ATLANTA (December 13, 2018) — Spelman College has received the largest gift from living donors in its 137-year history from long-standing Spelman trustee Ronda Stryker and spouse William Johnston. The transformative $30 million gift will help build the Center for Innovation & the Arts, the College’s first new academic facility since 1996.
Chicago architect, Jeanne Gang, founding principal of the firm Studio Gang, has completed a schematic design of the 85,000 square footbuilding that will occupy a current parking lot at Spelman at the corner of Westview Drive and Lee Street.
“As former educators who believe strongly in social justice, Bill and I
have great appreciation for how Spelman provides a superior education
for students that encourages them to be global change agents,” said
Stryker, a director of the medical equipment company Stryker Corp., as
well as vice chair and director of Greenleaf Trust, an investment bank
chaired by Johnston.
“Spelman alumnae are leaders across every field imaginable, breaking new
ground, while tackling some of the world’s most challenging issues from
health disparities to the digital divide. We are thrilled to support a
building that will encourage students to master technology, innovation
and the arts.”
Stryker has been a trustee of Spelman since 1997 and currently serves as
the vice chair of the Spelman College Board of Trustees and chair of
the Board’s Arts, Innovation & Technology Committee.
Consistent and extraordinary giving from the Stryker family has had a
significant impact on Spelman. Their gift to establish the Gordon-Zeto
Center for Global Education, for example, funded the expansion and
ongoing operation of the College’s study abroad program. As a result,
the Institute of International Education’s Open Doors report notes that
Spelman sends more Black students to study abroad than any other
baccalaureate college in the country with 75 percent of its 2018
graduating class having studied abroad.
Support from the Stryker family has benefitted numerous other Spelman
initiatives, including the Spelman College Museum of Fine Arts, science
initiatives, summer internships, the Annual Fund, the President’s Safety
Net Fund, and renovations to Sisters Chapel and the Wellness Center at
Read Hall.
“Ronda Stryker has been staunchly committed to the mission and ideals of
Spelman College for more than 20 years. She has been an unstinting
advocate for our students and has supported a wide range of strategic
initiatives, critical to Spelman’s long term sustainability and the
success of our students,” said Mary Schmidt Campbell, Ph.D., president of Spelman.
“With this historic gift, yet again, Ronda’s support will be
transformational. Her contribution ensures that Spelman students will be
prepared to tackle the challenges of our changing world through
innovation, creativity and the dynamic intersection of science,
technology, engineering, arts and math (also known as STEAM).”
Including the generous gift from Stryker and Johnston, the College has
raised more than one-third of the total cost of the CI&A, which
received its first support from Leonard and Louise Riggio in 2016. The cost of the new facility, which includes an operating endowment and state of the art technology, is $86 million.
The Center for Innovation & the Arts
The CI&A enables the College to bring together in one
building its considerable strength in STEM with its award-winning
programs in the arts. The hub of the building will be the Innovation
Lab, co-directed by Brown-Simmons Professor of Computer Science Jerry Volcy, Ph.D., and Associate Professor De Angela Duff, MFA, whose work sits at the intersection of art, design, and technology, in consultation with Senior Adviser Topper Carew, Ph.D., a visiting scholar at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab.
For the first time in the College’s history, the same building will
house all of Spelman’s arts programs – art, art history, curatorial
studies, dance, digital media, documentary filmmaking, photography,
music and theater.
A major feature of the building will be its “Front Porch,” an element of
the design that opens up the entrance of the CI&A to the Westside
community and offers a set of ground floor amenities. They include an
expansion of the award-winning Spelman College Museum of Fine Art, a
digital theater housing publicly accessible performances, technology
events, film screenings and a cafe.
A schematic of the CI&A demonstrates the innovation and
intentionality behind creating a unique interdisciplinary environment.
The facility will offer different scales of gathering and assorted modes
of connecting and collaborating for learning and risk taking in the
liberal arts.
ARTS@Spelman New Programming
Under the leadership of award-winning, innovative independent filmmaker, Ayoka Chenzira, Ph.D.,
division chair for the Arts, Arts@Spelman has developed a new
initiative and several new majors and minors that join Music and Theater
& Performance including:
• Documentary Filmmaking (major)
• Photography (major)
• Dance Performance & Choreography (major)
• Art History (major)
• Curatorial Studies (minor)
• Atlanta University Center Collective for the Study of Art History and Curatorial Studies, funded with a recent gift from the Walton Family Foundation
Several distinguished faculty have joined Spelman in the past three
years either as permanent or distinguished visitors. They include
photographer Myra Greene, filmmaker Julie Dash, director/performer/choreographer Aku Kadogo and playwright Will Power. Art historians and curators, Cheryl Finley, Ph.D.,
associate professor at Cornell University, and Lowery Stokes Sims,
Ph.D., former curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and former
executive director of the Studio Museum in Harlem, serve as senior
advisers to the Art History and Curatorial Studies Collective. Andrea Barnwell-Brownlee, Ph.D.,
also a member of the Art History and Curatorial Studies Collective and
director of the Spelman Museum, was recently named Atlanta’s Best
Curator by Atlanta Magazine.
Spelman innovation and arts leaders shared their thoughts on this significant gift:
Ayoka Chenzira, Ph.D., Division Chair for the Arts, Spelman College
“This generous gift by Ronda Stryker and William Johnston
represents a deep understanding of the value of Black women’s research
as it relates to artistic creative expression and the use and
integration of technology to help discover and articulate new forms of
imaginative processes that engage with global conversations. Spelman
students will be at the forefront of these new discoveries as a result
of this gift.”
Jerry Volcy, Ph.D. Co-Director, Spelman Innovation Lab, Brown-Simmons Professor of Computer Science
“Ronda’s gift takes us one big step closer to realizing a
center that aims to prepare women of color to become tomorrow’s agents
of innovative change.”
Topper Carew, Ph.D., Senior Adviser, Atlanta University Center Collective for the Study of Art History and Curatorial Studies
“The Stryker gift will further support the unprecedented
ascendancy of the great Spelman women and their continuing stellar
contribution to American society.”
De Angela Duff, MFA, Associate Professor, Co-Director of the Spelman College Innovation Lab
“Ronda Stryker’s gift empowers Spelman College to educate 21st
century, women-of-color visionaries who will create a cultural paradigm
shift by embracing creativity at the intersection of the arts and
technology and harnessing the power of innovation.”
About Spelman College
Founded in 1881, Spelman College is a leading liberal arts
college widely recognized as the global leader in the education of women
of African descent. Located in Atlanta, the College’s picturesque
campus is home to 2,100 students. Spelman is the country’s leading
producer of Black women who complete Ph.D.s in science, technology,
engineering and math (STEM). The College’s status is confirmed by U.S.
News and World Report, which ranked Spelman No. 51 among all liberal
arts colleges and No. 1 among historically Black colleges and
universities. The Wall Street Journal ranked the College No. 3,
nationally, in terms of student satisfaction. Outstanding alumnae
include Children’s Defense Fund Founder Marian Wright Edelman, Starbucks Group President and COO Rosalind Brewer, former Acting Surgeon General and Spelman’s first alumna President Audrey Forbes Manley, global bioinformatics geneticist Janina Jeff and authors Pearl Cleage and Tayari Jones. For more information, visit www.spelman.edu.