Hala Moddelmog
President & CEO
The Woodruff Arts Center
A Letter from our President & CEO
Between a global pandemic, a national reckoning on social justice, and political unrest, each of us emerged from 2020 with our own unique tale. But art is one of the most powerful tools we have to heal and—perhaps even more remarkably—to effect change. The arts facilitate dialogue; they encourage us to listen and learn, to grow and connect. Art tells a story. So come visit the High Museum (yes, it’s open) to find hope in the gallery walls. And when the Alliance Theatre and Symphony Hall are lit up once again and audiences pack the houses, I hope you’ll join us there, too. Because when you immerse yourself in the art here, you can always turn the page and start anew. It’s your story to tell. We’ll help you use your voice.
In service,
Hala Moddelmog
- Artistic Excellence: The Woodruff Arts Center serves as Atlanta’s cultural cornerstone, offering world-class art to the community through our Art Partners—the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and High Museum of Art.
- Arts Education: Together, our Art Partners serve as the #1 arts educator in the state of Georgia. Our education programs foster the innovation, creativity, and critical thinking skills that 21st-century students need to be successful.
- Social Justice: The Woodruff Arts Center and our Art Partners have long been committed to work in equity, diversity, and inclusion; increasing access to programming; and ensuring that our art, artists, and staff reflect our vibrant city.
Employees for the Arts
Employees for the Arts is the Woodruff Arts Center’s workplace giving program, which encourages employees to make personal contributions to promote the arts in Atlanta. By investing in the Woodruff Arts Center, employees play an integral role in enriching the cultural landscape of our city. Thank you to all of our Employees for the Arts supporters who contributed to the 2019-2020 Campaign.
- ADP
- AT&T
- Bank of America Private Bank
- Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner
- Cushman & Wakefield of Georgia, Inc.
- Deloitte LLP
- Equifax
- Eversheds Sutherland (US) LLP
- EY
- Genuine Parts Company
- IBM Corporation
- JLL
- Jones Day
- Kilpatrick Townsend
- King & Spalding
- KPMG LLP
- Morris, Manning & Martin
- LLP
- PwC
- Smith & Howard, P.C.
- Truist
Corporate Cabinet
The Woodruff Arts Center’s Annual Corporate Campaign raises critical funds for the cultural growth of our local and global community. Support from corporations ensures a lasting impact in Atlanta and beyond through arts education, outreach, and world-class performances and exhibitions. More than 250 companies contribute in this citywide effort, led by the volunteer Campaign Chair and the Campaign Corporate Cabinet composed of Atlanta executives. The Woodruff Corporate Cabinet helps support the success of the Woodruff Arts Center and its Art Partners—the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and High Museum of Art. We are deeply grateful to these volunteers, who help ensure that the arts thrive in our city.
Chair, Jeff Anderson
Managing Partner
The Goodwin Group
Lisa Ashby
SVP and Regional Manager, Foundations and Endowments
Truist Financial Corporation
Jennifer Cambern
Vice President
ADP
Tom Chubb
President & CEO
Oxford Industries
Scott Cullen
Executive Vice President
Jones Lang LaSalle Brokerage, Inc.
David Duncan
Executive Vice President
Georgia Pacific
Kerri Faber
President
Faber Metrics
Jason Halliburton
Financial Advisor / Portfolio Advisor Merrill Lynch Wealth Management
Doug Hertz
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer United Distributors, Inc.
Ed Heys
Managing Partner
Deloitte & Touche LLP
Dan Israel
Senior Director, Digital Retailing Cox Automotive
Bob Jimenez
Senior Vice President
Cox Enterprises
Russ Jobson
Senior Vice President
Colliers International
David Leiter
Managing Partner
KPMG
Hala Moddelmog
President & CEO
The Woodruff Arts Center
Bill Morgan
Managing Director
The William Morgan Company
Sanjay Parekh
Founder
Mirage Data
Danny Patton
Vice President
Gilbane Building Company
Brett Pulley
Atlanta Bureau Chief
Bloomberg
Kim Reed
President, US Southeast Zone
AIG
Frank Spears
CEO
Frank Spears & Associates
Bentina Terry
Senior Vice President
Georgia Power
Michael Tesler
North Georgia Corporate Bank President Ameris Bank
John Yates
Partner
Morris, Manning & Martin, LLP
Friends of Woodruff
Our Friends of Woodruff help sustain the very best in visual and performing arts through their support of the Woodruff Arts Center’s Annual Campaign.
