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Make a difference in the arts by providing
items of immediate need to the programs. Below are wish lists for
the departments. All gifts are tax-deductible to the fullest extent
of the law.
Click
here to make a cash gift online
For non-monetary gifts, please call or
email Amy Boiselle, Director
of Arts Development— 919.513.3802, fax to 919.515.6163
orJeanne
Duvall, Development Assistant—919.515.6160
UNIVERSITY THEATRE WISH LIST:
Large plastic containers for the costume shop storage
Dye vat
Freezer
Rolls of muslin cloth
New lighting system, control dimming and wiring for Stewart Theatre
Rigging and fly system safety overhaul and upgrade for Stewart Theatre
Replacement of the gold curtains in Stewart Theatre
Replacement of the red side-tab curtains to sides of proscenium
in Stewart Theatre
Matched set of two power amplifiers-QSC model PLX2402
Pair of PA speakers JBL model 4722 XF
Books and plays on theatre for the library at Thompson Theatre
Film videos and DVDs or gift certificates
Musical theatre CDs
Small tape recorders for student use in classes/rehearsals/coaching
Donated tickets to other theatres' shows for students and staff
GALLERY OF ART AND DESIGN WISH LIST:
Examples sought should be in excellent condition,
with no repairs or loss of surface; no serious cracks, chips or
loss of fabric, no evident deterioration that would prevent work
from being exhibited. No objects should require conservation. There
are always exceptions, so please don’t hesitate to ask.
FURNITURE
Examples of 19th to late 20th century American chairs,
tables and case furniture
including:
Shaker furniture: chair, chest, table
American Arts and Crafts both handmade and production work
Makers include: Limberts, Stickley, Craftsman Farms, Roycroft)
Painted furniture.
Especially country painted tables, blanket chests, painted and decorated
boxes, highstyle Baltimore chairs, Windsor chairs.
Furniture designed by and associated with the mid-fifties contemporary
furniture design and produced by such firms as Herman Miller and
Knoll.
Designers sought:
Alvaar Alto Charles & Ray Eames
Marcel Breuer
George Nelson
Mies van der Rohe
Nathan Lerner
Harry Bertoia
Le Corbusier
Thonet bentwood furniture
American Studio Furniture:
Designers sought
Garry Knox Bennett
Doug Sigler
Sam Maloof
James Krenov
Wendell Castle
George Nakashima
Wendy Maruyama
Rosanne Somerson
Judy K. McKie
Thomas Loeser
Mitch Ryerson
Peter Dean
Jere Osgood
James Krenov
Steven Madsen
Wharton Esherick
Bob Stockdale
Arthur Carpenter(Espenet)
John Marcoux
Peter Adams
Historical glass:
·Venetian, Steuben, Sandwich, New Jersey, Waterford
(molded, pressed, cut, etched, blown, hot glass, lampworked)
Art Nouveau:
Daum
Tiffany
Lalique
Alfred Stevens (English)
Orrefors
Bacarat
Early 20th century work:
Kosta Boda
Orrefors
Lalique
Steuben
Blenko
·Examples by all the major glass artists associated
with the Penland School
(Studio glass as currently practiced was established at Penland
in 1965)
Historical glass, con’t:
Harvey Littleton
Fritz Driesbach
Bill Boysen
Mark Peiser
John Nygren
John Kuhn
Paul Seide
Richard Marquis
Kate Little & John Vogel
Robert Levin
Richard Ritter
Amy Roberts
William Carlson
Howard Ben Tre
David Goldhagen
Robert Gardner
Junichero Baba
William Morris
Dan Dailey
Joel Philip Myers
Sonja Blomdahl
Mary Ann “Toots” Zynsky
Karla Trinkley
Mark Abildgaard
Dante Marioni
Paul Marioni
Lino Tagliopetra
Dale Chiluly
Dominick Labino
Marvin Lipofsky
Maurice Heaton
CERAMICS
·Studio Ceramics 20th century, American
Cynthia Bringle
Peter Voulkos
Robert Turner
·Studio Ceramics 20th century, other
Bernard Leach
Michael Cardew
Shoji Hamada
Other North Carolina and regional practicing ceramists
whom are young and emerging; work must be considered, case by case.
