Donors

Puget Sound Energy Foundation Supports Centrum Jazz Students

Puget_sound_energy_foundation_gra_2 The Puget Sound Energy Foundation presented Centrum with a grant of $5,000 in support of Centrum’s Jazz workshops and performances at an 11 am ceremony on Friday, Aug. 29 at Fort Worden State Park.

“This generous gift has certainly come at an appropriate time,” said Centrum’s Executive Director Thatcher Bailey, saying that in 2008 Jazz Port Townsend had more participants than at any other time in the organization’s history. “How wonderful for our students, performers and faculty to be acknowledged in this way,” Bailey said.

Bailey said that under the artistic direction of John Clayton, the jazz program includes year-round learning and performance opportunities for players and audiences from around the region and country.

“We are extremely pleased to be able to assist in the valuable work that Centrum is doing,” said Phil Bussey, senior vice president of Corporate Affairs for PSE and chairman of the Puget Sound Energy Foundation.

“So many residents of the Olympic Peninsula have benefited from Centrum’s programs over the past 35 years—they are indeed an organization that deserves to be rewarded and recognized.”

To date in 2008, the Puget Sound Energy Foundation has awarded more than $189,000 in charitable grants to 34 regional organizations. The grants are awarded based on a competitive review process to qualifying 501(c) (3) charitable organizations in PSE’s 11-county Washington service and broader operations area.

“Generous donors like Puget Sound Energy have also made it possible for Centrum to provide nearly $24,000 in scholarship support to attract great young players to the jazz program,” Bailey added.

(In the photo: Phil Bussey presents $5,000 check to Thatcher Bailey and Centrum Board President Libby Reid.)

Port Townsend Country Blues Fundraiser

Wurlitzer_manor_music_room Barbara Hammerman and Raymond Lavine are inviting the Centrum community to their beautiful home in Gig Harbor, Washington for food, fun and music to support Centrum’s Country Blues scholarship program. At this event the scholarship program will be officially named The Cephas and Wiggins Scholarship Fund in honor of retiring Centrum Blues Artistic Director Phil Wiggins.

The private concert takes place inside the magnificent Mighty Wurlitzer music room in Barbara and Raymond's home, Wurlitzer Manor, and is produced by Amanda Gresham's Delta Music Experience. Tacoma businessperson Ryan Harder will open the event with his award-winning slide guitar stylings, including original songs and stories full of the knowledge of the blues.

Please join us on Saturday, July 26, from 3-7 pm and hear some outstanding performances. Blues musicians Phil Wiggins and John Cephas will perform along with a young, accomplished blues duo from Southern California, Nathan James and Ben Hernandez, who triumphed over dozens of other groups in the 2007 International Blues Challenge.

Barbara, Raymond, and Amanda will underwrite all costs so that every dollar contributed will support the Country Blues Festival scholarships. A $100 donation is requested.

For further information, reservations, address, and directions, please contact Barbara at 253.858.4435 or barbara(at)wurlitzermanor(dot)com.

Checks should be made out to "Centrum" and sent to: Port Townsend Country Blues Festival Scholarship Fund, P.O. Box 1158, Port Townsend, WA, 98368

2008 Donor 'Thank You' Events

Centrumdonorevents_2 Centrum thrives because of the courage and understanding of you, our donors. Each year, we endeavor to connect donors with experiences that deepen their connection to the people and activities their generosity serves.

For a complete list of our 2008 donor events, please download our 2008 "Thank You Calendar. For questions and more information, please contact our Donor Events Manager, Kendra Golden, at kendra@centrum.org.

You Can See the Impact

Centrum community members Jack and Bonnie Lambton are a husband-and-wife team who for twenty-two years traveled extensively as business consultants for a number of companies.

They donate to Centrum for a number of reasons.

“Centrum fulfills the Fort Worden mission of being a center for lifelong learning and transformational experiences, and it’s amazing how much one donation helps,” says Jack, who also participates as a guitarist in Jazz Port Townsend.

“For kids that come into the programs, such as the jazz program, it’s as valuable as going on a foreignJazz2_58  exchange trip,” he says. “When you go on a foreign exchange, you meet new people and learn new ways of seeing the world, and it’s the same here.”

