Sunday, December 22, 2024

And the next piece selected for the Women Artists of the DMV survey show is...

I've been doing art fairs all over the world since 2006, and I've literally seen, reviewed, curated, awarded, inspected, admired, gawked, etc. at tens and tens of thousands of artists in my lifetime.


As such, my next sentence comes from a immensely educated background, with loads of empirical and anecdotal data to back up my bombastic nature and the statement. 

Sharon Moody is the greatest living trompe l'oeil artist on planet Earth. 

Does her work fool your eyes? Check

Has her artwork evolved in the last few decades, ever growing in presence and impact? Check.

Is she represented by some of the top hyper-realism galleries in the nation? Check.

Is she a super nice person? Check.

Behold Falling Away, 18x24, oil on panel, 2024.

Falling Away, 18x24, oil on panel, 2024 by Sharon Moody
Sharon Moody - Falling Away
18x24, oil on panel, 2024


Saturday, December 21, 2024

This week's updated list for Women Artists of the DMV

Here's another updated list of the DMV area female artists who have agreed to participate so far in the 2025 "Women Artists of the DMV" survey show! 

Loads more to come as I await confirmations! I am also having trouble reaching some artists that I'd like to invite to the show... so far my emails have either been suffering from spam folderitis or just being ghosted... but if anyone knows the following artists, please tell them to email me: Marian Van Landingham, Iona Rozeal Brown (now known as Rozeal), Lillian Burwell, Danni Dawson, Zoë Charlton, Sylvia Snowden, Joyce Wellman, Margo Humphrey, Marily Mojica, etc.

Before I forget: If I've invited you to the show and you've agreed to participate, please email me (lennycampello@hotmail.com) and let me know... or if I've mispelled your name :-) 

And the "in the show" list so far...

