188th Annual Report for the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

Item

Title

188th Annual Report for the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

Identifier

1993-1994-AR.pdf

Date

1993

Creator

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

Subject

annual report
finance report
school report
exhibition
history

Publisher

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts' Dorothy and Kenneth Woodcock Archives

Medium

paper

Format

PDF

Source

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts' Dorothy and Kenneth Woodcock Archives

Language

eng

Rights

Digitized archival materials are accessible for purposes of education and research. We have indicated what we know about copyright and rights of privacy, publicity, or trademark. Due to the nature of archival collections, we are not always able to identify this information. We are eager to hear from any rights owners, so that we may obtain accurate information. Upon request, we will remove material from public view while we address a rights issue.

extracted text

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

~NNUAL lJ\.EPORT
AUGUST 1, 1993-JULY 31, 1994

Camac and Summer Streets
Andrew Goodfellow
Oil on paper, 19" x 24"
Private collection
Certificate Program

2

.Jl New Beginning

Gresham Riley
President
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
Photograph: John Morgan

1994 was a year of transition, repositioning, and accomplishment
for the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
The major transitions occurred in leadership positions
with Chuck Andes assuming the chairmanship of the Board of
Trustees in January 1994 and my becoming president of the
Academy the same month. Indeed, my decision to accept the presidency was
based in large measure on the opportunity to work with Chuck. As many
Philadelphians know, Chuck Andes has been an influential participant in the
city's cultural life for many years; and we are fortunate indeed to have his
creative talents devoted to the Academy's cause.
Signs of repositioning were most evident on the Museum side of the Academy.
First, we embraced the name Museum ofAmerican Art for our permanent collection in order to communicate more clearly to our many publics the precise nature
of who we are. Second, we closed the Museum for six months, beginning June
1994, to undertake a major $3.5 million renovation and reinstallation project. In
addition to refurbishing our historic, 1876 Frank Furness architectural jewel, we
reopened the Museum with a more clearly focused educational mission for both
our collection and the programs we shall be offering to the public.
We are also proud of the accomplishments of this past year. It began with
the nationally acclaimed Horace Pippin retrospective, the most successful
exposition at the Academy since the Red Grooms show. For the second year in a
row we operated with a balanced budget, made possible by uncommon generosity
on the part of Board members, foundations, corporations, government agencies,
and friends. Mention has already been made of the successful renovation of the
Museum and reinstallation of our permanent collection, with more than 3,500
people attending our gala reopening weekend in early December 1994. And finally,
the Academy School continued its tradition of graduating the next generation of
the country's most creative young artists. The Annual Student Exhibition and
Graduate Thesis Exhibition in May 1994 was once again quite extraordinary.
The Academy is close to entering its third century of service to the city, the
region, and the nation. We are proud of our tradition and what we have contributed to the cultural life of American society. As we enter our third century of
service, we shall do so as a more unified School and Museum because we believe
that we are unique among fine arts institutions in the country. For this reason we
can playa major role in determining how art shapes our values and our society in
the 21st Century.
I ask all our friends and supporters to join us in this worthwhile endeavor.

January 24, 1995

3

Giant
Hale Allen
Oil on canvas, 36" x 40"
MFA Program

4

The Master ofFine Arts Degree Program

After 186 years, the Academy has added a Master of Fine Arts
Degree Program to its academic repertoire. Why? The answer to the
question was provided by President Thomas Jefferson in 1803 when
he urged our founder Charles Willson Peale and his contemporaries
to undertake the development of the Pennsylvania Academy to
"assist the studies and excite the efforts of artists to gradually unfold, enlighten and
invigorate the talents of our countrymen."
The formal educational components of the Pennsylvania Academy have
changed since then, but the needs of our students have remained the same-to get
the best education, training and initiation into the world of the visual fine arts as
possible. If there had been such a thing as a Master of Fine Arts degree in 1805,
then the Academy would have been granting one since our founding.
Today, practicing the fme arts is accepted as a valid and respected professional
career choice. The professional fine arts have also become a highly competitive field
that demands not only creativity, but a wide understanding of art history, technique, and the artist's own creative philosophy.
As a result, in the world of the 1990's the choice of fine arts as an advanced
education and career path requires the same amount of discipline and study as any
other higher educational program. If a student wants to develop successfully his or
her talent to practice art for a living, or to join the world of art as a teacher, or to do
a combination of both, formal study has become a necessity. For art students to
succeed in art-related careers, an M.F.A. degree is as important to them as an
M.B.A. is to a business major. Realizing this, it became clear that to serve the needs
of our students we had to implement a graduate program, which we did in 1991,
conferring the first Master of Fine Arts degrees in 1993.
We are especially proud of the fact that our Master of Fine Arts Program is
distinctive among fine arts institutions. In keeping with our reputation as one of
the top fine arts schools in the world, we set out to develop a Master's Program that
would lead, not follow, in the educational field.
The Academy's reputation has been built on an approach that stresses proficiency in the fundamentals of drawing and figurative study as the foundation for
individual creative growth and development. Combined with "hands on" instruction and studio work, our students are afforded a personal and individualized
educational experience. In structuring our M.F.A. Program we sought to carry
forward the classic, yet customized, educational approach of our undergraduate
philosophy.
Thus our Master's Program uses the same hallmark master/apprentice
tradition between student and teacher. In developing the program we strove to
furnish the formal structure and curriculum required of a master's degree without
impinging on freedom of artistic expression.
The result is a distinctive two-year Master of Fine Arts Program, requiring 60
graduate-level credits of formal study with research, studio work, critiques, courses
in aesthetics, criticism and a written thesis supporting a presentation of the
candidate's artwork.

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But the curriculum and degree requirements don't reveal the elements of the
program that make our educational approach distinctive.
The essence of our Master's Program is its simplicity: mastery of the fundamentals of drawing and the systematic study of form and content; the professional
profile of our faculty and visiting artists; and the personal learning approach
afforded the student.
Life drawing and figurative study, a basic course requirement, has been in and
out of vogue in art schools over the years. For all of its 200-year history the
Academy has adhered to the principle that a solid grasp of the fundamentals is
essential to fully developing an artist's potential. Now, with schools such as the new
Graduate School of Figurative Art of the New York Academy "discovering" what we
have known all along, study of these fundamentals is making a reappearance in
course study requirements around the nation.
In every endeavor people make the real difference. The Academy's faculty
and visiting artists are not only experienced teachers in the fine arts, they are
leaders in the contemporary art world with established reputations. They
exhibit nationally and internationally and are included in the most prestigious
public and private collections.
Together, the faculty creates a dynamic that provides students with
exceptional opportunities for study, critique, and the exchange of ideas.
Headed by Michael G. Moore, director of Graduate Programs with over 25
years of academic experience in the fine arts, the faculty and visiting artists
bring expertise in each field of concentration as well as broad knowledge of
the real world of the fine arts beyond schooling.
More than teachers or instructors, they are a resource for the students.
Mary Frank is noted for her figurative terra cotta sculptures; Peter Paone is
nationally and internationally recognized for his paintings, prints and sculpture; Irving Petlin, who commutes monthly from Paris to serve as a visiting
artist critic, is world-renowned for his narrative figurative paintings; Bruce
Samuelson is a prolific abstract figurative painter-and graduate of the
Pennsylvania Academy; Anthony Visco is noted for his figurative sculptures
expressing pathos, spirituality and finesse in two-and three-dimensional
works; Jan Baltzell is a highly successful abstract artist whose works are prized
in many corporate collections; Sidney Goodman's paintings of dramatic
realism will be honored next year with a major exhibition; and Yvonne
Jacquette, a visiting artist critic, is well known and respected for her aerial
landscape and cityscape paintings and woodcuts.
The final element of our distinctive approach is the individual focus on
each student. Every student chooses a concentration in painting, sculpture or
printmaking. Each is provided with his or her own studio space, creating an
environment for the artist to work with privacy while providing access to
instructors and their fellow students for advice, critique and assistance. Within
this structure students are able to work and pursue their own personal vision