The Annual Campaign provides critical operating expenses—including shared services that benefit the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and High Museum of Art—as well as funding for artistic and educational programs.
Friends of Woodruff enable the Art Partners to deliver world-class performances, exhibitions, and education programs that make Atlanta a cultural hub, strengthen the community, and improve student outcomes.
If you’d like to learn more about becoming a Friend of Woodruff, please contact friendsofwoodruff@woodruffcenter.org.
Financials at A Glance
Woodruff Arts Center
FY2021 Governing Board |
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Douglas J. Hertz*, Chair |
Phil Jacobs*, Vice Chair |
Claire Lewis Arnold*, Secretary |
Hala Moddelmog*, President & CEO |
Lila Hertz* Chair, Alliance Theatre |
Janine Brown* Chair, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra |
Robin Howell* Chair, High Museum of Art |
D. Richard Williams* Chair, Finance Committee |
Shantella Cooper* Chair, Compensation & HR Committee |
Galen Oelkers* Chair, Investment Committee |
Glenn W. Mitchell III* Chair, Audit Committee |
Thomas Chubb* Chair, Nominating & Governance Committee |
John Yates* Chair, Development Committee |
Dan Baldwin At-Large Member |
Duriya Farooqui At-Large Member |
Ravi Saligram At-Large Member |
Benny Varzi At-Large Member |
Kathy Waller At-Large Member |
2021 Board of Trustees
Voting Trustees
Peter Aman |
Ozzie Areu |
Thomas J. Asher |
Ali (Al) Azadi |
Melissa Babb |
Juanita Baranco |
Barry Berlin |
Stan Blackburn |
Rebecca Blalock |
Joseph Blanco |
Theodore I. Blum |
Jim Boswell |
Jon Bridges |
Carrie Brown |
Mary Cahill |
Lisa Calhoun |
Elizabeth W. Camp |
Meria Joel |
Carstarphen, Ed.D Bert Clark |
Bobby Condon |
Colin Connolly |
Dave Dase |
LeighAnn Costley* |
Donna Owens Cox |
Ann W. Cramer |
Christopher Cummiskey |
Kappy Kellett deButts |
Michael Donnelly |
Richard J. Dugas, Jr. |
Michael Egan III |
Howard Feinsand |
John Ferguson |
Teresa Finley |
Jordy Gamson |
BJ Green |
Jamila M. Hall |
James B. Hannan Philip Harrison |
Beth Holder |
Karen T. Hughes* |
Kit Hughes |
Voting Trustees
Daniel Israel |
Nancy Janet* |
Bob Jimenez |
Ty Johnson |
Wab P. Kadaba |
Jenna Kelly |
Amy Kenny |
Andjela Kessler* |
Kurt Kuehn |
Aldo (Al) LaFiandra |
Jane D. Lanier |
David Leiter |
Milton Little |
Dennis Lockhart |
Helene G. Lollis |
Larry Mark |
John S. Markwalter, Jr. |
Barry McCarthy |
Milford McGuirt |
Penelope McPhee |
Steve Mensch |
Duncan Miller |
Pat Mitchell |
Arun Mohan, MD |
Valerie Montgomery Rice, MD, FACOG |
John Murphy |
Kenneth M. Neighbors |
John F. O'Neill III |
Howard Palefsky |
Chuck Palmer |
Natalye Paquin, Esq. |
Sanjay Parekh |
William Pate |
Gary Peacock |
Kathryn Petralia |
Suzanne T. Plybon |
Alan Prince |
Erica Qualls-Battey |
Margaret C. Reiser |
Joe W. Rogers, Jr. |
Michael M. Rogers |
James A. Rubright* |
Voting Trustees
Teya Ryan |
Louise Sams |
David W. Scheible |
Steve Selig III |
James Simpson |
Janet Simpson |
Pradeep Sinha, MD, PhD, |
FACS |
Michael J. Sivewright |
John W. Somerhalder, II |
Wendy Stewart |
Lizanne Thomas |
Lyle Tick |
Claude Wade |
Anita Ward |
Darcy R. White |
Ryan Wilson |
Gregory H. Worthy |
Carolyn Yancey |
Life Trustees
Mr. James S. Balloun |
Mr. Joseph R Bankoff |
Ms. Jane C. Black |
Mr. Bradley N. Currey, Jr. |
Mrs. Lynda Bradbury Courts |
Mr. Richard A. Denny, Jr. |
Ms. Laura J. Hardman |
Ms. Virginia Hepner |
Mrs. W. Barrett Howell |
Mr. Douglas Ivester |
Mr. Lynn H. Johnston |
Ms. Ingrid Saunders Jones |
Mr. James Henry Landon |
Mr. Solon P. Patterson |
Mr. Manning M. Pattillo, Jr. |
Mr. C.B. Rogers, Jr. |
Mrs. Charles A. Smithgall |
Mr. John W. Spiegel |
Mr. G. Kimbrough Taylor, Jr. |
Alliance Theatre
Alliance Theatre
EXPANDING HEARTS AND MINDS ON STAGE AND OFF
The Alliance Theatre’s 19/20 onstage season was filled with Broadway-scale productions, new plays for teen audiences, and regional premieres of contemporary works by America’s leading playwrights. The season opened with the Broadway-scale musical Becoming Nancy, directed and choreographed by Broadway legend Jerry Mitchell. Maybe Happy Ending pushed the boundaries of what musical theater can be and shone a spotlight on the Alliance’s technical prowess. Ghost, adapted from the wildly popular young adult novel by Jason Reynolds, delighted middle and high school audiences, and Seize the King, a contemporary twist on Richard III, served as the inaugural production in the Alliance’s Classic Remix Series.