Shiri Achu 

Maremi Andreozzi 

Erin Antognoli

Sondra N. Arkin

Michele Banks 

Suzi Balamaci 

Kate Barfield 

Jennifer Barlow 

Holly Bass

Jennifer Lynn Beaudet 

Julia Bloom 

Lori Boocks 

Margaret Boozer 

Laurie Breen

Lisa Brotman 

Dianne Bugash 

Shante Bullock

Melissa Burley 

Rachel Carren 

Elizabeth Casqueiro

Anne Cherubim

Shanthi Chandrasekar 

Hsin-Hsi Chen 

Irene Clouthier 

Amanda Coelho

Ellen Cornett 

Kathy Cornwell

Rosemary Feit Covey 

Sheila Crider 

Andrea Cybyk 

Jenny Freestone 

Andrea Cullins 

Joan Danziger 

Jenny Davis 

Tanya Davis 

Patricia de Poel Wilberg

Wendy Donahoe

Margaret Dowell

Mary Early

Bria Edwards

Cheryl Edwards

Dana Ellyn 

Hyunsuk Erickson 

Cynthia Farrell Johnson 

Felisa Federman Cogut

Helen Frederick 

Genie Ghim 

Susan Goldman

Carol Brown Goldberg 

Margery Goldberg

Janis Goodman 

Graciela Granek 

Josephine Haden 

Debra Halprin 

Elyse Harrison

Muriel Hasbun 

Rania Hassan 

Mira Hecht 

Francie Hester 

Leslie Holt

Michal Hunter 

Melissa Ichiuji 

Selena Jackson 

Martha Jackson Jarvis  

Barbara Januszkiewicz 

M. Jane Johnson 

Jessica Kallista 

Jenny Kanzler

Maria Karametou

Lori Katz 

Sally Kauffman

Zofie King 

Kate Kretz 

Bridget Sue Lambert

Susan LaMont 

Linda Lawler 

Ngoc Le

Kyujin Lee 

Harriet Lesser 

Shelley Lowenstein 

Taina Litwak 

Dalya Luttwak 

Kara Lin 

June Linowitz 

Shelley Lowenstein

Laurel Lukaszewski 

Caroline MacKinnon

Akemi Maegawa 

Susan Makara

Joey Mánlapaz 

Katherine Mann

Isabel Manalo

Anne Marchand 

Isabella Martire 

Lucinda Marshall 

Amy Marx 

J.J. McCracken

Donna McCullough  

Maggie Michael 

Michele Montalbano 

E.J. Montgomery

Sharon Moody 

Ally Morgan 

Camille Mosley-Pasley 

Jody Mussoff

Georgia Nassikas 

Leslie Nolan

Teresa Oaxaca 

Helena O'Neill Gallego 

Erica Orgen 

Marian Osher 

Betsy Packard 

Dora Patin

Judith Peck 

Monica Perdomo

Sandra Pérez-Ramos 

Susana Raab 

Marie Ringwald 

Amber Robles-Gordon 

Alla Rogers 

Roxana Rojas 

Christine Ryan 

Susan Shalowitz 

Nancy Sausser 

Karen Schmitz 

Lian Sever

Gail Shaw-Clemons 

Elzbieta Sikorska 

Alexandra Silverthorne 

Pritha Srinivasan

Renee Stout 

Zsudayka Nzinga Terrel 

Andrea Way 

Ellyn Weiss 

Marcie Wolf-Hubbard

Sharon Wolpoff 

Shawn Yancy

Suzanne Yurdin

Helen Zughaib

Thursday, December 19, 2024

The fourth piece for the Women Artists of the DMV show

Kate Kretz is fearless.


How do I know that? I don't know it based on actual evidence, but once you explore this talented artist's ventures into so many diverse art planets in the universe of the fine arts, it is easy to arrive at that conclusion.

For all I know she may be terrified by red ants, or spiders, or whatever, but she is not afraid to put her brush, or sewing needle, or whatever art weapon is at hand to deliver some of the most extraordinary political and social commentaries being created today by a fine artist anywhere in the world.

Not just the DMV, but the world.

Behold "Gunlicker I", oil and acrylics on Gatorboard.

"Gunlicker I" by Kate Kretz c. 2016 20x16 inches
"Gunlicker I" by Kate Kretz, Acrylic and Oil on Gatorboard
c. 2015 20x16 inches (oval)




Wednesday, December 18, 2024

The third work selected for the 2025 Women Artists of the DMV show

I've curated over 200 group art shows in the DC area since the mid 90s, and as I continue to point out, often I find that the first few pieces chosen often also speaks about the show as a whole.

My formula for group shows is essentially the same, and a proven, successful, and bordering on brilliant technique: 

  • the group show is a pyramid of artists at various points in their artistic career and development - blue chip, well-known artists; 
  • a large set of well-known, mid career artists; 
  • and the pyramid's wide and powerful base: a set of young (not simply in age, but perhaps also in artistic age - think of a 95 year-old artist who just started painting five years ago) artists who need the exposure and push that a well-attended, widely publicized, and wildly successful art show offers their young careers.

Renée Stout is an international blue chip artist, and easily fits on the top tier of the pyramid - this immensely talented and multi-skilled artist, moves easily between genres and media with the ease which at first glance appears so easy to the uninitiated, but it is in reality the hardest task for any fine artist.

Stout's magical ability to use her art not only as a showcase of her enviable talent, but also as a breath taking weapon to deliver ideas, positions, historical references, social and political commentary is what makes her such a formidable presence in the contemporary art scene.

Her artwork may seduce you, or surprise you, or inform you, or anger you... but it will always deliver an intelligent punch to the solar plexus of your mind.

Behold "Cracked Baby"acrylic on wood:

Renée Stout (1958)  Cracked Baby, 1998  acrylic on wood  11 x 10 1/2 x 1 3/4 inches
Cracked Baby by Renée Stout
11 x 10 1/2 x 1 3/4 inches, c. 1998
Courtesy of Hemphill Artworks



Monday, December 16, 2024

Women Artists of the DMV: Updated List

Here's another updated list of the DMV area female artists who have agreed to participate so far in he 2025 "Women Artists of the DMV" survey show! 

