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Auction 2003 |
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It’s auction time once more, folks! It’s time to take a serious and thoughtful look at our Frankoma Pottery collections and select what we’ll donate or offer on consignment for AUCTION 2003. Have you found some great bargains this year with the auction in mind? Any duplicates you’re willing to part with? The candidates for this year’s John Frank Memorial Scholarship Awards have submitted their applications, and the Scholarship Committee has interviewed the students and judged their works. Each year we look for and find more students whom we find worthy of our support. And this year we will award scholarships to four students! Jessica Leonard and Kendall Deaton are from the University of Central Oklahoma in Edmond, and from the University of Oklahoma in Norman are Laura Boyce (2nd year winner) and Yoko Sekino, an international student from Japan. Junior and senior winners of the competition will each receive $1,000 ($500 per semester) for the next school term, and graduate school winners will receive $500 ($250 per semester.) They will be introduced to you at the Open House and the Awards Banquet on Friday evening. We hope you will all have a chance to introduce yourselves and congratulate them on being winners. Make them feel welcome, and know that we have faith in their futures as artists. They are all outstanding potters and very fine people. As you know, it is the annual auction that funds those scholarships. And the auction items come only from us, the FFCA members! The net profits from the auction are used for the support and encouragement of outstanding junior, senior, or graduate students of ceramic art. Why only juniors, seniors and graduate students? Because we feel that, by the time they’ve reached that level, they’re serious about a career in the field of art. We have observed that younger students tend to be still “testing the waters” and have not made their decision a firm one. It’s the serious, dedicated, no-nonsense student whom we wish to support! Thanks to your generosity, our Frankoma Family continues to make a truly significant contribution to the continuing education of these worthy, talented young artists. We must not take this challenge lightly! We have so many new members who need to know our deep feelings about our wonderful scholarship program—so we’ll repeat the following without apologies! John Frank often met young artists who were struggling to get through school, and he never turned his back on them. He himself had been helped in his early years by the generosity of people who believed in him, and he vowed he would “pass it on” and do the same for others when he could. If he truly believed that a student had potential and was destined to make a positive contribution in the Art World, he would slip them an amount of money, whatever he could afford. It wasn’t much to begin with, and sometimes all he could do was buy a piece of their work. Later, as he became more successful, the dollar amounts got larger and larger. Many of the recipients of his generosity and his faith in them became successful and well-known artists, curators, and teachers. And they never hesitate to tell their stories and give credit to the man who believed in them enough to help them avoid having to drop out of school because of lack of funds. This work we’re doing is important, friends! Think of what a difference we’re making in the lives of our future ceramic artists. In this era of high-tech, “instant” products, real (and good!) ceramic artists are few and far between. And we pottery lovers must not let the true pottery craftsmen of this generation die on the vine. They are the future of our ceramic art culture! This is how our current scholarship winners follow Mr. Frank’s example and “pass it on” to others . . . Each of the previous year’s winners generously donate one or two of their works to the following year’s auction, as will last year’s winners give to AUCTION 2003. It’s their way of saying thank you to us— as well as helping one of their fellow artists along the way.
So please! Look through your Frankoma collection and select whatever you can send to be auctioned this September. Remember—every item you donate to your AUCTION 2004 will take another ceramic student that much closer to his or her education goals, and on to their future careers in art. They will be the teachers of our children, and our children’s children. Mail us a list of your donations and/or consignments on the form provided on the back of this letter. Please do so as soon as possible so we’ll know what we can count on. Then bring the items with you to the convention before Friday noon so they can be displayed for everyone to preview as they arrive. If you cannot attend REUNION 2003, or if you cannot be there for the Friday evening auction, please be good enough to ship your items, along with that list, to Donna Frank, 1300 Luker Lane, Sapulpa, OK 74066. We must have at least the donation form before August 15th! |
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Donations
or Gifts to FFCA are NOT deductible as Charitable Contributions |
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Our
heartfelt thanks go to you in advance for whatever you choose to
send. YOUR FRANKOMA FAMILY COLLECTORS ASSOCIATION OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES
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NOTE: Donate means outright donation, and 100% of whatever it brings goes directly into the John Frank Memorial Scholarship Fund. Consignment means that you will receive 60% of the final bid, with 40% going to the scholarship fund. No minimum value is set on the pieces you donate, but some may be grouped with other low-dollar items to make a package with a minimum value of $25 (normal trade standards). Consignment pieces must have a value of $50 (NTS) or more. NTS= Normal Trade Standard Copyright ©
1995-2003 Frankoma Family Collectors Association |