As March began, the Alliance was humming with activity. The third musical of the 19/20 season, Mo Willems’ Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed: The Rock Experience, was on stage performing for sold-out student matinee audiences. Meanwhile, Kendeda National Graduate Playwriting Competition winner 53% Of was in the rehearsal hall, while the creative team for the Alliance’s production of Lynn Nottage’s Pulitzer Prize winner Sweat was preparing to start rehearsals and close out the season. The COVID-19 crisis forced these plans to grind to a screeching halt.
COMMUNITY CONNECTION
Live theater is an art form celebrating live, in-person gatherings. But 2020 has taught us that theater—and the Alliance—are so much more than that. When the Alliance’s stages went dark in the early days of the pandemic, its production departments set to creating more than 8,000 fabric masks and 1,000 gowns for local hospitals, providing emergency personal protective equipment to healthcare workers until manufacturers could meet demand. Meanwhile, the Alliance teams created connection during times of isolation through virtual camps, which reached more than 1,000 children and teens in 26 states, and streaming performances of the Kathy & Ken Bernhardt Theatre for the Very Young productions like In My Granny’s Garden and Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed, which streamed in eight countries.
Above all, the Alliance Theatre has spent this year listening. The Alliance has been committed to being an anti-racist organization for decades—but there is still work to do to be a theater that is inclusive, diverse, and accessible to all. The Alliance is committing to telling more BIPOC stories on all of its stages, created with more BIPOC artists, and to serving as a community resource through programs like Allyship training, the Spelman Leadership Fellows program, and many others.
Alliance Theatre
Officers |
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LeighAnn Costley Treasurer Partner, Frazier & Deeter |
Lila Hertz Chair Community Volunteer |
Jocelyn J. Hunter Vice Chair Vice President & Associate General Counsel The Home Depot |
Anne Kaiser Immediate Past Chair Vice President, Community & Economic Development Georgia Power |
Hala Moddelmog President & CEO The Woodruff Arts Center |
E. Kendrick Smith Secretary Partner, Jones Day |
Alliance Theatre
Board of Directors
Board Of Directors
Kristen R. Adams |
James L. Anderson |
Alba C. Baylin |
Kenny Blank |
Brittany Boals Moeller |
Terri Bonoff |
Matthew Bower |
Laura E. Brightwell |
Jeffrey S. Cashdan |
Steve W. Chaddick |
Miles Cook |
LeignAnn Costley |
Joe Crowley |
Alison Danaceau |
Fred Ehlers |
Reade Fahs |
Howard L. Feinsand |
Andrea Freeman |
Richard Goerss |
Kim Greene |
Lila Hertz |
John Keller |
Andjela Kessler |
Lauren Kiefer |
Mary Jane Kirkpatrick |
Carrie Kurlander |
Allegra Lawrence-Hardy |
Jean Ann McCarthy |
Alan McKeon |
Alan McKnight |
Dori Miller |
Phil H. Moise |
Voting Trustees
Maureen Morrison |
Shareka Nelson |
Allison O'Kelly |
Paul Pendergrass |
Scott Pioli |
Jamal Powell |
Asif Ramji |
Danielle Reardon |
Margaret Reiser |
Matthew Richburg |
Robyn S. Roberts |
Maurice M. Rosenbaum |
Steve Selig |
Mital Shah |
Mark Silberman |
William D. Sleeper |
H. Bronson Smith |
E. Kendrick Smith |
Karen Shepherd Spiegel |
Chandra Stephens-Albright |
Charlita Stephens-Walker |
Rosemarie Thurston |
Benny H. Varzi |
Cynthia Widner Wall |
Rebekah Wasserman |
Glenn Weiss |
Todd Zeldin |
Lifetime Directors
Rita M. Anderson |
Frank S. Chew |
Ann W. Cramer |
Linda Davidson |
Laura Hardman |
John Hays Mershon |
Richard S. Myrick |
Helen M. Regenstein |
Robert E. Reiser, Jr. |
Jane Shivers |
Helen Smith Price |
Benjamin T. White |
Voting Trustees
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
CELEBRATING 75 YEARS
The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s 75th anniversary season began with dazzling performances featuring celebrated guest artists and conductors, Mahler’s monumental “Symphony of a Thousand” with 454 musicians on stage, eight ASO premieres, and solo performances from three ASO musicians. Atlanta Symphony Hall LIVE events and the Movies in Concert series also brought new audiences looking for unique entertainment experiences.