Scholarships that bring under-privileged and under-represented students to Port Townsend can change lives, he says. “Centrum offers week-long, total immersion workshops that don’t just provide a week-long experience, but actually change people. It’s fun to watch what happens as kids sit and listen to John Clayton, or Jeff Hamilton, or Bruce Forman. You can actually see these kids change as they watch how their role models act, and treat one another. You see them come in, and then you seem them leave with a new vista of pride and confidence, and what might be possible in music, and in their lives.”

“You can see the impact your donation has in someone’s life,” Bonnie says. “Every gift is a legacy gift way beyond the week, and way beyond ourselves as donors. Because of the way Jazz Port Townsend has grown, not everybody is accepted into the program any longer,” she adds. “So those that are accepted know how special of an opportunity it is.”

“It’s not a summer camp,” Jack notes. “It’s a special opportunity, and the people who are accepted into it know how tough the competition is to get in. So the knowledge that you were hand-selected by John Clayton, and then provided with a scholarship, means a lot.”

He encourages donors to think about giving deeply. “By giving at the Gala, or any other time of year, you provide a high-levered donation,” he says. “It’s not just the top players—the ones who we’ll be hearing on the radio for years to come—who receive scholarships. It’s also for the good players, who then get a Jazz2_108_2 chance to come to Port Townsend, and experience the community, and the music, and the role models, and leave with a life-changing experience. You get such a return on your donation. It’s an incredible investment in someone’s life and offers a multifaceted return to the community and to individuals.”

“It’s such a personal gift,” Bonnie says, “and each and every gift makes things happen. You can give money and see it impact people.

“Another great way to give is through estate allocation,” she says. “By making plans to include Centrum in your legacy plans. But every gift you give is also a legacy gift, because you can watch it at work in the lives of the students.

The Lambtons also point to the Centrum organization as modeling in its structure the transforming experiences that they offer Centrum community members.

“Given the focus on Fort Worden as a center for lifelong learning, and lifelong, life-changing experiences in the arts, it’s great to see Centrum as an organization itself learning and evolving, which is what they encourage people to come and do,” Jack says.

“So many times you can make a donation to a worthwhile organization, but you can’t actually watch it work, and you don’t really know what’s happening with it,” Bonnie says. “But if you give money to Centrum, you can see it work, and watch the changes in our community. It gives you a rare opportunity as a donor to see that impact one-on-one. Centrum conducts itself with total transparency, and treats its donors with respect and appreciation. And it’s not just a transparent process, but it invites your input and invites you to volunteer and be part of the process.”

“It gives you a sense of fulfillment to see your donation at work, and a sense of pride in helping to change people’s lives,” Jack says.   

Deepening Our Commitment to Young Artists

In the last issue of Experience I wrote that artists teach us that “embracing change can be the most meaningful way to honor tradition.” This understanding plays out in myriad ways at Centrum. Most recently, we have re-invented our programs for elementary, middle school, and high school students by remembering what has always been most transformative for then: deep interactions with practicing artists who are taking risks with their own work and will push students to think very differently about art making.

Visual artist Martha Worthley, our new manager for youth programs, is working to deepen our commitment to youth by deepening our connections to provocative emerging and established artists across disciplines. She is selecting a core group of artists who will serve as faculty for all 2008 youth programs. These artists will also be given residency opportunities to further their own projects and to interact and collaborate in community with other artists at Fort Worden. By extending their connection to Centrum over an entire season, they will have more chance for creative engagement with the physical site and the local community.

For 35 years Centrum has worked with artists across a spectrum of creative endeavor to inspire and challenge young artists. We are deepening that tradition. Our November 2006 gathering of youth arts leaders from across Washington underscored the critical importance of identifying, working with, serving, and learning from artists whose work recasts and opens up new cultural conversations. Linking our artist-in-residence program with student residential programming will provide an array of new opportunities for learning and creation.

We do not provide arts education; we provide education, community, and creative time for artists—professional, emerging, aspiring, or experimenting. When we talk about Centrum experiences changing lives we are, more often than not, talking about individuals whose decision to be artists were made as the result of their time at Fort Worden.

We wish to give special thanks to the painter Mary Ann Peters, a former student, teacher, and artist-in-residence at Centrum, and the newest member of the Centrum advisory board, for working closely with Martha on this program. Several years ago, Mary Ann, along with writer Matthew Stadler and Anne Focke—one of the nation’s greatest advocates for individual artists—proposed an initiative for Centrum that looked a lot like what is emerging for 2008. Embracing change can be the most meaningful way to honor tradition.

