Jan Foulke's Guide to Dolls, 2011 edition, Synapse Publishing, retail $26.95.

In Review: Jan Foulke’s Guide to Dolls 2011 edition

Jan Foulke's Guide to Dolls, 2011 edition, Synapse Publishing, retail $26.95.

Jan Foulke’s Guide to Dolls, 2011 edition, Synapse Publishing, retail $26.95.

LANCASTER, Pa. – Beautifully designed and richly illustrated, the 2011 edition of Jan Foulke’s Guide to Dolls is now available for purchase through Synapse Publishing’s website or amazon.com. Nearly 300 pages in length, this immaculately organized full-color reference is an indispensable resource for any level of doll buyer, seller or collector.

Written by the most trusted authority on antique and vintage dolls, Jan Foulke, the book includes reliable, up-to-the-minute market values on more than 2,000 antique, vintage and modern collectible dolls. More than 600 dolls – many of them from premier private collections – are shown in full-color photographs.

Main doll classifications are broken down into subcategories arranged alphabetically by manufacturer. Doll productions from each of the makers are further sorted by doll type, size and/or model number.

Foulke added an introductory section to each doll factory or studio category, providing a thumbnail history, basic description of the manufacturing technique, and additional tidbits of information, such as cautions about reproductions.

A detailed main index enables the user to look up virtually any doll by name, and it is followed by a second index that helps identify dolls by numbers incised into the molds from which they were created. Foulke didn’t stop there; she also included a glossary of terms to help beginners and non-doll specialists with trade terminology, such as “paperweight eyes,” “gusset joint” or “mignonnette.”

With nearly 40 years of experience in the doll business, Foulke relishes the opportunity to share her knowledge and does so with an extensive section on how to assess quality, condition, clothing and originality. It is followed by a detailed narrative packed with tips on buying and selling dolls, including at auction. Throughout, these tutorials are written in a clear and conversational style with no filler.

Jan Foulke’s Guide to Dolls 2011 softcover edition (ISBN 978-1-4507-8178-7) is quite likely the only book any doll enthusiast requires for doll identification and accurate market values. The book is available to purchase online for $26.95 through amazon.com

Click here to order: http://www.amazon.com/Jan-Foulkes-Guide-Dolls-Second/dp/1450781780/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1312558178&sr=1-2.

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Jan Foulke's Guide to Dolls, 2011 edition, Synapse Publishing, retail $26.95.

Jan Foulke’s Guide to Dolls, 2011 edition, Synapse Publishing, retail $26.95.

The Wilmington & Western’s 114 diesel-electric switcher locomotive is similar to the one that is being restored. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Vintage Delaware locomotive earns a rest, overhaul

The Wilmington & Western’s 114 diesel-electric switcher locomotive is similar to the one that is being restored. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

The Wilmington & Western’s 114 diesel-electric switcher locomotive is similar to the one that is being restored. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

ELSMERE, Del. (AP) – A historic locomotive that has seen more change in the Red Clay Valley than most residents is being restored to its prime through the next year.

Wilmington & Western Railroad’s Engine No. 8408 has been operating in the valley for nearly 70 years. It has seen numerous owners as newer, larger trains fly by faster and faster each day. But now it is being restored to take its place leading historical treks through the valley.

The locomotive operated on the Wilsmere Yard on Centerville Road in Elsmere, which is now operated by CSX. Its latest journey will be on the back of another train that will take it to McHugh Locomotive and Crane in Fairless Hills, Pa.

The 100-ton locomotive first came to the valley in the 1940s as a switcher engine. It has smaller axels compared with the behemoth pack mules used to tug chains of boxcars that Engine 8408 would link and configure around the rail yard, said David Ludlow, executive director of Wilmington & Western, which owns the locomotive.

“If you stand beside her, you would be amazed by the massive amount of metal and weight staring back at you. But in the industry today it’s a baby in comparison,” Ludlow said.

The rails the locomotive worked on have historic significance and importance in the path the engine took to its current restoration.

The Wilmington & Western Railroad first opened in 1872, when trains would move Kaolin Clay, vulcanized fiber materials, snuff, iron and coal to and from industry that lined the route that ran to downtown Wilmington and the Christina River.

In the 1880s, the line was purchased by Baltimore & Ohio Railroad and became known as the Landenberg Branch.

The locomotive was built by the Electro-Motive division of General Motors in the 1940s, before the line was shortened in the `50s to its present 10-mile stretch that ends in Hockessin.

