Blog

2011 in Review

Written by Patrice Johnson
Tuesday, 20 March 2012

Highlights of 2011
By Chris McGuigan, President/CEO 

 “WOW” was our Theme word for 2011, and WOW is how it felt!  Our 50th Anniversary year was full of both well-planned, as well as un-planned, projects, features, experiences and fun. Our operating mantra was to honor the Foundation’s tremendous history of accomplishments, while focusing with positive expectation and optimism on the future.  

We began and ended the year with Summer Celebration on our plate.   In January our newly formed PRI Committee approved the $200,000 loan to start Muskegon Summer Celebration off on what (we hoped) would be its recovery and next twenty years of success.  In September, the Board of Summer Celebration informed us that Summer Celebration would be dissolved and its creditors paid a fraction of the debt owed.    So, we worked to start up something in its place, and by December, it was very clear a new Festival and Art Fair would be in place for the very next summer.  

Peter Kageyama was a home run keynote speaker at our Annual Meeting.  His message of “Love Notes to your Community” still resonates and continues to inspire many creative gestures of love for Muskegon.  Fired up by Peter’s message, we dedicated Alcoa Celebration Square on a perfect summer day, hot enough to lure children and adults into the new Children’s fountain.  Later in the year, thousands of people cast their votes to fund seven other “Love Notes to the Community”.  The idea and words “Love Muskegon” have caught hold and continue to inspire action by many people, in many projects, small and large. 

Donor Impact continued to be an effective philosophy.  We helped Norma Jean Horan honor her and her husband’s dream of beautifying Hackley Park, forever, with their Donor Advised Fund.  Roger and Barbara Brink enabled the City of Muskegon to establish a fund that will enhance and maintain the Lakeshore Trail.  Chuck and Pat Johnson commissioned Matthew Amante to create the “Community” sculpture, the latest piece of public art to grace our downtown. 

Throughout the year, a team of seven of us, two Trustees and five staff, participated in an intensive Peer Action Learning Network on Diversity and Inclusion.  What we learned in this training has changed the way we see the world, and the work we do. It caused us to initiate changes to our policies and our physical environment to make the Frauenthal Center for the Performing Arts and the Foundation office, more welcoming and inclusive.

 The Foundation was involved in some downtown successes in 2011.  In addition to the opening of Alcoa Celebration Square and the dedication on May 19 of the Amante sculpture, we facilitated a grant of $125,000 from Consumers Energy to the Russell Block Market, a retail incubator program.  We also facilitated and provided necessary funding to place a group of Summer Youth workers downtown to beautify the streetscape and landscape throughout downtown.  We also organized the plan to remove snow from the sidewalks and streets downtown, (which we will use next winter, maybe).   

Finally, we started “moving” our real estate!  In the fall of 2011, we closed on the sale of one acre of the Morris Street lot to create the new Social Security building, opening in June 2012.  In December, we closed on the sale of the “grassy area on the corner of Shoreline and Third Street.”  Meanwhile, using a nice grant from Alcoa Howmet, we hired Chesapeake Group to do a redevelopment analysis of the Morris Street Lot to give us advice and a design for the 9 acres there.   The study will be presented in February 2012.

 


 

His Wide World of Sports Began Here

Written by Heidi Sytsema
Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Last summer, Dan Bylsma - head coach of the NHL's Pittsburgh Penguins - was inducted into the Muskegon Area Sports Hall of Fame.  In his acceptance speech, which follows, he credited his success to the people & places that inspired him right here in our community.  

"It is a special honor and privilege for me to be inducted into the Muskegon Area Sports Hall of Fame.

Growing up, West Michigan was my Wide World of Sports -- from the back yard rink to L.C. Walker Arena I dreamed of playing college hockey. In the NHL I emulated the likes of Wayne Gretzky and Steve Yzerman. 