Flagrant Flyer Unit
Tori Scott
Oil on convas, 25" x 31 "
Private collection
MFA Program

and to explore new terrains while being guided to perfect the basics of their
chosen field of concentration.
The learning atmosphere is deliberately geared to foster individual
creativity. Students are able to bring to their education their own artistic
structure, providing individual energy, points of view and goals for their work.
No ideal is ever imposed, and the process is one of constant give and take,
spurring intellectual growth and expanding creative ability.
Within the Academy's M.F.A. classes are the Peales, Eakins, Calders,
Cassatts and Wyeths of tomorrow, honing their talent with an appetite for
knowledge and understanding of the creative urge within, while perfecting the
fundamentals of their art. These advanced students will themselves become
part of our tradition just as their undergraduate predecessors have done over
the last two centuries-contributing to American art and the Academy
through their talent, vision and achievement.

Devil's Workshop (Rubber Ducky)
David Gerger
Oil an canvas, 34" x 34"
MFA Program

7

Untitled (Red Collage with Music and Crayon Lines)

B

Robert Motherwell
Acrylic, collage with music sheet,
and crayon on canvas, 1987
John Lambert Fund and
Gift of the Dedalus Foundation

.7lcquisitions

The permanent collection of the Pennsylvania Academy is
actually the oldest collection of contemporary art in Americabegun in 1805!
When you begin to think of the collection in these terms,
suddenly it takes on a whole new meaning and the works themselves have a much different impact. That's exactly why, as part of the recently
completed $3.5 million Museum renovation, we have renamed our Museum the
"Museum of American Art" and reinstalled the collection in a chronological
order-giving the visitor a tour of the history of American art as they contemplate
the works on display.
In an historical sense the Pennsylvania Academy has always been on the
leading edge of American art. As the founding home of the American School under
Charles Willson Peale and his contemporaries, the Academy was the avant-garde
art institution of its day. The collection, which fostered the nation's first museum of
art, was the MOMA collection of its time. The only thing that has changed since
our founding 190 years ago has been the tastes of the times reflected in the art of
our collection.
Compiling a collection, or "accessioning" as it is known in museum circles, is
very much an art within the arts. In the case of the Museum of American Art, it
calls for a deep understanding of American art history and the Academy's unique
place in its evolution. It also calls for a thorough knowledge of the permanent
collection-identifying where there may be gaps in periods, artists or movements
and then developing a careful plan of acquisition to fill them.
But historic accessioning is only one part of our responsibility as keepers of
our artistic heritage. As at our founding, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
is a chronicler of our times. That means that in accessioning contemporary works
we must have the ability to recognize emerging trends and, in a way, anticipate
greatness to keep the collection "alive" and relevant. It also means that in
accessioning we bear the responsibility to the times and the future in the form of
the imprimatur that incorporation of an artist's works into the nation's oldest
collection carries.
Many of what are now considered "classic works" on display and in the vaults
of the Pennsylvania Academy were acquired as contemporary works of their day.
Much of the art in the collection, from the Peales of the 1800's, to Eakins, Cassatt,
O'Keeffe, The Ten, and the Ash Can School, was acquired by the Academy as
contemporary pieces. The role of Pennsylvania Academy in American art history is
also a factor in our approach to accessioning works for the collection. In this regard
we are more than a School and Museum, we are a part of the force that helped
shape and continues to have an influence on American art itself.
The Museum of American Art actually gave rise to the Modernist movement
in America with its ground-breaking 1921 show "Exhibition of Paintings and
Drawings Showing the Later Tendencies in Art." It was the first comprehensive
exhibition of American Modernists to be given a museum presentation. This event
is reflected in our own acquisitions from that period and the resulting acquisition

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of great American Modernists by Dr. Albert C. Barnes, who purchased eight works
from the show for his own now famous collection. Our focus today has not
changed. As with Peale, our mission remains to collect and display works of
American art for the education and enjoyment of the public. In terms of our
accessioning policy, this mission charges us with collecting contemporary works
and augmenting the historic collection with works of importance that fill gaps,
round out an artist's representation, or add to the scholarly value of the collection.
There are two recent cases that demonstrate the art, and luck, in accessioning:
our partial purchase, partial gift acquisition of the Robert Motherwell collection
and the receipt of the sketch books and loose drawings of famed Ash Can artist
William Glackens.
In the case of Motherwell, the Academy recognized the need to augment the
collection in the area of Abstract Expressionism. Fortunately, Motherwell had a
long and close relationship with the Academy, which meant that the acquisition
would not only fill a gap with works by one of the movement's leading artists, but
would also strengthen an historic link with our institutional past.
Motherwell had exhibited in the Academy's famed Annual Exhibition for three
decades beginning in 1946 and had been the recipient of the Academy's prestigious
Gold Medal of Honor in 1979. Before his death in 1991, Motherwell established the
Dedalus Foundation to serve as an archive and to place works from his estate into
suitable museums. Shortly after his death, the Museum of American Art, with the
support of the Academy Board of Trustees, approached the Foundation to express
interest in acquiring some works to complement the collection and present the
historic ties of the artist and the Academy.
Based on careful planning and study in seeking to make this important
acquisition, the Museum of American Art became one of about ten museums
worldwide to receive works from the estate-accessioning 43 works on paper and
giving the Academy one of the finest collections of Motherwell's graphics in the
world. As a result of the acquisition, the Pennsylvania Academy is now a regional
scholarly center for the study of Motherwell's graphics.
In the case of William Glackens, timing, history and luck all came into play.
The famed Ash Can artist had been a student at the Academy School and had
frequently exhibited in the Annual Exhibition. The Sansom Foundation, administering Glackens' estate, contacted the Museum to say that they had identified a
1935 study for the artist's famed "The Soda Fountain;' which had been exhibited by
the artist in the 1936 Annual Exhibition and which had later been purchased by the
Academy. Realizing the importance of acquiring the study, the Museum responded
with great interest and excitement. Acknowledging Glackens' ties to the Academy,
the Foundation also offered to present the Museum with two of the artist's sketch
books. The promised two books turned out to be twelve intact (a rare event) books
and were accompanied by nineteen loose drawings!
Accessioning is not as easy a task as these two cases seem to suggestthere was plenty of research, study, investigation and negotiation in both of

Emigrant Train Fording Medicine
Bow Creek
Samuel Colman
Oil on canvas, 1 870
Henry C. Gibson Fund

these examples. It also has a very pragmatic side, which calls for business and
negotiating savvy, a keen eye for new talent and; as with Glackens, a little good
luck now and then.
Though we call the result of accessioning a "collection;' accessioning is not the
same as collecting in a familiar sense. If it were, we would need a storehouse the
size of the Navy Yard to house and care for the volume of works we could have
"collected" over the past 190 years. Accessioning is a very selective process which
calls for a philosophy, advanced planning, and considerable funding. It is the task
of the director of the Museum and the curator of collections to develop a detailed
plan for accessioning which then is approved by the Board of Trustees.
In the planning process the needs of the collection are regularly reviewed and
budgets established for specific purchases. Within this planning, the director and
the curator establish a target program of artists and/or works to be acquired. On
occasion, such as with the Glackens' books and drawings, the Museum is presented
with proposals for works to be incorporated into the permanent collection. In such
cases, the director and the curator also have to consider as qualifications the work's
aesthetic quality, its historic significance, its stylistic relationship to the artist's
other works, and its relevance to the needs of the collection as identified in the
accessioning plan. If the fit is there, the purchase proposal is then presented to the
Museum Committee of the Board for approval.
The Museum of American Art of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts is
both a shrine to the creativity of the American artist and a forum for the presentation and debate that fosters the creative process. On your next visit to the Museum,
take a moment to read the supporting labels by each work-when it was produced
and when it was acquired by the Museum. See for yourself the story behind the
story, the oldest collection of contemporary art in America.