On March 11, former Music Director Yoel Levi returned to Symphony Hall in what turned out to be the final concert of the season. In response to the COVID-19 crisis, the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra canceled all concerts for the remainder of the season. While the country sheltered in place, the ASO continued to deliver musical experiences via the ASO Virtual Stage, a central hub of online content featuring interviews, on-demand concerts, listening parties, education programs, archived concerts, and premieres of newly recorded solo and chamber performances by ASO musicians, keeping music lovers connected to the music and each other virtually.
Despite the many unforeseen challenges and the devastating cancellation of the remainder of the season, the ASO ended the fiscal year with a budget surplus for the sixth consecutive year.
COMMUNITY COMMITMENT
During the 2019-2020 season, the ASO also deepened its connection to the Atlanta community by broadening its education and community programs. The ASO reached 35,000 students and their families through its Concerts for Young People, Family Concerts, Music for the Very Young, Musicians in Schools, and Instrument Petting Zoo programs. The ASO also forged new partnerships with Living Walls Atlanta and Tiny Doors ATL to commemorate its 75th anniversary.
Taking the music to the community, engaging new audiences, and creating new partnerships, the ASO launched Around the A, presented by PNC Bank in September 2019. This free concert series featured performances across Atlanta in venues like Centennial Olympic Park, Morehouse College, Monday Night Garage, Atlanta History Center, Agnes Scott College, and more.
The civil unrest of 2020 created a renewed sense of urgency for the ASO to work toward a more equitable future for the institution, the Atlanta community, and the entire field of classical music. Building on the groundbreaking work the ASO began nearly 30 years ago with the nationally recognized Talent Development Program, a rigorous musical training program for Black and Latinx students, the ASO is committed to diversity, equity, and inclusion throughout its hiring and audition practices, artistic programming, internal culture, and education and community engagement.
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
Officers |
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Janine Brown Chair‡ Partner-in-Charge of Atlanta Office Alston & Bird LLP |
Howard D. Palefsky Immediate Past Chair‡ President, Victoria Capital Management, Inc. |
Lynn Eden Vice Chair Community Volunteer |
S. Patrick Viguerie Vice Chair President, Innosight |
Susan Antinori Secretary President, Antinori Foundation |
James Rubright Treasurer‡ Retired Chairman and CEO, RockTenn (now WestRock) |
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
Board of Directors
Board Of Directors
Keith Adams |
Juliet McClatchey Allan‡ |
Jennifer Barlament |
Paul Blackney |
Rita Bloom |
Justin Bruns* |
Benjamin Q. Brunt |
C. Merrell Calhoun |
S. Wright Caughman, M.D.‡ |
Susan Clare |
Russell Currey |
Errol B. Davis Jr. |
Carlos del Rio, M.D., FIDSA |
Sloane Drake |
Angela Evans |
Craig Frankel |
Sally Bogle Gable |
Anne Game |
Paul R. Garcia |
Jason Guggenheim |
Bonnie B. Harris |
Charles Harrison |
Caroline Hofland† |
Tad Hutcheson |
Roya Irvani |
Nancy Janet* |
Randolph J. Koporc |
Carrie Kurlander |
James H. Landon |
Donna Lee |
Sukai Liu |
Kevin Lyman |
Voting Trustees
Deborah Marlowe |
Brian F. McCarthy |
Penelope McPhee† |
Bert Mills |
Molly Minnear |
Hala Moddelmog* |
Terence L. Neal |
Galen Lee Oelkers |
Ebbie Parsons, Ed.D. |
Cathleen Quigley |
William Schultz |
