Women Cultural Leaders

November 21, 2014

With the arrival in 2013 of Jenny Bilfield, the first female president and CEO of the venerable Washington Performing Arts Society, followed this year by Deborah Rutter, the first female president of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, people sat up and took notice.

Bilfield and Rutter head what are arguably the two most high-profile arts institutions in Washington.

About to begin a major expansion, the Kennedy Center – with its array of theaters and venues and resident companies (including Washington National Opera, where Francesca Zambello is artistic director) – is considered the nation’s performing arts icon. Washington Performing Arts – with its new logo, shorter name and a sense of expanding mission – is the area’s leading producing organization, bringing world-class artists and ensembles not only to the Kennedy Center, but to venues such as the Music Center at Strathmore and the Sixth & I historic synagogue.

On the museum side, Kim Sajet at the National Portrait Gallery and Melissa Chiu at the Hirshhorn became the first female directors at their institutions this year.

The emergence of women as cultural leaders in Washington isn’t new, of course, but their recent growth in numbers may indicate a trend. It appears to have precipitated a burst of excitement and buzz in the city’s cultural world, especially in terms of possible and anticipated changes.

Arts organizations in cities across the United States face a host of challenges and opportunities. No one-size-fits-all approach is possible, other than the pursuit of excellence and, sometimes, survival.

Even within the visual-arts sphere, the challenges faced by leaders like Sajet at the National Portrait Gallery and Chiu at the Hirshhorn – and, for that matter, Elizabeth Broun at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Dorothy Kosinski at the Phillips Collection, Susan Fisher Sterling at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Judy Greenberg at the Kreeger Museum, Kate Markert at Hillwood and Camille Akeju at the Anacostia Community Museum – assume different forms.

Each museum is distinctly situated as to genre, mission, size, resources, patronage and the need to expand its horizons, what might be called bending the curve.

Our performing arts organizations are just as diverse, and sometimes evolve right before our eyes.

Arena Stage, one of the nation’s top regional companies, is the city’s oldest, founded in 1954 by the formidable and visionary Zelda Fichandler. Artistic director Molly Smith, who took over from Douglas Wager in 1998, oversaw Arena’s 2011 transformation. Joy Zinoman founded Studio Theatre and was its artistic director for more than 30 years of expansion before retiring in 2010 (the current artistic director is David Muse).

This sort of thing – women founding and sustaining theater and dance companies – has been going on in Washington for quite some time. Credit is also due to movers and shakers like the late Frankie Hewitt, who brought Ford’s Theatre back to life, and Jaylee Mead, who supported the growth of Arena and Studio.

Here in Georgetown, we remember Horizons Theatre and its mission of theater for women, led by George Washington University drama professor Leslie Jacobson.

In this issue, we pay tribute to the many talented and resourceful women who are leaders in the world of the performing and visual arts, sharing some of their thoughts below. The newcomers, who bring new enthusiasm, new ideas and a notable spirit of collaboration and partnership, join others already here (also outside the District, such as the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s Marin Alsop, who became the first female music director of a major American orchestra in 2007; Helen Pafumi at the Hub Theatre in Fairfax, Va.; and Toby Orenstein at Toby’s Dinner Theatre in Columbia, Md.). We regret the unavoidable omissions.

Together, they constitute a remarkable group of women and leaders, gifted with pragmatism, will, heart and vision.

Joy Zinoman, Founder, Studio Theatre: “For myself, some of the defining moments have included going overseas to Asia at age 19, a move that caused me to switch my interest from acting to directing. They also include arriving in Washington at a time when there were numerous industrial buildings in the city, and we had an opportunity to acquire space for our theaters, including the jewel that the Studio occupies now, which includes four theaters at 14th and P Streets. It allowed us to become an anchor of an arts corridor.”

Jenny Bilfield, President and CEO, Washington Performing Arts: “I loved seeing how the gears of organizations worked close-up, and high-level. And so I pursued leadership roles at small and then larger organizations where I could learn a great deal and make a big impact. Also, thanks to my mother, early exposure to a wide range of art forms, experienced in museums, performing arts venues, church basements, alternative spaces. We went to everything! So, being comfortable with many creative forms of expression, and appreciating that great art can happen in ANY location, was foundational for me.”

Kate Markert, Executive Director, Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens: “Probably taking my first art history course. I fell in love, head over heels, with all of art history, from prehistoric to contemporary. Man’s need to create, and the exceptional material examples of that creativity found in museums around the world, never cease to fascinate me. I really need to be in a place where I interact with the art objects themselves.”

