Categories
News

Tampa Museum of Art Presents First Annual Juneteenth Cultural Celebration

May 12, 2022 (Tampa, FL) — Commemorate Juneteenth with an engaging, family-friendly experience at the Tampa Museum of Art’s first annual Juneteenth Cultural Celebration. On Sunday, June 19, 2022, from 10 am to 8 pm, prepare for a lively community celebration of this holiday, also known as Freedom Day, with free museum admission, art-making activities, live music and performances, family portraits, amazing food trucks, and more.

The event lineup also includes programs by community partners Moffitt Cancer Center, its George Edgecomb Society, and HORUS Construction Services, promoting social and health equity for all community members. CAN Community Health will provide free health screenings onsite throughout the day. Visitors will also experience a free sampling of arts and health programs the Tampa Museum of Art provides for families and various special needs groups.

Kessanda Abel, Community Engagement Manager at the Tampa Museum of Art, said, “Juneteenth at TMA is an excellent way to see the amazing power that art has to bring the community together, especially when all members of the community are welcome and represented in a place that celebrates the uniqueness of everybody.”

Cathy Grant, Vice President and Chief Diversity Equity and Inclusion Officer at Moffit Cancer Center and Co-chair of the Governance Committee at the Tampa Museum of Art, said, “this celebration is a great example of organizations with a shared commitment to equity working together to support programs like the Juneteenth Cultural Celebration and making educational opportunities accessible to everyone. It’s important for us to extend the opportunity for young people and community members to be able to walk through the doors with their personal experiences, see themselves represented and know that this is a place where they are welcomed, whether they are experiencing the exhibits at the Tampa Museum of Art, or receiving care at the Moffitt Cancer Center.”

Lena Graham Morris, Chair of HORUS Academy, added that “commitment to equity and inclusion is vital as we continue to educate and create cultural awareness. We continue to make strides in this arena and work from a place and space of intention. These efforts ignite impact in our communities from a grassroots perspective, which moves the needle for opportunities to live a quality life.”

The first annual Juneteenth Cultural Celebration is possible thanks to passionate community members and partner organizations that support the Black and African American community in the Tampa Bay area and share the Museum’s objectives to create programs that facilitate equal access to art education opportunities for all community members.

Register for free admission to the Juneteenth Cultural Celebration at https://tampamuseum.org/juneteenth

About Moffitt Cancer Center

Moffitt is dedicated to one lifesaving mission: to contribute to the prevention and cure of cancer. The Tampa-based facility is one of only 52 National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers, a distinction that recognizes Moffitt’s scientific excellence, multidisciplinary research, and robust training and education. Moffitt’s expert nursing staff is recognized by the American Nurses Credentialing Center with Magnet® status, its highest distinction. With more than 7,500 team members, Moffitt has an economic impact in the state of $2.4 billion. For more information, call 1-888-MOFFITT (1-888-663-3488), visit MOFFITT.org, and follow the momentum on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

About the Tampa Museum of Art

Founded in 1920, the Tampa Museum of Art inspires visitors with engaging exhibitions and innovative educational programs that emphasize ancient, modern, and contemporary art. The Museum houses one of the largest Greek and Roman antiquities collections in the southeastern United States. As one of the region’s most prominent museums devoted to the art of our time, the Museum’s permanent collection also embraces sculpture, photography, painting, new media, and more.

Online programs add to the year-round studio art classes, lectures, and tours that allow children, teens, and adults to discover new perspectives and learn different art-making techniques. Likewise, through unique community partnerships, the Museum offers outreach programs that provide art-therapy-informed interventions and meaningful modes of self-expression to vulnerable segments of the population.

Located in the heart of downtown Tampa, the Tampa Museum of Art leads as both a cultural institution and a community museum dedicated to celebrating its home city’s diversity. In 2021, the Museum embarked on an ambitious renovation to increase exhibition space and education facilities to accommodate growing community partnerships and allow more hands-on, up-close experiences for students and adults. The Museum will remain open to the public throughout the Centennial Renovation, with an expected completion date in the second half of 2022.

General Hours and Information

For tickets and information, visit TampaMuseum.org or call (813) 274-8130. Located at 120 W. Gasparilla Plaza. Tampa, FL 33602, the Tampa Museum of Art is open seven days a week, Monday – Sunday, 10 am – 5 pm, and Thursdays from 10 am – 8 pm.

###

Categories
Centennial Campaign News

Tampa Museum of Art Announces Historic $25 Million Lead Gift to Centennial Capital Campaign

TAMPA, FL (April 25, 2022) – The Tampa Museum of Art has received a landmark $25 million donation from Dick Corbett as the lead donation to the Museum’s Centennial Capital Campaign for Renovation and Expansion, which began during its 100th anniversary celebration in 2020.

