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Click on the following to see AFFA's Annual Reports
2003
Annual Report
2004
Annual Report
2005
Annual Report
2006
Page 1 Annual Report
2006
Page 2 Annual Report
AFFA's History in a Nutshell
The brainchild of Ted Warmbold and Marcia Lucas, Austin
Friends of
Folk Art began in 1987 as a small but enthusiastic band
of culturally
curious explorers.
At the time, Warmbold, a folk art enthusiast and collector,
was
editor of the San Antonio Light and president of the
San Antonio
Friends of Folk Art, a well-established organization
that serves as a
fund-raising arm of the San Antonio Museum of Art. Lucas
was and is
a passionate lover of folk art and owner of El Interior,
a store
featuring folk art of Mexico. The two were drawn together
by efforts
to find a permanent home for the wonderful folk art
collections of
Nelson Rockefeller and Robert K. Winn.
In its first six months, AFFA held six programs to
educate and build
friendships: a caravan to San Antonio to see the museum's
folk art
collections with a stop at Ted Warmbold's (home to his
private
collection of some 4,000 pieces), a lecture and film
on Mexico's Day
of the Dead celebration, a meeting to construct a Day
of the Dead
altar, a mask-making event for children at the Laguna
Gloria Museum,
a harvest wreath-making workshop, and the first holiday
party.
Speakers, excursions, hands-on programs, visits to homes
of private
collectors, educational outreach-these are the types
of programs AFFA
has continued to offer through the years.
On June 30, 1988, Austin Friends of Folk Art was formally
incorporated as a 501.c.3 non-profit organization, complete
with bylaws, officers and directors, and a mission to
promote public appreciation of folk art, which AFFA
defines broadly enough to accommodate everything from
urban mural art, Feng Shui and Southwest petroglyphs
to Moroccan fortune-telling, Oaxacan wood carving and
Byzantine icon painting.
The organization has been blessed with dedicated leaders,
who speak
articulately about the organization and their dreams
for it. Founder Marcia Lucas: "We are an
educational group. We are here to educate people about
folk art. And we are friends, friends who love folk
art. We are not an elite organization and do not wish
to become one. Our goal has always been to educate as
many people as possible."
Carol Blanchard (President 1988-89): "What
first attracted me was an
opening to a spiritual existence, folk art as spiritual
life. It is the spiritual level of folk art which unites
people as well as the unbridled experience that folk
art is. People are attracted to the ceremonies and artifacts
related to ceremonies. The ceremonies help us key into
the spirit of the people who created them. It is nurturing
to learn of the cultures which fostered this spiritual
world."
Teresa Kendrick (President 1990): "We managed
to have fun at this
learning endeavor. We wanted to blend serious material
without being
too serious, with people who had a genuine affection
for each other.... Friends of Folk Art educated all
of us. It honed our sensibilities. We brushed with people
whose lifework is folk art. Visiting homes was never
as interesting as the experts who shared their lives
and passions with us. [...] We were [...] lay people
who became educated in folk art which would normally
have stayed in the realm of museum curators and serious
collectors."
Priscilla Murr (President 1991-96): ""My
goals were: 1) education;
2) building a community of friends; and 3) making Austin
Friends of
Folk Art financially viable. [...] We were founded upon
principles
of community- building within an educational context,
and education
has remained central to our purpose. For me, as for
the founders and
past presidents, that meant we could explore any avenues
which
interested us. We were soon defining folk art as any
art by any
folk."
Juan Isart (President 1997-98): "I had
big dreams. I wanted Austin
Friends of Folk Art to become a real force in the community.
I even
had a dream of establishing a folk art museum. I also
wanted to
establish a scholarship connected to folk art, whether
in art,
archeology or whatever. [...] What was really great
was being part
of a group where members are so dissimilar. It didn't
matter if you
were rich or poor, young or old, attractive or unattractive.
Nobody
had to fit into some sort of mold. All were individuals
and all were
friends."
Pat McCambridge (President 1999-2002): "If
you get too highly
structured and get too locked up in procedures, you
begin to lose
creativity. You have to keep stoking the flames to keep
the creative
fires burning. If you begin to worry too much about
how something is
going to get done, you can lose sight of what it is
you are trying to
do in the first place. [...] [T]here was a great deal
of serendipity
in the group. Finding subjects for programs was never
really the
problem. The trouble was finding people with enough
time to make
them happen."
Barbara Jackson (President 2003-2004): [About
programs:] "There
seems to be no end of ideas, and most of them are good."
[About
AFFA's sound financial status:] "This is the pool
of resources that
puts AFFA at the crossroads. The board sees these remaining
assets
as 'visionary' ones that will enable AFFA to plan some
very special
events-once-in-a-year or once-in-a-lifetime events-or
to make
contributions to organizations that will become permanent
additions
to the preservation of a culture. The board feels the
necessity of
spending assets to benefit its members and other individuals,
organizations and institutions in the community while
being mindful
that these assets are not being renewed in the same
manner as the
$2,000 per year that is earmarked for donations and
grants."
Trevoris Morgan (2005-06): "I was President
at a time when AFFA had made the commitment to return
some of its accrued savings to the
community through grants and in other ways that promote
an
appreciation of folk art. Of course, we continued to
have stimulating and educational programs for our members,
and we increased speakers' honorariums as a way of supporting
their contribution to the survival and appreciation
of folk art. Those are all reasons for AFFA to be proud."
Merry Wheaton (2007- ): "AFFA has matured
structurally over the last
several years. We have solid accounting practices and
guidelines for
grant awards, and our annual report to members recaps
the year's
activities and shows how our funds are working in the
community.
During my term, I want AFFA to build partnerships with
other
organizations of adults and children, to conduct joint
programs, and
to get them covered regularly by the media. I believe
that to know
folk art is to love it, and that means our job is to
effectively get
out the word so new friends can find us and learn along
with us."
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