After being tipped for demolition, the Landenberg Branch was purchased by Historic Red Clay Valley Inc., a nonprofit organization tasked with historic preservation in the area, in the `80s.

“It has been here all its life. That is why it’s significant,” Ludlow said. “It’s part of our heritage of the line.”

Though the locomotive is aged, Ludlow said it still has life.

“Amazingly enough it is still very dependable and still very sound,” Ludlow said. “But it’s requiring more troubleshooting, and things are starting to just wear out with the electrical systems.”

The $300,000 restoration will see the locomotive get a new powerhouse, but stay true to the antique nature of the engine.

The restoration will take about a year. When restored, the locomotive will lead Wilmington & Western’s weekend historic excursions to Hockessin.

Ludlow said the company, which operates with three paid employees under Historic Red Clay Valley Inc., has been running tours of the area since 1966.

“We have preserved the line itself and preserved the historic features,” Ludlow said of the excursions the group runs from April to December each year. “The reason is to interpret the railroad history of New Castle and northern Delaware and the significance of what railroads did for this area.”

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Information from: The News Journal of Wilmington, Del., http://www.delawareonline.com

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-08-03-11 1931GMT

 


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


The Wilmington & Western’s 114 diesel-electric switcher locomotive is similar to the one that is being restored. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

The Wilmington & Western’s 114 diesel-electric switcher locomotive is similar to the one that is being restored. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

ELSMERE, Del. (AP) – A historic locomotive that has seen more change in the Red Clay Valley than most residents is being restored to its prime through the next year.

George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Portrait in Va. governor’s mansion attributed to Bingham

George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) – Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell has learned that a painting hanging in his temporary home was done by a famous 19th-century artist.

The Virginia Executive Mansion and the Library of Virginia announced Wednesday that the painting was confirmed to have been done by George Caleb Bingham, Missouri’s first artist. The George Caleb Bingham Catalogue Raisonne Supplement of Paintings & Drawings recently confirmed the authentication.

The painting is commonly referred to as Portrait of A Boy and His Dog. It depicts Colin Dunlop, a man who was born in Petersburg in 1836 and was killed in battle during the Civil War in 1864.

The portrait was given to Virginia’s Executive Mansion by the estate of Martha Spottswood of Petersburg, Va., in 1977.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-08-03-11 2140GMT

 


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

The Hawaiian Hall at the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum contains the world's largest collection of Polynesian artifacts. The museum has been awarded a grant from the U.S. Department of Education. Image by Stan Shebs. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Grant to improve Native Hawaiians’ education

The Hawaiian Hall at the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum contains the world's largest collection of Polynesian artifacts. The museum has been awarded a grant from the U.S. Department of Education. Image by Stan Shebs. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

The Hawaiian Hall at the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum contains the world’s largest collection of Polynesian artifacts. The museum has been awarded a grant from the U.S. Department of Education. Image by Stan Shebs. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

HONOLULU (AP) – A Honolulu museum has been awarded a federal grant to improve middle school education for Native Hawaiian students.

Bishop Museum said in a news release Monday the $369,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Education is to allow the museum to partner with the Polynesian Voyaging Society and the University of Hawaii College of Education.

The project is to create a series of educational experiences for Native Hawaiian middle school students that combine western science with cultural knowledge and practice.

The project is expected to create lessons plans, an online learning center, teacher workshops and other resources.

Museum President and CEO Blair Collins says the project is to impact more than 5,000 Native Hawaiian middle school students.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-08-02-11 1503GMT

 


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


The Hawaiian Hall at the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum contains the world's largest collection of Polynesian artifacts. The museum has been awarded a grant from the U.S. Department of Education. Image by Stan Shebs. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

The Hawaiian Hall at the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum contains the world’s largest collection of Polynesian artifacts. The museum has been awarded a grant from the U.S. Department of Education. Image by Stan Shebs. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Circa-1863 Currier & Ives lithograph The Battle of Gettysburg.

Science and technology in Civil War subject of lecture series

Circa-1863 Currier & Ives lithograph The Battle of Gettysburg.

Circa-1863 Currier & Ives lithograph The Battle of Gettysburg.