Loads more to come as I await confirmations! 

Shiri Achu 

Maremi Andreozzi

Sondra N. Arkin

Michele Banks 

Suzi Balamaci 

Jennifer Barlow 

Holly Bass

Jennifer Lynn Beaudet 

Julia Bloom 

Margaret Boozer 

Laurie Breen

Lisa Brotman 

Shante Bullock

Melissa Burley 

Rachel Carren 

Elizabeth Casqueiro

Anne Cherubim

Shanthi Chandrasekar 

Hsin-Hsi Chen 

Irene Clouthier 

Amanda Coelho

Ellen Cornett

Rosemary Feit Covey 

Sheila Crider 

Jenny Freestone 

Andrea Cullins 

Joan Danziger 

Jenny Davis 

Tanya Davis 

Wendy Donahoe

Margaret Dowell 

Bria Edwards

Cheryl Edwards

Dana Ellyn 

Hyunsuk Erickson 

Cynthia Farrell Johnson 

Felisa Federman Cogut

Helen Frederick 

Genie Ghim 

Susan Goldman

Carol Brown Goldberg

Janis Goodman 

Josephine Haden 

Elyse Harrison

Muriel Hasbun 

Rania Hassan 

Mira Hecht

Michal Hunter 

Melissa Ichiuji 

Selena Jackson 

Martha Jackson Jarvis  

Barbara Januszkiewicz 

Jessica Kallista 

Jenny Kanzler

Maria Karametou

Lori Katz

Zofie King 

Kate Kretz

Susan LaMont 

Linda Lawler

Kyujin Lee 

Harriet Lesser 

Shelley Lowenstein 

Taina Litwak 

Dalya Luttwak 

Kara Lin 

June Linowitz 

Shelley Lowenstein

Laurel Lukaszewski

Akemi Maegawa

Joey Mánlapaz

Isabel Manalo

Anne Marchand 

Isabella Martire 

Amy Marx

Donna McCullough  

Maggie Michael 

Michele Montalbano 

E.J. Montgomery

Sharon Moody 

Ally Morgan 

Camille Mosley-Pasley 

Jody Mussoff

Georgia Nassikas 

Leslie Nolan

Teresa Oaxaca 

Helena O'Neill Gallego 

Erica Orgen 

Betsy Packard 

Dora Patin

Judith Peck

Sandra Pérez-Ramos 

Susana Raab 

Marie Ringwald 

Amber Robles-Gordon 

Roxana Rojas

Gail Shaw-Clemons 

Alexandra Silverthorne 

Pritha Srinivasan

Renee Stout 

Zsudayka Nzinga Terrel 

Andrea Way 

Ellyn Weiss 

Marcie Wolf-Hubbard

Sharon Wolpoff 

Shawn Yancy

Suzanne Yurdin

Helen Zughaib

 


Friday, December 13, 2024

Second work chosen for Women Artists of the DMV show

I've curated over 200 group art shows in the DC area since the mid 90s, and often I find that the first few pieces chosen often also speaks about the show as a whole.

My formula for group shows is essentially the same, and a proven, successful, and bordering on brilliant technique: 

  • the group show is a pyramid of artists at various points in their artistic career and development - blue chip, well-known artists; 
  • a large set of well-known, mid career artists; 
  • and the pyramid's wide and powerful base: a set of young (not simply in age, but perhaps also in artistic age - think of a 95 year-old artist who just started painting five years ago) artists who need the exposure and push that a well attended, widely publicized, and wildly successful art show offers their young careers.

Judith Peck fits on the top tier of the pyramid - this brilliant painter, like a lot of women artists, took a huge hiatus in her career to raise now highly successful offspring.

