2024 CMA Impact Report

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IMPACT REPORT

JULY 1, 2023–JUNE 30, 2024

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Table of Contents

Letter from the Executive Director & CEO

As we approach the close of this transformative year, I am filled with gratitude for the opportunity to lead the Columbus Museum of Art (CMA) and reflect on all we’ve accomplished together. At the same time, I am energized and inspired by the possibilities that lie ahead. When I first visited the museum in early 2023, I was struck by the exceptional depth and breadth of our permanent collection. Since then, my appreciation for our collection has only deepened. It has been a lens through which I’ve gained a greater understanding of Columbus—its past, its present, and its future. This year, CMA reached new heights in our efforts to connect people and art in meaningful ways. Highlights include exhibitions Wendy Red Star: A Scratch on the Earth and Accra! The Rise of a Global Art Community , which brought global and local perspectives to the forefront. We celebrated the expansion of the Scantland Collection, which continues to propel our initiatives in contemporary art. In total, CMA welcomed over 227,000 visitors, provided free programming to tens of thousands of families, and partnered with dozens of community organizations to broaden access to art and creative experiences. Next fall, we will proudly celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Margaret M. Walter Wing, a transformative addition that helped prepare CMA for the twenty-first century. As we prepare for this milestone, we have embarked on a strategic planning effort to chart a bold vision for the next five years. This plan will guide CMA’s continued growth and innovation as we move toward the museum’s 150th anniversary in 2028.

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Letter from the Executive Director & CEO

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Letter from the Board President

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Board of Trustees

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Financials

We are also focused on creating a sustainable and impactful future for our second campus, Columbus Museum of Art at The Pizzuti in the Short North Arts District. Starting this season, The Pizzuti will be invigorated with fresh and exciting programming. The space will continue to serve as a laboratory for innovative ideas while honoring Ron and Ann Pizzuti’s dedication to contemporary art. Their legacy of showcasing diverse and groundbreaking exhibitions remains a cornerstone of our vision. Thank you for your support of the Columbus Museum of Art. As Columbus continues to grow and evolve, CMA will remain at the heart of our cultural landscape. Your partnership enables us to transform lives through the power of art. I invite you to explore these pages and celebrate all that we’ve achieved together this year.

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Collections & Exhibitions

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Learning, Experience, & Engagement

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Acquisitions

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Donors

With heartfelt appreciation,

Cover: Installation image by Luke Stettner of PRESENT ‘23: Building the Scantland Collection of the Columbus Museum of Art . Artists featured include (from left to right) Danielle McKinney, Angela Dufresne, Jamea Richmond-Edwards, Marina Perez Simão, and Raphaël Barontini. PRESENT ‘23 is featured on pages 16 & 17

Brooke A. Minto Executive Director & CEO

Looking ahead, I am particularly excited about the opportunities that lie before us. The museum’s upcoming 150th anniversary in 2028 presents a chance to honor our storied history while envisioning a bold and dynamic future. With Brooke’s leadership, CMA is charting an exciting path forward—one that balances our commitment to preserving the past, with a dedication to innovating for the future. I am particularly excited about our renewed dedication to further activating our second campus, the Columbus Museum of Art at The Pizzuti. Following an intentional pause to reassess how best to utilize this space, we are reimagining The Pizzuti as a dynamic complement to our Broad Street location. Here, we will continue to experiment, innovate, and push boundaries—engaging with art and audiences in bold and transformative ways. On Broad Street, we look forward to entering our tenth anniversary year of the Walter Wing, a transformative investment that radically improved the scale and quality of our exhibitions program and our visitor experience. Indeed, it is difficult now to imagine CMA without it. On behalf of the Board of Trustees, I want to express my deepest gratitude to everyone who has contributed to our success this year. It has been an honor to serve as President of the Board and to witness the extraordinary ways in which art, and CMA, bring our community together. As this vibrant city continues to attract new residents, CMA will remain a vital cultural cornerstone, helping to define what it means to live, create, and connect in Columbus. The next decade will be the most pivotal in our history: a chance to energize residents’ quality of life, to grow as a top destination for skilled workers, and to become a model “city of the future.” To realize this dream—to fulfill Columbus’ true potential—we must invest now in art, culture, creativity, connection, and belonging. Please join me in continuing to support Columbus Museum of Art, led by Brooke and incoming President Seanna Walter, as CMA serves a central and essential role in this effort.

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Letter from the Board President

Board of Trustees

Board of Trustees

As I reflect on my final year as President of the Board of Trustees, I am proud of all that the Columbus Museum of Art (CMA) has accomplished and the steps we have taken to prepare the museum for its next chapter. Thanks to the leadership of our Executive Director and CEO, Brooke A. Minto, the dedication of the museum’s exceptional staff, and our very generous donors and supporters, CMA increasingly serves as a hub for creativity and cultural dialogue within our community. CMA is not just a place to experience art, but a partner in shaping the cultural fabric of our region. As a trustee, I have always been inspired by the deep connections our museum fosters— between individuals and the works of art they encounter, between Columbus and the world, and among our many dedicated supporters. Columbus’ renaissance is today. Our city’s best days are ahead of us. To become a “city of the future,” we must invest in a museum for the future, and much of the work that Brooke, her team, and our generous supporters have accomplished in the last several years is aimed at meeting this challenge.

BOARD OFFICERS Brooke A. Minto, Executive Director & CEO Pete Scantland, President Seanna Connor Walter, Vice President James Ferguson II, Vice President Elizabeth Crane, Secretary Ewout Leeuwenburg, Treasurer Stephen S. Wittmann, Immediate Past President

NATIONAL TRUSTEES Non-voting members Lesley F. Blanchard Paula Brothers DeeDee Glimcher Wil Haygood

Mary G. Kidder Jason Schoen Jeanie Schottenstein Barbara Siemer V. George Vollmer

TRUSTEES Russell P. Austin John C. Beeler Sheryl Brown

HONORARY TRUSTEES Non-voting members John Bevilacqua Jeffrey W. Edwards Steve English Bebe Finn Joy Gonsiorowski Ann S. Hoaglin Wayne P. Lawson †

Jeffery D. Chaddock Michael B. Coleman Robert S. Copeland Michael A. Edwards Sarah Kay Alexa Konstantinos Lee M. Lochtefeld Sandra R. López Carol Manley R. Brian Moore Shannon Morgan Michael Petrecca Dara A. Pizzuti Nikia Reveal David R. Schooler Kara Siak George A. Skestos Jonna Twigg

Michael D. Martz Floradelle A. Pfahl Ronald A. Pizzuti Doug Preisse Sarah Ross Soter John C. Vorys Peggy M. Walter Arlene Weiss

Larry J. Young Lisa P. Young Sarah Ziegler

† In memorium

Warmly,

Pete Scantland President, Board of Trustees

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Financials

OPERATING REVENUE

Total Operating Revenue 15,202,409

Other Revenue 1,802,500 – 11.9%

Contributions, Memberships, & Grants 7,687,183 – 50.6%

Admissions 545,924 – 3.6%

Special Events 3,250,300 – 21.4%

Retail Operations 583,584 – 3.8%

Endowment/Investment 1,332,918 – 8.8%

We seek to connect visitors with the cultural dialogues shaping our world.