RICHMOND, Va. – The Museum of the Confederacy and Virginia Commonwealth University are partnering with The Citizens School for Science and Technology at the University of South Carolina to present a series of six public lectures that explore the science and technology of the Civil War. The six lectures will be held at the Museum of the Confederacy, 1201 East Clay Street, Richmond, Virginia, during August and September, 2011, with featured speakers from The Museum of the Confederacy, the VCU Medical Center, Loyola University, The National Park Service, E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, and Longwood University.

The lectures will explore topics on innovations in naval warfare, current science and technology used to study museum artifacts, medical care during the Civil War, Confederate patents, and photography, as well as the new techniques that were used and how they helped to change the face of war. The final lecture will be a panel discussion on Civil War battlefield technologies and the broader historical and geographic impact of these advances.

Speakers are: Dr. John M. Coski and Catherine Wright of the Museum of the Confederacy; Dr. James P. Neifield, MD, FACS; Stuart McGuire, professor and chairman of the Department of Surgery at VCU School of Medicine; Jack Knight, agent for E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company; Dr. Kelly DeVries of Loyola University, Mike Gorman, ranger and historian, Richmond National Battlefield Park; and Dr. Charles Ross of Longwood University.

The lectures will be presented Aug. 11, 18, and 25, 6-7:30 p.m., Sept. 7 and 14, 6-7:30 p.m., and Sept. 21, 6-8 p.m.

The lectures are free. To register, send an email to: walkerkm@email.sc.edu or go to the Calendar of Events page under Visit Us on the Museum’s website www.moc.org. For more information call Kelly Hancock at 804-649-1861 ext. 21.

The Museum of the Confederacy is a private, nonprofit educational institution. The Museum and White House are located at 1201 E. Clay St., in downtown Richmond’s historic Court End neighborhood. Free parking is available in the MCV/VCU Hospitals Visitor/Patient parking deck adjacent to the Museum.

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ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


Circa-1863 Currier & Ives lithograph The Battle of Gettysburg.

Circa-1863 Currier & Ives lithograph The Battle of Gettysburg.

Assortment of medicines used to treat soldiers during the American Civil War era, on display at the 2009 re-enactment of the Battle of Corydon in Indiana. Photo by Charles Edward, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Assortment of medicines used to treat soldiers during the American Civil War era, on display at the 2009 re-enactment of the Battle of Corydon in Indiana. Photo by Charles Edward, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Using a plain plain sheet or blanket as a backdrop not only helps solve the problem of backlighting, but also eliminates background clutter. Fred Taylor photo.

Furniture Specific: Take your best shot

Using a plain plain sheet or blanket as a backdrop not only helps solve the problem of backlighting, but also eliminates background clutter. Fred Taylor photo.

Using a plain plain sheet or blanket as a backdrop not only helps solve the problem of backlighting, but also eliminates background clutter. Fred Taylor photo.

While I don’t exactly hold myself out as expert on older and antique furniture, I do have a pretty good library and I have spent a lot of time studying the subject. And I love to share what I have learned with other folks who are interested. Toward that end I regularly field inquiries from readers about the furniture they have acquired/inherited/found etc., mostly wanting to know how old something is and what it is worth. I have written about both of those subjects in this space previously so I won’t rehash them.

What I want to talk about is one aspect of how you go about asking the questions you want answered in a manner that is likely to get them answered by someone who may actually know. A good way NOT to get an answer is to say something like: “I have an old antique rocker that belonged to my grandmother and it was old when she got it. She was 98 when she died in 1963 so we know the chair is probably close to 200 years old. It has an old dark finish on it. Who made it and what is it worth?” That won’t get you very far with any furniture professional. By far the best way to get an answer is to show a picture.

I get hundreds of pictures a year from readers wanting information about their family heirlooms, and frankly most of the photos are awful. Either they don’t know how to take a photograph or they don’t look carefully at them before they send them.

Here are lots of good reasons to take good pictures of your furniture other than for identification purposes. The most common is for insurance work. A good photo can go a long toward justifying an adequate replacement cost with a claims adjuster. An appraiser also needs a good picture to complete an evaluation even though they probably will have examined the piece in person. And then there is just plain old pride of ownership. I have taken pictures of some of my best finds not for insurance or evaluation purposes but just for bragging rights and just because I like the subject.

While a certain minimum level of adequate equipment is required to photograph furniture, that’s not all there is to it. Just like having a good pair of Nike running shoes doesn’t guarantee a good time in the local 3K run, a good camera doesn’t guarantee good pictures. Good technique does that.

