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Mitzner Markle Women's Sculpture Competition Award Winners Announced at Ringling College of Art and Design

The competition to design a main entrance sculpture for permanent installation of the new Ringling College Library was created by Nancy Markle and facilitated by Gulf Coast Community Foundation. The winning team of Irene Garibay and Celia Garcia Nogales receive a $15,000 scholarship and a $25,000 budget with which to create and install their sculpture

SARASOTA, Fla., Dec. 1, 2015 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ringling College of Art and Design today announced that the Ringling College student team of Irene Garibay and Celia Garcia Nogales have won the Mitzner Markle Women's Sculpture Scholarship Competition. Irene and Celia will receive a $15,000 scholarship and a $25,000 budget with which to create and install their sculpture in a permanent, dedicated space to the south of the main entrance of the new Ringling College Library.

Noted artist and technologist Nancy Markle created and financed the Mitzner Markle Women's Sculpture Competition through a charitable fund at Gulf Coast Community Foundation. "During my career serving as a Chief Information Officer and technology advisor for many organizations I have had the good fortune to mentor many young women working in IT," Ms. Markle stated. "One thing I learned as a CIO is that very often I would hire students and they were unprepared to be fully functional members of the team, taking as much as a year of training and experience to become sufficiently knowledgeable. Now that I am working as an artist I am supporting opportunities for professional development in the arts."
 
"I have designed this competition to not only inspire a creative sculpture design for the new library, but to reward and immerse the winning team in the detail and challenges that come with making their sculpture a reality – such as material durability and compatibility, environmental resistance, lighting, security, etc.  This experience will provide Irene and Celia with the real world experience that can make a notable difference in their success upon graduation. I am very impressed with these young women and look forward to watching their careers and creativity blossom," concluded Ms. Markle.
 
Irene and Celia's winning entry comprised a concept statement, concept rendering in situ, list of proposed materials for the sculpture, a budget proposal, and examples of their current work. Their proposal included all aspects of the creation, transport, installation, and lighting of the final work of art.  The final sculpture will pose a thoughtful and visually striking contrast to the new library. Iron wood and glass will be used to create the sculpture.  It will be installed in a prominent space on the west side of the new library adjacent to the main entrance. Over time the wood will naturally darken from the environmental elements adding to the nuances of the natural materials chosen for the site-specific piece.
According to winning team member Ringling College Senior Irene Garibay, "It is an honor and an affirmation to receive this award. An affirmation to the importance of societies' awareness towards the weightiness of life sources. Libraries are a source for education, trees are a source for books and environments are a source for humans. We looked at the space around us to create this sculpture. We hope it serves as celebration of the sources of life and those that support it."
 
Winning team member and Ringling College Junior Celia Garcia Nogales noted that, "The Mitzner Markle Award means a reward to the appreciation of the grandness of nature. The project will always breathe out gratitude, towards Nancy Markle as the donor, towards the construction team and towards all the knowledge that has been, is and will be shared with us along the way. We hope that our collaboration inspires future understanding and co-existence between the Ringling College community and its arborous surroundings."  
 
"The Mitzner Markle Scholarship is an outstanding opportunity for our female students in supporting a professional-level learning opportunity for the winning team of students," said Jeff Schwartz, Ringling College Dean of Undergraduate Studies and Interim Head of Fine Art. "Nancy Markle has created an opportunity for our students work at a professional level and supports our commitment to offer experiential learning experience to all our students. Submissions came from a variety of students in different majors it was a challenge for the committee to make this very difficult decision. We are very proud of Irene and Celia, who are both enrolled in the Fine Arts program – their proposed sculpture is ambitious, monumental and thoughtful, and will present itself as a beautiful contrast to the new library."
 
In addition to funding the creation and installation of the sculpture through her competition, Markle also established an endowment at Gulf Coast Community Foundation to provide for the piece's ongoing care. "Nancy is setting such a wonderful example through her thoughtful giving," noted Veronica Brady, senior vice president for philanthropy at Gulf Coast Community Foundation, who assisted Markle in structuring her multipurpose philanthropic gift. "Not only is she providing these students with a 'real world' learning opportunity while they create an historic piece of art for the Ringling College campus, but she is also looking ahead and securing the future of the work through the power of endowed philanthropy."
 
 Currently under construction, the new Ringling College of Art and Design Library will be an $18 million, state-of-the-art library of the future that will transform the way students engage with the Ringling College collections. Architecturally stunning, the building itself is designed to adapt and grow with new technologies to come.  At 46,000 square feet, the facility will have ample room for the extensive collections, 30% of which is currently housed off-campus.  The new library will be an active physical and virtual destination on the Ringling College campus—an intellectual, cultural, social, creative, and technological hub alive with the ebb and flow of students, faculty, and visitors. With increased technological capabilities and access, the new Ringling College library will redefine its mission and strengthen its instructional role within and beyond its walls.
 