From Ferrysburg Field, Sulka Field to Marsh Field, I hit in the bottom of the ninth attempting to score the game winning run many a time and wore number 23 in hopes of hitting like Kirk Gibson.

From Crockery Hills, Grand Haven to Chase Hamond Golf Courses I competed against the greatest golfers in the world .... at least in my mind.

I had many great memories growing up in my Wide World of Sports -- from teammates and competitors, to coaches and to competitions...culminating in winning the State championship in golf in '84 and the Baseball State Championship in '85 with the Western Michigan Christian High School Warrior golf and baseball teams.

My Wide World of Sports got bigger when I moved off to college to play hockey at Bowling Green State University for 4 years. Then I moved on to playing 12 years of professional hockey and coaching for the past 7 years.

Certainly there have been some highlights -- many with the brown and orange of BGSU, and climbing up the ranks of professional hockey. As a player I appeared in a Stanley Cup Final  and experienced a Game 7 loss. As a coach I enjoyed the victory of a Game 7 win for a Stanley Cup Championship with the Pittsburgh Penguins....

But as my Wide World of Sports has expanded I often look back on how it all started and realize how special West Michigan has been to me in shaping the person I am today.

From the best competition I have ever had - from my brothers, to Tony Fredirecee, Todd Richards, Tim Supee, and many others....

From the coaches and mentors - my father and mother, Mr. Kisasondi, Mr. Tardoni, Steve Fisher, the late Mr. Ter Haar, the late Mr. Hicks and Sam DeBoer.  The people I had the opportunity to grow up with, the coaches and mentors all made this a very special place for us to grow up in...

They gave me the opportunity to pursue a bigger Wide World of Sports, one in which I am not done yet...And if I get another opportunity to swipe a second Stanley Cup from the Red Wings, with no apologies I will!!!! 

Thank you very much!"

Who are you inspiring today?


 

Flash Mob for Pat

Written by cffmc
Wednesday, 21 December 2011

Thanks to all who participated...
enjoy the video!

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alt“I’ll try it for a year…”

Pat Johnson remembers that she was “rather surprised” when asked by Ted Operhall in 1980 if she would be interested in becoming the Foundation’s first full time Executive Director. “I said I would try it for a year and see if I liked it and they felt I was the person for the position.”

Nineteen years later, in 1999, hundreds of Muskegonites and dignitaries from around the state gathered at the Frauenthal Center for the Performing Arts to pay tribute to Johnson as she retired.

State Senator Gerald VanWoerkom told the crowd Johnson had a “heartfelt concern for the citizens of the community.” U.S. Representative Pete Hoekstra called her a “visionary leader,” and Dottie Johnson, former president of the Council of Michigan Foundations, called Johnson a “true Renaissance woman.”

But perhaps Muskegon businessman John Hilt best encapsulated her years of service saying: “There hasn’t been a major positive project in Muskegon in 19 years which hasn’t been impacted or led by Pat Johnson and the Community Foundation for Muskegon County.”

Pat’s nineteen years were marked by a phenomenal increase in Foundation assets (from $4 million in 1980 to over $85 million in June 1999) as well as innovative, significant grants and projects that will benefit Muskegon forever. In 1982 Johnson convinced the Board to break through the back wall of the Frauenthal Theater into the former Bishop Furniture building to create a backstage, dressing rooms and rehearsal halls. Labor union members provided free labor for the renovation and the success of that project inspired Pat and the Trustees to raise money for a complete renovation of the former Bishop Furniture building, now named the Hilt Building in honor of the family who were the major benefactors to that project.

altPat Johnson was at the helm for the creation of Heritage Landing and the Paul C. Johnson Pavilion and in the mid ‘90s for the renovation and restoration of both the L.C. Walker Arena and the Frauenthal Center for the Performing Arts. In 1988 a Foundation Ambassadors group was started by 8 couples who funded the annual  dinner for three years. The Paul C. Johnson Foundation was created in 1989 with a $2 million gift as a supporting organization of the  Community Foundation. That same year the Oceana County Community Foundation became our affiliate, the first community  foundation affiliation in Michigan, creating a model that has been emulated statewide.