To see what good furniture photos look like take a stroll through one of the high quality antiques magazines like The Magazine Antiques and take a good look though this publication. Of course most of those photos are taken by pros with thousands of dollars worth of equipment and they get paid for their time, but at least you can see what a good photo looks like and you can come surprisingly close with a little attention to particulars.

The four main components of informative furniture photography are lighting, focus, frame and detail.

LIGHTING – The most common problem in photographs I get from readers is the image is too dark. Just because a camera has a flash doesn’t mean it will illuminate the subject in all conditions. You have to help it out. Natural light, supplemented by the flash is always a good bet, but even hardware store drop lights with 60 or 100 watt bulbs, clamped onto a door frame, will illuminate most furniture shots.

When using the flash don’t shoot the flat front of a cabinet from straight ahead. You’ll get the flash bounced back into your camera resulting in a big glare spot on the object. Use a slight angle so the reflection bounces away from the camera lens. The same holds for drop lights or pole lights. Shoot from an angle that takes the glare of the lights out of the picture.

Pay special attention to other sources of light. Your eyes adjust to ambient light a lot better than most cameras so you have to look for problems through the lens. Watch out for windows filled with sunlight or other light sources that are behind your subject. While you can still see the details on the chair back, the automatic camera lens reads only the brightest light source—the window in the background—and adjusts for that. The result is a black chair with no apparent detail against a white window.

FOCUS – With today’s autofocus cameras you would assume that this would not be an issue. But just as the internal light meter in the camera can be fooled by backlight, the autofocus feature is not always seeing what you are. It is seeking the point that meets a number of criteria like the right distance from the lens, adequate light and sufficient surface area on which to bounce an infrared beam. Those are probably not your criteria for a focal point. Practice with your camera to learn what your equipment thinks is a good focus and adjust your shooting to what works best within those parameters.

FRAME – This is what you actually see within the photograph and setting up the frame is one of the most important things you do. Most of us have a tendency to look through the lens and see exactly what we want to see—the subject. But there are often many other things in the frame that we don’t notice until we look at the photo. Why didn’t you see that pile of dirty socks next to the chest of drawers when you snapped the picture? Because you didn’t look for it. It was there all along but you were too busy looking at the chest. The same thing occurs if you don’t notice what is on top of the dresser or the buffet. You would be surprised at how many personal details are discernible in a loosely framed photo of your bedroom. Believe me, the claims adjuster or appraiser doesn’t want to see all your family photos arranged on the vanity and doesn’t care a whit for the old bowl that obscures half the tabletop.

If you are taking a picture of a chair, then take a picture of the chair, not half the room around it. Fill the frame with your subject. And get on the same level as your subject. Photographing furniture is a lot like taking pictures of kids—only easier. The main thing is you have to be on their level. A 6-footer standing up taking a shot of a kid from above doesn’t produce a very good photo of the kid. The same with the chair. Get down to the chair or get the chair up to you.

Group shots of furniture are also generally about as successful as group shots of kids or cats. They don’t convey what you are really trying to portray, and no claims adjuster can tell much about the entire dining room set from a group shot of the whole room. Take a group picture just for the record but record each component piece of the set individually, giving each its own frame.

DETAIL – The way to identify the age and origin of a chair or chest is not to take a dozen pictures of the piece, all showing the same thing from a different angle. Show the details that will identify a piece. First show an overall shot of the piece to get a frame of reference. Then show the informative details. Take a photo of both the front and rear joinery of a drawer for example. Then show the inside of the drawer, the bottom of the drawer the back of the drawer and a side view of the drawer. All of these may contain valuable clues to your piece. Be sure to show the backs of cabinets, the tops, the insides with the drawers removed and take close ups of feet and legs. Show chairs from underneath and above. Take pictures of the edges of tops and drawers. They may reveal the thickness of the veneer or point out the absence of veneer at all.

Take close looks at hardware and inlay, locks and escutcheons, hinges and handles, nails and screws. Look for tool marks and notations, numbers or marks. They may not mean anything but they also may be crucial to correct identification.

But most of all take lots of pictures. The only way to get a good picture is to take lots of pictures. If you think three photos will work, take six—or a dozen. Most of the pictures we take are not good photos, but if we take enough of them we sometimes get lucky.

Visit Fred’s website at www.furnituredetective.com. His book How To Be a Furniture Detective is available for $18.95 plus $3 shipping. Send check or money order for $21.95 to Fred Taylor, P.O. Box 215, Crystal River, FL 34423.