“This extraordinary gift to the Museum contributes a historic $25 million cash gift to our campaign for the Museum’s expansion. It will allow us to grow our overall area from 69,000 to 120,000 square feet and expand our exhibition and collections space from 14,800 square feet to 43,000 square feet. It will also more than triple available event space, add public restaurant and retail store space as well as a 10,000-square-foot Education Center, allowing us to serve 24,000 Hillsborough County school students annually,” said Michael Tomor, Ph.D., the Penny and Jeff Vinik Executive Director of the Tampa Museum of Art.

“This gift from Dick Corbett makes history in Florida’s art community because it constitutes the single largest private donation ever made to a public art museum and art education center in this state,” Tomor added, noting that although there have been other large donations made to museums in Florida, those have been in the form of part cash-part collections of art.

“This generous donation is unique because it is a stand-alone cash contribution to our capital campaign,” Tomor explained.

“The Tampa Museum of Art strengthens arts and culture in our vibrant city, and opens the eyes of schoolchildren to the power of beauty and imagination. I am proud to make this historic gift to TMA in celebration of their centennial anniversary. My hope is that it will encourage others who have the means to give back to also join in and support the growth of the Museum’s world-class exhibits and programs,” said Dick Corbett.

Cornelia and Dick Corbett at the Tampa Museum of Art during Pavilion XXXIII in 2018.

“Dick and Cornie Corbett have been extraordinary patrons and supporters of the Tampa Museum of Art for decades,” according to Jerry Divers, chair of the Tampa Museum of Art Foundation and head of the Museum’s Centennial Capital Campaign. Divers added: “Our community is blessed by so many other significant gifts and legacy projects developed and funded by Dick Corbett. His contributions have been bold catalysts for effective, broad-based public and private projects with lasting benefits for commercial development in Florida as well as on policies affecting K-12 education, growth management, economic development, agriculture and commercial real estate.”

“Dick Corbett’s generous donation to the Museum’s Centennial Capital Campaign will allow us to move swiftly to complete the significant renovations already underway and to begin our transformative expansion project scheduled to break ground in the next eight to 10 months,” according to Dianne Jacob, President of the Tampa Museum of Art Board of Trustees.

About Richard A. Corbett

Dick Corbett has developed, financed, and constructed more than $1 billion in complex real estate ventures as chief executive officer and president of Concorde Companies, a Tampa-based real estate investment firm. His most ambitious and acclaimed achievement was conceiving, developing, and attracting funding for Tampa International Plaza and Bay Street shopping center adjacent to the Tampa International Airport. Tampa International Plaza is a 3-million-square-foot mixed-use retail, office, and hotel development that attracts more than 20 million visitors annually. Since its opening in 2001, it has generated thousands of permanent jobs, hundreds of new commercial businesses, including hotels and restaurants, as well as commercial offices that have contributed hundreds of millions of dollars annually to the Tampa Bay regional economy.

Together with his wife, Cornelia, the Corbetts have financially supported the Independent Day School for more than 40 years and served as Board of Trustee volunteer leaders. In 2012, the school was named the Corbett Preparatory School in appreciation of the work the Corbetts have done for the school.

In 2013, the Crisis Center of Tampa Bay dedicated the Corbett Trauma Center in honor of Cornelia. The facility expanded mental health counseling in eastern Hillsborough County by providing counseling services, group therapy, and other mental health support for children and families.

The same year, Dick and Cornelia Corbett were inducted as a couple into the Florida Council of Economic Education Hall of Fame, recognizing their impact on the community through business and civic achievements and how they serve as lifelong examples of integrity and high ideals.

In 2015, Dick Corbett made two high-profile gifts totaling $35 million to his alma mater, the University of Notre Dame. The pledge included $25 million to underwrite the construction of the Corbett Family Hall, a 280,000-square-foot academic building, and a $10 million endowment for the Notre Dame head football coaching position at the university.

Dick Corbett was appointed to consecutive terms on the Florida Fish & Wildlife Commission by Governors Jeb Bush and Rick Scott, including acting as Chairman of the FWC for several years. During that period, Corbett helped develop the Florida Youth Conservation Centers Network, jointly sponsored by the FWC and the Wildlife Foundation to help reconnect children with traditional outdoor activities. He continues to serve as chair emeritus of the Fish & Wildlife Foundation of Florida.

In his revealing biography, “Ringside Stories,” Dick Corbett tells the fascinating story of his hard-knock youth from a fractured home in Rochester, NY, who overcame setbacks large and small to forge his long and remarkable career as a real estate guru.

“Life is precious – everyone gets exactly one,” Corbett is fond of saying, which helps explain how a combination of perseverance and strategic thinking pushed him to be the best that he could be, and fuels his family’s generosity toward their neighbors and community.

