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University News

Contact:
Liam Otten - (314) 935-8494
Home - 314-863-4296
liam_otten@aismail.wustl.edu

$56.8 million center for the visual arts and design at Washington University to be named in honor of St. Louis civic and philanthropic leader Sam Fox

Related:
- Sam
Fox Arts Center Receives $1 Million
Challenge Grant
- Frequently
asked questions about The Sam
Fox Arts Center at WUSTL
-
Background
information on Sam Fox
-
Background
information on Fumihiko Maki
- Background
information on Harish A. Shah
[St. Louis, MO.,
12-07-02]

Washington
University in St. Louis will name
a new $56.8 million campus center
for the visual arts and design
in honor of Sam Fox, one of St.
Louis' most prominent civic and
philanthropic leaders and one
of the University's staunchest
supporters, Chancellor Mark S.
Wrighton announced today.
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Musuem Building (northwest entrance), Sam Fox Arts Center |
The
Sam Fox Arts Center links three
academic units -- the School of
Architecture, the School of Art
and the Department of Art History
and Archaeology in Arts & Sciences
-- with the University's nationally
recognized Gallery of Art and
Art & Architecture Library. It's
facilities will include two new
buildings designed by Pritzker
Prize-winning architect Fumihiko
Maki -- an art museum and a second
building for the School of Art
-- that will be integrated, also
according to Maki's design, with
three renovated structures. This
integration will produce new opportunities
for research, interdisciplinary
study and teaching in visual arts
and design.
Renovations to two of the existing
buildings have been completed.
Renovation of the third and construction
of the new buildings will begin
when funding has been secured.
Sam Fox, who has described Washington
University as "the place where
the whole world came alive for
me," is the founder, chairman
and chief executive of Harbour
Group, Ltd., a privately owned
company specializing in the acquisition
and development of manufacturing
companies for long-term investment.
A 1951 business graduate of the
University, he is an emeritus
trustee and chairman of the public
phase of the University's current
$1.3 billion Campaign for Washington
University. He and his wife,
Marilyn, have long been active
in numerous business, civic and
cultural organizations, and they
and their family foundation support
many causes.
"Sam
Fox is among Washington University's
most loyal and dedicated supporters,"
said Wrighton, "and we are deeply
indebted to him for his longstanding
generosity and his many years
of devoted service. Sam truly
believes there is nothing more
important to the future of our
nation than educating our young
people, and his commitment to
the University is inspiring to
even the most dedicated of our
supporters. He is the very embodiment
of the generosity of spirit that
has made Washington University
the world-class institution it
is today.
"It is with great pleasure that
we are able to recognize Sam's
special relationship with Washington
University by naming the new center
for the arts in his honor," Wrighton
continued. "The Sam Fox Arts Center
will bring together artists, designers,
architects, educators, students,
patrons and the public in a world-class
facility that promises to become
a landmark for the entire region."
To date, more than $39.5 million
has been earmarked toward the
estimated $56.8 million cost of
the Center, both through the allocation
of university funds and the receipt
of outside commitments, including
$10 million in gifts and bequests
from Fox. Major commitments also
have come from -- among others
-- Linda and Harvey Saligman,
and the children of Florence Steinberg
and Richard K. Weil.
Sam Fox

Fox's leadership in the St. Louis
community has been extraordinary.
His is currently chairman, and
formerly was president, of the
Greater St. Louis Area Council,
Boy Scouts of America, one of
the strongest scouting programs
in the United States. As president
of the Board of Commissioners
of the St. Louis Art Museum from
1997 to 2001, he spearheaded recruitment
of director Brent Benjamin and
the development of a 10-year strategic
plan. Today he is extending that
leadership as a member of the
Art Museum's Board of Commissioners.
He serves or has served on the
boards of many other St. Louis
institutions and cultural groups,
including the Arts & Education
Council of Greater St. Louis,
Barnes-Jewish Hospital, Civic
Progress, The Muny in Forest Park,
Opera Theatre of Saint Louis,
the V.P. Fair Foundation, the
St. Louis Science Center and the
Saint Louis Zoo.
Fox
and his wife, Marilyn, have supported
a wide range of campus programs
and initiatives over the years,
including the School of Art and
the John M. Olin School of Business,
the Department of Music in Arts
& Sciences, the School of Medicine's
Kidney Center, Edison Theatre,
the Danforth Scholars Program,
and scholarships in business and
art. The Foxes are life Danforth
Circle Members of the William
Greenleaf Eliot Society. Sam Fox
was elected a trustee of Washington
University in 1989, served as
vice chairman of the Board of
Trustees from 1999 to 2001, and
was then elected a trustee emeritus.
In 2002, Fox received an honorary
doctor of laws degree from Washington
University and was named the St.
Louis Variety Club's Man of the
Year. He received the University's
Distinguished Alumni Award in
1986, the John M. Olin School
of Business's Distinguished Alumni
Award in 1988, and the Beta Gamma
Sigma Medallion for Entrepreneurship
in 1996.
Sam Fox Arts Center