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Cj{ecent Acquisitions

Jack Levine

Edna Andrade

Dynamite
1976
Acrylic on canvas
Gift of Donna Turner Petersen and
Robert E.A. Petersen, 1994.3
March Avery

Summer at New Beach
1965
Oil on canvas
Gift of Elizabeth Greenfield Zeidman,
1993.3.2
Bo Bartlett

Tender
1993
Oil on canvas
Gift of Anonymous Donors, 1993.4
Anda Dubinskis

Naiad with Tragic Mask

1967
Soft ground etchings on hand-made
BFK Rives paper
Gift of Elizabeth Greenfield Zeidman,
1993.3.3a-c

ca. 1920
Painted plaster
Gift of Collectors' Circle, 1993.6

JodyPinto

Raw Mountain
1977
Watercolor, gouache and graphite
on paper
Gift of Elizabeth Greenfield Zeidman,
1993.3.1
Katherine Porter

Untitled
1982
Oil on rag paper
Gift of Renee and David McKee,
1993.5

William Glackens

Study for "The Soda Fountain"
1935
Oil on board
Gift of the Sansom Foundation,
1994.7
Alex Katz

Art School
1952
Oil on board
Gift of the Artist, 1994.8
Albert Laessle
12

Embracing Figures
1899
Plaster model with colored surface
Gift of Janis Conner and
Joel Rosenkranz,
1994.5

Samuel Colman

Emigrant Train Fording Medicine
Bow Creek
1870
Oil on canvas
Henry C. Gibson Fund, 1994.2
Frank Hyder

Shaman Memento series
1992-93
Oil and acrylic on wood and plexiglass
Purchased with funds provided by
Dr. Stephen P. Silverstein, Dr. Elliott
Schulman, and the More Gallery,
1993.2a-c
Bruce Samuelson

James Abbott McNeill Whistler

Untitled

The Traghetto, No.2

Pastel and charcoal on paper
Pennsylvania Academy Purchase
Prize from the 96th Annual Fellowship
Exhibition, 1994.1

1880
Proof etching, sixth state
Gift of Ann Stokes, 1994.4

Barbeque
1985
Oil on panel
Gift of Dr. Stephen D. Silberstein,
1993.1

Alexander Stirling Calder

The "Dreigroschenfilm" Suite

Tender
Bo Bartlett

Oil on canvas, 1993
Gift of Anonymous Donors

Robert Motherwell
Samurai #2
1974
Acrylic on board
Untitled (Pink Figure)
1950
Oil and crayon on paper
Sepia and Black Ink (Automatism Series)
1958
Sepia and black ink on paper
Untitled (Black Elegy)
1960
Acrylic on paper
Ly ric Suite
1965
Black ink with orange halo and blue
ink on rice paper
Ly ric Suite
1965
Black ink with green halo, royal blue
and blue ink on rice paper
Lyric Suite
1965
Blue and green ink on rice paper
Lyric Suite
1965
Black ink with orange halo and royal
blue ink on rice paper
Lyric Suite
1965
Black ink on rice paper
Lyric Suite
1965
Green and blue ink on rice paper
Lyric Suite
1965
Black and dark blue ink on rice paper
Ly ric Suite
1965
Red and blue ink on rice paper
Untitled (Red Collage with Music
and Crayon Lines)
1987
Acrylic, collage with music sheet and
crayon on canvas
The Letter
1990
Collage, acrylic and envelope on
canvas panel

Untitled
1966
Etching

Put Out All Flags
1979-80
Aquatint and etching

Window
1973
Lithograph

The Black Wall
1980-81
Etching and aquatint

Bastos
1974-75
Lithograph

Beige Open
1981
Etching

The Wave
1974-78
Etching

Gray Open with White Paint
1981
Etching

Djarum
1975
Lithograph, silkscreen
and hand-painted ink

Running Elegy
1982
Etching and aquatint

Untitled
1975
Aquatint and etching
Red Sea I
1976
Aquatint and etching
Gesture III
1976-77
Aquatint and etching
Gesture N (State II)
1976-77
Aquatint and etching
Elegy Sketch
1977
Lithograph
Dance III
1978
Etching and aquatint
Samurai II
1979-80
Lithograph
Rite of Passage I
1979-80
Lithograph
Rite of Passage II
1979-80
Lithograph
Rite of Passage III
1979-80
Lithograph

Black Mountain (State I)
1980-83
Aquatint and etching
Black Mountain (State II - Red)
1982-83
Aquatint and etching
Running Elegy II, Red State
1983
Etching and aquatint
America - La France Variations II
1983-84
Lithograph
The Persian II
1984-85
Aquatint and etching
Redness of Red
1984-85
Silkscreen, lithograph and collage
The Green Studio
1985
Aquatint and etching
Blue Elegy
1987
Relief and lithograph
Barcelona Elegy for the Spanish
Republic
1991
Print

John Lambert Fund and Gift of the
Dedalus Foundation, 1994.6.1-36

13

Hannah in a Landscape
Alex Kanevsky
Oil on masonite, 26" x 30"
Private collection
Certificate Program

14

Publications

Exhibitions and Traveling Exhibitions

Lanny Bergner/Frank Galuszka
June 10 through August 29,1993
Howard Brunner/Ron Klein
September 10 through October 24,1993

I Tell My Heart: The Art of Horace Pippin
Judith E. Stein. Published in association
with Universe Books, 1993.
Cool Waves and Hot Blocks: The Art of
Edna Andrade with an essay by Ann
Sutherland Harris. Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts, 1993.

"Photographic Highjinks at the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts"
Cheryl Leibold. The Nineteenth Century,
Vol. 12, No.2, 1993.

Masterworks of American Art: 1720 1993
June 12,1993 through June 1,1994
Nature's Way: 19th-Century Paintings
from the Permanent Collection
June 12,1993 through January 2,1994
Carved in Wood and Stone: 20thCentury Sculpture
June 19,1993 through January 2,1994
Contemporary Art from the Permanent
Collection
June 26 through August 1993
Cool Waves and Hot Blocks: The Art of
Edna Andrade
September 17, 1993 through January 31,
1994
Substracting the Surface: The Art of
Printmaking
September 22, 1993 through January 2,
1994
Jill Bonovitz and Bhakti Ziek
November 2, 1993 through January 23,
1994
Nannette Clark/Scott Rothstein
February 4 through April 24, 1994
I Tell My Heart: The Art of Horace
Pippin
January 21 through April 17, 1994

Frank Furness and Cultural Reform
April 22 through June 1, 1994

Traveling exhibitions
Facing the Past: 19th-Century Portraits
from the Collection of the Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts
Through April 11, 1993
Traveled To:
Museum of Arts and Sciences, Macon,
Georgia
September 18 through November 13,1993

Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, Nebraska
December 11, 1993 through January 30,
1994
Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach,
Florida
March 5 through April 30, 1994
The Frick Art Museum, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania
May 28 through July 23, 1994