Fred and Gail Taylor’s DVD, Identification of Older & Antique Furniture ($17 + $3 S&H) is also available at the same address. For more information call 800-387-6377, fax 352-563-2916, or info@furnituredetective.com. All items are also available directly from his website.


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


Using a plain plain sheet or blanket as a backdrop not only helps solve the problem of backlighting, but also eliminates background clutter. Fred Taylor photo.

Using a plain plain sheet or blanket as a backdrop not only helps solve the problem of backlighting, but also eliminates background clutter. Fred Taylor photo.

The picture on the left doesn’t tell you much about the top of the table, just the Lladro cluttering it. When the tabletop is cleared you can see the distinctive pattern of crotch cut mahogany. Fred Taylor photo.

The picture on the left doesn’t tell you much about the top of the table, just the Lladro cluttering it. When the tabletop is cleared you can see the distinctive pattern of crotch cut mahogany. Fred Taylor photo.

The photo on the left was taken from straight ahead and the flash bounced right back. When taken at a slight angle there is no glare from the flash. Fred Taylor photo.

The photo on the left was taken from straight ahead and the flash bounced right back. When taken at a slight angle there is no glare from the flash. Fred Taylor photo.

Police arrest suspect in Colo. park thefts

FRISCO, Colo. (AP) – Police in the Denver suburb of Thornton have arrested a man suspected of stealing items from the Frisco Historic Park and Museum in the mountains.

Frisco officials say Tony Bana was arrested Sunday. He was transferred to Breckenridge on Tuesday to await court proceedings. They say Bana has lived and worked in both Summit County and the Front Range.

The historic park and museum suffered a fire at one of its buildings June 19. Investigators later discovered several items were missing and suspected arson.

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Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

The James S. McDonnell Planetarium built in 1963 features a thin-shell and hyperboloid structure by Gyo Obata. This building is one of the most distinctive components of the St. Louis Science Center campus.

St. Louis Science Center to cut number of VPs

The James S. McDonnell Planetarium built in 1963 features a thin-shell and hyperboloid structure by Gyo Obata. This building is one of the most distinctive components of the St. Louis Science Center campus.

The James S. McDonnell Planetarium built in 1963 features a thin-shell and hyperboloid structure by Gyo Obata. This building is one of the most distinctive components of the St. Louis Science Center campus.

ST. LOUIS (AP) – The St. Louis Science Center, which has drawn scrutiny over the salaries its top executives earn, plans to cut five of its nine vice president positions and to reevaluate how it compensates its leadership team.

In a brief statement Tuesday, the center said it plans to cut five of its nine vice president positions and to reconfigure the remaining four, but it didn’t say whether its current vice presidents would be fired or demoted, the St Louis Post-Dispatch reported Wednesday. The center will also hire a consulting firm to help determine appropriate executive compensation.

The four vice presidents will be responsible for “science content and technology, science education programs, business operations and institutional advancement.” Commissioners who make up the center’s governing board approved the change at a closed-door meeting on Tuesday.

The newspaper has published several articles about executive compensation at the science center, which is one of five St. Louis Zoo-Museum District institutions, all of which receive property tax money in St. Louis city and county. According to the paper, the science center paid 10 vice presidents more than $1.8 million in total compensation in 2010, and eight of the 10 made more than $184,000. One of those positions already has been eliminated.

The Post-Dispatch reported that the center awarded $264,000 in performance bonuses this year to current and former executives, while none of the other four institutions offered similar bonuses. And eight or the 13 highest-paid workers at district institutions, with the exception of CEOs, worked at the science center.

Ted Hellman, the chairman of the science center’s board of commissioners, said he thinks the paper’s coverage has been unfair, but he declined to elaborate. A spokeswoman for the science center did not respond to a phone message from The Associated Press on Wednesday seeking comment.

In the statement it issued, the center said the changes have been in the works since December.

Last year, the district generated more than $70 million. The funds are split among the science center, Missouri Botanical Garden, Missouri History Museum, St. Louis Art Museum and St. Louis Zoo.

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Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

 

Kan. Arts Commission regroups, seeks NEA funding

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) – The chairwoman of the reorganized Kansas Arts Commission has asked the National Endowment for the Arts to continue funding programs in the state amid concerns from commission members about how much money will be available for awarding grants in the state.

Linda Browning Weis released a letter on Tuesday that was sent a day earlier to the NEA’s director of state and regional partnerships.

