Seattle, WA. Nine leading Seattle arts organizations have received welcome news at a critical time. On October 20th, 2020 the Friday Foundation announced philanthropic gifts totaling more than $9 million to honor the lives and legacies of late art enthusiasts Jane Lang Davis and Richard E. Lang (pictured above).
“These gifts are a shining example of what community support for art and art institutions looks like, and it reflects and furthers the incredible legacy of the Langs,” said Amada Cruz, director and CEO of the Seattle Art Museum. “The gift to our Closure Relief Fund was the single largest gift to that fund, and it arrived at a crucial moment in April as we faced the crisis directly, enabling us to support all museum operations.”
Aaron Fowler’s “Into Existence” exhibit, Seattle Art Museum.
The Langs believed in the power of the arts to embrace new ideas, foster quiet reflection, and promote community. The gifts are intended to inspire others to discover and engage with Seattle’s many cultural communities and opportunities in the visual and performing arts and find lifelong engagements as the Langs did themselves. Whether it is attending a concert or performance, volunteering with an organization, or discovering art, the hope is to remind the Seattle community that there are so many places and organizations for people of all ages to find inspiration.
With lights dimmed in most theaters and museums this year due to COVID-19, these gifts enable five major Seattle arts organizations – Seattle Art Museum, Seattle Symphony, Pacific Northwest Ballet, Seattle Opera, and the Henry Art Gallery at the University of Washington – to acquire or present new works for audiences to enjoy from home or in person when it is safe to do so.
“My mother and stepfather were dedicated to the arts, to Seattle, to the stability of these critical civic gems, and to the inherent promotion of human connection,” said Lyn Grinstein, daughter of Jane Lang Davis and president of the Friday Foundation. “Through the Friday Foundation, these gifts will help fulfill these wishes, by funding new activities and initiatives, as well as provide stability through financial assistance to operations hard hit by the pandemic shutdown.”
The Langs, who lived in Medina, are best known for their internationally recognized art collection with a focus on Abstract Expressionism. Richard joined the Seattle Art Museum board in 1972 and served until his death in 1982. Jane, who died in 2017, joined the SAM board in 1985 and in 2000 became a lifetime trustee, and served for a time as the chair of the Honorary Trustees. Always true to her devotion to abstraction, emerging artists, and the newest work, Jane was an early and active member of the Contemporary Art Council (CAC), advocating for and supporting Seattle Art Museum’s early initiatives in its contemporary collections and exhibitions. She served on CAC and all its subsequent forms for four decades and was an active participant in all major fundraising campaigns.
To continue the Lang’s legacy, the Friday Foundation is funding The Richard E. Lang and Jane Lang Davis Acquisition Fund for Global Contemporary Art at the Seattle Art Museum with a $2 million gift. Amid the COVID-19 global pandemic, the Friday Foundation also gifted the Seattle Art Museum an additional $2 million in emergency funds to help offset economic losses when the museum closed to visitors in March. Amanda Cruz, SAM’s director and CEO stated that “This endowment will help shape the future of SAM’s collection, as we continue our focus on emerging artists from all over the world. We are extremely grateful for the generosity of the Friday Foundation.”
The Seattle Opera
Christina Scheppelmann, general director of the Seattle Opera, said, “This extraordinary gift from the Friday Foundation allows us to create the Jane Lang Davis Creation Lab, which cultivates the next generation of storytellers in opera. This new multi-year initiative will contribute to the operatic repertoire at large — and bring new stories to our community — by supporting the talents of a diverse group of composers and librettists (ages 18-30). Opera needs new and varied perspectives to thrive into the future—and to complement great works of the past. The impacts of this gift will reverberate in Washington State, and far beyond. We are humbled by this investment in the future of opera.”
“The Langs transformed the arts landscape throughout our region with their stewardship, advocacy, and extraordinary support,” said Sylvia Wolf, John S. Behnke Director of the Henry Art Gallery. “With these gifts, their impact will live on, in perpetuity. The Henry has a long tradition of inviting artists to consider the museum as a laboratory for new ideas. This extraordinary gift will allow us to expand this practice and to deepen our service to artists, audiences, and the field at large. It will also connect our UW community and students of all ages with living artists and their creative processes. We are deeply grateful to the Friday Foundation for establishing the Henry’s first endowed fund specifically geared towards supporting newly commissioned work.”