LEAD (Let Education Answer Dreams) ’98 began in 1990, when the  Foundation adopted the fifth grade class from Nelson School and promised every student college scholarships in 1998, the year they would graduate.

Shortly before her retirement the Foundation made its largest grant:  $1 million to the Grand Valley State University Lake Michigan Center,  cementing Johnson’s tenure as one marked with defining, exciting, projects which forever changed the footprint of the Port City.

 



   

The Gift of Inspiration Is No Small Matter

Written by cffmc
Friday, 09 December 2011

Judy Hayner of the Muskegon Museum of Art shared the thoughts below at one of our recent events.  And while her message certainly related to the art museum, she did a great job of promoting the message of generosity and philanthropy!  Read on...  

By Judy Hayner

The gift of inspiration is no small matter.  Just look at yourselves and at each other...you are here today because you believe in the gift of inspiration.  

The Muskegon Museum of Art is a gift of inspiration.  One hundred years ago, construction was on pace to complete a pioneer on the American art museum frontier, that being the Hackley Art Gallery, which, in 1912, was the first and only building in the United States erected purposely as an art museum in an American city of less than 30,000 inhabitants.

Isn’t that remarkable?  How did that happen?

Andrew Carnegie was a gift of inspiration…a gift of inspiration to Charles Hackley and to us.  Carnegie published in June of 1889 a short essay entitled The Gospel of Wealth...I recommend that you take the time to read it.

However, here, I would like to share with you a few excerpts from that essay, because I believe that herein lies the tale.

According to Carnegie:

The problem of our age is the proper administration of wealth …

What is the proper mode of administering wealth after the laws upon which civilization is founded have thrown it into the hands of the few?…

There are but three modes in which surplus wealth can be disposed of.  It can be left to the families of the decedents; or it can be bequeathed for public purposes; or finally, it can be administered by its possessors during their lives.

Carnegie goes on to discuss these three modes.  He says:

The first (of leaving estates to the children) is the most injudicious.  There are instances of millionaires’ sons unspoiled by wealth, who, being rich, still perform great services to the community.  Such are the very salt of the earth, but unfortunately, they are rare. …

Looking at the usual result of enormous sums conferred upon legatees, the thoughtful man must shortly say “I would as soon leave to my heirs a curse as the almighty dollar,” and admit to himself that it is not the welfare of the children but family pride which inspires these legacies.  

(Carnegie was a firm believer in estate taxes, by the way!)

Continuing with Carnegie:

As to the second mode, that of leaving wealth at death for public uses, it may be said that this is only a means for the disposal of wealth, provided a person is content to wait until he is dead before he becomes of much good in the world….

Carnegie goes on to say…

…the cases are not few in which the real object sought by the testator is not attained….and indeed…men who leave vast sums in this way may fairly be thought men who would not have left it at all had they been able to take it with them.

There remains then only one mode of using great fortunes…and that is…to consider all surplus revenues which come to one of hard work simply as trust funds, which the wealthy person is called upon to administer in the manner which is best calculated to produce the most beneficial results for the community---persons of wealth becoming the mere trustee and agent for the greater good.  

Carnegie goes on to suggest…

…the best means of benefiting the community is to place within its reach the ladders upon which the aspiring can rise:  free libraries, parks and means of recreation, by which we are helped in body and mind; works of art, certain to give pleasure and improve the public taste; and public institutions of various kinds, which will improve the general condition of the people.

Sound familiar?  Many of us here in Muskegon think that Charles read that essay.  Charles, we like to think, made a list.  In an interview, Charles Hackley has been quoted as saying:

…a rich man to a great extent owes his fortune to the public. He makes money largely through the labor of his employees.....Moreover, I believe that it should be expended during the lifetime of the donor, so that he can see that his benefactions do not miscarry and are according to his intent....To a certain extent, I agree with Mr. Carnegie ....that it is a crime to die rich. 

