Jonathan Green (BFA 1982) being recognized with Verner Award for Lifetime Achievement
Friday, March 12, 2010
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Posted by: Kristen Boddy
Charleston playwright Julian Wiles, founding director of Charleston
Stage, has been named recipient of the 2010 Elizabeth O'Neill Verner
Award for individual artists, the South Carolina Arts Commission
announced Thursday.
Established in 1972, the state's highest honor in the arts is named
for the renowned Charleston artist, author and lecturer (1883-1979)
whose etchings, drypoints and pastels earned wide acclaim.
To be recognized with Verner Awards for Lifetime Achievement are
artist Jonathan Green of Daniel Island and Fripp Island
novelist/non-fiction writer Pat Conroy. Receiving a Verner in the
category of Arts in Education is Larry Barnfield of Summerville, fine
arts coordinator for Dorchester District 2.
The awards will be presented May 6 at the S.C. Statehouse, followed
by the S.C. Arts Gala that evening at the Columbia Museum of Art.
Tickets are available online.
"South Carolina is filled with awe-inspiring artists, astounding
arts professionals and arts supporters," said S.C. Arts Commission
Board Chairman Bud Ferillo. "This year's recipients are an excellent
representation of this reality, and we are honored to recognize these
top arts achievers for their outstanding commitment to the arts and
dedication to our state."
Wiles, who grew up in Ft. Motte, inaugurated Charleston Stage in
1978. Over the past 31 years he has directed and designed more than 200
productions and written 27 original plays and musicals for the company.
Wiles continues to serve as the company's producing artistic director.
Wiles attended Clemson University, received a history degree from
the College of Charleston in 1974 and an MFA in dramatic art from the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1976.
Conroy, one of America's most celebrated writers, is the author of
such best-selling novels as "The Great Santini," "The Prince of Tides"
and, most recently, "South of Broad." Born in Atlanta, his family moved
to Beaufort when he was 15. His novel "The Lords of Discipline" and the
memoir "My Losing Season" were inspired by his years as a cadet at The
Citadel.
Green was born in 1955 in Gardens Corner, and graduated from the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1982. Though widely traveled,
Green has looked to the familiar images of his ancestral home for the
subjects of his paintings, which have been coveted by collectors,
museums and critics around the world. He is president/CEO of Jonathan
Green Studios, Inc., and the Jonathan Green Art Collection Gallery, LLC
in Naples, Fla., as well as chairman of Jonathan Green Living Designs,
LLP in Charleston.
Barnfield has worked to increase the number of arts opportunities
and arts faculty in South Carolina schools. During the past eight
years, he has expanded the school district's arts program, earning it
national recognition by the Kennedy Center Alliance for Arts Education.
http://www.postandcourier.com/news/2010/mar/12/playwright-among-named/
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