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TUSCALOOSA, Ala.- Alabama poet and arts advocate Jeanie
Thompson, the late noted organist Warren Hutton, and the
Northport Kentuck Association will be honored for their
contributions to the arts by The University of Alabama’s College
of Arts and Sciences during its annual Fine Arts Awards Gala
to be held Thursday, Feb. 13, in Moody Music Building on the UA
campus at 7:30 p.m.
The 20th Annual Fine Arts Gala recognizes Alabamians and UA
alumni who have made a significant impact on the creative and
performing arts in Alabama. The awards will be presented by the
Fine Arts Committee of the College of Arts and Sciences
Leadership Board.
Jonathan Michaelson, associate dean for the College of Arts
and Sciences, will serve as master of ceremonies at the event.
Recipients and their awards are:
Jeanie Thompson
Alabama Alumni Award
Jeanie Thompson of Montgomery will receive the Alabama Alumni
Award for her work as both a poet and arts education advocate.
Thompson is executive director for the Alabama Writer’s Forum,
a statewide literary arts program housed in the offices of the
Alabama State Council on the Arts in Montgomery. After working
as a teacher of English and creative writing in Louisiana and
Alabama, Thompson, a University alumna, returned to her alma
mater in 1985 to work in marketing and communications for UA’s
College of Continuing Studies. During this time, she published
“The Widening Circle,” a history of extension and continuing
education at the University and a recipient of the Bronze Award
of Excellence given by the National University Continuing
Education Association. She is also the author of three
collections of poems and three chapbooks of poetry including
“How to Enter the River” and “Witness,” which won a
Benjamin Franklin Award from the Publishers Marketing
Association in 1996. She is co-editor with Jay Lamar of “The
Remembered Gate: Memoirs by Alabama Writers.”
A native of Decatur, Thompson graduated with a bachelor’s
degree in English from The University of Alabama in 1974.
She was one of the first students in the master’s in
creative writing program, earning her degree in 1977. While at
the University, Thompson was one of the founding members of the Black
Warrior Review literary magazine.
Warren Hutton
Posthumous Award
Legendary University professor and organist Warren Hutton is
the recipient of the Posthumous Award. A nationally known
musician and organ teacher, Hutton attracted the nation’s best
organist and musicians to Alabama to study with him. Today, his
former students include many of the country’s most respected
musicians. Hundreds of former students, representing the
country’s finest conservatories and universities, returned in
1994 to honor Hutton’s 40-year-long career at a recital on the
UA campus. Hutton received the Outstanding Commitment to
Teaching award from the University’s Alumni Association in
1982.
A native of Little Rock, Ark., Hutton graduated from Oberlin
Conservatory of Music in 1950 with a bachelor’s degree in
music and earned his master’s from Syracuse University in 1951
while studying under Author Poister. After graduation Hutton
served as a member of the faculty at Scarritt College from
1951-1952 and the Peabody School for Teachers from 1951-1954,
both in Nashville, Tenn. In 1954 he joined The University of
Alabama’s School of Music as an instructor. He retired from
the University in 1996 but continued to teach classes as
professor emeritus until his death in 2002.
Kentuck
Association
Alabama Image Award
The Kentuck Association will receive the Alabama Image Award
for promoting regional artists and their works with the Kentuck
Festival of the Arts and the Kentuck Art Center in downtown
Northport.
The annual Kentuck Festival of the Arts is held in Kentuck
Park and attracts more than 30,000 visitors each year. The
juried arts fair has been named the Top Twenty Events by the
Southeast Tourism Society and is a recipient of an Alabama
Governor’s Award. The Kentuck Association also operates the
Kentuck Art Center in historic downtown Northport, Alabama, an
arts village with a gallery shop, museum, and studios for seven
regional artists. The center has become a magnet for visitors
and was a key component in the revitalization of downtown
Northport as an arts community.
The Fine Arts Committee of the College of Arts and Sciences
Leadership Board, formerly known as the Society for the Fine
Arts, consists of 80 alumni and friends who serve as supporters
and advisors to the College. For attendance information about
the gala contact Bobbie Rafferty, coordinator of college
advancement, at 348-6698.
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