Telling Tales: 19th-Century Narrative
Painting from the Collection of the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
June 13, 1991 through April 19, 1992
Traveled to:
Equitable Gallery, New York
September 17 through December 6, 1992
Greenville County Museum of Art,
Greenville, South Carolina
January 5 through February 28,1993
The Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, Virginia
March 13 through May 8, 1993
Williamson Gallery of Art, Pasadena,
California
June 20 through August 15,1993
Wichita Art Museum, Wichita, Kansas
September 12 through November 7,1993
Dixon Gallery and Gardens, Memphis,
Tennessee
December 5, 1993 through January 30,
1994

I Tell My Heart: The Art of Horace
Pippin
January 21 through April 17, 1994

Traveled to:
Art Institute of Chicago
April 30 through July 10, 1994
Cincinnati Art Museum
July 31 through October 9, 1994
Baltimore Museum of Art
October 26 through December 31,1994
Metropolitan Museum of Art
February 1 through April 30, 1995

15

.71nnual Giving

'President's Council
($10,000 or more)
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Andes
Hon . and Mrs. Walter H. Annenberg
Mr. and Mrs. C. Graham Berwind, Jr.
The Cook Family
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin F. Donohoe
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Ginsburg
Estate of Gertrude Feldman Goodman
Estate of Robert McCay Green
Dr.' and Mrs. F. Otto Haas
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. V. Hamilton
Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard 1. Korman
Mr.' and Mrs. John W. Merriam
Mr. and Mrs. Bertram L. O'Neill
Mr. and Mrs. Meyer P. Potamkin
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert S. Riband, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Ross
Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. Schaeffer
Mr. G. Ralph Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Sorgenti
Mr. Wayne A. Stork
Mr. Benjamin Strauss
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley C. Tuttleman
Mr. and Mrs. Archbold D. van Beuren
Mr. and Mrs. J. Roffe Wike II
Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Worley

'Thomas Eakins Society
($5,000 - $9,999 )
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Bartlett
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Silberstein
Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence E. Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Wilder

Vean's Circle

16

($2,500 - $4,999)
Peter A. and Felicity R. Benoliel
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Allen J. Model
Ms. Barbara Schaff
Mr. Robert Sentz
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard A. Sylk

:Mary Cassatt Associates
($1,000 - $2,499)
Mr. Stewart R. Cades
Mrs. Elliott R. Detchon
Fellowship of the Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts
Mr. Albion J. Fenderson
Mr. Roger Geier

Mrs . Robert A. Hauslohner
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson J. Leidner
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Locke
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Mather III
Scott and Sandra Phillips
Eileen Y. Rosenau
Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Schulman
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Wolf

'Friends
($100 - $999)
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Alexander
Mrs. John G. Bartol
Mrs. Charles Becker, Jr.
Mrs. Mary Jane Bension
Dr. Harriet Berger
Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Binswanger, Jr.
Mrs. Alfred E. Bissell
Mrs . Morris Blackburn
Mr. John W. Blatteau
Mr. Peter Borie
Mrs. Michal W. Bristol
Mrs. Rebecca Bunkin
Mrs . Pearl M. Carpel
Mrs . Maurice L. Clancy
Mr. Edward B. Clay
Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Cohen
Ms. Florence Tyson Cohen
Ms. Kara Louise Coleman
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Demchick
Mrs. C. Paul Denckla
Mrs. Christine L. Drake
Mrs. Edward L. Duer
Mrs. Alice B. Duffy
Mr. John Ward Ewan
Louis S. Fine, Esq.
Ms. Nancy Flynn
Mrs. Joan Butler Ford
Friends of the Barnes Foundation
Friends of The Pennsylvania Historical
and Museum Commission
Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Goodyear, Jr.
Mr. Francis J. Grey
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Guggenheim
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Haas
John and Irene Hempstead
Mrs. J. H. Ward Hinkson
Mrs. Henry Lea Hudson
Mr. and Mrs . Orton P. Jackson
Mrs. Lawrence Katz
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Kopple
Mr. Kenneth S. Kuchin
Dr. and Mrs. Marc S. Lapayowker
Ms. Frances Reiner Lax
Mr. and Mrs. Anany Levitin
Marian and Jerry Locks
Mr. Robert W. Loder
Mrs. Jeanne MacAlpine
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Mangel
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm A. Margolies
Mr. George H. Mayer

Mr. and Mrs. Alan McIlvain
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Murphy, Jr.
Mr. James P. O'Brien
Mrs. Judith R. Obbard
Mrs. Eugene Ormandy
Mr. William H. Osborne III
Mr. and Mrs . Peter Paone
Mrs. Otto J. Patzau
Mr. and Mrs. J. Liddon Pennock
Ms. Dorothea Pinto
Mrs. Robert S. Pitcairn
Mr. Kalman Radin
Mr. Frederick H. Remington
Dr. and Mrs. Murray A. Ringold
Mrs . Stephen A. Ritt
Dr. and Mrs. Harold J. Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Rosenthal
Mr. Nathan Rubinson
Dr. and Mrs. George Ruff
Mr. and Mrs . James A. Schnaars
Mr. Robert H. Scholl
Mrs. Irene Schrank-Shuman
Mr. and Mrs. V. Richard Sheridan
Mr. Martin P. Snyder
Miss Karen Spiro
Mrs. Edgar R. Stephens
Mr. G. Stockton Strawbridge
Mrs. Charles Tabas
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Talucci
Dr. and Mrs. J. Edward Taylor
Mr. S. Robert Teitelman
Mrs. Robert S. Thanhauser
Dr. and Mrs. Gordon L. Tobias
Mr. Robert Venturi, Jr.
Ms. Mary H. Vilwock
Mr. and Mrs. Warren H. Watanabe
Dr. and Mrs. George D. Webster
Mr. and Mrs. Roswell Weidner
Hon. and Mrs. Charles R. Weiner
Mr. Richard B. Welsh, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Linton A. Whitaker
Mrs. Fred Wolf, Jr.
Bertram and Lode Wolfson
Mr. Paul A. Wolkin

'Friends
(Gifts to $99)
Mrs. Joyce Adelman
Mr. George C. Alburger
Mrs. David W. Allen
Mrs. Eileen M. Baird
Mr. Julius S. Baum
Dr. and Mrs. Aydin Z. Bill
Mrs . Lem W. Bowen
Mrs. Marietta P. Boyer
Mr. Sol Brodsky
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Broker
Ms. Patricia L. Brubaker
Dr. William P. Camp
Dr. and Mrs. Leon Cander
Ms. Olive Carland

Ms. Janice Cederbaum
Mr. and Mrs . Irving Chaykin
Dr. and Mrs. Norman N. Cohen
Elliott and Barbara Coleman
Ms. Rita Conyers
Dr. Barry R. Cooper
Dr. and Mrs. Constantin Cope
Mrs. C. Daniel Coppes
Mr. and Mrs. Robert 1. Corbin
Mrs. Jacqueline S. Cotter
Dr. and Mrs. John 1. Cotter
Fred and Edna Creamer
Ms. Bettina Dearborn
Ms. Marie M. deBenneville
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dunitz
Mr. James E. Dyer, Jr.
Mr. Walter Edmonds
Ms. Bette A. Esposito
Dr. and Mrs. Howard E. First
Ms. Miriam Franklin
Ms. Miriam Kellogg Fredenthal and
Ms. Ruth Ann Fredenthal
Mr. Landon Burns and
Mr. Russell W. Fulton, Jr.
Mrs. Carl W. Funk
Mrs . Joan D. Gilkyson
Dr. Estelle Gold-Kossman
Jane and Weston Goodnow
Ms. Ann Gradwohl
Ms. Jane Gravany
Mrs. Isabelle J. Green
Mr. and Mrs. David Greenberg
Drs. Mark and Vivian Greenberg
Mr. and Mrs. George Hammes
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Harris
Mrs. Dorothy P. Heindel
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold S. Hoffman
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Horna
Mr. and Mrs. E. Alexander Howson
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Ignarri
Hon. Babette Josephs
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Kahn
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Kalbfleisch
Mr. Courtland F. Kanzinger
Ms. Barbara F. Klein
Mr. Carlyle Klise
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Korngold
Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Kravitz
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Kuter
Don and Virginia La Rossa
Mrs. Martha Laney
Mr. Wayne D. Larabee
Mr. William J. Lee
Mrs. Stanley Lefkoe
Mr. and Mrs. Mariano Leo
Ms. Ruth Levine
Mr. J. H. Livaudais, Jr.
Mr. Bob A. London
Thomas and Joan Lynch
Dr. and Mrs. Paul Todd Makler
Mr. and Mrs . Peter Masullo