Once the kids were grown and out of the nest, she re-assumed her art career with a passion bordering on quiet ferocity... and I choose those words carefully.

Peck's enviable painting skills border on spectacular, but it is how she can focus them on bringing forth artwork full of psychological, allegorical, social commentary that makes it special.

Behold "Coastal Communities", 40x30 oil on canvas.

Coastal Communities, oil on canvas 40x30 by Judith Peck
Coastal Communities, oil on canvas 40x30 by Judith Peck


Thursday, December 12, 2024

Gisela "Gigi" Huberman

Gisela "Gigi" Bialik Huberman

Gisela "Gigi" Bialik Huberman passed away two days ago in her home in Sarasota, Florida, where she and her husband Ben had relocated after decades of living in the DC area.

Gigi Huberman was not only a great supporter of the local DC area art scene, but also a GREAT supporter of DC area artists, and a power force whose footprint upon our region's art and artists will last for years to come.

Gigi's enthusiasm for art, artists, and people was not only contagious, but also the kind of enthusiasm that came from a deep well of goodness and power achieved from an extraordinary life of hard work, immense accomplishment, and remarkable success.

I first met Gigi and her husband Ben in 2009 at an art fair in Miami during Art Basel Miami Beach's week of art fairs in the greater Miami area. 

They bought a gorgeous work by Michael Janis titled "Cubans Dreaming of Liberty", and that night I delivered the piece to their home on Fisher Island, which meant driving to the ferry point and getting a spectacular view of the Miami skyline in a full moon, arriving at Fisher Island and visiting their home.

Inside there was a massive treasure of an art collection, including one of the largest and best Jose Bedia's paintings that I have ever seen, in good company with Miro, Picasso, many Latin American artists, and a surprising number of DC area artists, thus revealing the couple's DC roots. I saw work by DC area artists Yuriko Yamaguchi, Rick Wall, Carol Goldberg, Sam Gilliam, and several others whose names escapes me now.

She also had dinner waiting for me... so sweet for someone whom I had just met a few hours before, and an early sign of what sort of special human being this lady was.

Soon after that our friendship deepened back in the DC area, fueled by many things in common, such as the fact that her husband Ben, like me, was a Cuban-born immigrant who came to the US as a child, and like me, was a former US Navy officer.

The Gigi and Ben Huberman love story, related to my wife and I one night over dinner at Hunter's Inn, is another example and memory that I hold in a special place.

Gigi was born in Mexico City, and studied in the US at UC Berkeley. While she was there, she was introduced via letters, to Ben Huberman, then a young Navy officer working in the Navy's submarine program, or "Nukes" as we called them in the Navy, and where the brightest and smartest Navy officers were hand-picked by Admiral Hyman G. Rickover.

"We wrote tons of letters before we met - for six months!", noted Gigi.  When they finally met in person, their letters became the fuel for love and they were married three months later.

Later in life, now a DC area family, Gigi got a Masters and then a PhD at George Washington University, eventually became a linguistics professor at American University. Within  a few years, this powerhouse of a woman was the Chairman of America University's Languages Department.

While we were talking over dinner, Gigi mentioned one of her son's name, and my wife's eyes widened.

"Jonny Huberman?", my wife repeated the name, but as a question... "the Jonny Huberman who lived on Lilly Stone Drive?," she asked, mentioning the street where she had lived with her parents as a young girl.

At the end, to everyone's delight, they re-discovered that the Hubermans and Andersons had been neighbors for years, and my father in law had been his own sons and their sons' coach! Another amazing coincidence, or a glitch in the Matrix -  not only that, but around the date of that dinner were also the beginnings of my wife's own employment as a (then) Assistant Professor at American University, where years later Gigi played a key and positive role in her career.

Somewhere along the timeline of this power force, she decided to go to law school and became a lawyer, and then focused on communications law, which (naturally) led to a focus on the radio industry itself and before long she and Ben were the owner of a struggling radio station (the first one of which, as I recall was bought at an auction, as the station was going bankrupt!). One radio station became, two, and soon there were 13 of them! 