OPERATING EXPENSES Total Operating Expenses 15,182,514

General Expenses 3,881,680 – 25.6%

Payroll & Related Expenses 6,883,407 – 45.3%

Direct Expenses - Special Events & Retail Operations 1,428,131 – 9.4%

Facilities, Maintenance & Security 1,659,065 – 10.9%

Exhibitions & Collections 948,316 – 6.2%

Programs 381,915 – 2.5%

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List of Exhibitions

COLUMBUS MUSEUM OF ART

Think Outside the Brick: The Creative Art of LEGO ® 11/11/23–2/5/24 New Encounters: Reframing the Contemporary Collection of the Columbus Museum of Art 12/16/23–Ongoing Playful Perspectives: Staff Reflections on Play 2/22–11/7/24 The Family and The Zombie by The Karrabing Film Collective 3/1–8/25/24

Big Idea Gallery: HOME 8/10/19–8/20/23

Gina Osterloh: Mirror Shadow Shape 2/24–10/8/23

The Columbus Front Steps Project: How We Found Connection During the COVID-19 Crisis 3/4–11/8/23 Arbus • Sherman • Woodman: American Photography from the 1960s and 1970s 3/18/23–4/28/24

Wendy Red Star: A Scratch on the Earth 4/21–9/3/23

Marie Laurencin: Sapphic Paris 4/5–8/18/24

Lesley Vance: always circled whirling 4/21–9/3/23

Robin F. Williams: We’ve Been Expecting You 4/5–8/18/24

Open Gallery: CATS 5/27/23–Ongoing

Thresholds of Vision: Barbara Morgan, Diane Arbus, Francesca Woodman 5/4–8/11/24

PRESENT ’23: Building the Scantland Collection of the Columbus Museum of Art 6/8–10/8/23

Big Idea Gallery: SHAPES 9/2/23–Ongoing

CMA AT THE PIZZUTI

Was It Your Trigger Finger? featuring work by Bobby T. Luck 2/17–8/6/23 Greater Columbus: The 2023 Greater Columbus Arts Council Visual Arts Awards Exhibition 2/17–8/6/23

I would like to be midnight / I would like to be Sky 9/9/23–2/4/24

Accra! The Rise of a Global Art Community 10/6/23–1/28/24

Quilting a Future: Contemporary Quilts and American Tradition 10/6/23–1/28/24

Sarah Rosalena: In All Directions 9/9/23–2/4/24

Impact Report FY24

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Featured Exhibition

Wendy Red Star: A Scratch on the Earth

Organized by The Newark Museum of Art, Wendy Red Star: A Scratch on the Earth featured over 40 works spanning 15 years of her practice. Using photography, textiles, and mixed media, Red Star explored Crow history, Indigenous feminism, and life on the Crow Indian reservation in Montana, where she was raised. The exhibition offered CMA audiences a unique opportunity to learn, reflect, and engage with her perspective on Indigenous culture and history.

ON VIEW

APRIL 21 – SEPTEMBER 3, 2023

IN THE PRESS

Wendy Red Star Takes Columbus Museum Of Art Visitors To The Apsáalooke Reservation —Forbes

On Wendy Red Star —The Brooklyn Rail

Our Columbus community’s awakening to the history and endurance of Indigenous people should not be for a day or a month, but for a lifetime. We hope this exhibition is a step towards bridging the void. ”

At Museums and Galleries, a Spirit of Togetherness —The New York Times

Wendy Red Star —Aesthetica

Native American culture, abstract images showcased in Columbus

Museum of Art exhibits —The Columbus Dispatch

‘Wendy Red Star: A Scratch on the Earth’ at Columbus

—Deidre Hamlar Director of the Aminah Robinson Legacy Project and exhibition curator for Wendy Red Star: A Scratch on fhe Earth at CMA

Museum of Art —Ohio Magazine

Impact Report FY24

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Featured Exhibition

Accra! The Rise of a Global Art Community

The exhibition celebrated 18 artists with connections to Accra, Ghana, Columbus, Ohio’s sister city. Accra! surveyed the increasingly visible impact Ghanaian artists have had on global art discourse, including the rise of the “Ghana School,” which has emerged over the past five years as an influential group of artists reshaping the contemporary art landscape.

ON VIEW

OCTOBER 6, 2023 – JANUARY 28, 2024

A young museum-goer imitates the poses of figures in Accra! Images shared by @aya.gram2016

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Collection Spotlight

The Scantland Collection at CMA is one of the most dynamic additions to our permanent collection, featuring work by some of the most exciting and thought- provoking artists in the world today. First introduced in 2021 with a transformative gift of 27 works and a $2 million endowment, the collection grew this year with an additional 33 works and another $2 million to support CMA’s contemporary art initiatives. Thanks to the Scantland Family’s ongoing generosity, this vibrant and evolving collection continues to enrich visitor engagement with the diverse perspectives shaping our world.

The Scantland Collection at CMA features artists through both realized and promised gifts, including:

Jerrell Gibbs Aaron Gilbert Sayre Gomez Jenna Gribbon Lauren Halsey Alexander Harrison Angela Heisch Jammie Holmes Asif Hoque Devin B. Johnson Heather Jones Tidawhitney Lek Deana Lawson Kat Lyons Kylie Manning Danielle McKinney Jaime Muñoz Robert Nava GaHee Park Hilary Pecis Marina Perez Simão Patrick Quarm

Lauren Quin Kenny Rivero Jamea Richmond-Edwards

The Scantland Collection: A Growing Legacy of Contemporary Art at CMA

Lauren Satlowski Devan Shimoyama Sarah Slappey Emily Mae Smith Vaughn Spann Claire Tabouret Blair Whiteford Nicole Wittenberg Mikey Yates Oscar yi Hou Guimi You Yuri Yuan Yesiyu Zhao Robin F. Williams Ambera Wellmann

Hayley Barker Raphaël Barontini Cristina BanBan Felipe Baeza Gabriella Boyd Greg Breda Lucy Bull Coady Brown Jonathan Lyndon Chase Somaya Critchlow Julie Curtiss Kenturah Davis

We interviewed 11 of the 32 artists on display in PRESENT ‘23: Building the Scantland Collection of the Columbus Museum of Art on view June 8– October 8, 2023 which featured our second wave of promised gifts.

