We writing to you because we have an urgent need for funds to keep the doors
open at the North Carolina Pottery Center. Without immediate financial
assistance, the Center will have to close in just a few months.
Over its ten-year life, the Center has enriched the lives of tens of thousands
of North Carolinians, as well as people from every state and many countries
around the world. It has continually provided us with wide ranging, well
designed programming including:
a permanent exhibit on the history of North Carolina pottery,
more than fifty changing exhibitions featuring individuals, regions, ethnic
groups, schools, pottery associations,
classes in pottery making and workshops by master potters,
firings by potters using our two wood kilns,
educational events for children, scouts, and teachers; lectures by potters and
scholars,
an extensive oral history program, and
most recently, 250 people attended the opening of our current exhibition,
"Contemporary Pottery from North Carolina's Indian Communities." Some of the
featured potters had never seen their work in a museum before.
In a state that values pottery as we do, it makes no sense to close an
institution that embodies what is certainly our most important and famous
indigenous art form.
As you know, in December of 2007, the Board of the Pottery Center entered into
an agreement with the Department of Cultural Resources to transfer the Center's
assets to the State and operate the Center through the North Carolina Arts
Council. Funding for this move was inserted into the expansion budget at
$300,000 but was cut from the Governor's budget. As no legislator stepped
forward to introduce a bill to support the Center, the current budget will not
provide any funding.
The Department of Cultural Resources does want to take over the Center and will
ask for funding in next year's budget. In the meantime, we have to keep the
Center open, admittedly on a somewhat reduced schedule. We can do this if we can
raise $100,000. The Arts Council has indicated that it will offer a substantial
amount of support as well. This is to some degree a gamble that the State will
come through, but we think it is a gamble that is well worth taking.
Many donors have already pledged a total of $30,000, so we are off to a good
start toward our goal. All contributions are most welcome and are tax
deductible. You can easily make your donation online by following the link at
the bottom of the Center's home page:
NC
Pottery Center Website
Checks should be made to the North Carolina Pottery Center and mailed to:
NCPC, P.O. Box 531, Seagrove, NC 27341.
Donations of stock can be made to the Center through your local broker.
This letter is just one part of a vigorous, multi-faceted, fundraising campaign.
A very generous supporter of the Center has just given 250 pieces of pottery to
be put up for auction, and a number of potters are organizing raffles of their
work. We will announce other initiatives in the coming months.
Some years ago, Pennsylvania potter Jack Troy wrote, "If North America has a
'pottery state,' it must be North Carolina. . . . There is probably no other
state with such a highly developed pottery-consciousness." Let's keep that
special pottery-consciousness alive. Please join us in saving the Center.
Sincerely,
Tim Blackburn
Cynthia Bringle
Mark Hewitt
Terry Zug
Vernon and Pamela Owens Dan Finch