Robert and Elizabeth Mather
Mr. Paul N . McCarthy
Ms. Melinda McGough
Ms. Sandra McMullin
Ms. Esther P. Meltzer
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Merves
Ms. Theresa Meyerowitz
Mrs. Casmir Michalski
Dr. Beverly A. Mikuriya
Dr. and Mrs. Wallace T. Miller
Dr. Margaret A. Minehart
Mrs. William Molloy
Mr. Michael Moore
Mrs. G. Fairman Mullen
Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Murphy
Mr. Duane S. Myers
Mrs. Sheldon Z. Myers
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Nagy
Ms. Naomi C. Newman
Mrs. John P. Nissen, Jr.
Dr. Hugh O'Neill
Mrs. William H. Osborne, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Parella
Mr. Thomas B. Payne
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pinto
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pinto
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred C. Prime
Dr. Edward C. Raffensperger
Ms. Christine P. Reeves
Dr. Jonathan E. Rhoads
Alfred H. and Ruth Riddell
Mrs. Walter T. Roach
Mr. David B. Roberts
Ms. Jeanne Roberts
Ms. Margaret M. Roberts
Mr. Charles Robinson
Mrs. Miga S. Rogoff
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Rosati
Dr. Leonard Rosen
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Russell
Mr. Rocco E. Russo
Dr. Barbara M. Sachs
Mr. Samuel Saligman
Ms. Marillyn Beecham Schnall
Mrs. Samuel K. Schneidman
Mr. and Mrs. Hardie Scott
Mrs. Gloria Seltzer
Ms. Evelyn Shelly
Richard and JoAnn Simon
Ms. Josephine Smith
Mrs. Edmund J. Snyder
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Sorch
Mr. Boyd 1. Spahr, Jr.
Ms. Helen E. Stephens
Dr. Lester Steppacher
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Stevens
Ms . Anne E. Sumner
Miss Helen 1. Swain
Ms. Ann I. Tatman
Mr. Robert G. Taylor
Mrs. Evelyn Tecosky

Mr. and Mrs. M. Anthony Terranova
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Thompson
Ms. Jenifer Thuell
Mrs. George A. Tice
Mr. Edwin E. Tuttle
Jerome and Alice Weiland
Ms. Signe Wilkinson
Ms. Deborah H. Winant
Ms. Caroline Bertha Wittman
Ms. Edith Stead Wittman
Ms. Dorothy B. Work
Mrs. Ethel Worth
Mr. and Mrs . Ron Wyffels
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Zedaker

.J1/umni
($100 - $999)
Ms. Valla Amsterdam
Ms. Edna Andrade
Mr. Richard T. Crawford
Ms. Jeanette D. de Moll
Mr. Arthur A. DeCosta
Mr. Joseph G. Elliott
Mrs. P. F. N. Fanning
Mr. Charles J. Frith, Jr.
Ms. Deena J. Gu
Mr. Walker Hancock
Mrs. Mary Jane Walters Knox
Mr. Alphonse M. Lane
Ms. Cathy Lizzio
Mrs. Kathleen K. Lundy
Ms. Clara N. Thomas MacKannan
Ms. Sarah A. McEneaney
Mr. Dan D. Miller
Mrs. Norman Moore
Mr. John Greswold Nace
Ms. Elizabeth Osborne
Ms. Jody Pinto
Mrs. Janice Roediger
Mrs. Katharine Grove Sailer
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Sammak
Mr. Sidney Simon
Mr. Louis Sloan
Mr. Raymond M. Spiller
Mrs. Benedict Tatti
Ms. Betty Rice Titone
Mr. Robert Chapman Turner
Mr. D. Colman Witte

17

.J1/umni
(Gifts to $99)
Mrs. Sidney Bailey, Jr.
Mr. Joseph Barbieri
Sister Mary Paula Beierschrnitt
Mrs. Judith Ann F. Bell
Ms. Jean Blumberg
Mr. James J. Boyle, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Carson
Ms. Roz Chatt
Mr. Leon Cohen
Ms. Rebecca C. Cooke

18

Ms. Grace Curcio
Ms. Deborah Deichler
Mrs. Gail Della Pelle
Mr. John Devine
Ms. Helene M. Diamond
Mr. David F. Driesbach
Mr. Benjamin Eisenstat
Ms. Wendy Epstein
Ms. Sue Fischman
Ms. Barbara Fox
Mr. R. Mark Gardner
Ms . Elizabeth Garon
Ms. Bernice Gordon
Ms. June Snider Harris
Ms. Phyllis M. Hennessy
Ms. Paula Hensel
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Hessemer
Mr. Redwood Hoffman
Mr. William M. Hoffman, Jr.
Ms. Marian Holland
Ms. Cynthia D. Hyde
Mr. Homer W. Johnson
Mr. A. John Kammer
Ms. Grace G. Keast
Ms. Nina S. Klymowska
Mr. John Koomar
Mrs. John E. Kramer
Mr. Russell M. Lanzilotta
Mr. Paul J. Lore
Ms. Elizabeth H . MacDonald
John and Carmen T. McHugh
Mr. Hugh B. Mesibov
Mr. Robert A. Minnick
Ms. Lesley Mitchell
Ms. Guna S. Mundheim
Mr. John Needre
Mr. Oliver William Nuse
Ms. Carla A. Pagliaro
Ms. Marie Palamaro
Dr. and Mrs. Philip Paul
Mrs. Epps Turner Perrow
Ms. Susan Pfeifer-Scala
Ms. Leah Pinson
Dr. V. Fred Rayser
Mr. Allen 1. Rile
Ms. Anita Riley
Ms. Libby Rudnick
Mrs. Charles Rudy
Mr. Erwin F. Schabhuettl
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin S. Shadel
Mrs. Albert F. Snyder
Ms. Louise Z. Stahl
Mrs. Grace T. Steinmetz
Mr. Barnard C. Taylor
Mr. James E. Taylor
Ms. Louise Tucker
Mrs. Rachel Dowalo Weider
Ms. Ellen Wilkinson
Ms. Harriet Zeitlin
Ms. Diane Weitzman Zuckerman

'Foundations

Smith Kline Beecham Corporation
SUNOCO
Tasty Baking Corporation
United Engineers and Constructors
The Vanguard Group
Martin F. Weber Company
Windsor & Newton, Inc.
Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories

American Federation of the Arts
The Annenberg Foundation
The Arcadia Foundation
Atwater Kent Foundation, Inc.
The Barnes Foundation
Barra Foundation, Inc.
Connelly Foundation
Samuel S. Fels Fund
Richard Florsheim Art Fund
The Foundation for New Era
Philanthropy
Colin Gardner Foundation
John McShain Charities, Inc.
The Pew Charitable Trusts
The Philadelphia Foundation
Gilroy and Lillian P. Roberts
Charitable Foundation
Sara Roby Foundation
Stobart Foundation
Hoxie Harrison Smith Foundation
The Warwick Foundation
The William Penn Foundation