Angela Dufresne Jadé Fadojutimi Veronica Fernandez Derek Fordjour Louis Fratino

Visit our YouTube channel to watch the interviews.

List as of June 30, 2024

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Featured Exhibition

Columbus Museum of Art at The Pizzuti

Sarah Rosalena: In All Directions

ON VIEW

In All Directions highlighted Los Angeles- based interdisciplinary artist Sarah Rosalena’s innovative fusion of Indigenous craft techniques with emerging technologies, exploring powerful themes such as colonization, climate change, and space exploration.

SEPTEMBER 9, 2023 – FEBRUARY 4, 2024

The exhibition was the culmination of an ambitious, multiyear collaboration with The Ohio State University’s Department of History of Art. In line with the vision for Columbus Museum of Art at The Pizzuti to become a creative “laboratory,” a program was developed to provide Ohio State students with integrative, hands- on experiences working on all components of exhibition making. Students collaborated closely with Sarah Rosalena and CMA staff, contributing to the exhibition’s development from its initial concept to its final public presentation.

Installation view showing a double-sided AI-generated textile from Rosalena’s Above Below (2020), woven with one pixel per thread to explore satellite imaging’s role in place-making.

Impact Report FY24

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Personal Connections

Quilting a Future: Contemporary Quilts and American Tradition

ON VIEW SEPTEMBER 9, 2023–FEBRUARY 4, 2024

As part of Quilting a Future we asked visitors to share personal stories:

I grew up with generations of strong, courageous

With splashes of colors…to reveal

my memories appearing in my quilts. It is slow, a

women. They often created beauty from fiber. My mother

repetitive process that soothes my soul and spirit. I studied Women’s studies, fiber restorations and Art at Ohio State University. My stitching… my hand work…has helped me travel around the world to discover cultures and civilizations I had only dreamed about in my youth. Now in my 70’s…I am making adjustments in my technique…macular degeneration is slowly altering my vision…living with lupus…but slowly I continue my work as an artist. In the last couple of years I have allowed myself to explore mixed media explorations. My heart remains dedicated

taught me to make my own clothes at an early age…I felt a sense of pride and empowerment when I made my own wedding dress. My grandmother was able to crochet anything. I shared in a photograph from a magazine. Yes this is often dismissed as “women’s work” and unappreciated. I can tell the story behind each stitch…each design…the gift in cloth these women graced with me. This is an early important lesson of living with intention and celebrating and living in the present moment.

I create my sacred marks with needle and thread. It is my meditation…my journey through the decades…my prayers for creating a community in love and peace. I often write…in a multitude of journals.

to working with my hands holding a needle and thread…telling my story with my quilts.”

—Mary Helen Fernandez Stewart

Impact Report FY24

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Collection Highlights

Featured Exhibition

New Encounters: Reframing the Contemporary Collection at Columbus Museum of Art

Lesley Vance: always circled whirling

ON VIEW

Lesley Vance: always circled whirling marked Vance’s first solo exhibition in a public institution. The Los Angeles-based artist is renowned for her swirling, interwoven forms that simultaneously captivate and challenge the viewer’s perception. For years, Vance has drawn inspiration from modernist masters such as Charles Demuth, Arthur Dove, Marsden Hartley, and Georgia O’Keeffe.

APRIL 21 – SEPTEMBER 3, 2023

John Claude White, Kampa Dzong, Tibet , 1904. Gelatin silver print.

Charles Sheeler, Lhasa , 1916. Oil on canvas. Gift of Ferdinand Howald.

Lesley Vance, Untitled , 2023, Oil on linen. Courtesy of the artist.

One of the most rewarding aspects of my role is finding innovative ways to connect our collection with the community. A few months into my new role at CMA, I set out to reinstall our contemporary collection. In December 2023, we opened New Encounters: Reframing the Contemporary Collection of the Columbus Museum of Art , the first comprehensive reinstallation of our upper level galleries since the opening of the Margaret M. Walter Wing in fall 2015. With over 100 works by 68 artists from the 1940s to the present, New Encounters presents our collection in an entirely new light. While researching this project, I was delighted to find important works in the collection that had not been on view in recent years, or ever before. These treasures are installed in new thematic groupings that pair postwar art with contemporary works, a reflection of the intergenerational dialogues that continue to shape the art of our time.

This project has been an invaluable part of my journey at the museum, deepening my understanding of our collection and enhancing its relevance to our growing community. Last spring, following a fruitful collaboration on New Encounters , we were delighted to welcome Daniel Marcus as our Curator of Collections and Exhibitions. Daniel, who re-joined CMA from The Wexner Center for the Arts, was our first Roy Lichtenstein Curatorial Fellow in 2018. Daniel received his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley in 2017 and has worked on a broad range of exhibition projects in recent years, including our successful touring exhibition Art after Stonewall , 1969–1989. ”

Artist Lesley Vance drew inspiration from our celebrated American modernist collection. The exhibition featured 27 of her paintings, including three newly commissioned works inspired by pieces from the museum’s permanent collection.

—Brooke A. Minto Executive Director & CEO

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Personal Connections

The Aminah Robinson Legacy Project

Deidre Hamlar reflects on her daily experience stewarding the legacy of one of America’s most prolific artists.

When Aminah Robinson passed away in 2015, she left her art, writings, home, and personal property to the Columbus Museum of Art. In 2020, CMA established the Aminah Robinson Legacy Project to encompass the myriad aspects of her life, proliferate awareness of her work, and place her in the pantheon of the most important twentieth and twenty- first century American artists.

2024 Writer Resident A.J. Verdelle stands in Aminah’s home. You can read A.J.’s story One day, in the history of Columbus, Ohio on CMA’s blog.

I have a dream job. I work every day to preserve the life, art, and legacy of one of America’s most profound and prolific artists of my generation, Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson. Aminah was born February 18, 1940, and this year would be 84 years old. Every day I am a witness to and a re- teller of Aminah’s storied life, anecdotes of her ancestry, and rich family history. Her background served as fodder for the shapes, colors, textures, and tales related through seven decades of sensitive portrayals, intricate drawings, and complex button-laden works of art. Aminah’s generation witnessed a period of profound social change. This era included the Great Migration of Blacks escaping the Jim Crow South, three wars, the American Civil Rights Movement, the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert F. Kennedy, as well as the moon landing, Woodstock, Thurgood Marshall and Sandra Day O’Connor integrating the Supreme Court, and the advent of color TV and the internet.While the world was changing so did her life. She won a MacArthur Fellowship, raised her son, Sydney, then suffered his death.