In addition to the $2 million SAM acquisition fund, the new endowments include $1.5 million to support the development of the Richard E. Lang and Jane Lang Davis Living Music Program at the Seattle Symphony, $1 million for the creation of the Jane Lang Davis New Works Fund at Pacific Northwest Ballet, $1 million to support the launch of the Jane Lang Davis Creation Lab at the Seattle Opera, and $1 million to support the creation of the Richard E. Lang and Jane Lang Davis New Works Fund at the Henry Art Gallery.
The Seattle Symphony
“The Seattle Symphony is honored to receive this grant from the Friday Foundation recognizing the legacy of Richard and Jane,” said Seattle Symphony president and CEO Krishna Thiagarajan. “The Symphony is known for its imaginative programming, from our [untitled] series to our just-launched The Essential Series. The Richard E. Lang and Jane Lang Davis Living Music Program allows us to expand this transformative work by creating a pathway for sustained success within our bold programming choices, while also giving us the possibility of re-envisioning the concert experience for audiences within and beyond Benaroya Hall.”
Peter Boal, artistic director of Pacific Northwest Ballet, said, “Through the gift of the Friday Foundation, Jane and Richard Lang’s legacy continues by helping the creation of new choreography. Because of this generosity, Pacific Northwest Ballet will be able to fund an original new work every season. When I choose the commission every season, I will recall Jane’s willingness to embrace risk and innovation in order to bring inspired art and dance into our lives.”
In addition to the new works, other Friday Foundation gifts announced today include $270,000 to ArtsFund’s COVID-19 Arts Emergency Relief Fund, and $100,000 each to ACT – A Contemporary Theatre, Seattle Rep, and the Seattle Chamber Music Society.
“The Langs understood the transformational power of the arts – a power we need today more than ever,” said Michael Greer, president and CEO of ArtsFund. “Their vision and legacy, honored by these gifts from the Friday Foundation, will have an immediate impact on arts and culture in our region and will resonate for years to come. These gifts serve as a significant reminder of the impact of philanthropy, and how we can and must all work together to secure the future of cultural organizations that help our community thrive. These generous gifts are inspiring and set a profound example for us all.”
Pablo Schugurensky, adviser to the Friday Foundation, said, “As well as sustaining and strengthening these nine institutions, we hope these gifts spur others to join the arts community, inspired by the examples of Jane Lang Davis and Richard E. Lang and their deep commitment to the arts and their love for Seattle. Whether it is creating art, enjoying a performance, attending exhibitions, or supporting artists and art organizations in their city, we all have an important role to play.” This gift honoring the Langs’ legacy is the first of several. Additional announcements will be made in 2021.
Seattle, WA. Although the COVID-19 crisis forced FEEST Seattle to pause nearly all of its usual activities, the youth-led, health justice organization quickly shifted gears to bring much-needed nourishment to the homes of students in South Seattle and South King County through a grocery delivery program. As Community Engagement Manager Leigh Thomas explained, pandemic-related school closures and job losses have amplified food insecurity, especially for the low-income, youth of color served by FEEST. “We saw a gap in families getting groceries,” Thomas said, “and we decided to bring the food to the students.”
Staff, donors, and volunteers rallied to fill this gap by purchasing and delivering groceries to over 600 families that requested assistance between March and June of 2020 (see above photo of FEEST staff and volunteers purchasing groceries). Currently, FEEST is offering grocery assistance in the form of pre-paid gift cards for eligible families in the Sea-Tac, South Seattle, Skyway, Tukwila, White Center, Burien, and Delridge areas. More information about this program can be found on the grocery gift-card page of the FEEST site and those who would like to contribute can do so through the donation link.
Youth gather around the table at a FEEST community dinner (pre-COVID-19).
Founded in 2008, FEEST is a non-profit organization focused on bringing Seattle youth of color together to build community and organize around issues of food access and health justice. Prior to COVID-19, community dinners, where young people prepared and shared a meal, were the heart of the organization’s mission “to set the table for young people to transform the health and equity of their community by gathering around food & working towards systems change” (see photo above of teens at a FEEST dinner). According to the organization’s leaders, “the FEEST kitchen creates space for young people to reclaim their health, celebrate ancestral food traditions, and share radical joy. In addition to the practical skills youth learn in the kitchen, breaking bread together builds lasting community connections that become a foundation for long-term organizing.”
