Attending the Awards Night presentations
(l to r): Kim English, Joanne Friedman, Lynda Goldberg, Raymond
Gilbert , Judy Roderick (Chair), Katey Behnke, Marietta Collins
(Chair), and Mollie Goldstrom. Award Winners: Joanne Friedman
(BOS), Mollie Goldstrom (OSW), Katey Behnke (OSW), Lynda Goldberg
(HON), Raymond Gilbert (HON), Carol Hanson (HON), Kim English (HON) Chairpersons: Judy Roderick
and Marietta Collins
Committee: Martha Benish,
Nancy Q. Collins, Roger Cowles, Andrew Nieman, Heather Nieman, Pam
Robbins, Darlene Tufts, Timothy Tufts
Judges
Nona Hershey has participated in over 100 Print
Biennials and Group Exhibitions internationally. Her work is included
in numerous public and corporate collections, including the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, The Library of Congress, and the Fogg Museum. Solo
exhibitions include those at Mary Ryan Gallery, New York; Dolan/Maxwell
Gallery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Galleria Il Ponte, Rome, Italy;
and most recently (March 2004) at Miller Block Gallery, Boston.
She has had residency grants at the Asillah Forum Foundation, Morocco;
the Ballinglen Arts Foundation, Ireland; the MacDowell Colony, New
Hampshire; and the Ucross Foundation, Wyoming. She taught printmaking
at Tyler School of Art in Rome, Italy for 12 years; and at Temple
University’s Tokyo program for one year. Since September,
1993, Ms. Hershey has been Professor and Coordinator of the Printmaking
Department at Massachusetts College of Art in Boston.
Ken Turino earned a Master of Arts in Teaching
in the field of Museum Education at George Washington University.
A Massachusetts Historical Society Fellow, he is currently an Exhibition
Manager, and formerly Director of Exhibitions and Adult Programs,
for Historic New England (formerly known as the Society for the
Preservation of New England Antiquities) in Boston. He is responsible
for all aspects of exhibition development for Historic New England’s
traveling exhibition program. He developed and ran the annual Program
in New England Studies, an intensive weeklong course on New England
architecture, decorative arts, and material culture. Mr. Turino
is a Board member of the New England Chapter of the Victorian Society
in America, President of the Bay State Historical League, and an
Adjunct Professor in the Museum Studies Certificate Program at Tufts
University. He previously taught at North Shore Community College;
he co-chaired the New England Museum Association, Small Museums
Committee; and has authored numerous articles and publications. |