Matching Companies
A.T.& T. Foundation
ARCO Chemical Company
ARCO Foundation
Chevron Companies
CIGNA Corporation
Continental Bank
Elf Atochem North America, Inc.
Exxon Corporation
IBM Corporation
Illinois Tool Works Foundation
Johnson and Johnson
Merit Gasoline Foundation
The Mobil Oil Foundation
NEC Research Institute, Inc.
The William Penn Foundation
Persis Hawaii Foundation
PNCBank
R. H . Macy and Company
Rohm & Haas Company
SmithKline Beecham Foundation

Corporations
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.
ALCO Standard Corporation
ARAMARK
ARCO Chemical Company
Balis & Company, Inc.
Bell Atlantic
Betz Laboratories
Brandywine Asset Management
Chevron U.S.A., Inc.
Childs Gallery Limited
Chubb & Son, Inc.
CIGNA Corporation
Comcast Corporation
CoreStates Financial Corporation
Crown, Cork & Seal Company, Inc.
E.r. DuPont Nemours & Co.
Elf Atochem North America, Inc.
Hege, Kramer, Commell, Murphy
& Goldkamp, Inc.
Historic Yellow Springs, Inc.
Mellon Bank, N.A.
Merck & Co., Inc.
Meridian Bank
Parkway Corporation
Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company
Philadelphia Calligraphers' Society
The Philadelphia Contributionship
Philadelphia Water Color Club
Philip Morris Companies, Inc.
Rabbet Gallery
Reliance Insurance Company
Rohm & Haas Company
Safeguard Scientifics
Shared Medical Systems Corporation
Sharyne Care, Inc.

government
Federal
National Endowment for the Arts
State
Pennsylvania Council on the Arts
City
Philadelphia Cultural Fund

.E
~c
o

'"

Membership

'J{onorary Members
Mr. Stephen Green*
Mr. Jacques Puechal

President's Council
($10,000 or more)
Mrs. J. Maxwell Moran

Museum Director'sIDean's Circle
($5,000 - $9,999)
Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. de Serio
Mr. Wayne A. Stork

Charles Willson Peale Society
($ 1,000 - $4,999)
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Alexander
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Andes
Hon. and Mrs. Walter H. Annenberg
Mr. and M rs. W. Graham Arader III
M rs. Malcolm J. Baber
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Bartlett
Mr. and Mrs. George Beach
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent G. Bell, Jr.
Peter A. and Felicity R. Benoliel
Dr. Harriet Berger
Mr. and Mrs. C. Graham Berwind, Jr.
Ms. Claire S. Betz
Mr. and Mrs . Frank G. Binswan ger, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Bradley
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Buck
Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Burt
Robert and Joyce Byers
Ms. Sally R. Christy
Ms. Georgette Ciukurescu
Mrs. Avery B. Clark
The Cook Family
Mrs. Elliott R. Detchon
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dolan IV
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin F. Donohoe
Mrs. Joseph N. DuBarry IV
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Elliott Farr
Ms. Susan Fletcher and Mr. Robert Spencer
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Fox
Mr. and Mrs. Jack M. Friedland, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gansky
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Gemmill
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Ginsburg
Mr. and Mrs . Albert M. Greenfield, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel P. Hamilton
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. V. Hamilton
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Hammer
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Harkins, Jr.
Mrs. Avery D. Harrington
Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Harris
Mrs. Robert A. Hauslohner
Mr. and Mrs. J. Welles Henderson
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian S. Hooper
Mrs. Henry Lea Hudson
Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop S. Jessup
Dr. and Mrs. Henry A. Jordan

Dr. and Mrs. Arnold S. Kessler
Patricia and Philip Kind, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard I. Korman
Mr. and Mrs. B. Gordon Landis
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Lee
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Lemmon, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard H. Lewis
Mrs. E. Yerger Leydon
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. MacElree
Mr. John L. Marion
Mr. and Mrs. Peter McCausland
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McEwen
Mr. and Mrs. Sam S. Mc Keel
Mr.* and Mrs. John W. Merriam
Edward and Elizabeth Meyer
Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Allen J. Model
Mr. and Mrs. Shaun F. O 'Malley
Mr. W. Gresham O'Malley 3rd
Mr. and Mrs. Bertram L. O 'Neill
Mrs. Robert S. Pitcairn
Mr. and Mrs. Meyer P. Potamkin
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel R. Quinn
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert S. Riband, Jr.
Gresham and Pamela Riley
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Ross
Dr. and Mrs. Karl F. Rugart
Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. Schaeffer
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schwarz
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Scudder, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Shein
Mr. G. Ralph Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Sorgenti
Dr. and Mrs. Sidney J. Stein
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Stewart
Francis and Bayard Storey
Mr. Benjamin Strauss
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard A. Sylk
Mrs. Harrison Therman
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley C. Tuttleman
Mr. and Mrs. Archbold D. van Beuren
Mrs. Richard Walsh
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome B. Weinstein
Mr. and Mrs. J. Roffe Wike II
Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Wilder
Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Williams
Ruth W. and A. Morris Williams, Jr.
Richard B. Worley and Leslie Anne Miller
D. Robert and Ann Gates Yarnall

Curator's Circle
($500 - $999)
Mrs. Harris C. Aller
Mr. Peter Borie
Ms. Frances S. Fernley
Mrs. Quita W. Horan
Mr. and Mrs. Ellice McDonald, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Liddon Pennock
Mr. and Mrs. David N. Pincus
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Scott

Mr. Robert M. Scott
Ruth and Earl Scott
Mr. and Mrs. William Sudhaus
Mr. and Mrs. Leon C. Sunstein, Jr.
Mrs. Charles Tabas
Mrs. Helen M. Taws

Collector's Circle
($350)
Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Behrend
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. G. Theodore Burkett
Ms. Hope Byer
Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Casper
Mr. James Crawford and Ms. Judith Dean
Mr. Donald Cresswell and Mr. Christopher Lane
Mr. and Mrs. G. Morris Dorrance, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Frank A. Elliott
Ms. Cecelia Fanelli
Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Foley
Mrs. P. D. Newsome Funk
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew I. Garfield
Mr. and Mrs. Maitland A. Gordon
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. V. Hamilton
Miss Armason Harrison
Mr. and Mrs. J. Welles Henderson
Dr. and Mrs. Douglas Holsclaw, Jr.
Richard and Sharyn Huffman
Dr. and Mrs. Eric Hume
Mrs. Josef Jaffe
Miss Julie Jensen
Mr. and Mrs. Jules Kay
Mrs. Ethel C. Kesler
Dr. and Mrs. Morton M. Kligerman
Mr. and Mrs. Irving Kosloff
Stanley and Sylvia Krangel
Mr. Charles LeClair
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Lee
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Mangel
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm A. Margolies
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Mather III
Dr. Sara Miller and Mr. Leon C. Robbins
Mr. Scott Niefeld and Mr. Michael Shannon
Mr. James P. O'Brien
Mr. and Mrs. William Patterson
Dr. Charlotte De Monte Phelps
Mrs. Irwin Nat Pincus
Mr. and Mrs . Meyer P. Potamkin
Dr. and Mrs. Robert S. Pressman
Mrs. Stephen A. Ritt
Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy A. Rosenau
Dr. and Mrs. Karl F. Rugart
Mrs. M. H. Samitz
Mrs. Samuel K. Schneidman
Mrs. Frank S. Schwarz
John C. and Nora Schwarz
Francis and Bayard Storey
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Straw
Dr. and Mrs. J. Edward Taylor
Mrs. Luther Terry
Mr. and Mrs. George Turak

19

Mr. and Mrs. Stanley C. Tuttleman
Mr. and Mrs. F. Alton Tybout
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon L. Wahls