In the past, this organizing has generated several successful youth-led campaigns. Motivated by the belief that “all students deserve to have access to fresh, hot, nutritious, and culturally relevant meals whenever they need them” (FEEST website), a group of FEEST youth leaders worked directly with school administrators to add new, healthy, culturally relevant foods like squash curry and lentil stew to the lunch menus at Highline Public Schools. FEEST youth also created two innovative healthy snack pilot programs that brought free, nutritious snacks to students at Evergreen and Chief Sealth High Schools. Watch FEEST youth talk about their participation in FEEST and their roles as “food justice leaders” in the video below.
This school year, Thomas shared that FEEST plans to continue the grocery gift-card program, and also to bring back some additional programs, beginning with a “youth fellowship program” where students will discuss social justice issues that concern them, and identify causes that they would like to rally around. The best way to support FEEST at this time is to donate, which can be done through the link here.
FEEST is an organization led by youth of color in South Seattle and South King County working to improve health in our schools. Focusing on the need for more healthy, affordable, and culturally relevant food at school, FEEST centers young people as leaders toward concrete changes in our food systems. Youth are in the lead at FEEST because change is not effective unless those most impacted by health inequities are the decision makers. When young people lead the way with creative solutions, the whole community benefits. Fierce youth who speak truth to power are essential in a time when our communities are constantly under threat by a political system that directly threatens our survival.
We seek health justice: the elimination of all barriers for people to live physically, mentally, socially, culturally healthy lives.
Our mission is to set the table for young people to transform the health and equity of their community by gathering around food & working towards systems change.
Seattle, WA. The Wing Luke Museum has been hard at work putting new content on its website. Due to COVID-19 the Museum is closed until October 7th. New additions to the website include new curated stories, digital content, and virtual tours. The Wing Luke Museum is “A physical embodiment of community, it is truly a community based museum that represents community voice and stories, as well as the spirit and heritage. There will always be a home for these stories.” This was stated by Ellen Ferguson, The Co-President of the Board of Trustees at the Wing Luke Museum in a video posted on its YouTube channel and website. The Museum is a place where “the Asian Pacific American community looks to for engagement, inspiration and leadership.” This all can be felt when learning about its history and why the Wing Luke Museum was founded. The stories that are being told are personal and “hardly told in the school books and rarely seen on TV.” Until October 7th when the Wing Luke Museum opens up for in-person tours its website is a great gateway into the Asian Pacific culture.
Jewelry Located at The Wing Luke Museum Via Facebook .
Art Work Located At The Wing Luke Museum Via Facebook.
Virtual Tours are a great way to experience The Wing while we are all staying inside and social distancing. “We have decided to close our doors for the sake of our community, but through this closure we have found new and innovative ways to take you folks inside our walls”. This was said at the beginning of a quick Virtual Tour by Alexis L. Silva a Artist, Curator and Visitor and Events Assistant Manager. These tours offer great insights and a general basis of information about exhibits in the museum. When taking a tour you will have a guide that will speak on the exhibits being shown during the tour. The tour consists of a camera showing off parts of the Wing that help give you a chance to learn and experience many different art pieces and performances. These tours are 45 minutes and are being held every Thursday at 5pm, this experience will help you learn about the immigrants in the 1900s and the Family Association Rooms that housed them, as well as the Yick Fung Store. You can RSVP for next Thursdays tour right here on the Wings website.
Alexis L. Silva Presenting An Exhibit On A Virtual Tour Called Where Beauty Lies.
On October 7th the Wing Luke Museum will resume operation with some new policies to help ensure the public safety. Buying tickets online is highly encouraged, as well as capacity within the museum will bow be limited. Masks will be required and physical distancing is required. Lastly, storage will be closed. These guidelines are to ensure safety for museum-goers and to help give everyone an enjoyable experience. Planning your visit is encouraged and all information about the museum can be found here on its website. When arriving at the museum expect a contactless experience. This meaning that anything that would be intractable such as touchscreens and multimedia installations in exhibits, has been removed. There is much more the Wing Luke Museum is offering on its website including YouthCAN, a free, after-school, high school arts program designed to provide students with exposure to arts professions and increase their knowledge and familiarity with the Chinatown -International district. There is a Virtual gallery that teenagers and kids can explore. This showing off many different art forms and giving some background to how and why these came to be. This was created by YouthCAN student lead Henry Jensen. This virtual experience was curated from the museum having to close down. “Being able to put this exhibit together and continue working with these students after the closure due to COVID-19 has truly made my days brighter”. That was said by Alexis L. Silva on YouthCAN transitioning online.
YouthCAN Virtual Tour From The Wing Luke Museum.