Among the many things on Hackley’s list was an art museum.  However, the fates intervened, and in February 1905, before he could make this happen, Charles Hackley died.  However, he did not die without creating his own gift of inspiration.  Charles Hackley left to the Board of Education for Muskegon Public Schools an expendable trust fund of $150,000 to buy pictures of the best kind. 

Because of that gift, the Board of Education was inspired to build that which Charles might have done had he lived long enough…an art gallery in which they could exhibit pictures of the best kind…

To share with you a quote from a new book entitled Pictures of the Best Kind:  the First One Hundred Years on our history, the story of the Muskegon Museum of Art’s first century, researched and written by our own Marilyn Andersen, scheduled for publication June of 2012:  

Under clear summer skies on Friday, June 21, 1912, the Muskegon Board of Education formally ushered the city’s leaders, citizens, and guests through the newly completed Hackley Art Gallery’s large double doors.  As they gathered at two-thirty that afternoon, the glass roof over the Inaugural Exhibition admitted no shadow on the chosen paintings. 

The Muskegon Museum of Art is a gift of inspiration...Andrew Carnegie inspired Charles Hackley.  Charles Hackley inspired an entire community on so many fronts.   

We hope, as we begin our 100th year, that we inspire you.


 

The Power of Youth

Written by Janelle Mair
Friday, 11 November 2011

Tuesday afternoon, our Board Room filled with 20 teenagers from nearly all Muskegon County schools, pouring over 62 teacher mini grants.  62!  For two and a half hours, students carefully considered each request.   

“Reading is important, but I don’t think we need to fund the prizes that go along with the program.”

“But prizes are why I spent so much time reading as a kid!”

“This band conductor wants to bring in professionals to provide sectional lessons for each instrument in the band.  Why can’t she teach them herself?”

“Most conductors specialize in one section like percussion or brass, and aren’t able to give the specialized instruction to the other sessions.  She will be supplementing her skills.  We do this in my band and it is so helpful!”

“Field trips were my favorite part of elementary school, why wouldn’t’ we fund it?”

“Although I think a visit to the Air Zoo is cool, it doesn’t really tie into the book they are reading, so it won’t be in context to the lesson.”

WOW!  These students were thoughtful and dedicated to making informed decisions.  They didn’t always agree, but voiced their dissenting opinions clearly and respectfully.  And, in the end, they approved funding for over $11,000, $250 at a time, in grants to our area schools.  These grants fund the “extras” that enhance a teacher’s lesson and a student’s experience.  Isn’t a lesson about magnets much easier to understand if you can touch a magnet while the teacher explains polar north?  As a budding artist, aren’t you more proud of your work if it is displayed in a carefully cut mat?  And certainly the concepts of recycling and energy transfer become clearer when food waste from the school cafeteria is composted and fed to a piglet, which will in turn feed students when the pig comes of age.

I hope these 20 students realize the positive impact they are having in our community. I hope our schools and our community are grateful for their efforts, and for the donations to the Youth Advisory Council fund that make teacher mini grants possible.  

And…I hope that Whitehall Middle School invites me to their pig roast in May.  

 


   

One in '21

Written by Heidi Sytsema
Tuesday, 08 November 2011

One in ’21...becoming the healthiest county in Michigan in ten years...we do love an ambitious goal, don't we?  At the Community Foundation for Muskegon County, we’re joining the effort in a few ways.

Most of our staff has joined the 21,000 pound challenge.  We’re taking the stairs, walking in the L.C. at lunch, and trying to make good food choices.  (Though with nine birthday treats in six weeks, and leftovers from a few community receptions, our breakroom is a danger zone as we head into the holidays!)

Our board recently approved some exciting grants that promote dignity, health, and well-being for Muskegon County residents:

East Muskegon Little League will be building a No More Sidelines T-ball field at Sheldon Park that will allow kids of all abilities to get out and Play Ball!  

