walls, and patterns of time-worn city streets float fragmented and incomplete, much like a memory, suspended on chiffon which helps to subvert their typical associations with permanence and timelessness. The prints of these scratched and aged surfaces from many places in Europe are intended to deconstruct the past, and reconstruct a visceral and emotional experience that speaks to history and preservation, memory and loss.

Hyde is an interdisciplinary artist born in Tacoma, WA. She received a BFA from Colorado State University in 2007 and MFA from the University of Oregon in 2011. Her work has been exhibited at Seacourt Center for Contemporary Printmaking in Bangor, Ireland, LeCoueNt Artist Residency in Auzits, France, Gallery 110 and Form/Space Atelier in Seattle, and Tacoma Art Museum. Nicholas Nyland Wallpaper, 2015. Created in collaboration with Julie Alexander and Matthew Offenbacher, acrylic on paper, dimensions vary.

Nyland lives and works in Tacoma. He received a MFA from the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. His artwork has been included in exhibitions throughout the region including Tacoma Art Museum, Bellevue Art Museum, and Henry Art Gallery. A 2012 solo exhibition at Prole Drift, Seattle was reviewed in Art in America magazine. Recent public projects include temporary works for the Seattle Art Museum , and ALL RISE, Seattle. Nyland received an Artist Trust Fellowship in 2008 and was a finalist for the 2013 Contemporary Northwest Art Award.

A Big ACT—A Contemporary LeMay—America’s Car Theatre Museum THANK YOU Amy Reeves Libertine Tacoma Anna Skibska Lisa Kinoshita to our Argosy Cruises Lisa Telford Authentic Materials Mary Cov Block Wonderful Barre253 Michael Brophy Beautiful Angle Michelle Lenáe Donors: Brian Murphy Micki Lippe Broadway Center for the Natasha Alphonse Performing Arts Nicholas Nyland Cary Lane Olympic Eagle Distributing Cascade Eye and Skin Cen- Pacific Bonsai Museum ters, P.C Pam Mayer, Natalie Mayer, Chad Gunderson Joe & Gloria Mayer Chambers Bay Golf Course Preston Singletary Chandler O’Leary Provenance Hotels Chateau Ste. Michelle Pure Luxe Apothecary Chihuly Garden and Glass Ryan Molenkamp Chihuly Studios Salish Sea Organic Liqueurs Children’s Museum of Tacoma Satori Boutique Chris Leavitt Photography Seattle International Film Christopher Hoppin Festival Chyrum Lambert Seattle Mariners Clara Ladd Seattle Repertory Theatre Claudia Riedener Sheraton Seattle Hotel Connie Winberry Source Yoga Curtright and Son Tribal Art Susan Russell Hall Danielle Dunlap Susan Thompson David Graves Tacoma Dome Dorothy Cheng Tacoma Glass Blowing Studio Eat Local Tacoma Laser Clinic Elise Richman Tacoma Rainiers Professional Emerald City Trapeze Arts Baseball Eric Carle Studio Teatro ZinZanni Four Foot Photography Tesla Motors George Pilant and Helen The Grand Cinema McGovern Pilant The Haub Family Greg Kucera and Larry Yocom The Ice Cream Social Greg Kucera Gallery The Pacific Jazz Institute Heritage Distilling Company Tim and Barbara Tucci Janet Marcavage TMN Creative Jeff Williams and Mark Pinto Tom Douglas Restaurants Jenny Pohlman and Sabrina University of Washington Knowles Victoria Adams Jeremy Mangan Watson’s Greenhouse and Kathy McGoldrick Nursery Kristin Giordano Woodland Park Zoo KV Apothecary Year Round Co. Laura Russo Gallery