Wing Luke Mission Statement: We connect everyone to the dynamic history, cultures and art of Asian Pacific Americans through vivid storytelling and inspiring experiences to advance racial and social equity.
Location and Information: 719 S. King Street Seattle, Washington 98104 – 206.623.5124 – [email protected]
Seattle, WA. Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, YouthCare has continued to work toward its mission to end youth homelessness by providing shelter, safety, and stability to young people. “In times such as these, YouthCare cannot close our doors,” writes YouthCare CEO, Melinda Giovengo, in a news release. YouthCare’s emergency shelter, community living, and independent living programs have remained open throughout the crisis. To accomplish this, YouthCare temporarily suspended its education, employment, and prevention programs, and instead directed the brunt of its people-power toward keeping essential food, shelter, and housing programs open. “We know that every young person deserves more than just survival. Yet, for now, we must do all that we can to protect young people and the broader community,” says Giovengo.
Before the COVID-19 outbreak, YouthCare’s Orion Center served over one hundred young people per day. YouthCare is now serving a fixed number of young people, approximately 200 youth and young adults across their Seattle area shelter and housing programs. To follow Governor Inslee’s stay-at-home order, these young people are no longer allowed to have visitors, or leave and come back without pre-approval. To flatten the curve, “YouthCare must navigate the complicated balance of keeping our doors open and shut at the same time,” says Giovengo.
Gourmondo joined forces with 16 Seattle businesses to provide over 1,000 meals to youth experiencing homelessness
Providing young people with food and safety as they shelter in place has required additional resources. YouthCare is keeping its facilities staffed 24 hours a day so that clients can shelter in place 24/7. The young people served by YouthCare are also now sharing three communal meals per day, which means increased food costs. Responding to YouthCare’s increased need for food, many restaurants, businesses, and non-profits have donated food and meals to YouthCare.
A student working hard at virtual school
In addition to food donations, YouthCare is also now collecting donations to its Back-to-School drive as schools begin to reopen online. With most schools holding classes exclusively online this Fall, the students served by YouthCare must have access to the supplies they need to stay connected to and engaged with their classes. To prevent the spread of COVID-19, YouthCare is not currently accepting in-person donations. Instead, those hoping to donate can do so through YouthCare’s Amazon wishlist, or ship supplies directly to YouthCare’s main office.
From YouthCare:
YouthCare envisions a community where no young person experiences homelessness, all young people have the opportunity to thrive, and the systems that oppress them are dismantled.
Seattle, WA. Despite the challenges involved with social distancing requirements and remote learning, Page Ahead, a program dedicated to closing the literacy achievement gap experienced by at-risk children, was able to provide over 145 thousand books to kids in Washington this summer. “It was super important and extra challenging,” says Rebecca Brinbury, Page Ahead’s Development Manager.
Students receiving books
Book Up Summer, Page Ahead’s flagship program helps prevent summer reading loss, the decline in reading development that occurs when children are away from school. Research shows that summer reading loss has a more significant impact on lower-income students, largely because they have limited access to reading material. In a typical year, Book Up Summer allows students to choose twelve books each to bring home from school book fairs in the spring. This year, with schools and libraries closed, it was more important than ever that kids have books at home, but there were barriers at every step of the process.
With book fairs no longer running in schools, Page Ahead provided web portals and paper packets for children to select books from during remote learning. According to Page Ahead, the trick to “making” kids read is allowing them to choose books that they are interested in, so it was important that kids were still able to select their own books during the COVID-19 crisis.
After the books were selected, Page Ahead staff worked to coordinate the book shipments and deliveries. With many retailers closed, Page Ahead staff had to find substitutions for books that were out of stock.
In the end, Page Ahead was able to deliver over 145 thousand books. Brinbury emphasizes that Page Ahead is a four-person organization and that they would not have been able to deliver the books, were it not for the help of “some really amazing volunteers who wore masks and gloves, socially distanced, and were able to get thirty thousand books packed.” “With everything going on people really wanted to help,” says Brinbury. Many volunteers delivered books to Page Ahead’s partner schools themselves, and when students couldn’t make it to school to pick up their books, volunteers brought the books directly to them.
Now that Page Ahead has a model for providing Book Up Summer remotely, Brinbury says they are prepared for the possibility of running the program remotely again next Spring.
From Page Ahead:
Literacy can make the difference between the poverty of one generation and the promise of the next. Page Ahead helps children realize their potential by providing them with the inspiration to read.
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