Deborah Rutter, President, Kennedy Center: “Sitting in the middle of the violin section performing Beethoven’s “Pastoral Symphony” (No. 6) was a life-changing experience, one that told me I had to find a way to live my life with music at the center of it.”

Francesca Zambello, Artistic Director, Washington National Opera: “Standing backstage at the stage manager’s console at the Starlight Theater during a performance of ‘The Music Man,’ aged five, watching the scenery being changed, the performers running on and off stage (including my mother) and the sound of the orchestra. Attending the dress rehearsals of Wagner’s “Ring” Cycle in Bayreuth for the Patrice Chéreau production, the world of Wagner opening like a door wide before me.”

Marin Alsop, Music Director, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra: “Every time I encountered a major obstacle or experienced a rejection, I tried to use the experience as an opportunity to improve my skills and learn more abut my craft. I never assumed that I did not win a position or did not get an opportunity because of my gender. I was very fortunate to have parents who believed in my capacity without limitations and who encouraged me every step of the way.”

Molly Smith, Artistic Director, Arena Stage: “Moving to Alaska – embracing the hugeness and vastness of life, the cold, the endless days. Surviving cancer – another way of embracing life, choosing to fight for yourself. Directing “South Pacific” – opened my artistic eyes to the grandeur and beauty of the American musical.”

Judy Greenberg, Director, Kreeger Museum: “It was when I was serving as a commissioner [on the Rockville Cultural Arts Commission] that the idea of developing an art center in the city of Rockville was introduced. In the 1980s, I spearheaded the development of the art center and served as president of the board. Today the center is called VisArts and continues to flourish. Because of my experience bringing Rockville Arts Place to fruition, when David Lloyd Kreeger died in 1990 and Carmen Kreeger moved from the residence in 1992, I was offered the position as director of the Kreeger Museum in 1994. In essence, it was building the museum from ‘scratch,’ always keeping in mind the founders, the collection and the architecture.”

Melissa Chiu, Director, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “The Hirshhorn is a public institution and a nonprofit so we are more interested in education and programming than commerce per se. We are a 20th- and 21st-century museum. Tradition for our program is focused largely on the early tenets of modernism in the 20th century. My feeling is that in order to understand where we are today we must also understand the past. It is a part of our thinking and, in effect, allows us to see how we can make sense of today’s changes. My goal is to make the Hirshhorn a leader in the conversation on arts and culture.”

Susan Fisher Sterling, Director, National Museum of Women in the Arts: “NMWA’s unique focus on art by women keeps us in the forefront of discussions about empowerment. In the U.S. alone, the data shows that women artists continue to be in the minority in museums and galleries, and yet 51 percent of artists are women artists. If women are left out of our cultural landscape, what does that say about women in society as a whole? We answer that question by offering inspirational exhibitions, collections and programs, featuring exemplary women in the arts from the Renaissance to the present day.”

Kim Sajet, Director, National Portrait Gallery: “My aspiration is to turn on its head the traditional notions of portraiture as commemorating the dead, to that of living people recognizing and identifying with the lives of the people they meet through amazing art. The commerce part of the question is actually a huge challenge, because as a Smithsonian museum, although we have free admission, none of our federal funding covers any of the exhibitions or public programs. We rely entirely on fundraising to have our vision realized. Luckily the philanthropic community up to this point have shared our vision for the future and supported what we do.”

Zinoman: “I think that art, good plays, good works, certainly need to be fresh and look forward, but I also feel that there’s too much value placed on the idea of cutting-edge. Cutting-edge seems now to be everything. Great works of art always have an immediacy. It’s about the thought that art and ideas illuminate contemporary life.”

Alsop: “Trust is the cornerstone of every relationship, including the one between orchestra and audience. We have worked hard to earn and build that trust and, as a result, our audience is very open to and curious about new music. That said, balance and moderation are key in building successful programs, so we strive to present a good mix of the standard, beloved repertoire alongside works by living composers. I believe that we also have an obligation to challenge our listeners to a certain degree while entertaining them.”

Smith: “We do both. This year half of our season are premieres, risky and exciting. Then we’ll have a gold-standard musical like ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ to introduce audiences to this great American musical. Arena has broad shoulders and we can do both in exciting ways.”

Bilfield: “Given how many arts opportunities are available to our audiences, I want us to remain vigilant in designing programs that offer our audiences a sense of context and connection between events and across genres. Whether that happens onstage, or in events surrounding our performances, every experience should be energized and have an authorial perspective. If what we’re presenting could happen exactly the same way elsewhere, in the same context, then perhaps we shouldn’t be doing it.”