Towards the end of her life Aminah felt fortunate to see the election of the first Black US President, Barack Obama. She would have been overjoyed to witness the appointment of the first Black woman Supreme Court Justice, Ketanji Brown Jackson.

These life events and more inspired her vast research, writings, and her art.

I enjoy quick forays through the galleries to visit her on the walls of the Columbus Museum of Art. And when I make it to my desk, I greet her to my right, my left, and over my left shoulder and say, “Thank you, Aminah. I am so happy you chose me to do this work to celebrate you.” Yes, I feel special, and we as a museum community feel special and honored to steward the legacy of Aminah Robinson. We do not take it for granted. She entrusted the museum with this responsibility and we have created a way to see it forward, or, as she would say, “Stay on the path.”

Aminah’s writing room.

Aminah carves into her interior entry door in 2002.

To date, residents and fellows include:

Warith Taha, 2024 Artist Resident A.J. Verdelle, 2024 Writer Resident Jana Cardwell, 2024 Artist Fellow Marla McLeod, 2023 Artist Resident Allie Martin, 2023 Writer Resident Beverly Whiteside, 2023 Artist Fellow Anthony Peyton Young, 2022 Artist Resident Darlene Taylor, 2022 Writer Resident Richard Duarte Brown, 2022 Artist Fellow Wendy Kendrick, 2021 Artist Fellow Johnathan Payne, 2021 Artist Resident DonCee Coulter, 2020 Artist Fellow

—Deidre Hamlar Director of the Aminah Robinson Legacy Project

Aminah’s foyer and interior door as it is seen today.

Impact Report FY24

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227,134 Total Visitors

76,018

FREE SUNDAY VISITORS

7,100+ STUDENTS ON GROUP VISITS

We are dedicated to creating visitor-centered programming that fosters meaningful connections between our collection, exhibitions, and the community.

5,000 + COMMUNITY DAY VISITORS

4,760

CHILDREN PARTICIPATED IN CMA STUDIO ACTIVITIES

122 SUMMER ART WORKSHOP YOUNG ARTISTS

210+ TEACHERS TRAINED

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Program Highlight

CMA Community Day

2,500+ VISITORS FOR COMMUNITY DAY HIGHLIGHTING ACCRA!

We announced a transformative $1.2 million gift from the Art Bridges Foundation’s Access for All program which supports three more years of free admission on Sundays and a new programming series, CMA Community Days.

Left: A family snaps a selfie. Right: A young museum- goer strikes a pose at Accra! Community Day.

Participating in Community Day at the Columbus Museum of Art was an enriching experience. Viewing the exhibit Accra! The Rise of a Global Art Community and connecting with the Columbus arts community was wonderful. This fulfilling experience allowed me to write an original poem and share cultural stories and traditions that resonate deeply with both my personal journey as a Ghanaian-American artist and the broader public. The enthusiasm and engagement from participants made it a truly memorable event. ”

—Cynthia Amoah Ghanaian-American poet

Impact Report FY24

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Program Highlight

Every year, CMA collaborates with dozens of organizations and initiatives to expand the reach of our learning and community engagement mission. Their collaboration makes our work possible, and we are grateful for their support.

CMA Partner Initiatives

Select partners this fiscal year included:

Mid-Ohio Food Collective Juneteenth on the Ave Just Bloom McConnell Arts Center Mosaic Museums for All Columbus Ohio Early College High Schools

Association of Midwest Museums Cartoon Crossroads Columbus The Childhood League Center Columbus City Council Latino Heritage Month Committee Columbus City Schools CCS Unified Arts CCS Early Childhood Education CCS Columbus Gifted Academy Columbus College of Art & Design

Ohio Hands and Voices Ohio Lego Users Group The Ohio State University–History of Art Department OSU Center for Feminist Research, Education and Engagement (FREE Center) OSU Department of Arts Administration, Education & Policy OSU Medicine & the Arts Board Ohio Teacher of the Year Program Olentangy Local School District Otterbein University Integrative Studies Partnerships for Authentic Learning and Leadership Proyecto Mariposa Reimagining Columbus Replenish Well and the Yoga Carriage STEAM Factory Stonewall Columbus

Columbus Cultural Orchestra Columbus Fashion Academy Columbus Metropolitan Library Columbus State Community College Department of Early Childhood and Development Columbus Symphony Orchestra COSI Science Festival CreativeMornings Columbus Cristo Rey Columbus High School Deaf Friends of the Library Discovery District Downtown Columbus Educational Service Center of Central Ohio Erase the Space Flux + Flow Franklin County Board of Developmental Disabilities Greater Columbus Arts Council Ghana Fest Irrepressible Soul Kenyon College Art History Department Leadership Columbus Lincoln Theater Made for Medicine El Mercadito

Museums for All (M4A)

We partnered with Museums for All (M4A) Columbus to host EMERGE!, a convening that brought together six museums and twelve social service organizations to address barriers to museum access at Ohio State University’s STEAM Factory. M4A Columbus includes the Columbus Museum of Art, COSI, Franklin Park Conservatory and Botanical Gardens, National Veterans Memorial and Museum, Ohio History Center and Ohio Village, and Wexner Center for the Arts.

Thurber House Urban Strings Visual AIDS Winds Brilliante

Whitehall City Schools WOSU Public Media YMCA of Central Ohio Zora’s House

…plus dozens of Columbus-based artists!

Impact Report FY24

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Docent Spotlight

Accessibility

Betty Zimmer Award for Docent Excellence

Accessibility at CMA

Here are some of the steps we took to expand accessibility:

This year, we celebrate 55 years of Betty Zimmer’s dedication to engaging visitors with great art as a CMA docent. She was honored as the first recipient of the Betty Zimmer Award for Docent Excellence at our annual luncheon.

Strengthened community partnerships through collaborations with Franklin County Board of Developmental Disabilities, Ohio Voices & Hands, and Deaf Friends of the Library. Convened a diverse group of community members to review CMA’s current accessibility practices and provide recommendations for improvement. Offered American Sign Language (ASL) interpretation for public programs to better serve our Deaf and hard-of- hearing visitors.

CMA docents contributed 2,762 hours this year, giving tours, roaming the galleries, and leading our signature 10 Minutes on the Dot program, which offers deep dives into individual works of art.

CMA docents are the primary educational outreach to students, visitors, and the Columbus community. Docent volunteers undergo an extensive five-month training period that focuses on building critical thinking skills with CMA’s collections and exhibitions.