Pickle-ball equipment will soon be available for White Lake residents to check out and use.

Seniors at Tanglewood Park will be starting a greenhouse project, growing veggies to eat and enjoying the therapeutic benefits of gardening.

Families in poverty often rely on unlicensed caregivers to watch their children.  Free training is going to be provided to train these caregivers in CPR/First Aid and childhood development.

Drop boxes for disposing of controlled substances are going to be available daily in law enforcement offices, meaning families can get these medicines safely out of their homes.

A Personal Needs Pantry is planned through the Salvation Army, which will help people with limited resources have access to personal hygiene products.  

The Child Abuse Council will be creating and sharing an education video to increase internet safety knowledge among parents.  

Volunteer committees awarded all of these grants through a competitive process.  In addition, there are many, many donors who make grants from their own Funds to build a healthier Muskegon County every day!

Studies show that generous people are happier and live longer.  The people of Muskegon County are incredibly giving, and we work every day to build this culture of generosity and philanthropy.  Here’s to a happy and healthy Muskegon County!

 

 


 

What's a Love Note?

Written by Heidi Sytsema
Thursday, 14 July 2011

It’s the candy on the pillow, the hand-written card that goes with the gift…we all know the little things matter in our relationships with people.  But Peter Kageyama encourages us to think about our relationship with our city, and the little things matter there, too.  Filled potholes are great, but they don’t make us love the place where we live.  Public art, places to play, dog parks, mystery bikes, vacant lots turned into gardens, children’s fountains…these are the things that engender love! [See below for some more examples.]

For a little more information and inspiration, you can watch Peter’s TEDx talk or read the Chronicle's recap of Peter's visit to Muskegon.  And here are some of the Love Notes he refers to!

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Intersection Art in Portland, OR, and St. Paul, MN makes people smile and keeps traffic moving slower.  

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Painted bikes have mysteriously appeared throughout our very own Muskegon, MI!

Detroit is on its way to having a statue of RoboCop thanks to one person's idea and crowdsourcing:  
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/imaginationstation/detroit-needs-a-statue-of-robocop

This Muskegon Believes video is our love note to the community!

Dear New Orleans is one of many love notes the city has received in recent years.

STL Style has created a fun line of t-shirts for locals that bear the "inside jokes" that St. Louis residents are proud to wear! 
PS - Several fun ideas for Muskegon t-shirts were generated at the "Loving Your Community" workshop.  Anyone wanna start a t-shirt business?  

 

 

 


   

Why Aren’t We Building ‘Emotionally Connected’ Cities? A Guest Post

Written by Peter Kageyama
Tuesday, 24 May 2011

This post originally appeared at The Infrastructurist.

 emotional-cities

This is a guest post by Peter Kageyama, the author of “For the Love of Cities: The Love Affair Between People and Their Places. and featured speaker at the Foundation's Annual Gathering on June 29.  For more information on the gathering, click here.

We think of city infrastructure in a particular way – sort of like bones and connective tissue in a body; the major structural components that support our existence. Beyond the bones, we need to include key pieces that nourish our higher selves- our minds and spirits. If cities are merely paved surfaces and police and fire service, there is nothing that distinguishes one place from another. But this isn’t the case: The Gallup Soul of the Community survey from 2008 to 2010 found strong correlations between peoples’ emotional attachment to the communities they lived in, and higher levels of local GDP. They also found a link between passion for and loyalty to places, and the health of the local economy.

These results should not be surprising — we all recognize that when children, pets, plants or even objects are loved, they thrive (yes objects – just look at the car of someone who loves it). So this emotional dimension to infrastructure should not be seen as superfluous. Not long ago, the medical community discounted the idea that sunlight, plants, laughter and human proximity were inside the serious discussion of medicine. Today, the best hospitals like the Mayo Clinic employ design teams to incorporate gardens, social activity rooms, and more to improve patient outcomes. These elements do not take away from the core science and technology, but rather provide a necessary compliment to our overall approach to health.