This number pushed the then FCC establish rule for multiple ownership of radio stations, which led to the "Huberman Rule" allowing one group to own multiple stations in one market.

Another example that stands in my memory about this spectacular human being also happened during an art fair in Miami.  I was relating to her about how my assistant at the time, a wonderful artist and amazing hard-worker who helped me for years to do the Art Basel Art fairs, was leaving and heading out to Postgraduate school.

Gigi's going away present to her?  She bought ALL of her work at the booth that year as a sending away present.

The radiance of her energy reached out widely - most recently she served as President of the James Renwick Alliance, hosted dozens of artists in her former spectacular home, helping them connect with collectors and galleries, and when she moved permanently to Sarasota, she immediately became involved with the Asolo Repertory Theatre there.

Somewhere along that cyclonic life, she also found the time to author three books! Starting with the groundbreaking "Mil obras de Lingüística española e Hispanoamericana. Un ensayo de síntesis crítica" and then two best-selling mysteries!

No one could stop Gigi when she put her focus on something - nearly everything that she touched flourished and was better at the end of it.

That includes my family and I.

We send our love to Gigi and Ben and their family.

Abrazos y amor -- el universo ha perdido una de sus mas brillantes estrellas.

Bethesda Art Walk tomorrow!

The Bethesda Arts & Entertainment District invites you to join us tomorrow evening, Friday, December 13 from 6-8PM, for the Bethesda Art Walk. During this self-guided walking tour of the galleries and studios of downtown Bethesda you will be able to view the artwork, chat with the artists in residence, and enjoy light refreshments at each stop along the way. The participating galleries and studios are:

Amy Kaslow Gallery with two concurrent exhibits on view: "Jane Kell: Skyline" and "Joseph Holston: Black Lives, a Retrospective."

Gallery B will host artists Jennifer McBrien and Kate Norris, and their exhibition "Unraveling Narratives: A Dialogue in Toile."

Studio B is home to artists Linda Button, Shanthi Chandrasekar, Sara Leibman and Gloria Solomon. 

Triangle Art Studios is home to artists Stephen Estrada, Maruja Quezada and Barbara Siegel.

Waverly Street Gallery will hold their Annual Holiday Show, featuring the work of Waverly Street Gallery artists.

Art Walk

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Another update to the list of confirmed artists

Here's another updated list of the DMV area female artists who have agreed to participate so far in he 2025 "Women Artists of the DMV" survey show! 

Loads more to come as I await confirmations! Still curious about a significant number of artists have not responded to my invitation, which affirms the power of the "Spam folder" to screw up once in a while.