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YEARS OF SERVICE AS A CMA DOCENT

An American Sign Language interpreter provides translation services for a tour in the Ross Wing.

Added portable stools to offer seating flexibility in the galleries.

Introduced a sensory hour ahead of every Open Studio.

Installed an electric wheelchair charging station for increased mobility support.

Visitors rest on portable stools during a tour featuring a Flemish 16th century tapestry on view in Gallery 10.

Impact Report FY24

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JPMorgan Chase Center for Creativity

Cultivating Creative & Civic Capacities (C4)

JPMorgan Chase Center for Creativity

The JPMorgan Chase Center for Creativity at CMA serves as a hub for exploration, collaboration, and connection. In September 2023, Battelle made a transformative gift of $1.2 million to establish the “Fund for Learning,” a three-year initiative to nurture creativity, critical thinking, and civic-mindedness through the Center for Creativity and other Learning & Engagement initiatives. This year, the Center for Creativity unveiled two new exhibitions:

Thriving communities rely on lifelong learning that sparks imagination and curiosity.

Cultivating Creative & Civic Capacities

Shapes BIG IDEA GALLERY

The Big Idea Gallery highlights art from diverse times and places, centered around accessible, universal themes. In Shapes , visitors encounter everything from found object sculptures to woven textiles, exploring how artists use form to create harmony, investigate their surroundings, and depict real or imagined experiences.

This year, CMA concluded the five-year Cultivating Creative & Civic Capacities (C4) initiative, developed in collaboration with Project Zero and local educators. C4 provides a research-based framework that promotes the creative and civic agency necessary for our complex world. Funded by Battelle and the Martha Holden Jennings Foundation, C4 offered free professional development to 195 teachers through half-day sessions. An additional 20 educators participated in a learning community that applied the C4 framework in their classrooms. This initiative highlights the role of art in Cultivating Creative & Civic Capacities, equipping educators and students to engage with complex issues and imagine more just, sustainable futures.

The impact on my students was profound...reaffirming how important being a teacher is. Classrooms are also worlds, and our ideas can shape the bigger world, starting with the real people in front of us. ”

Playful Perspectives LOANN W. CRANE FORUM

Playful Perspectives emphasizes the essential role of play in mental and physical well-being. Play stimulates new ideas, activates neurons, and promotes health. For this installation senior members of CMA’s Experience Team, who guide visitors and protect the art, offer their perspectives on how selected works from our collection evoke different forms of play.

—C4 teacher

Laura Sanders, Girls and Plastic Floating , 2010. Oil on canvas. Museum Puchase, Howald Fund

Impact Report FY24

Impact Report FY24

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Sidney Beck South African, born 1936

Lucy Bull American, born 1990 Veiled Threat 2021 Oil on linen Gift of the Scantland Collection

Jonathan Lyndon Chase American, born 1989 Black Knight 2020 Acrylic paint, spray paint, marker, oil stick, and plastic on muslin Gift of the Scantland Collection

Acquisitions

Card Player Date unknown Oil on board Gift of Donna and Larry James The Penny Whistler Date unknown Bronze Gift of Donna and Larry James

Richard Anuszkiewicz American, 1930–2020

William S. Carter American, 1909–1996

Somaya Critchlow British, born 1993 The Weight of Silence 2019 Oil on linen Gift of the Scantland Collection Julie Curtiss American, born France, 1982 Cool Off 2020 Oil on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Complimentary Fission 1964 Acrylic on Masonite Gift of George Nauyok Luminous 1965 Acrylic on Masonite Gift of George Nauyok

The Dandy Date unknown Oil on canvas Gift of Donna and Larry James The Green Lady (Woman) 1965 Oil on board Gift of Donna and Larry James

George Bellows American, 1882–1925 Study of Hands for Portrait of My Mother 1921 Graphite pencil Gift of John Wirchanski

Siah Armajani American, born Iran, 1939–2020 Streets #40 Sculpture 1993 Painted steel, copper screen, aluminum screen, ceramics, and brass Gift of Joyce and Charles Shenk

Elizabeth Catlett American, 1915–2012 New Generation 1992 Lithograph Gift of Donna and Larry James

Cian Dayrit Filipino, born 1989 Natural Histories of Struggle: Class 2021 Objects, embroidery, imagery, and digital print on fabric (collaboration with RJ Fernandez and Henricus) Museum Purchase with funds provided by The Contemporaries

Filipe Baeza American, born Mexico, 1987 Finding Home in My Own Flesh II 2020 Ink, twine, acrylic, cut paper, varnish, and glitter on paper Gift of the Scantland Collection Cristina BanBan Spanish, born 1987 Cinco Rosas 2021 Oil and oil stick on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

George Bellows, Study of Hands for Portrait of My Mother , 1921

Greg Breda American, born 1959 What Shall I Cry 2020 Acrylic on vellum Gift of the Scantland Collection Coady Brown American, born 1990 Hypnosis 2019 Oil on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Elizabeth Catlett, New Generation , 1992

Spread: Image of Robin F. Williams, Final Girls Exodus , 2021 Full credit line on pg. 48

Cian Dayrit, Natural Histories of Struggle: Class , 2021

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Janet Echelman American, born 1966 Current 2022 Engineered fiber, colored LED lighting, and

Louis Fratino American, born 1993 Tom Doing the Dishes 2020 Oil on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Jenna Gribbon American, born 1978 Talia, Hannah, and Emily in My Living Room Waiting to Wrestle 2019 Oil on linen Gift of the Scantland Collection Lauren Halsey American, born 1987 The National Council of Negro Women, Inc. 2020 Acrylic, mirror, sand, and objects on foam and wood Gift of the Scantland Collection

Elsie Brown Jones American, 1903–1996

Willow Street Date unknown Oil on board Gift of Donna and Larry James

architectural attachments Gift of the Edwards Family

Kojo Kamau American, 1939–2016

Carol Esteep American (Ohio, Scioto County, Portsmouth), active early 20th century Grandmother’s Flower Garden Quilt about 1935 Cotton Gift of Rodney H. Wasserstrom

[Man with Mustache Stands Beside Elijah Pierce in Pierce’s Barber Shop]

January 11, 1980 Gelatin silver print Gift of Nannette V. and George Maciejunes

Jadé Fadojutimi British, born 1993 bosom. Blossom. bosom 2020–21 Acrylic on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection Chris Finley American, born 1974 Untitled (Ellipse #4) 2005 Acrylic and ink on paper Gift of Nancy and Dave Gill Derek Fordjour American, born 1974 STOCKROOM Ezekiel 2019 Mixed media Gift of the Scantland Collection