So why is it so hard to think about these elements for our cities today?

Politics has played a key role in this dilemma. Politicians don’t want to appear frivolous and insensitive to fiscal challenges, so they say “no” to things that make a city fun, like the arts, culture, design, landscaping and events.

Instead they fill potholes, because when people are polled, they typically cite potholes as their chief concern. But filling potholes wins the politicians and cities very little love. There is no emotional capital in return for that investment. At best, people will say that the roads don’t suck quite as bad.

But invest in a little emotional infrastructure like a dog park or a piece of public art that kids can actually play on, and you get love and emotional engagement in spades.

Or do something symbolic that reinforces the emotional connection people crave with their communities.

Look at Durham, North Carolina. In early 2011, a group of private citizens, with no official city support, created the “Marry Durham” event which they described as the largest “civic union” in history. On March 19th, 1,600 brides and grooms married not each other, but the city of Durham. Their vows included promises to keep the streets clean and safe, to shop local, to protect their environment, to support their city’s arts and culture, to cherish diversity, and to elect responsible leadership. The event, done entirely by volunteers, raised over $25,000 for local charities.

Yes, we need to pave our streets and fix potholes — but there is more to a city than that. My worry in the current economic/political climate is that we will fixate only on these traditional “essentials,” and in doing so undermine the very thing that is keeping many communities going – the love, affection and loyalty that people have for their places. We need to expand our expectation of “essentials” and include that which speaks to our higher selves, and invest at least a little in beauty, fun and engagement. This does not take lots of money — it takes creativity, imagination, and an awareness of its importance.

When I ask people what they love about their cities, the answers always involve small things that often cost little or no money — a comfortable place to people watch, a favorite street corner, a local dog park, a street festival or outdoor movies in the park. These things are like a handwritten note that accompanies the formal gift — the note is just as important as the actual gift, because of the thoughts and emotions conveyed within it. The cost is incidental, but their impact is significant.

Cities today need that emotional connection with their citizens. City authorities have to make hard choices, and those choices will no doubt anger some. But this anger is a function of the level of emotional capital the city has put in the bank over the years. Cities that have emotionally-connected citizens will see those same citizens do extraordinary things for their cities. Take the Durham example. Emotionally engaged citizens were the source of this event, and in the coming months/years, our cities will need engaged citizens to fill the widening gaps between the communities we desire and the communities we can afford.

Ultimately, we need to invest in the “infrastructure of love” because emotions matter. They play a critical role in our decision-making process since they tell us what to value. If we are not emotionally attached to our cities, it shows. And things we don’t value become disposable, so we feel free to walk away from them without a second thought because we have little emotional or other investment in them. When we love someone, we are willing to do more for them, to make sacrifices — we forgive shortcomings and fight for them. Emotions are contagious, and our cities need them now more than ever.


 

Pennies For Your Thoughts?

Written by Heidi Sytsema
Friday, 20 May 2011

altThe morning was a bit dreary as we walked into Nelson School in downtown Muskegon.  Armed with philanthropy videos, donor stories, and jars of pennies, we climbed three flights of stairs to Mrs. Roesler’s fifth grade classroom, the one we “adopted” this year.  Since January, on the First Friday of each month we’ve brought homemade goodies, fresh fruit, and classroom supplies to the kids.  It’s part of an effort within the Nelson & McLaughlin Schools to show the kids that there are business, churches, and organizations surrounding them that care about them and believe in them.  The first couple times we felt a little bit like a delivery service, but since then we’ve been building a relationship, and it’s been a lot of fun.  In May, Chris McGuigan made her legendary no-bake cookies and handed them out with copies of the recipe.  “I was about your age when I learned to make these cookies, so I thought maybe you could try making them too!”  