Rutter: “My most important role is to ensure that we are able to celebrate and experience the best of the arts long in to the future. ‘Forever’ is a powerful word, and one that isn’t used frequently in our world, but that is the role of the arts: to reflect our world, to speak to the past and the future, to stimulate interchange between people – ‘forever.’”

Sajet: “In my first year, a number of amazing women made it their mission to take me under their wing by hosting lunches and dinners, taking me to important events, introducing me to their friends and inviting me into their offices and homes. I have honestly made more female friends in my first twelve months of living in Washington than at any other time of my life.”

Alsop: “Observing my friend, Senator Barbara Mikulski, I see that women in Washington band together to support each other and are committed to making a difference in the quality of peoples’ lives. Cultural institutions contribute hugely to that quality of life level and I am inspired by the example set by our women leaders in D.C.”

Dorothy Kosinski, Director, The Phillips Collection: “People tend to allow the big industry of government to obscure the importance and vitality of our cultural community. This is a theater town. This is a museum center, with much more than just the federally subsidized institutions. Women see the importance of the cultural life of a great city. It’s good and natural that we step up to the plate to serve.”

Smith: “Ours is a great city that knows how to look forward. Men and women with plans for the future naturally gravitate to this center of our government, and the arts are no exception. It’s a supportive artistic environment full of wonderful artists, of both genders, and we work together to build a thriving cultural community. Just in the past few years more women have been given the opportunity to lead in cultural organizations and that’s good for all of us.”

Camille Akeju, Director, Anacostia Community Museum: “I never see being a woman as an obstacle. I’d venture to guess that most of the women in the same role I am, it’s not in the front of their minds that being a women is something to overcome. Drive is drive, passion is passion, knowledge is knowledge—I don’t care if you’re a woman, a man or androgynous. Perhaps women instinctively know they have to try a little harder and work a little more, but we’re finally in an era where women are getting recognition for the things they’ve done and assuming these leadership roles. And I do think the Washington environment is receptive to creativity and passion.”

Sterling: “Washington is an exceptional place for women cultural CEOs because we serve the most educated public in the nation. Like our male counterparts, we have the ability to forge cultural and social connections that are deep, authentic and build great institutions. These are the qualities people want us to demonstrate in order to maintain the highest degree of public trust.”

Zinoman: “Is it really? I still find that, at least in theater, the culture is dominated by men. There are ideas about leadership that pertain to qualities: men are action-oriented, women are more compassionate. I do feel that women bring a quality of leadership based on relationships, which leads to cooperative efforts.”
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Washington Design Center Opening


The eagerly anticipated and new Washington Design Center officially opened Nov. 12 at the Franklin Court Building, 1099 14th St. NW. Guests browsed three floors of showrooms and previewed the new collections, as they enjoyed light refreshments and hors d’oeuvres.
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Washington Ballet Soirée: a Night of Passionate Art


The Washington Ballet celebrated philanthropy and raised funds to benefit TWB’s Latino Dance Initiatives and student scholarship programs with “Noche de Pasión: The Tango Soirée” at the Organization of American States Nov. 8. The event brought together the women’s committee of TWB, the Jeté Society and Latino Dance Initiatives host committee with honorary co-chairs, the ambassadors of Argentina to the U.S. and the OAS. It was a beautiful evening of live performances, music, dancing and dining, highlighted by the special guest appearance of renowned Argentine dancer Julio Bocca. [gallery ids="118436,118401,118412,118421,118427" nav="thumbs"]

Kreeger Museum Plans Expanded Contemporary Sculpture Garden


Knight Kiplinger was the keynote speaker at a luncheon hosted by the Kreeger Nov. 9, as the museum launches its first Capital Campaign and announced plans for an expanded contemporary sculpture garden. Five acres will ultimately be filled with contemporary sculptures around the reflecting pool, the north lawn and wooded pathways, enabling he museum to further its mission to highlight the connection between art, architecture and music. The sculpture garden is free and open to the public, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. [gallery ids="101929,136115" nav="thumbs"]

21st Annual Knock Out Abuse Against Women Fundraising Gala


The 21st annual event took place at the Washington Ritz-Carlton Nov. 23. Co-founders Cheryl Masri and Jill Sorenson selected Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe as the recipient of the 2014 Break the Silence Award for his efforts to combat sexual violence at college and universities. Dr. Rondi Walker served as 21st Anniversary Chairwoman, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer introduced keynote speaker Robin McGraw and Maksim Chmerkovskiy of “Dancing with the Stars” conducted the live auction. WUSA9’s Andrea Roane again hosted the evening. Knock Out Abuse is dedicated to promoting awareness and assisting the victims of domestic violence. [gallery ids="101927,136156,136132,136159,136138,136142,136147,136152" nav="thumbs"]

