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Business Committee For the Arts salutes five businesses


The Montgomery area’s business and arts communities congregated Thursday at Embassy Suites to celebrate the arts — and the businesses that help make it all happen.

At lunch Thursday, the Montgomery Area Business Committee For the Arts honored five businesses that support the area’s arts organizations, thereby improving the quality of life and encouraging economic development in the area, said Kelton Morris, executive director of the Business Committee For the Arts.
But for Tom Bryant of ALFA Insurance, support just makes sense.

“The arts are an integral part of the community,” Bryant said after accepting a Business in the Arts Award for supporting such programs as the Alabama Shakespeare Festival’s SchoolFest.

Business in the Arts Awards also went to Harmon, Dennis and Bradshaw and LWT Communications. Each of the three companies accepted an original watercolor painting by Montgomery area artist Carol Barksdale Meredith.

BlueCross and BlueShield of Alabama/BCBS won the Arts in Education Award and received a painting by Dothan high-school student Gaelle Gourmelon. And the Aaron Aronov Family Foundation was honored with the 2004 Frank Plummer Memorial Arts Award.

About 360 individuals attended this year’s luncheon. Morris said, “We are very pleased (with turnout). It’s up about 60 people from last year.”

And that is promising, as more businesses are supporting the area’s arts organizations through sponsorships, in-kind donations and other means, she said.

Arts organizations also participated in Thursday’s celebration by entertaining the crowd and helping to decorate the ballroom. The Montgomery Chorale Ensemble and the Booker T. Washington Magnet High School Show Band performed for everyone, and ASF dressed up the tables with a variety of colorful costumes.

Other highlights were the original watercolor paintings by Barksdale Meredith, whose commission proposal was selected from about 10.

Morris said, “Mainly, the board was looking for someone who covered the Montgomery area, not just Montgomery. Carol definitely does, with Wetumpka, Tallassee, Montgomery and Prattville,” Morris said. “And then there’s the whole feel of her work. That’s really why she won.”

The artist received about $1,750 in addition to the community exposure, Morris said.

After seeing the displayed paintings and hearing the groups perform, Joe A. Lee, president of Alabama State University, said he was excited to be a part of the celebration.

Recently named to the Business Committee For the Arts, Lee said, “Community development and cultural awareness go hand in hand in building a great community.”

David Allred of LWT Communications agreed.

Preparing to leave the luncheon with his company’s newly acquired Barksdale Meredith watercolor painting, Allred also stressed the importance of supporting the arts.

With his company’s help, Montgomery area arts organizations can develop professional-level marketing materials, which lend credibility to their work, he said.

“We help raise the bar,” he said. “And that encourages visitors to come here.”

That, in turn, benefits everyone in the area, he said.

Awards

  • 10 time winner: Designer of the Year, American Advertising Federation ADDY® Awards
  • 13 time winner: Best In Show, American Advertising Federation ADDY® Awards
  • 2 time Small Business of the Year Award Winner, Montgomery Area Business Committee for the Arts
  • 3 time winner: Copywriter of the Year, American Advertising Federation ADDY® Awards
  • 550+ Local and Regional, American Advertising Federation ADDY® Awards
  • Daily Points of Light Award, winner 2006
  • Promotional Products Association International Pyramid Competition, winner 2008
  • Southern Public Relations Federation Lantern Award , winner 2009