Alexander Harrison American, born 1993 Just Over the Hill 2021 Acrylic on panel Gift of the Scantland Collection Dan Hays British, born 1966 Separation 1998 Oil on canvas Gift of Nancy and Dave Gill Angela Heisch American, born New Zealand, 1989 Green Haze in Spring 2021 Oil on linen over panel Gift of the Scantland Collection

[Elijah Pierce Sits at White Table in His Barber Shop, Half Smiling at Camera, with Guests] January 11, 1980 Gelatin silver print Gift of Nannette V. and George Maciejunes [Guests at Elijah Pierce’s Studio] January 11, 1980 Gelatin silver print Gift of Nannette V. and George Maciejunes Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Pierce in His Studio June 28, 1982 Gelatin silver print Gift of Nannette V. and George Maciejunes [Elijah Pierce, Holding a Carved Wood Cane, Sits Beside a Man in a Wheelchair, Both Wear Suits]

Louis Fratino, Tom Doing the Dishes , 2020

Lenz Geerk Swiss, born 1988 Moth and Girl with Moth Dress 2024 Acrylic on canvas Gift of an anonymous donor

Jerrell Gibbs American, born 1990 Lady in a Blue Dress 2020

Acrylic and oil stick on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Aaron Gilbert American, born 1979 Love Still Good 2021 Oil on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Jammie Holmes American, born 1984 Carrying Caskets #3 2021

January 29, 1983 Gelatin silver print Gift of Nannette V. and George Maciejunes

Acrylic and oil pastel on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Derek Fordjour, STOCKROOM Ezekiel , 2019

Impact Report FY24

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William Kentridge South African, born 1955 Oh to Believe in Another World 2023 Direct gravure, drypoing and chine collé on Hahnemühle, Natural White 300 Museum Purchase with funds provided by an anonymous donor in memory of Jack Lewin Madison

Robert Lowe American, currently active Back Home Date unknown Oil on canvas Gift of Donna and Larry James Richard Macdonald American, born 1946 O’Reynolds 2009 Oil on canvas Gift of Donna and Larry James Joseph Marioni American, born 1943 Untitled (Yellow) 2000 Acrylic on linen Gift of Nancy and Dave Gill Woodrow Nash American, born 1948 Queen Date unknown Stoneware Gift of Donna and Larry James

Hilary Pecis American, born 1979 Tulips, Ranunculus, and Oranges 2021 Acrylic on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Roy Lichtenstein, Brushstrokes in Flight (Maquette) , 1983

Brushstrokes in Flight (Study) 1982

William Kentridge, Oh to Believe in Another World , 2023

Hilary Pecis, Tulips, Ranunculus, and Oranges , 2021

Tape, cut painted paper, acrylic, and graphite pencil on board Gift of the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation in Celebration of the Centennial of Roy Lichtenstein Brushstrokes in Flight (Study) about 1982 Tape, cut painted paper, and graphite pencil on eight joined sheets of foam core Gift of the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation in Celebration of the Centennial of Roy Lichtenstein

Wendy Red Star Apsáalooke American, born 1981 Let Them Have Their Voice 2016 Fifteen hand-cut digital prints on archival photo paper with digital wax cylinder recording Museum Purchase, Derby Fund

Deana Lawson American, born 1979 Assemblage 2010–20 Drugstore photographs and specimen pins Gift of the Scantland Collection

Catherine Opie American, born 1961 Gay Pride, 1990 1990 (printed 2024)

Roy Lichtenstein American, 1923–1997

Pigment print on Canson Platine paper Museum Purchase, Westwater Fund

Corbett Reynolds American, 1944–2002 Untitled Head Date unknown Concrete and paint Gift of Steve Shellabarger

Brushstrokes in Flight (Maquette) 1983 Painted wood Gift of the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation in Celebration of the Centennial of Roy Lichtenstein

GaHee Park Korean, born 1985 Angel Next Door 2020 Oil on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Brushstrokes in Flight (Study) 1981 Graphite pencil on paper

Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson American, 1940–2015 Unwritten Love Letter (Dr. Selma H. Burke) 1989

Gift of the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation in Celebration of the Centennial of Roy Lichtenstein

Pen, ink, colored pencil, and stamp on envelope Gift of Donna and Larry James

Impact Report FY24

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Clare Rojas American, born 1976 Emmanuelle (The Lord is Among Us) 2023

Emily Mae Smith American, born 1979 Double Sun School 2020 Watercolor on paper Gift of the Scantland Collection

Fur Coat 1951 Ink on paper Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation Preferendum 70 1970 Lithograph on paper Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation

Untitled [Still Life with Two Flowers] about 1985 Color monotype on Somerset paper Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation Untitled [Woman in Colorful Tunic, Striped Pants, and Japanese Sandal] 1979 Graphite pencil and colored pencil on paper Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation

Patinated bronze Museum Purchase

Ming Smith American, born 1950 Aunt Ruth (Columbus, Ohio) 1979 (printed later) Archival pigment print Museum Purchase with funds provided by The Contemporaries

Speech 1966

Color lithograph on BFK Rives paper Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation

Claire Tabouret French, born 1981 The Blue Soccer Boy 2019 Acrylic and ink on paper Gift of the Scantland Collection

Three Landscapes 1976 Screenprint in colors, lithograph, and drypoint on Dutch Etching paper Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation Untitled [Mask] 1961–1962 Crayon and colored pencil on cut brown paper bag Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation Untitled [OHIO STAR / OHIO RATS] 1977 Graphite pencil, colored pencil, and crayon on paper Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation Untitled [Portrait of a Man with Glasses] 1992–1993 Crayon on paper torn from sketchbook Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation Untitled [Profile with Colorful Helmet] 1980–1990 Oil crayon, crayon, and pastel on unstretched canvas Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation

Clare Rojas, Emmanuelle (The Lord is Among Us) , 2023

Sarah Rosalena American, Wixárika, born 1983 Transposing a Form 2020 Ceramic 3D print, MMS-2 Mars regolith simulant, bentonite clay, glaze Museum Purchase, Westwater Fund

Ming Smith, Aunt Ruth (Columbus, Ohio) , 1979 (printed later)

Vaughn Spann American, born 1992 Greyson 2019 Polymer paint, Flashe paint, and terry cloth on stretcher bars Gift of the Scantland Collection

Omar Shaheed American, born 1946

Guardian Spirit Date unknown Tone Gift of Donna and Larry James

Claire Tabouret, The Blue Soccer Boy , 2019

Saul Steinberg American, born Romania, 1914–1999

Unidentified Artist American, 19th century Gated-fence Shelf with Hooks Date unknown Stained wood and metal Gift of Lynda Roscoe Hartigan in honor of Nannette Maciejunes