The letter states that the arts commission, despite not receiving direct state funding, is the lead agency in Kansas for arts programs. Gov. Sam Brownback vetoed $689,000 in funding for the commission this year. All of the commission’s staff was terminated.

“We aren’t here to bury the Kansas Arts Commission. We are here to resurrect the Kansas arts Commission,” Weis told commissioners Tuesday.

Weis said she received an email from the NEA earlier Tuesday confirming receipt of her letter and that it was being reviewed.

To fund the programs, Brownback created the Kansas Arts Foundation, a private organization charged with raising funds for state arts programs that would distributed by the commission.

Critics argue the changes disqualify Kansas from NEA funding without direct state funding. The Mid America Arts Alliance notified the commission in July that it was putting all grant requests on hold pending further review by the NEA of the state commission’s status.

Commission members appeared concerned about what their new role is and how much money the foundation has raised.

“We have seen nothing in writing,” said Henry Schwaller, a commission member and former chairman.

Weis declined to say how much money the foundation has been raised, saying it wasn’t an agenda item and she wasn’t prepared to share the information. Brownback announced in July that he was donating more than $30,000 from his inaugural fund to the foundation, but other amounts raised haven’t been disclosed.

The commission voted to ask the foundation to report quarterly to members about how much money has been raised and what is available to distribute in Kansas.

Commissioner Larry Meeker said it was also unclear what the commission’s authorities were under the new arrangement, including use of office space donated to the foundation for use by the commission.

“Why do we need office space if we have no money?” Meeker said. “Are we becoming a front for the foundation?”

Weis and others said the commission would continue to award grants and not the foundation. They said it was at least symbolic to have physical presence to show that public support for the art hadn’t ended in Kansas.

“It matters to donors. You can’t just be in the ether. You can’t do that and expect the public to take you serious,” said Sandra Hartley, commission secretary-treasurer.

Brownback appointed Weis to serve as chairwoman of the committee, along with six other members. The previous members had been strong critics of the governor’s push to reduce the state’s role in funding arts programs and have them rely more heavily on private funds.

Senators rejected an executive order that would have moved the arts programs under the State Historical Society, leaving the commission in place. Brownback responded by vetoing the commission’s budget, saying it wasn’t a “core” function of state government.

The governor has said that having a private foundation raise money for arts programs potentially could raise more money to support the arts than through state tax dollars or federal sources.

But Schwaller and Meeker said foundation funds that may come with stipulations from donors that they be spent on specific programs could limit the commission’s ability to support arts statewide, or attract matching NEA funds.

“We don’t want strings attached. The NEA doesn’t like strings attached,” Schwaller said.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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'View of the Red Cedar River' by Frances Farrand Dodge. Michigan Women's Historical Center & Hall of Fame.

Mich. women’s history center opens art exhibit Sunday

'View of the Red Cedar River' by Frances Farrand Dodge. Michigan Women's Historical Center & Hall of Fame.

‘View of the Red Cedar River’ by Frances Farrand Dodge. Michigan Women’s Historical Center & Hall of Fame.

LANSING, Mich. (AP) – The Michigan Women’s Historical Center and Hall of Fame is opening an art exhibition on Sunday.

The exhibit is titled “Selected Works from the Michigan Women’s Historical Center Art Collection.” It features works from the museum’s permanent collection.

The exhibit includes a newly acquired oil painting by Frances Farrand Dodge of Lansing, a prominent artist from the early 20th century.

The center says admission is free and says light refreshments will be provided for an opening reception from 2-4 p.m. in the gallery. The exhibit continues through Oct. 29.

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Online:

www.michiganwomenshalloffame.org

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


'View of the Red Cedar River' by Frances Farrand Dodge. Michigan Women's Historical Center & Hall of Fame.

‘View of the Red Cedar River’ by Frances Farrand Dodge. Michigan Women’s Historical Center & Hall of Fame.

'Martha W. Griffiths' by Patricia Hill Burnett. Michigan Women's Historical Center & Hall of Fame, Lansing, Michigan.

‘Martha W. Griffiths’ by Patricia Hill Burnett. Michigan Women’s Historical Center & Hall of Fame, Lansing, Michigan.

'Helen Milliken' by Patricia Hill Burnett. Michigan Women's Historical Center & Hall of Fame, Lansing, Michigan.

‘Helen Milliken’ by Patricia Hill Burnett. Michigan Women’s Historical Center & Hall of Fame, Lansing, Michigan.