African Art Museum Celebrates Its 50th


The Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, founded by Warren Rogers in 1964 in a Capitol Hill townhouse that once belonged to Frederick Douglass, celebrated 50 years Nov. 7 with a star-studded gala. Special guests were Camille and Bill Cosby, who loaned their art collection to the museum for inclusion in the newly opened “Conversations: African and African American Artworks in Dialogue.” Gala honorees were artist Bruce Onobrakpeya and Lydia Puccinelli Robbins of the Robbins Center for Cross Cultural Communication. [gallery ids="101926,136160,136164" nav="thumbs"]

Royal Embassy of Cambodia Hosts National Society of Arts and Letters


Ambassador Hem Heng hosted the National Society of Arts and Letters Washington, D.C., Chapter at the Royal Embassy of Cambodia for its monthly meeting Nov. 4. Journalist and author Elizabeth Becker presented her book, “Bophana,” the true story of a young woman who became a rare heroine during the Khmer Rouge era. Becker, one of two western journalists to interview Pol Pot while he was in power, discussed how her nonfiction book evolved into a movie, a novel and the lyrics of a rock band song.

FreshFarm Markets 2014 Farmland Feast


Joe Yonan, food and travel editor of the Washington Post, emceed FreshFarm Markets 2014 Farmland Feast at the Ritz-Carlton Nov. 10. “We are a little organization but tonight it doesn’t look like it.,” Yonan. Several leading chefs, including Tony Chittum of Iron Gate and Todd Gray of Equinox Restaurant, and sommeliers like Brent Kroll of Neighborhood Restaurant Group prepared signature dishes and libations. Auctioneer Patrick Shane O’Neill raised $28,000 to support FreshFarm Markets’ mission to build and strengthen the local, sustainable food movement in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. [gallery ids="101928,136124,136128,136131,136119" nav="thumbs"]

Hope for Children Celebrates

November 19, 2014

Hope for Children-US held it’s 9th annual gala on November 6th at the
Ethiopian Embassy. The event featured models from THE Artist Agency that generously donated their time and were shown doing platform modeling in clothing provided by Ethiopian designer, Yodit Dabba. The event also
featured a film of the youths that are sponsored and supported by HFC.
Hope for Children’s mission is to support families and children in
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Georgetown Gala ‘Plays Among the Stars’


As the Georgetown Gala makes the scene this Friday at the Italian Embassy, it joins other big-time soirees around the city at the height of Washington, D.C.’s social calendar.

The gala’s theme, “Fly Me to the Moon” evokes an optimistic 1960s feeling with Frank Sinatra, the Rat Pack, “Mad Men” and man’s first landing on the moon. Expect to see some Franks and Sammys walking around, some Don Drapers and Jane Harrises, too — maybe even Buzz Aldrin, or one Georgetowner, who is, in fact, a retired space shuttle commander.

Started in 2003 as the 125th anniversary celebration of the Citizens Association of Georgetown, the party has become the hot ticket in town, attracting about 400 partygoers to the association’s biggest annual fundraiser.

Georgetown’s advocate for residents and homeowners descends from D.C.’s first civic group, the Georgetown Citizens Association, formed in 1878, which merged in 1963 with the Progressive Citizens Association of Georgetown to form CAG. Past victories include the passage of the Old Georgetown Act in 1950 and saving the Old Stone House.

Today, the group works with neighbors, businesses, Georgetown University, the Metropolitan Police Department and other groups. The association sees “Georgetown as a residential community, a historic treasure, an educational center and a vital component of the District of Columbia’s retail and tourism economy. The association seeks to maintain a unique mix of missions for the community . . .”

Together, the list of what CAG does is impressive: tree plantings, concerts in the parks, an oral history project, a public safety program, historic preservation, town-gown relations, monthly meetings and an online bulletin board and efforts on trash and rodents. It is all the more impressive that much of the work is done by volunteers from the community – and with an annual operating budget of $545,000.

This year, the annual black-tie blowout will honor former mayoral candidate and Ward 2 Councilmember (since 1991) Jack Evans and his wife Michele Seiver Evans and their six children, who live on P Street (a modern-day Brady Bunch). Chair of the Committee on Finance and Revenue, Jack Evans is closely involved with decisions on D.C. taxes and budgets. He was in the forefront in pushing for approval of the Verizon Center and Nationals Park. Michele is very active in CAG, its Trees for Georgetown as well as Volta Park and the Georgetown House Tour – and, now, Dog Tag Bakery (more on this later).