Maremi Andreozzi

Sondra N. Arkin

Michele Banks 

Holly Bass

Jennifer Lynn Beaudet 

Julia Bloom 

Margaret Boozer

Lisa Brotman 

Shante Bullock

Melissa Burley 

Rachel Carren

Anne Cherubim

Shanthi Chandrasekar 

Hsin-Hsi Chen 

Irene Clouthier 

Amanda Coelho

Ellen Cornett

Rosemary Feit Covey 

Jenny Freestone 

Andrea Cullins 

Joan Danziger 

Jenny Davis 

Tanya Davis 

Wendy Donahoe

Margaret Dowell

Cheryl Edwards

Dana Ellyn 

Hyunsuk Erickson 

Cynthia Farrell Johnson

Helen Frederick 

Susan Goldman

Carol Brown Goldberg

Janis Goodman 

Elyse Harrison

Muriel Hasbun 

Rania Hassan 

Mira Hecht

Michal Hunter 

Melissa Ichiuji 

Selena Jackson 

Barbara Januszkiewicz 

Jessica Kallista

Maria Karametou

Lori Katz

Zofie King

Susan LaMont

Kyujin Lee

Laurel Lukaszewski

Akemi Maegawa

Joey Mánlapaz

Isabel Manalo

Anne Marchand 

Isabella Martire 

Amy Marx

Donna McCullough  

Maggie Michael 

E.J. Montgomery

Sharon Moody 

Ally Morgan 

Camille Mosley-Pasley 

Jody Mussoff

Georgia Nassikas 

Leslie Nolan

Teresa Oaxaca

Betsy Packard 

Dora Patin

Judith Peck

Sandra Pérez-Ramos 

Susana Raab 

Marie Ringwald 

Amber Robles-Gordon

Gail Shaw-Clemons 

Alexandra Silverthorne 

Pritha Srinivasan

Renee Stout 

Zsudayka Nzinga Terrel 

Andrea Way 

Ellyn Weiss 

Marcie Wolf-Hubbard

Sharon Wolpoff

Suzanne Yurdin

Helen Zughaib


Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Art Scam Alert!!!

And yet another asswipe trying to scam artists - Be careful out there!

Corrol Elizabeth - elizabethcorrol86@gmail.com

Hello,I just want to reach out and let you know how much I admire your artworks ,I stumbled upon your online gallery and was immediately captivated by the beauty of your arts .

I would like to know if they are up for sales, I would love to purchase some.

Monday, December 09, 2024

A Gentle Unroot: A Latinx Perspective

Opening Thursday!


A Gentle Unroot: A Latinx Perspective

Curated by Claudina Hannon

December 12, 2024 — January 12, 2025

Artists' Reception: Sunday, December 15, 4 — 6 pm

Artists' Talk: Sunday, January 12, 2:30 pm


I've never been a fan of the term "Latinx", as I consider it an invasion of the language and no single Spanish word that I know of ends in "x" - but I am guilty of employing it myself here and there... anyway from The Athenaeum in Alexandria:


A Gentle Unroot: A Latinx Perspective uncovers the possibilities for what happens when someone leaves their native Latin American land to reside elsewhere, and what they choose to keep with them physically and mentally throughout their daily lives.


Most people who have experienced an immigrant’s journey will tell you it is no “gentle” process. However, the humanistic wish and ideal is for all people to transition from one place to another gently and to carry one culture into another seamlessly. The exhibition's title suggests this concept as a wish for a gentle transition with almost blind yet faithful hope in unrooting one or more cultures and taking them with us as we move to a new country.


Many times, it is not just something that affects those who are first-generation immigrants. It is a process that affects future generations of families through the traditions and memories kept from that unrooting via language, family, culture, and history. But it is that unrooting that allows the travelers to almost transform their identities as they embrace a new country, culture, and language individually, while merging their Latin American identity with that of their new homeland.


The Latinx diaspora of artists in this show share a multigenerational lens of experiences within Latinx and American culture. Their compelling stories and artwork provide a glimpse of what they experienced and witnessed, and this opens a greater understanding and sensibility for humanity through their first-hand experiences as immigrants or as descendants of immigrants within their family lineage.


Participating artists:


Ana Rendich


Francisco Juncadella


Katty Huertas


Paloma Vianey


Pedro Ledesma III


Rosa Vera


Ric Garcia


Athenaeum / 201 Prince Street, Alexandria, VA 22314
703.548.0035 /  nvfaa.org

Sunday, December 08, 2024

First work chosen for the "Women Artists of the DMV"

I've curated over 200 group art shows in the DC area since the mid 90s, and often I find that the first piece chosen often also speaks about the show as a whole.

My formula for group shows is essentially the same, and a proven, successful, and bordering on brilliant technique: the group show is a pyramid of artists at various points in their artistic career and development - blue chip, well-known artists; a large set of well-known, mid career artists, and the pyramid's wide and powerful base: a set of young (not simply in age, but perhaps also in artistic age - think of a 95 year-old artist who just started painting five years ago) artists who need the exposure and push that a well attended, widely publicized, and wildly successful art show offers their young careers.