Today wasn’t a First Friday.  But Mrs. Roesler allowed us an extra visit, this time to talk about philanthropy…a big word for 5th graders!  Our Program Director, Marcy Joy, was a teacher before she joined the Foundation, and she expertly  talked them through the concept of giving your time, talents, and treasures to support the things that are important to you.  From our website the kids were able to read brief stories about some of our donors and identify what was important to them.  A whisper frenzy broke out “hey,that’s Mrs. Husid!” when they recognized a familiar face from their school on one story.  Another student could relate to Alta Daetz’s story when he learned she’d lived in Jefferson Towers:  “I used to live there, too!”  We hope many were encouraged when they learned that Ken & Clara Kolberg’s scholarship fund was there to support Muskegon Public School students – especially minority students – who wanted to become teachers.  Whatever donors care about…that’s what we do.  

To drive this message home, we gave each of the kids a stack of ten pennies.  Five Mason jars labeled Education, Health, Environment, Arts/Music/Theater/Culture, and Happy Neighborhoods awaited their contributions signifying what was important to them.  As their teacher called them forward, they thought carefully about where their pennies would go.  We overheard things like “health is the most important…none of the other things matter if you don’t have that,” and “yeah, but the environment is really important, too.”  One little girl came forward with eight pennies in one hand and two in the other, but in the end all ten went to education.  “Education is really important, because then you can work on the other things.”  

We left Nelson school and the day was much brighter, inside and out.  


   

Go Away…but COME BACK!

Written by Janelle Mair
Wednesday, 18 May 2011

 We were at the Community Foundation for Oceana County Board meeting the other day, and Nancy Sterk, the Youth Advisory Council Advisor was bidding farewell to the seniors who had given their time and talents into improving their community.  She made a statement that grabbed us: “This community has invested in you.  We want you to go away, learn great things, have great experiences…and then come back and work to improve this community that has invested in you.”  

What a great message!  Think how incredible Muskegon County will be if our students, full of energy and potential, were all told that their community cared about them, wanted them to go out in the world and fill their brains will ideas and knowledge – and then come back here and build the Muskegon they want to live in.  As the Foundation prepares to give away over $500,000 (!) in scholarships this year, we hope you will join us in sharing this message with our best and brightest.  

Have any great stories of students leaving – and then returning to do good things?  Please share! 

 

 

Celebrating "Community" with Glee

Written by Heidi Sytsema
Wednesday, 11 May 2011

altDowntown Muskegon is about to dedicate its newest piece of public art, and we couldn’t be more excited!  A generous gift from Charles E. & Patricia B. Johnson allowed the Downtown Arts Committee to commission a sculpture to be placed at the corner of Clay & Second.   We hope you’ll join us for the dedication on May 19 at 5:30 (see details).  Constructed of welded steel and river rocks, “Community” is the design of sculptor Matthew Giovanni Amante, who is originally from Michigan.  From festively painted mystery bikes to commissioned works, the downtown Muskegon public art scene continues to expand!

But it’s not just sculptures…there is live art happening too.  The Monet Garden is bursting with spring tulips.  The Olthoff Street Stage will have Community Bands playing on it this weekend as part of the Association of Concert Bands 2011 conference.  (Four nights of free concerts kick off tonight at the Frauenthal...kudos to the West Michigan Concert Winds for bringing this national group to Muskegon!)  If you like Glee, don’t miss Muskegon Civic Theatre’s “Glee” show choir performance this weekend.  Judging solely by the picture below, it should prove to be a great show.  Edible art can be found at Baker’s Sweet Spot, where tasty masterpieces are created by the culinary students.  And now that the weather is nice, you can dine al fresco on their patio!  

We celebrate art on purpose…we know that it represents a healthy community, and we love our community!  We’ve mentioned just a few of the things coming up – there is so much more throughout the county.  Challenge yourself to look for art, and see how much you can enjoy in the coming weeks!

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