###

Tampa Museum of Art rendering of Centennial Renovation and Expansion. Image courtesy of Weiss/Manfredi.
Tampa Museum of Art rendering of Centennial Renovation and Expansion. Image courtesy of Weiss/Manfredi.

Learn more about the Tampa Museum of Art’s $100 Million Centennial Campaign for Expansion and Renovation.

News Coverage

Categories
News

Tampa Museum of Art is showcasing work from kids in kindergarten through 8th grade | Creative Loafing

By Ray Roa 

The Tampa Museum of Art has a couple of handfuls of great exhibitions happening right how (CL recently covered outsider art from the Monroe Family and “HerStory”), but downtown’s landmark museum has also made room for “Young @ Art,” featuring work from Hillsborough County students in kindergarten through 8th grade. Check it out through Feb. 20.

Read Full Article

Categories
Centennial Campaign News

Tampa Museum of Art to transform downtown skyline with $68M expansion | WFLA.com

by WFLA

TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) – The Downtown Tampa city skyline is set to get a boost in the near future thanks to a new addition being constructed for the Tampa Museum of Art.

When completed in 2024, the crystalline, four-story structure to the Hillsborough River waterfront will double the museum’s exhibition spaces and triple its education spaces.

Read Full Article

Categories
Past Exhibitions

Highlights from the Karam Collection

On view November 11, 2021 through January 15, 2023

Bust of young man holding palm frond
Bust of young man holding palm frond, Stone sculpture, Roman Syria, ca. 2nd-3rd cent. CE. Karam Collection, USF Libraries’ Special Collections, 63

In 1998, Dr. Farid Karam and his wife Jehanne generously donated 149 objects to the Special Collections of the University of South Florida (USF) Libraries. The authentic antiquities originate from ancient Syria, Phoenicia, Egypt, Greece and the Arab world. In date, they range from the Bronze Age to the early Islamic period (ca. fifteenth-century BCE – thirteenth-century CE). The metal, stone, glass and ceramic artifacts include cosmetic and medical implements, utility vessels and oil lamps, as well as sculptures and figurines. This presentation of 58 highlights is the first time the Karam Collection of Lebanese Antiquities is on display for the general public. The selection reveals Dr. Karam’s profound interest in the diversity of ancient cultures found in the Eastern Mediterranean. 

Learn more about the Karam Collection at the USF Libraries.

About Farid Karam, M.D. 

Farid Karam (1929–2018) was born in a Greek Orthodox village in northern Lebanon. After specializing in plastic surgery in Cleveland, Ohio (1961), he taught medicine at the American University of Beirut Hospital until 1976. Due to the outbreak of the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990) he moved to Bay Pines, Florida. In 1992, Dr. Karam was appointed Associate Professor of Plastic Surgery at the University of South Florida College of Medicine in Tampa, Florida. Before returning to Lebanon, where he continued to practice otolaryngology and facial plastic surgery, Dr. Karam donated his antiquities collection to USF. Since 1977, Dr. Karam was a member of the World Scout Foundation headed by King Carl Gustav of Sweden and received the highest medal for life achievements, the Bronze Wolf Medal. Dr. Karam passed away on March 1, 2018, in his hometown in northern Lebanon. 

The Ancient Levant 

The Eastern Mediterranean seaboard, also known as the Levant, which is the region of present-day Syria, Lebanon and Israel, has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Some of the oldest cities in world history were founded there. From the Bronze Age, peoples called Canaanites, Phoenicians or Philistines populated the region. The Israelites appeared in the Iron Age. They all spoke Semitic languages. Phoenicians based their wealth on trade – especially purple dye and wine as well as cedar wood and glass. They also contributed their alphabet to the development of ancient civilizations across the Mediterranean. During the early first millennium BCE, Phoenician trade colonies were established across the southwestern Mediterranean, most notably the city of Carthage. The Eastern Mediterranean coast meanwhile came under the successive spheres of influence from Egypt, Assyria, Babylonia and Persia. The Seleucids and Ptolemies, dynasties ruling from Babylon and Egypt respectively, competed for power over the region during much of the Hellenistic period (ca. 323–30 BCE). In 64 BCE, Roman rule was established and for the following four centuries, Syria became one of the richest eastern provinces of the Roman Empire. In the Mediaeval period, the region first came under the influence of the Christian Byzantine empire and then the Muslim Arab world. 

Categories
Centennial Campaign News

Inside the Tampa Museum of Art’s epic expansion | Axios Tampa Bay

by Ben Montgomery

The Tampa Museum of Art unveiled impressive plans for a $68 million expansion and redevelopment of its building and land on Curtis Hixon Park, adding about 51,000 square feet of new space to the existing 25,000-square-foot museum.