Charles Sharbaugh |
John A. Sibley, III |
Fahim Siddiqui |
W. Ross Singletary, II‡ |
John Sparrow |
Gail Ravin Starr |
Elliott Tapp |
Brett Tarver |
Kathy Waller |
Mark D. Wasserman |
Chris Webber |
John B. White, Jr.‡ |
Richard S. White, Jr. |
Kevin E. Woods, M.D., M.P.H. |
Board Of Counselors
Neil Berman |
John W. Cooledge, M.D. |
John R. Donnell, Jr. |
Jere A. Drummond |
Carla Fackler |
Charles B. Ginden |
Voting Trustees
John T. Glover |
Dona Humphreys |
Aaron J. Johnson, Jr. |
Ben F. Johnson, III |
James F. Kelley |
Patricia Leake |
Karole F. Lloyd |
Meghan H. Magruder |
Patricia H. Reid |
Joyce Schwob |
H. Hamilton Smith |
W. Rhett Tanner |
G. Kimbrough Taylor, Jr. |
Michael W. Trapp |
Ray Uttenhove |
Chilton Varner |
Adair M. White |
Sue Sigmon Williams |
Life Directors
Howell E. Adams, Jr. |
Bradley Currey, Jr. |
Betty Sands Fuller |
Azira G. Hill |
Lessie B. Smithgall |
- * Denotes Ex-Officio Board Member (Serves as consequence of Office)
- † Denotes Members on Sabbatical for the 2020/21 Season
- ‡ Denotes Committee Chairs for the 2020/21 Season
High Museum of Art
High Museum of Art
ART AND ARTISTS TO INSPIRE, ENRICH, AND DELIGHT VISITORS OF ALL BACKGROUNDS
With 13 exhibitions and dozens of school, family, and public programs, the High Museum of Art facilitated an engaging dialogue with diverse audiences of more than 323,000 visitors on-site during the High’s fiscal year, which ends each year on May 31. The Museum served another 1,552,467 online. The High’s vision was to create a dynamic suite of exhibitions and programs to foster an understanding and appreciation for the visual arts.
Although the last months of the High’s fiscal year brought a number of challenges due to the COVID-19 crisis, including the temporary closure of the Museum, shutting the doors opened up new opportunities to bring the High’s collections and educational resources directly into homes through new and engaging online programs. As a result, hundreds of thousands of viewers connected with art—even during the pandemic.
EXHIBITIONS AND COLLECTIONS
The High’s curatorial team crafted a robust schedule of exhibitions for 2019-2020 that celebrated the excellence of the Museum’s collections while reaching beyond its boundaries to present new and riveting material. These exhibitions represented a broad range of cultures, styles, and art forms.
Last year more than 300 objects were added to the High’s permanent collection, most notably the 24 artworks donated by philanthropists Doris and Shouky Shaheen. This collection of Impressionist, Post-Impressionist, and modernist paintings is one of the most significant groups of European paintings ever to enter the Museum’s collection. The gift marks the High’s first acquisition of paintings by renowned artists such as Henri Fantin-Latour, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, and Alfred Sisley. In recognition of the gift, the Museum established the Doris and Shouky Shaheen Gallery in its Stent Family Wing, where the paintings are currently on view.
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
The High Museum strives to ensure that its programs are accessible and inclusive to the entire community. Through programs like the popular Second Sundays, when the Museum offers free admission and a broad array of activities; Toddler Thursdays, when the High welcomes young children and their caregivers for art-making activities, stories, and tours; or the new Creative Aging programs designed for older adults to experience the collections in fun and innovative ways, the High meets people of all ages where they are and provides profound, often transformational experiences.