The Sam Fox Arts Center at Washington
University will serve as a campus-wide
umbrella organization for the
study and promotion of visual
culture.
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Reading room, Kenneth & Nancy Kranzberg Info Center, Museum Building, Sam Fox Arts Center at WUSTL |
Creation
of the Sam Fox Arts Center will
allow for greater collaboration
between the participating units
and the development of new and
interdisciplinary programs, while
also preserving the integrity
of the distinct disciplines of
architecture, art, and art history
and archaeology. Additionally,
it will bring students and faculty
in the School of Art, now studying
and working in three separate
buildings -- one of them a renovated
former junior high school located
one mile from campus -- together
in two adjacent buildings on the
Hilltop Campus.
Mark S. Weil, Ph.D., director
of the Sam Fox Arts Center and
the E. Desmond Lee Professor for
Collaboration in the Arts, said:
"By bringing three curricular
units into a consortium with our
museum and library, we are embarking
on a new approach to arts education.
Our goal is to move away from
separate practices and toward
a more interactive and cross-disciplinary
training that takes greater advantage
of contemporary technology."
Spearheading the fund-raising
initiative for the new Center
are Lee Liberman and Harvey Saligman,
leadership chairs for the School
of Art in the Campaign for
Washington University, and
Warren Shapleigh and Jerome Sincoff,
leadership chairs for the School
of Architecture in the capital
campaign.
Site Plan

Design architect Fumihiko Maki,
principal of Maki & Associates
in Tokyo, Japan, is internationally
renowned for creating bold, monumental
structures that harmonize with
their natural and urban environments.
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Site plan, Sam Fox Arts Center at WUSTL |
The
Sam Fox Arts Center will be located
at the eastern end of the University's
Hilltop Campus, near the intersection
of Skinker and Forsyth boulevards.
It will encompass two new limestone
buildings; the Beaux Arts-era
Bixby and Givens Halls, homes
to the Schools of Art and Architecture,
respectively; and the classically
modernist Steinberg Hall, current
home of the Gallery of Art, Art
& Architecture Library and Department
of Art History and Archaeology.
Steinberg Hall was Maki's first
commissioned building, designed
in the late 1950s during his tenure
as a professor at the School of
Architecture.
"We are extremely fortunate to
be working with an architect of
Maki's caliber," said Cynthia
Weese, FAIA, dean of the School
of Architecture. "His buildings
are thoughtful, dignified and
respectful of what is around them
... beautiful and useful at the
same time. The Sam Fox Arts Center
will be one of only a handful
of Maki's work built in the United
States, and a source of pride
for all of St. Louis."
Each of the five member areas
will benefit from significant
increases in programming space
as well as the use of shared facilities
and such amenities as a planned
lunch counter/snack bar. In addition,
Maki has designed a series of
connecting plazas, courtyards
and green spaces. A sculpture
garden and reflecting pool will
be located on the northern side
of the Museum Building, facing
Brookings Drive.
In preparation for new construction,
Bixby and Givens Halls have, over
the last two years, been the focus
of an extensive, $16 million renovation,
with an additional $1.8 million
allocated to infrastructure improvements
for the entire site. New construction
-- along with renovations to Steinberg
Hall, which will provide additional
studio space for both the Schools
of Art and Architecture -- is
budgeted at approximately $39
million.
Project architect is Harish Shah,
a principal of RMW Architect +
Design in San Francisco and a
1973 graduate of the School of
Architecture. Maki and Shah previously
collaborated on the award-winning
Yerba Buena Gardens Visual Arts
Center in San Francisco.
Museum Building

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Temporary display gallery, Museum Building, Sam Fox Arts Center at WUSTL |
The
three-level, approximately 65,000
gross-square-foot Museum Building
will be located immediately north
of Steinberg Hall and will house
permanent and temporary exhibition
spaces -- and state-of-the-art
storage facilities -- for the
Gallery of Art, which will be
renamed the Museum of Art, reflecting
its status as the first art museum
founded west of the Mississippi
River. The building also will
incorporate a gallery for the
School of Art for use by faculty
and students; new offices and
classrooms for the Department
of Art History and Archaeology;
and the 13,000-square-foot Kenneth
and Nancy Kranzberg Information
Center.
Angela Miller, Ph.D., associate
professor and acting chair of
art history and archaeology, noted
that the Museum Building will
become a central meeting point
for faculty and students in different
design disciplines, both physically
and programmatically.
"Already, productive exchanges
have begun taking shape through
joint committees and the funding
of collaborative work," Miller
said. "We look forward to expanding
these opportunities for interdisciplinary
cooperation."
Shirley K. Baker, vice chancellor
for information technology, added
that the Kranzberg Information
Center will combine an expanded
Art & Architecture Library with
the Visual Resource Collection,
a massive slide and digital image
bank; and with the Whitaker Learning
Lab, a media studio and technology
center.
"Books remain incredibly important
to students and scholars of the
visual arts, but increasingly
they're supplemented by rich databases
of images and online journals,"
Baker said. "Grouping these services
together will radically enhance
their accessibility and usefulness
to students from both studio and
academic disciplines."
School of Art building

The approximately 38,000-square-foot
School of Art building, also three
levels, will be located just north
of Bixby Hall and will allow programs
presently conducted at the Lewis
Center in University City, the
Vernon Street Graduate Studios
and Washington University's West
Campus in Clayton to return to
the Hilltop Campus. The new facility
will include graduate studios;
studios for ceramics, sculpture
and painting; and the Nancy Spirtas
Kranzberg Studio for the Illustrated
Book.
"Currently, more than half of
art and design students and faculty
work and study away from Bixby
Hall," said Jeff Pike, dean of
the School of Art. "The Sam Fox
Arts Center will bring programs
scattered between several off-campus
sites to the Hilltop, fostering
both a greater sense of community
within the school and a greater
degree of interaction with our
colleagues in other creative areas."
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