Read Full Article

Categories
Centennial Campaign News

Tampa Museum of Art set to expand future with new exhibition, education spaces | WTSP

By 10 Tampa Bay

TAMPA, Fla. — Leaders at the Tampa Museum of Art announced plans Monday that would expand its footprint and change the overall look of the downtown area along the Hillsborough River.

It’s even more growth for a museum that started a separate renovation project earlier this summer.

Read More.

Categories
Past Exhibitions

Taking Shape: Abstraction from the Arab World, 1950s–1980s​

On view September 30, 2021 through January 16, 2022

Etel Adnan (Lebanon). Oil on canvas. Collection of the Barjeel Art Foundation, Sharjah, UAE
Etel Adnan (Lebanon). Autumn in Yosemite Valley, 1963–1964.Oil on canvas, 20 1/8 x 20 1/8 in. Collection of the Barjeel Art Foundation, Sharjah, UAE

Taking Shape: Abstraction from the Arab World, 1950s–1980s explores mid-20th-century abstract art from North Africa, West Asia, and the Arab diaspora—a vast geographic expanse that encompasses diverse cultural, ethnic, linguistic, and religious backgrounds. Comprising nearly 80 works by artists from countries including Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Morocco, Palestine, Qatar, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the exhibition is drawn from the collection of the Barjeel Art Foundation based in Sharjah, UAE. Inspired by Arabia calligraphy, geometry and mathematics, Islamic decorative patterns, and spiritual practices, they expanded abstraction’s vocabulary—thus complicating its genealogies or origin and altering how we view non-objective art. The paintings, sculpture, drawings, and prints on view reflect the wide range of nonfigurative art practices that flourished in the Arab world over the course of four decades. At the Tampa Museum of Art, Taking Shape: Abstraction from the Arab World, 1950s–1980s is possible thanks to a community sponsorship by Morgan Stanley. The exhibition is also supported in part by Colonial Distributing and George & Debbie Baxter in honor of Dr. Mudhafar Amin and Zahar Hadid.​

Categories
Past Exhibitions

Her World in Focus: Women Photographers from the Permanent Collection

On view through September 5, 2021

Maria Friberg (Swedish, b. 1966), "Almost There (#2)", 2000. Dye destruction print (Cibachrome) mounted on glass. 47 x 60 inches. Tampa Museum of Art. Gift of the artist and Conner Contemporary Art, 2010.002.
Maria Friberg (Swedish, b. 1966), Almost There (#2), 2000. Dye destruction print (Cibachrome) mounted on glass. 47 x 60 inches. Tampa Museum of Art. Gift of the artist and Conner Contemporary Art, 2010.002.

The Tampa Museum of Art’s holdings in photography represents the largest collecting areas of the permanent collection. The collection now comprises more than 950 photographs and illustrates a range of processing techniques and approaches to the medium. Her World in Focus: Women Photographers from the Permanent Collection highlights important women photographers in the Museum’s collection. From the candid street photography of Dianora Niccolini to Jan Groover’s influential still life photographs, and Cindy Sherman’s iconic portraiture, the exhibition highlights key genres of post-war photography. Personal identity and reflections on place appear in the works by artists such as Maria Martinez-Cañas. The exhibition will also include the work of Berenice Abbott, Barbara Ess, Maria Friberg, Penelope Umbrico, and others.

Categories
Past Exhibitions

Skyway 20/21: A Contemporary Collaboration

On view June 3 through October 10, 2021

Skyway 20/21 Installation View at the Tampa Museum of Art
Skyway 20/21: A Contemporary Collaboration installed at the Tampa Museum of Art. Photography by Paige Raburn.

Skyway 20/21: A Contemporary Collaboration celebrates the artists and work created in the Tampa Bay area. Launched as a triennial exhibition in 2017, this survey show is the second presentation of Skyway and is mounted collaboratively by the Tampa Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, and the Contemporary Art Museum at the University of South Florida. Skyway highlights the breadth of artistic practices in the counties served by the organizing museums: Hillsborough, Pinellas, Manatee, Sarasota, and new to the exhibition, Pasco. The exhibition will be on view simultaneously at the four museums.

Exhibiting at the Tampa Museum of Art are Jaime Aelavanthara & Amanda Sieradzki, Kim Anderson, Wendy Babcox, Janet Folsom, Samson Huang, Cassia Kite, Jason Lazarus, Jenn Miller, Sarah O’Donoghue, Herion Park, Anat Pollack, Libbi Ponce, Selina Román, John Sims, Mike Solomon, Jill Taffet, and Kirk Ke Wang.

SKYWAY A Contemporary Collaboration 20/21