“CAG, for me as a newcomer, was such an inviting place,” said Michele Evans. “When I married Jack, I’d forgotten which side was east or west. Georgetown is a village: everybody takes care of everybody.”

She echoed her husband’s refrain: “This is the golden age of Georgetown.” (How many years has Jack said this?)

“The minute I got involved with CAG, they invited me on committees,” Evans said. “It was my pleasure to help.” Mentioning bicycling or jumping on the Circulator bus, she said that she liked that the town is so walkable.

As for CAG’s annual gala, it is a great time for “neighbors to catch up with neighbors,” Michele said.

The high-energy event — with lots of hellos, hugs and dancing — gathers residents, organizations, businesses and local politicos to celebrate Georgetown and CAG’s mission of historic preservation and improving the life of the community. The list of attendees and sponsors reads like a who’s who of the town. The food will be provided, appropriately enough, by Cafe Milano, the Italian restaurant on Prospect Street that is a center of its own social scene in Washington.

Honorary chairs are Ambassador Claudio Bisogniero and his wife Laura Denise, Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, Selwa “Lucky” Roosevelt, former Sen. Joseph Lieberman and his wife Hadassah, and John DeGioia, president of Georgetown University, and Kitty Kelley, who provides another gala tie-in. She wrote “His Way: An Unauthorized Biography of Frank Sinatra.” The famous crooner, bon vivant and businessman was not pleased. Kelley was sued by Sinatra even before she began to write the book. The lawsuit was dismissed. Three hundred signed copies of her Sinatra book will be given away at Friday’s big party.

It was gala co-chairs Jennifer Altemus, Colleen Girouard and Robin Jones who came up with the evening theme of “Fly Me to the Moon.”

Written in 1954 as “In Other Words,” the song was recorded by many artists and was made forever famous by Sinatra, who sang “Fly Me to the Moon” as a tribute to America’s Apollo astronauts. The singer would have astronauts in his Las Vegas audience as they took a break from training at nearby Nellis Air Force Base. The song itself became the first music heard on the moon, played by Aldrin — second man on the moon — who told song arranger Quincy Jones about it later.

With such music as a background, the gala’s entertainment, Danny Meyers and his DC Love band, will step up. For the after party, disc jockeys Trophy Brothers will keep it moving.

Gala co-chair Jones said, “Colleen and I have been a great team chairing the gala for the past two years — and with Jennifer this year. We just want to create a memorable experience for party guests that keeps them coming back. This year is our best effort yet.” She added, “Being involved with CAG is like having your finger on the pulse of Georgetown.”

After moving back to town, co-chair Girouard joined the association six years ago and found that “it was very best way to meet my neighbors.”

Altemus, the group’s president from 2009 to 2013, said, “I am impressed with all that CAG is able to do with its mostly volunteer staffing. It really adds to the feeling that we live in a small town with all of the big city conveniences and benefits.”

CAG President Pamla Moore sees a safe neighborhood and historic preservation among top concerns and said, “If it wasn’t for community members who actively give their time and talents, Georgetown would not be the wonderful place it is.” Betsy Cooley, the group’s executive director for the last 10 years, said she has a great job, “because all I have to do is keep up with the volunteers.”

Those involved with the group stay with it, such as past presidents Victoria Rixey, Barbara Downs, Ray Kukulski and Denise Cummingham, who began the annual gala, as well as Don Shannon and Kathleen Graff. Other names from years gone by include Ev Shorey, Louis Alexander Traxel, Grosvenor Chapman, Charles Poor, Olcott Deming, Peter Belin, Juan Cameron and Eva Hinton.

The live auction at the gala will be called by Griff Jenkins of Fox News. Items include a Washington Nationals game package, a party for 25 persons at Evermay, a five-night stay in a Sicilian villa, a three-night stay at the Vail Four Seasons, a three-night getaway to the Landings on Skidaway Island in Savannah, Ga., and a weekend at the Georgetown Four Seasons with spa treatments, dinner and rooftop cocktails at the Capella. Silent auction items include dinners at Kafé Leopold, Unum and Peacock Café, plus glassware by A Mano, a wine package and more.

So, raise a glass at the Georgetown Gala Oct. 24 to our kind of town. There are few strangers in the night here. And while CAG wants to “Fly [Us] to the Moon,” we will always come home to Georgetown.
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