Devan Shimoyama American, born 1989 Page of Wands 2020 Oil, colored pencil, glitter, Flashe, collage,

Dancing Couple [On Persian Rug] 1965–1974 Lithograph on Arches paper Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation Dancing Couple [with Cat] 1965–1974 Lithograph on Arches paper Gift of the Saul Steinberg Foundation

jewelry, and sequins on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Impact Report FY24

Impact Report FY24

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Unidentified Artist American, 20th century The Welder (Whirligig/Weathervane) about 1940–55 Cut and welded steel with applied metal details and paint Gift of Robert Johns in memory of Kempf Hogan Unidentified Maker American (Eastern Pennsylvania), 19th century Tree Everlasting Quilt about 1840 Chintz and flat woven cotton Gift of Rodney H. Wasserstrom

Lorna Williams American, born 1986 Threefold 2013

Mixed media (plumbing hardware, shutter, glass bottles, coffee grinder, bike cogs, copper wire, leather, snake- shedding, violin parts, chains, wasp hive, precious stones and acrylics, Jerusalem Olive wood, speaker, sea urchins, turtle shell, plaster mold, bamboo root, locks, mirror, pin clips, screw anchors, Australian burl, headphone wires, paper, sink strainer, candle holder, and light fixture.) Gift of Nancy and Dave Gill in honor of Brooke A. Minto, Executive Director and CEO

Unidentified Maker American (Pennsylvania, York County), 20th century Center Square Variation Quilt about 1925 Wool/cotton blends and sateen cottons Gift of Rodney H. Wasserstrom

Lesley Vance American, born 1977 Untitled 2023 Oil on linen Museum Purchase, Derby Fund Ambera Wellmann Canadian, born 1982 Vanishing Point 2020 Oil on linen Gift of the Scantland Collection

Lorna Williams, Threefold , 2013

Robin F. Williams American, born 1984 Final Girl Exodus 2021 Oil and acrylic on canvas Gift of the Scantland Collection

Right: Installation image of Lauren Halsey’s The National Council of Negro Women, Inc. , 2020 Full credit line on pg. 43

Impact Report FY24

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$25,000–$49,999 Anonymous (3) Bank of America Pamela and Jack Beeler Family Mrs. Rhoma Berlin Cardinal Health Foundation Marie B. Caren Fund Estate of Hazel Colburn Beth Crane and Richard McKee Pete and Suzie Edwards Equitas Health FotoFocus Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Fox Ann and Tom Hoaglin Lyman L. Leathers Fund Mrs. Carol Manley and Mr. Ted Manley Estate of Mrs. Anne H. Melvin The Ohio State University Mr. and Mrs. David C. Patterson Mrs. Lee Pfening Ron and Ann Pizzuti Pete and Michelle Scantland Mr. David R. Schooler Mr. and Mrs. Jay Schottenstein Schumacher Foundation Trustees in memory of Michael H. Finnell Thekla and Don B. Shackelford Mr. and Mrs. Al and Barbara Siemer

Flickinger Legal Group Friedman & Mirman Mr. James P. Garland and Mrs. Carol J. Andreae Mr. Charles Hillman Mr. and Mrs. C. Robert Kidder Ms. Jill Kingsley LAGOS Marketa and Ewout Leeuwenburg Lee Lochtefeld Mrs. Fran B. Luckoff Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Millat Dara Pizzuti and Richard Jolly Erdis G. Robinson Trust Rockbridge William Roth Barbara Trueman Mr. and Ms. Robert J. Weiler Alfred L. Willson Charitable Fund Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Young $5,000–$9,999 Blair and John Adams Mr. and Mrs. Brett M. Alexander Deborah Melton Anderson Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. James M. Ball Ms. Felicia Bernardini

Herb and DeeDee Glimcher Mr. and Mrs. Glade H. Grable Beth Grimes-Flood and Tom Flood Jim and Christina Grote Ms. Jane Hoffelt and Mr. Gary Means Mary Jo Hudson and Lynn Wallich Lloyd D. Hunter Memorial Fund Larry and Donna James William and Mae Johannes Family Fund Estate of Mrs. F. Ashton Kidder The Kirkpatrick Jordan Foundation, Jerry Jordan Family Allan R. Korb, M.D. Fund Mr. and Mrs. Douglas F. Kridler Mary Lazarus Mr. and Ms. George M. Levine Pamela McVeigh Mr. and Mrs. David R. Meuse The Harry C. Moores Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Murray Dr. Annegreth T. Nill D. Scott Owens and Kevin J. Kowalski Mr. Michael A. Petrecca and Dr. Heather P. Grant PNC Porter Wright Morris & Arthur LLP

Gifts to the Annual Fund JULY 1, 2023–JUNE 30, 2024

$1,000,000+ Art Bridges Battelle The Edwards Family

Greater Columbus Arts Council Ohio Department of Development The Scantland Family

$500,000–$999,999 Seanna and Matt Walter

$250,000–$499,999 Ohio Arts Council

$100,000–$249,999 Estate of Dr. Thomas Boles Marie Caren Crut The Columbus Foundation Martha Holden Jennings Foundation Mrs. Sara Jo Kobacker Nationwide Insurance Foundation $50,000–$99,999 Anonymous (2) Ms. Jacqueline M. Davies Green Family Art Foundation Huntington Bank Ram Rajadhyaksha William and Sarah Ross Soter Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Walter Mr. John L. Wirchanski and Mrs. Evelyn Wirchainski Ian Ziegler Sarah Ziegler

Ms. Carolyn Prince Mr. Dave Pullman Lynne and Martyn Redgrave Robert M. Rex Fund of The Columbus Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Ross Tadd and Nancy Seitz Dr. Lee Shackelford Kara Siak and Kellis Waller Jenny Squires

Siemer Family Foundation Skestos Family Foundation Arlene and Michael Weiss

The Erika Bourguignon Charitable Trust Christopher Broderick and Jean Broderick City of Columbus Recreation and Parks Department Mr. Michael Coleman and Mrs. Janelle N. Coleman Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Coons Dr. Lisa Courtice and Dr. Thomas Courtice Crabbe, Brown & James LLP Michael and Paige Crane

$10,000–$24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Russell P. Austin Big Lots Mr. Jeffery D. Chaddock and Mr. Mark Morrow Columbus Metropolitan Housing Authority Crane Group Tom Davis Dickinson Wright PLLC Discover Mike and Phaedra Edwards Envisage Wealth Everything But The House Bebe and John Finn