High Museum of Art
Officers |
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Robin R. Howell Chair, Board of Directors |
Newell Harbin Vice-Chair Collections |
Karen Hughes Vice-Chair, Finance and Operations and Treasurer |
Liza Jancik Vice-Chair, Exhibitions |
Sarah Kennedy Vice-Chair, Education |
Pratap C. Mukharji Vice-Chair, Communications |
Douglas Reid Vice-Chair, Development |
Sara Steinfeld Vice-Chair, Nominations |
High Museum of Art
Board Of Directors
Board Of Directors
Charles Abney*† |
Lauren A. Amos |
Spring Asher |
Farideh Azadi |
Radcliffe Bailey |
Dan S. Baldwin* |
Watt Boone |
Mary Schmidt Campbell, PhD |
Suzanne Christensen |
Bert Clark |
Charlene Crusoe-Ingram* |
Mary Wayne Dixon |
Marcia Donnell |
Brooke Jackson Edmond |
Michelle Edwards |
Jennifer Flanagan |
Peggy Foreman |
Gabriela Gonzalez-Lamberson |
Nancy Hall Green |
Jean Hanges |
Sara Hehir |
Ben F. Hill* |
Jack K. Holland |
Keinon Johnson |
West Johnson |
Baxter Jones |
Jane Lanier |
Bertram L. Levy |
Tim X. Mapes |
Joan Marmo |
Margot McCaul |
Voting Trustees
Sally McDaniel |
Anna Mershon |
James H. Morgens |
David Park* |
Richard C. Parker |
Fahamu Pecou |
William Powell |
Mark Preisinger |
Michael Render |
Great Neck Richman |
Stephanie Russell |
Louise Sams*† |
Tim Schrager |
F. Terry Stent*† |
Lisa Cannon Taylor |
Harriet H. Warren |
Rod Westmoreland |
John F. Wieland*† |
Elizabeth Willett |
EX-OFFICO NON-VOTING
Rand Suffolk*, Nancy & Holcombe T. Green Jr., Director |
Life Directors
Elizabeth Hale Barnett |
Jane C. Black |
Lucinda W. Bunnen |
Jacqueline F. Clark |
Thomas G. Cousins† |
Richard A. Denny, Jr.† |
Howard Elkins |
Nena Griffith |
Fay Howell |
Sanford Orkin |
Catherine Rawson |
Henry C. Schwob |
John W. Spiegel† |
Mark K. Taylor |
Joan N. Whitcomb |
Voting Trustees
DIRECTOR EMERITUS
Michael E. Shapiro, PhD |
- * Included in the Executive Committee along with all officers
- † Past Board of Directors Chair
Photo Credits
Page 3
Headshot by CatMax Photography
Page 4
Courtesy of Sara Keith Studios.
Page 5
Top Left Photo – Alliance Theatre Audience
Top Right Photo – Alliance Theatre, HANDS UP
Top Bottom Left – Alliance Theatre, Anti-Bias Training
Bottom Right – Alliance Theatre, Anti-Bias Training
Page 7
Woodruff Campus, Photo by Kelly Jordan.
Page 8
Left – Education Luncheon, Photo by Sara Keith Studios
Right – Woodruff Arts Center Women’s Panel 2019
Page 10
Woodruff Campus, Photo by Kelly Jordan
Page 12
Top – The Cast of the Alliance Theatre’s 2019/20 world premiere production BECOMING NANCY. Photo by Greg Mooney.
Middle – Alliance Theatre’s Costume Shop Face Masks for Theatre’s Frontline Workers
Bottom – Alliance Theatre’s US Premiere of Theatre’s Maybe Happy Ending. Photo by Loenid Furmansky.
Page 14
Ericka Ratcliff and Courtney Patterson in the Alliance Theatre’s 2019/20 production of Theatre’s Small Mouth Sounds. Photo by Greg Mooney.
Page 16
Top – ASO Virtual Stage Logo
Top Middle – ASO Talent Development Program Audition
Bottom – ASO Movies in Concert, Photo by Chris Eason
Page 18
Courtesy of Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
Page 20
Top – Doris and Shouky Shaheen Collection, Stent Family Wing, High Museum of Art
Top – Photo by Mike Jensen
Middle – SO–IL, Murmuration (detail), 2020, Carroll Slater Sifly Piazza. Photo courtesy of SO–IL.
Bottom – Thornton Dial, Birmingham News, 1997, High Museum of Art, purchase and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation from the William S. Arnett Collection, 2017. 51. Photo courtesy of Souls Grown Deep Foundation.
Page 22
Courtesy of Sara Keith Studios
Page 24
Woodruff Campus, Photo by Johnathan Banks
Social Justice
The Woodruff Arts Center and its three Art Partners—the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and High Museum of Art—continuously strive to be equitable leaders in all areas of the arts. Over the years, significant progress has been made to engage all of Atlanta’s residents and visitors by increasing access to innovative programming that appeals to people of all ages and backgrounds. Artistry showcased across our campus continues to highlight and acknowledge significant contributions in visual and performing arts made by women, BIPOC and LGBTQ+ artists. We are committed to celebrating all voices in our community, and we continue to examine, refine and implement practices which reflect our deep commitment to equity, diversity and inclusion.