Patrons

20

($250 - $349)
Ms. Linda Lee Alter and
Mr. Seymour Mednick
Mr. George R. Atterbury
Dr. and Mrs. E. Digby Baltzell
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Barness
Mrs. John G. Bartol
Mrs. Joseph T. Beardwood
Mrs. Stephen E. Beiter
Charles and Susan Bloom
Mr. and Mrs . Orville H . Bullitt
Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Caldwell
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Carson
Mr. and Mrs. E. Calvert Cheston
Mr. and Mrs. Willis S. De La Cour
Mrs. C. Paul Denckla
Mr. and Mrs. Otis W. Erisman
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fischer
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew l. Garfield
Mr. and Mrs. William Y. Giles
Mr. Robert B. Grinnell
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin P. Gutman
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce H. Hooper
Mrs. Clement E. Hoyler
Martin and Sylvia Kreithen
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Lazovitz
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Lee
Mrs. Clifton Lisle
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Locks
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Maier
Ms. Barbara W. Moffett
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Murphy
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Naylor
Ms. Claire Nelson
Dr. Arthur Patchefsky and
Ms. Marilyn J. McHenry
Ms. Mary V. Pendleton
Mr. and Mrs. Howard C. Petersen
Miss Mary N. Porter
Mr. and Mrs. Alan L. Reed
Mr. and Mrs. Myron E. Resnick
John and Henriette Rogers
Mr. and Mrs. Jack A. Rounick
Ms. Patricia Royston
Ms. Maude de Schauensee
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Sclufer
Dr. and Mrs. Edward M. Scolnick
Mr. and Mrs. l. M. Scott
Mr. and Mrs. Irving R. Segal
Dr. and Mrs. William Serber
Mrs. Elizabeth R. Sirmay
Dr. and Mrs. William Steinberg
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Tyson
Mr. Samuel M. Vauclain
Mr. Robert Venturi
Mr. William Woys Weaver

Mr. and Mrs. H. SI. John Webb
Bertram and Lorle Wolfson
Mrs. Ethel Worth

'Friends
($100 - $249)
Mrs. Jane Abrahams
Mr. Joe Abriola
Mrs. Edward K. Asplundh
Robert and Marilyn Asplundh
Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Babich
Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin Bacharach
Mr. and Mrs . William G. Baer II
Mr. and Mrs. Demetrius H . Bagley
Mrs. Lynne M. Baldwin
Mrs. Brandon Barringer
Dr. Eugene J. Bass
Mr. Walter W. Beachboard
Mr. Richard C. Bechtel
Drs. Sylvia Beck and Jay Federman
Mrs. Charles Becker, Jr.
Dr. Martin G. Begley
Mr. Joseph Bell
Mrs. Edgar Bernstein
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Bers
James and Jean Bodine
Mr. and Mrs. H . Dickson S. Boenning
Ms. Wendy Smith Born
Ms. Kristin D. Bottrell
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Bowden
Mr. and Mrs. David S. Boyer
Mrs. Robert Breidenstein
Mrs. Michal W. Bristol
Mrs. Clarence W. Brooks, Jr.
Ms. Cecilia M. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Scott Brown
Ms. Margaret C. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. David B. Brownlee
Mr. Mitchell Brownstein
Miss Vera D. Bruestle
Mr. James H. Bryson
Dr. and Mrs. Bernerd Caplan
Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Carey
Mr. David Carley and Ms. Claire Gargalli
Mr. E. Dean Chagan
Morton and Malvina Charlestein
Dr. and Mrs. Charles W. Charny
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Cheston, Jr.
Scott J. and Nellie Childress
Mr. Joseph Chudnoff
Mr. Edward B. Clay, Jr.
Mrs. Margaret S. Clews
Ms. Kara Louise Coleman
Dr. and Mrs. Robert H . Condon
Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Coslett, Jr.
Mrs. Pearson C. Cummin, Jr.
Ms. Ann Cutler
Mr. David Dallas
Mrs. Newlin F. Davis
Mrs . K. Stewart De Spoelberch
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Demchick

Mr. and Mrs. Arnold E. Denton
Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter Dewey
Mrs. Lee L. DeWitt
Dr. and Mrs. B. Franklin Diamond
Miss Sally F. Downing
Edward and Nancy Driscoll
Mr. Edward J. Dwyer
Dr. and Mrs. Albert Dzuba
Mr. and Mrs. James Eisman
Mrs. Mildred Elliott
Ms. Deborah Reich Epstein
Mr. and Mrs. J. Morris Evans
Dr. and Mrs. Andrew T. Fanelli
Mrs. P. F. N. Fanning
Mrs. Henry Faulkner, Jr.
Donald and June Felley
Mr. and Mrs. l. L. Fien
Dr. and Mrs. Michael Fineberg
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Fischelis
Dr. and Mrs. Robert S. Fisher
Mrs. Thomas Fisher
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver M. Ford
Mr. and Mrs . Walter L. Foulke
Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Fox
Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Friedman
Mr. Fred B. Gable
Mrs. Nancy Gardner H. Galt
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Garde
Mrs. Carol Gerstley
Ms. Christine Zeiger Gillespie
Ms. Elizabeth W. Gillies
Ms. Linda S. Goodman
Mrs. Karen R. Gordon
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Gordon, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis l. Gowen
John and Jan Gradwohl
.Mrs. Seymour W. Greenberg
Ms. Sheila Greenberg
Mrs. Florianne T. Greer
Mr. Milton Gross
Ms. Marcia Groverman
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Guggenheim
Ms. Dorothy M. Guinn
Ms. Barbara Gyde
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Haas
Mr. and Mrs. M. Hahn
Mrs. Elizabeth S. Haller
Mr. Richard J. Halloran
Ms. Sarah Duff Hamilton
Ms. Kimberly Haren
Ms. Margaret Harris and Mr. Phil Straus
Mr. James R. Hathaway
Ms. Margaret Healy
Mrs. Dorothy P. Heindel
John and Irene Hempstead
Mr. and Mrs. H. Ober Hess
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph F. Hirschmann
Dr. and Mrs. J. David Hoffman
Mrs. John J. Hohenadel
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Honickman
Mrs. Alonzo R. Horsey

Marc and Susan Howard
Miss Helen Virginia Hunter
Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Indriso
Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Ingersoll
Dr. and Mrs. Harold L. Israel
Hon. Babette Josephs
Mrs. Louis r. Kahn
Lawrence and Sandra Karlin
Mr. and Mrs. Brian T. Keirn
Ms. Eleanor Kelemen
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kellogg
Mrs. James B. Kelly
Mr. Paul E. Kelly
Mr. Thomas K. Kilkenny
Ms. Alison Douglas Knox
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Koether
John W. and Beverly Kolb
Ms. Lynne Kroiz-Solomon
Mr. and Dr. C. Scott Kulicke
Mrs. Beatrice Ball Landenberger
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Langfitt
Dr. and Mrs. Marc S. Lapayowker
Mrs. W. Mifflin Large
Mr. John A. Lawler
Ms. Frances Reiner Lax
Mr. Jonathan R. Lax
Mr. Robert W. Lees
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Leibovitz
Mr. Robert P. Leiby, Jr.
Mrs. Bernard V. Lentz
Drs. Becca Lewis and Jonathan Friedlander
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy M. Lewis, Jr.
Mrs. R. Schuyler Lippincott
Mr. and Mrs. S. Gerald Litvin
Mr. Robert W. Loder
Ms. Nancy A. Loeb
Mr. John J. Lombard, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Thacher Longstreth