Functional Ceramics: (emphasis on relationship of
traditional forms and use to
present production)
Ben Owen III
David Stuempfle
Mark Hewitt
Kim Ellington
Dover Pottery
Sid Oakley
Charles Chamberlain
Herb Cohen
Doug Dacey
Don Davis
Dorothy Davis
James Lawton
Dan Finch
Becky Gray
Billy Ray Hussey
Nicholas Joerling
Jim Lux
Phil Morgan
Brad Tucker
Michael Simon Clary Illian
A. R. Cole (d) Stanley Mace Anderson
Vernon and Pamela Owens (Jugtown)
Ruggles and Rankin (Rock Creek Pottery)
Eleanor and Hal Pugh (Salem Pottery)
Jon Ellenbogen and Rebecca Plummer
Westmoore (David and Mary Ferrell)
Dorothy and Walter Auman(d)
North Carolina and regional traditional ceramics,
19th century and pre - 1950:
Dave the Slave
Daniel Seagle
Daniel Holley
Hilton Family Potters
Reinhardt Family
Pisgah Forest
Propst Family
Meaders Family
Fox Family
Norman Ball
North State
J. B. Cole
OL Bachelder
Log Cabin
Sunset Mountain
David Hartzog
Isaac Lefevers
C. R. Auman/C. B. Maston
Thomas Ritchie (Ritchie family)
·Examples of work from Old Salem
Examples of work from the Valley of Virginia,
Shenandoah.
·Arts and Crafts Ceramics
Rookwood
Weller
Newcomb
Saturday Night Girls
Van Briggle
Roseville
McCoy
George Ohr
·Mass produced functional ware:
Russell Wright
Nathan Lerner
Michael Graves
European: need good but not great examples:
a really good Sevres vase, with landscape
Wedgewood: drab ware, creamware, jasperware,
English Slipwear and Spatterware
German slipware and salt glaze
Toby Jug
Staffordshire ware (animal figurine)
Tinware: Delft (Dutch), Majolica (Italian, Spanish), Bristol(English).
·Asian: Examples of ceramics that have
been collected or that
have influenced American work like Imari, T’ang pottery,
18th century Chinese porcelains.
African: West African pottery
Fibers:
Fiberwork, including baskets:
Fine examples of Native American, including Cherokee, Navaho, Hopi,
and related
Fine examples of African, South American
Southern split white oak, seagrass, pine needles
Shaker baskets/boxes
Flat woven textiles:
Navajo and Hopi, 19th and 20th centuries.
West African
·Studio work:
Katherine Westphal
Ed Rossbach
Norma Minkowitz
Martin Puryear
Billy Jean Sudduth
Dorothy Gill Barnes
Patty Hill
Dona Look
John Skau Neil Prince and Fay Cranick Prince
TEXTILES:
·(Woven, printed, painted, quilted etc.)
Gerhardt Knodel
Lenore Tawney
Olga De Amaral
John Babcock
Joan Sterrenburg
Cynthia Shira
Lia Cook
Adela Akers
Tom Lundberg
Kris Dey
Rebecca Medel
Mary Bero
Diane Itter
Faith Ringgold
James Bassler
Dominick DiMare
Anne Wilson
Nancy Crow
Michael James
Warren Sellig
Renee Breskin Adams
Tim Harding
Ana Lisa Hedstrom
Jean Williams Cacicedo
Randy Darwall
Rise Rice Nagin
Deborah Chase
Gaza Bowen (shoes)
K Lee Manuel(collars)
Claire Zeigler
Marion Claydon
Anni Albers
Lili Blumenau
Allen & Dorthy Fannin
Ritzi & Peter Jacobi
Maura Goldstein Brauner
Dorothy Liebes
Jack Lenor Larsen
John McQueen
Pat Campbell
Alma Lesch
Marilyn Pappas
Neda Al-Hilahi
Walter Nottingham
Sherry Smith
Sheila Hicks
Kay Sekismachi
Jean Stanaish
Joan Livingston
METALS
·19th and 20th century utilitarian forms:
fire irons, screens, gates,to be chosen carefully.
·Asian examples of forms that influence pottery
·Silver flatware by prominent makers -- a
few examples
Arts and Crafts examples of silver, bronze, and copper.
Archibold Knox
Charles LeBolt
William Waldo Dodge
Art Deco/Art Moderne examples of functional ware, i.e.,
Russell Wright
Mexican silver – Spratling
Studio metal/jewelry
George Jensen
Han Christensen
Paolo Soleri
Albert Paley
Vega Metals
Gary S. Griffin
Tom Joyce
Gregory Litsios
Helen Shirk
David Tisdale
Randy Long
Alma Eikerman
Arlene M. Fisch
Gayle Saunders
John Paul Miller
Fred Woell
John Pripp
Ronald Hayes Pearson
Pat Flynn
Mary Ann Scherr
Robert Ebendorf
Philip Baldwin
Billy Jean Theide
William Harper
Charles Loloma
Ken Loeber
Fred Fenster
Brent Kingston
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