In this latter set, I also include artists who are "new" to me. My logic is that if I haven't heard of them, no matter how advanced anyone else thinks they are (or perhaps even the artist her/himself), then they are in need of exposure.

Selena “Noir” Jackson, was born and raised in Washington DC, attended Montgomery College School of Art where she earned her A.F.A. in Studio Arts, and from what I can tell from her website, has not exhibited widely around here or anywhere else.

One of her works, titled "Comparative Anatomy (Petrus Camper)" and illustrated below, is the first piece that I have chosen for the epic "Women Artists of the DMV" survey show.  

Jackson, Selena - Comparative Anatomy (Petrus Camper) - 24x36
Comparative Anatomy (Petrus Camper) - 24x36 by Selena Jackson
Courtesy of the Grace McNicolas Collection 

This is an immensely talented painter.  A quick walk through her website quickly reveals that Jackson already owns the technical skills of a much more mature painter. Her brush work is impeccable and her texture and color application techniques already at a top level.

I predict great success for this artist.

Saturday, December 07, 2024

Clarification: What is the "DMV"?

Because I am receiving a lot of emails from interested women artists with regards to the 2025 "Women Artists of the DMV", to my surprise I have learned that I need to clarify what is meant by "DMV", which is somewhat of the local term for the Greater Washington, DC area.

Baltimore is not in the DMV, neither is Richmond, or Charlottesville, or anywhere where (in my definition (since I apparently may have invented the acronym) from the air it is impossible to tell where one street is inside the District and across the street in Maryland or Virginia.

If there's miles of uninhabited freeway between the District and wherever - Baltimore, Annapolis, Richmond, Charlottesville, Staunton, etc., then that is NOT the DMV.

If you live in Mars, but your studio is in DC, Alexandria, Bethesda, Rockville, etc. - then I am willing to accept that you are a DMV artist.

Baltimore: Especially you! Baltimore is a grown-ass city with its own art scene, art galleries, museums, art schools, colleges, etc.; you are NOT part of the DMV.

Baltimore and DMV from space
Baltimore and DMV from space

Quandary: What if an artist spent 40-50 years working and producing art in the DMV, but now has retired and lives somewhere else?  Tough call!

Leave suggestions as comments - I am willing to listen.

Thursday, December 05, 2024

More added to the list

Here's another updated list of the DMV area female artists who have agreed to participate so far! Loads more to come as I await confirmations!

Maremi Andreozzi

Sondra N. Arkin

Michele Banks

Jennifer Lynn Beaudet 

Julia Bloom 

Margaret Boozer

Lisa Brotman

Melissa Burley

Anne Cherubim

Shanthi Chandrasekar 

Hsin-Hsi Chen 

Irene Clouthier

Ellen Cornett

Rosemary Feit Covey 

Andrea Cullins 

Joan Danziger 

Tanya Davis 

Wendy Donahoe

Cheryl Edwards

Dana Ellyn 

Hyunsuk Erickson

Helen Frederick

Carol Brown Goldberg

Muriel Hasbun 

Rania Hassan

Michal Hunter

Maria Karametou

Lori Katz

Zofie King

Susan LaMont

Kyujin Lee

Laurel Lukaszewski

Akemi Maegawa

Joey Mánlapaz

Isabel Manalo

Anne Marchand

Donna McCullough 

Maggie Michael 

E.J. Montgomery

Sharon Moody 

Ally Morgan

Georgia Nassikas 

Leslie Nolan

Teresa Oaxaca

Betsy Packard

Judith Peck

Sandra Pérez-Ramos 

Amber Robles-Gordon

Gail Shaw-Clemons 

Alexandra Silverthorne

Renee Stout 

Zsudayka Nzinga Terrel 

Andrea Way 

Ellyn Weiss

Sharon Wolpoff

Suzanne Yurdin

Helen Zughaib