Mr. Robert F. Looney
Mrs. Joan W. Mackie
Mrs. Wister H. MacLaren
Miss Elizabeth Madeira
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mahoney
Mr. and Mrs. A. Bruce Mainwaring
Mr. Paul Maloney
Dr. and Mrs. Leigh Marsh
Mrs. Samuel Matlin
Mr. John F. McCloskey, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Alexander McCurdy III
Hon. and Mrs. John J. McDevitt III
Dr. and Mrs . Henry Meigs
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Meyerson
Mrs. Casmir Michalski
John and Gainor Miller
Dr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Miller
Ms. Leannah Mir
Mrs. Henry Mitchell
Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Montgomery
Mrs. Clarence Morris
Mr. Stephen Morse
Mr. Robert E. Mortensen
Mr. and Mrs. F. Stanton Moyer
Mrs. Craig Wright Muckle
James and Diana Naughton
Mr. and Mrs. Albert P. Neilson
Benjamin and Meta Neilson
Ms. Sara Nerken
Mr. Daniel P. O'Connell
Ms. Joan Ochroch
Mr. Albert T. Olenzak
Ms. Faye Olivieri
Dr. and Mrs. B. Perry Otten berg
Mr. Raymond S. Page, Jr.
Mrs. Otto J. Patzau
Mr. Thomas B. Payne
Mr. G. Holmes Perkins
Mr. and Mrs. David Peyster
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Powers
Robert L. and Gene E. K. Pratter
Mrs. Alfred W. Putnam
Mrs. Harley Rankin
Mrs. Harold M. Rappeport
Dr. and Mrs. Arnold J. Rawson
Ms. Vera Redmond
Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Reichardt
Mrs. E. P. Richardson
Alfred H. and Ruth Riddell
Mr. Anthony W. Ridgway
Dr. and Mrs. Murray A. Ringold
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rishel
Mr. Stewart B. Rorer
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Rosenthal
Mr. John Pierpont Rosso
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold L. Rothman
Dr. and Mrs. Bernard N. Rothman
Ms. Carole J. Rubins
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Russell
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan H. Savadove
Mr. Lewis C. Scheffey, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. James A. Schnaars
Ms. Irene Schrank-Shuman
Mrs. P. K. Schwartz
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Scull
Ms. Georgia Shafia
Mr. Edward O. Shakespeare
Mr. and Mrs. Warner S. Shelly
Mr. and Mrs. John J. F. Sherrerd
Mrs. William C. Shoemaker
J. Thomas and Janice R. Showier
Mr. Barry Simon and Ms. Mary Higgins
Mr. Dolph Simons
Mr. Robert M. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Solmssen
Mr. H. Peter Somers
Mr. Marc J. Sonnenfeld
Ms. Barbara Sosson
Mr. Paul Scott Sperry
Mr. and Mrs. Tad Sperry
Mr. Charles E. Stahlecker
Miss Irene T. Stankiewicz
Mr. and Mrs. jlJfred Steel
Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. W. Steinig
Mrs. Patricia Duncan Stephanoff
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley P. Stern
Mr. G. Stockton Strawbridge
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Sunstein
Ms. Barbara Billings Supplee
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford H. Swain
William and Helen Sweatt
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Talucci
Mr. Robert G. Taylor
Mrs. Evelyn Tecosky
Ms. F. Edith Thornton
Mrs. M . W. Tilghman
Mr. James H. Timberlake
Mrs. James W. Toren
Mrs. Annis Lee Furness Townsend
Mr. Edwin E. Tuttle
Mrs. Phoebe Valentine
Michael and Cynthia Haveson Veloric
Dr. and Mrs. Jack R. Vinson
Mr. and Mrs. William T. Vogt
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Walkup
Dr. R. J. Wallner
Mr. and Mrs. Warren H. Watanabe
Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Watts
Arnold and Beverly Weiss
Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Wiener
Mr. and Mrs. Barry F. Wiksten
Mr. Horace E. Williams
Mr. and Mrs. David R. Wilmerding
Mrs. Fred Wolf
Mr. Paul A. Wolkin
Mr. Richard D. Wood
Mrs. Elizabeth Zeidman
Mrs . Lee V. Zlotnick
Mrs. Gabrielle E. Zomber
We sincerely regret any errors or omissions.
* Deceased

21

~inancial

Information as of July 31, 1994

'FUN D RAISING

$2,OOl,183
'TRUSTEES
<NEW eRA
'THIRD CENTURY SUPPORT

$250 ,0 00

'TRUST 'INCOME

$159,901
OTHE R

$157,577
~---SHOP SALES

$125,836
22

l{.EVENUES

TOTAL $6,832,929

$1,040,806

(5 2 %)

.sUPPORT & 'REVENUE

Unrestricted Gifts and Grants
Third Century Support
Trust Income
Tuition and Fees
Net Sales
Museum Admissions
Restricted Fund Support
Other Income
TOTAL SUPPORT & REVENUE

2,001,183
$250,000
159,901
2,386,286
125,836
176,000
1,576,146
157,577
$6,832,929

OPERATING EXPENSES

School
Museum
Development
Security & Facilities
General & Administrative
Interest
TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES

EXCESS 'REVENUE OVER EXPENSE

2,5 2 4,738
1,191,319
148,303
1,305,080
1,066,382
595,834
$6,831,656
$1,273

.sECURITY AND 'FACILITY

$1,305,080

MUSEUM

$1,191,319

'FOUNDATIONS

$215,717 (11%)
gENERAL AND
.sCHOOL

$2,524,738

2lDMINISTRATIVE

$1,066,382

2lNNUAL gIVING

'INTEREST

.sPECIAL eVENTS

$595,834

$162,068 (8%)
gOVERNMENT

$105,780 (5%)

'DEVELOPMENT

$148,303

~,,-- lJ3EQUESTS

$30,000 (2%)
23

SUPPORT

eXPENSES

TOTAL $2,001,183

TOTAL $6,831,656

<Board of Trustees

Officers

Charles P. Pizzi
President, Greater Philadelphia Chamber Of Commerce

Charles L. Andes, Chairman
President, The Technology Council of Greater Philadelphia

Adele K. Schaeffer

Herbert S. Riband Jr., First Vice Chairman
Partner, Saul, Ewing, Remick & Saul

Harold A. Sorgenti
Managing Partner, The Freedom Group Partnership

Kevin F. Donohoe, Second Vice Chairman
President, The Kevin F. Donohoe Company

Wayne A. Stork
Benjamin Strauss

Richard B. Worley, Third Vice Chairman & Treasurer
Partner, Miller, Anderson & Sherrerd

Barbara A. Sylk

Lyn M. Ross, Secretary

Edna S. Tuttleman

Trustees

Archbold D. Van Beuren
Business Director, Campbell Soup Company

John B. Bartlett
Sr. Vice President, General Counsel & Secretary,
Rhone-Poulenc, Inc.
Felicity R. Benoliel
Mrs. C. Graham Berwind, Jr.
Stewart R. Cades
Managing Partner, Overseas Strategic Consulting, Inc.
Milton Ginsburg
President, Beon-Equip, Inc.

J. Roffe Wike
Senior Partner & Director, Cooke & Bieler, Inc.

Robert G. Wilder
Chairman Emeritus, FCB Philadelphia

ex Officio
Gresham Riley, President
Steven Nocella, Faculty Representative
Hon. Joan Specter, City Representative

Barbara L. Greenfield
Chairman, Residential And Special Properties Department,
Albert M. Greenfield & Company, Inc.
Samuel M.Y. Hamilton
Ragan A. Henry
Chairman & CEO, US Radio, Inc.
Argeris N. Karabelas, Ph.D.
President - North America, Smithkline Beecham
Pharmaceuticals
Stephen B. Klein
President, The Klein Company
Leonard 1. Korman
The Korman Company
24

Mary Macgregor Mather
Allen J. Model
Model Entities

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