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Nina Mason Pulliam cared deeply about enhancing the quality
of life in the communities where she and her husband, Eugene
C. Pulliam, worked, lived and prospered. Together, they worked
to add to the vibrancy of civic life in their dual hometowns
of Indianapolis and Phoenix. Today, Mrs. Pulliam's special
love of Southwestern art and Native American culture is memorialized
through grants to two legacy grantees, the Heard Museum in
Phoenix and the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western
Art in Indianapolis.
Heard Museum
For
over 75 years, the Heard Museum has served as a Phoenix landmark
and a place where visitors from around the world can learn
about the heritage and the living cultures and arts of native
peoples, particularly peoples of the Southwest. Nina Mason
Pulliam's relationship with the Heard began 50 years ago with
her election as a trustee. She later was named a Life Trustee
in honor of her active interest and generosity. In the 1960s,
Nina and her husband Eugene Pulliam spearheaded a successful
campaign to put the Heard Museum on solid financial footing.
Their lead gift, including stock in Central Newspapers, Inc.
that eventually grew to 100,000 shares, helped to establish
an endowment fund and encouraged other individuals and companies
in Phoenix to donate to the campaign.
"Both Nina and Gene Pulliam's support during their lifetimes
and the Trust's support since 1998 have been a source of enormous
strength to the Heard Museum," said Frank Goodyear, director
of the Heard Museum.
In 1998, the Trust awarded a legacy grant of $1.5 million
to fund the Heard Museum's major new pavilion, which is the
centerpiece of the education expansion and bears Mrs. Pulliam's
name. The Nina Mason Pulliam Pavilion ties the expanded campus
to the existing museum. It encompasses a new main entrance,
three exhibition galleries, a working studio for artists in
residence, a collection care and storage hall, a research
library and archives, and administrative offices.
In 2003, the Trust awarded the Heard Museum a second grant
of $500,000 to support a $7.6 million capital project for
the reinstallation of the "HOME: Native People in the
Southwest" galleries and to update and revitalize this
award-winning signature exhibit. Millions of visitors have
toured these galleries since their 1984 opening, but after
19 years, the exhibit needed revitalization. The two-year
project, which enables the Museum to exhibit 50 percent more
of its treasures from the permanent collection, uses technology
and new exhibition techniques to enhance the visitor experience.
The reinstallation is a natural progression in the artistic
expression and the worldwide stature of the Heard Museum.
The Museum is located in downtown central Phoenix. To explore
the "HOME: Native People in the Southwest" and other
current exhibitions at the Heard Museum, visit its web site
at www.heard.org
or call 602-252-8848 for more information.
Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art
Nina Pulliam's lifelong focus on children and their educational
experiences, combined with her interest in Native American
culture, are embodied in the Nina Mason Pulliam Education
Center, housed at the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians
and Western Art in Indianapolis. The Museum exposes visitors
to rich and vastly different artistic visions of Native Americans
and the American West from the early 19th century to the present.
Education plays a key role in every aspect of programming
at the Eiteljorg Museum. Each year approximately 20,000 school
children participate in special tours. When the Museum learned
that Indianapolis Public Schools had little funding for field
trips, it began a program that waives admission for kindergarten
through eighth grade students, and later extended the program
to include low-income families from an adjacent neighborhood.
To better accommodate such programs, the Trust provided a
legacy grant of $1.5 million toward the Museum's new education
center. The 6,000-square-foot facility, which opened last
month, will allow up to 50,000 school children and thousands
of lifelong learners to extend their visits each year to the
Eiteljorg by exploring art, history and cultures of the American
West and native peoples of North America in a hands-on setting.
The new space houses a resource center and library, two visual
and performing arts studios, a technology studio, and an outdoor
learning area. The library contains books, DVDs, videos and
other resources, and has content available online through
the Indianapolis Marion County Public Library system. With
the Center's additional display space, the Museum can expand
its artist-in-residence program for contemporary traditional
arts.
"We know that to educate our guests, we must engage
them. Our new Nina Mason Pulliam Education Center allows us
to offer schools and families more classes and workshops that
make the stories, concepts and lessons found in our exhibitions
come alive," says Martha Hill, vice president of the
Museum's public programs and visitor services. "We will
also offer additional training programs for teachers, giving
them resources that can be used at the Museum and in the classroom."
The Nina Mason Pulliam Education Center is a product of the
Museum's Eye on the Future campaign, which was launched
in 1997 to secure the Eiteljorg's long-term financial future
and to expand the Museum facility. The Eiteljorg, which opened
in 1989, is located in Indianapolis' White River State Park.
To obtain information about the Museum and learn more about
exhibits and events, call (317) 636-WEST (9378) or visit www.eiteljorg.org.
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