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Tripp Kara Trott and Robert Philips Jonna Twigg and Saami Sabiti Will and Mary Vorys Dr. John Wakelin and Dr. Anu Chauhan Ms. Jane A. Walsh Rodney Wasserstrom Hugh Westwater and Linda Larrimer Mr. and Mrs. Brian Westwater Wexner Center for the Arts

Sally W. Crane Cox Mr. C. John Easton Ernst & Young Dr. Francille M. Firebaugh and Mr. John D. Firebaugh Kirk Fisher Anna and Joey Gasbarro Nancy and Dave Gill

Impact Report FY24

Spread: Image by Emma Parker Photography

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Roger and Susan Whitaker Mr. and Ms. Andrew Wise Estate of Nancy Wolfe Lane Barbara Young and Robert Young Greg Zunkiewicz $2,500–$4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Stanford M. Ackley Mr. Ben Addison

and Ms. Teresa M. Stankiewicz Sylvia Garrett GBQ Partners Joy and Michael Gonsiorowski Babette T. Gorman Ms. Dianne Goss J. Ronald Green and Louisa Bertch Green Thomas R. Gross Family Foundation Mr. William C. Habig The Heffner Fund Mr. and Mrs. Larry A. Hilsheimer Ms. Leslie Huntington Rebecca and Sebastian Ibel John H. Inskeep Trust Daniel L. Jensen

Ms. Cordelia W. Robinson Edward and Melinda Sadar Mr. and Mrs. Charles Saxbe Mr. Michael Smithson Nanette and Sandy Solomon Rachel and Robert Stern Mr. David Sugar Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Talmage Mr. and Mrs. James H. Taylor

Michelle Brandt and Brian Brandt Dr. and Mrs. J. Richard Briggs Mr. William Brown Mr. and Mrs. Russ Bundy

Mr. Robert Carson Shamus Cassidy Mr. Neal Cavanaugh CME Federal Credit Union Ms. Susan Cohen and Mr. Douglas Williams Ms. Cindy Coleman Amy Conley Ms. Mary Jo Green Mr. David F. Cooke Dr. and Mrs. Christopher M. Copeland

Mr. John G. Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Doug Allen Ms. Christie L. Angel and Mr. Otto Beatty

Telhio Credit Union Lonni J. Thompson Dr. and Mrs. Martin A. Torch Jay and Diane Vorys Mr. David A. Voyles and Mr. Andy Miller Warhol & WALL ST. Watershed Distillery LLC Mrs. Janie Marr Werum and Mr. David G. Korn Angela Westwater and David Meitus Annie Westwater and Cormack Eubanks Mr. and Mrs. Alec Wightman Mr. and Mrs. William S. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Stephen S. Wittmann Mr. and Mrs. Franck G. Wobst Ms. Anne Wright Ms. Becky S. Wright Miriam and Bernard Yenkin $1,000–$2,499 Lucy Ackley and Robert Collier Mr. and Mrs. Joel M. Altschule Dr. and Mrs. Craig W. Anderson Anonymous Jon Armstrong and Sheila Egan David and Carol Aronowitz Annie Arthur Mr. Jeffrey A. Baker and Mr. Randall S. Arndt Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Barnes

Mrs. Diana G. Arthur Mrs. Sharon R. Ault George Barrett Mr. and Mrs. John Cadwallader

Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Corna Michelle and James Croft Devin Cygnar Ms. Carole Dale Mr. Spencer L. Davis Delta Dental

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Cannell Casey and Cindy Cathcart Catherine Chapin Kobacker Mr. Greg Comfort Georgeann C. Corey Dr. Melanie Corn and Tanner Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Josh D. Corna Dan and Christie Crane Mr. David Crane and Ms. Elizabeth Dang Ms. M. Jameson Crane and Mr. Timothy Miller Mr. and Mrs. Jay Crane Mrs. Shannon Crane and Dr. Rob S. Crane Mr. Thomas Crane Ms. Tanny Crane and Mr. John C. Wolff Whitney Crane and Bill Roddick Prof. Patricia Cunningham and Dr. Craig Hassler Mr. and Mrs. John R. DallePezze Mr. and Ms. William D. Dargusch Mr. and Mrs. John Derzon DLZ Corporation Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Driskell Jeff and Lisa Edwards Mr. James W. Elliott and Mr. John R. Behal Encova Insurance Sylvia Fergus and Kent Rigsby

Wendy and Chris Johnson Mrs. Gisela E. Josenhans

Mr. and Mrs. Brandon Joseph Mr. and Mrs. Ira Owen Kane Mr. and Mrs. Tom J. Katzenmeyer Mr. and Mrs. Brett Kaufman Mr. James M. Keny William Kirk Ms. Alexa P. Konstantinos and Mr. Courtney Miller Mr. Duff Lindsay Ms. Andrea Lowman Mr. Elliott S. Luckoff Nancy and Tom Lurie Mr. and Mrs. Douglas D. Martin Mrs. Nancy Marzella Peggy Mativi and Donald W. Dick

DGD Group, Inc Ms. Elfi Di Bella Gabriel Diniz de Faria and Jennifer Diniz de Faria Dr. and Ms. Scott L. Donaldson Ms. Susanne Dotson Mr. J. Patrick Doust and Mr. Richard North Ms. Mary C. Drennen Elizabeth Dvorkin and Benjamin Sloneker Mr. and Mrs. TJ Dwyer Dr. E. Christopher Ellison and Dr. Mary Pat Borgess Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Emery Dr. Benedicta G. Enrile

Mr. Thomas A. McDowell Sara and Robert Meyers Denise M. Mirman

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Farquhar Marion and Lawrence Fisher

Dr. William R. Mitchell Mr. Michael Mizesko Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Morse Ms. Dorothy P. Noyes and Mr. Michael P. Krippendorf John and Ashley Osinski Charles H. Pace Fund Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Ransier, III Mark Real and Susan Real Leroy Richey and Chad Fondriest

Clyde and Ann Fobes Fred and Howard Fund Barbara Gasbarro and Michael Gasbarro Gatehouse Media Partners, Inc. Mrs. Sandra L. Gaunt

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bauer Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Becker Ronald Bell Mr. and Mrs. William M. Bennett Julie Bertram John Bevilacqua and Colleen Byrne Bob Bitzenhofer and Megan Rose Nadine A. Block

Ms. Gladys Geanekopulos Mrs. Michelle K. Geissbuhler Ms. Sherri M. Geldin Mr. and Mrs. Jack M. George Joachim Gfoeller

Mr. James Ferguson, II Ms. Grace A. Franklin Mr. Richard J. Furnstahl

Impact Report FY24

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