Centrum’s programs for Washington State youth are supported through generous funding from the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, with monies secured by the ongoing advocacy of our legislative delegation. Kudos to Terry Bergeson and Gayle Pauley at OSPI and to Lynn Kessler, Jim Hargrove, and Kevin Van der Wege in the Washington State Legislature.

Dinner with the Professor!

2007dinnerwiththeprofessor13 On a beautiful Friday evening, April 20, twenty successful bidders from the 2006 Gala Dinner & Auction enjoyed drinks and dinner with Russell Johnson, "the Professor" from Gilligan's Island, who had a long career in film and television.

Johnson, along with his wife, Connie, met with the bidders before dinner for drinks. In the living room of the Bailey House on Discovery Road, Johnson talked about being shot down as a pilot during World War II, about going to acting school on the GI Bill, and about the earlyRussell_johnson_3  days television and movies. He also talked about how he turned down the role of the Professor twice before accepting it.

Johnson also starred in a number of motion pictures, including one of the first-ever 3D films, It Came From Outer Space. He appeared in other films with such luminaries as Rock Hudson, Tony Curtis, and Ronald Reagan. Now, he remains proud of the fact that his character, the Professor, helped many children to get excited about science.

2007dinnerwiththeprofessor6 Thank you! to all those Gala attendees who bid on this experience. Your generosity supports Centrum programs and scholarships. Without your support, the experiences in the arts that take place each month at Centrum would simply not happen.

Print Archive Celebration

Officers_rowThanks to partnership with Fort Worden, several dozen prints made by Centrum artists in residency will be displayed in the Fort Worden houses on Officers' Row.

Jordanhartt2007printarchiveevent_2 On the evening of Wednesday evening, April 18, Centrum community members came together to celebrate the framed prints while enjoying cheese and crackers, glazed meatballs, breaded shrimp, fruit, and wine.

In addition, contemplative juggler Thomas Arthur gave a special performance. In a beautiful, synchronized choreography of sound, rhythm, motion, and light, Arthur didn't just juggle: he explored human relationships with objects, how objects affect us, and how the natural world is affected by humans.  

The evening also served as an introduction to Centrum's newest resident partner organization, Corvidae Press, a consortium of 40 northwest printmakers.

iGive.com Helps Centrum

If you are like us, you do a fair amount of shopping online. Did you know that every time you shop online, a portion of your purchase can be donated to Centrum?

Visit www.igive.com to learn more. Right now they will give Centrum an extra $5 if you use the service within 45 days of signing up.

iGive is very easy, and actually saves you money. We've used it internally at Centrum for a few years every time we make an online purchase. Highly recommended!

Judith Bird's "Witness"

Donor Judith Bird is a visual artist. In the summer of 2006, she exhibited “Witness” at Port Angeles’s Fine Arts Center at Webster’s Woods. Forty shrunken sweaters gazde out of the forest, toward a meadow. Judith_bird2 What they are observing is up to the reader to interpret. “You can infer narratives in this piece, and make up your own stories,” said the center’s director, Jake Seniuk. Bird’s other work includes hand-dyed silk scarves and Edwardian jackets made from felted handwoven Merino wool with silk lining. Her 2006 collection has been shown in both Port Townsend and New York City. In February, Bird showed a new collection of clothes in NYC. The clothes are based on games, with checkerboard trim on jackets, buttons made from vintage Scrabble pieces, and clothes designed with poker chips.  

MissionFish

Did you know that clearing out your basement could actually help Centrum?

eBay's nonprofit site MissionFish allows you to designate a part of your proceeds from auction sales to help non-profits such as Centrum.

Check it out, and happy selling!

2006 Donor & Volunteer Listing

In our most recent issue of Experience, Centrum's magazine for the creative life, we listed our donors and volunteers from the past year. Follow this link to view the list, and thanks to all of you who joined us in making 2006 one of our best years ever!

How to Donate

We are grateful for your interest in supporting Centrum's work.

For Monetary Donations

DONOR & VOLUNTEER CONTACTS

  • Donations
    Mary Hilts
    360-385-3102 x116
    mary@centrum.org

    Donor Events
    Kendra Golden
    360-385-3102 x103
    kendra@centrum.org

    Volunteers
    Lisa Werner
    360-385-3102 x128
    lisa@centrum.org

    Sponsorship
    Tom Scharf
    360-385-3102 x132
    tom@centrum.org

ELSEWHERE AT CENTRUM