About Ringling College of Art and Design

Ringling College of Art and Design is a private, not-for-profit, fully accredited college offering the Bachelors of Fine Arts degree in 13 disciplines: Advertising Design, Computer Animation, Film, Fine Arts, Game Art, Graphic Design, Illustration, Interior Design, Motion Design, Photography & Imaging, Creative Writing (pending SACSOC approval), Critical and Visual Studies and a Bachelor of Arts degree in the Business of Art & Design. Located in Sarasota on Florida's Gulf Coast, the picturesque 48-acre campus now includes more than 110 buildings, and enrolls nearly 1,300 students from 44 states and 54 countries. It is recognized as being among the best and most innovative visual arts colleges in the United States as well as a leader in the use of technology in the arts. Visit the Ringling College website, or follow Ringling College on Facebook and Twitter for more news and information.
 
About Gulf Coast Community Foundation

Together with its donors, Gulf Coast Community Foundation transforms our region through bold and proactive philanthropy. Gulf Coast is a public charity that was created in 1995 through the sale of the Venice Hospital. Since then, it has become the philanthropic home of more than 600 families who have established charitable funds there, and has invested over $208 million in grants in the areas of health and human services, civic and economic development, education, arts and culture, and the environment. Learn more at www.GulfCoastCF.org
 
Bios for Nancy Markle, Celia Garcia Nogales and Irene Garibay follow:
 
Nancy Markle served as a leading Consultant, global innovator and Chief Information Officer (CIO) of Fortune 100 companies and service organizations over the past three decades,  providing a depth of expertise in innovative technologies, strategic planning, organizational assessment and transformation, business and technology alignment, project management, governance and metrics, systems development, leadership development and coaching, process improvements, compliance, business continuity, mergers and acquisitions, interim management and sourcing.  Her clients included companies such as The Patterson Foundation, Sarasota Memorial Health Care System, Ringling College of Art and Design, IBM, Harcourt, LILCO and AT &T. Industries for whom she has consulted are: Financial, Technology, Colleges/Universities, Retail, Engineering, Utilities, Publishers, Non-Profits, Government, Venture Capital, and Boards.
 
With Arthur Andersen, Nancy Markle was the Partner Responsible for Global Technology Strategy and Change, for an organization of over 2,500 technologists.  Prior to that, she was the first person to hold the position of Americas' CIO, meeting the firm's business needs with technology solutions throughout the US, Canada and Latin America, affecting about 35,000 employees in more than 100 Andersen offices.
 
Under Nancy's leadership, significant organization changes were effected, saving millions through automated systems and process improvements; with measurable improvements in customer satisfaction and quality products. She was instrumental in the firm's technology direction, professional growth and special initiatives such as the Growth and Retention of Women (GROW).
 
Before becoming a member of Andersen's leadership, Ms. Markle held the position of Executive Vice President and CIO for Home Savings of America, America's largest Savings and Loan.  Prior positions include President of Information Technology Consultants, Principal with Arthur Young's [Ernst & Young] IT Consulting and Utilities Practices, CIO for both Georgia Power Company and Fannie Mae.  She has also served The Pennsylvania State University and IBM as a faculty member and researcher.
 
Nancy's dream has been to retire early and devote her time to art and community service.  She retired in 2012 and has since sold commissioned painting in oil and multi-media for corporations and private individuals.  She also serves on numerous boards, having chaired, both the full board and various committees of the boards.
 
Celia Garcia Nogales is an interdisciplinary artist who focuses on printmaking, photographic and performance processes. She was born in Madrid, Spain, in 1995. In 2011 she received a full scholarship to attend United World College in Mostar, Bosnia & Herzegovina, an institution based on principles of cultural merging and understanding. While in Mostar, 2011-2013, she collaborated with the local volunteering network, getting involved in art workshops with Los Rosales Kindergarden, Tasovcici Refugee Camp and the town's environmental sphere. In 2012 she co-leaded a volunteer clowning group that performed in local non-for profit and cultural events. In 2013 she started her Fine Arts BFA at Ringling College of Art and Design, funded by a Davis Scholarship. That same year she was a member of ATTAC Collective, a collaborative project that executed public performances and installations. As a result of their work, the performance Your Choice was shown at the Best of Ringling show in 2014. In 2015 three of her pieces were featured at that year's Best of Ringling show. While at Ringling her work has also been shown at Two Columns Gallery in a curated show by Wassan Al Khudairi, Bamboo Scaffolding (2014), and in a collaborative installation experience, Mercury Keeps Spinning Forward (2014). Currently she is a junior majoring in Fine Arts: Printmaking at RCAD.
 
Irene Garibay (Mexico City, 1991) is currently studying her last year of Fine Arts in Sarasota, Florida at Ringling College of Art and Design with a trustee scholarship. In 2009 she attended high school with a full scholarship at the United World Colleges in Hong Kong for two years. While in Hong Kong she worked with STOP the Traffik, a global movement to prevent human trafficking. During those years she collaborated with AFESIP Cambodia (Acting for woman in distressing situations) giving art workshops for children. Between 2009- 2011 she was a member of Play Back Collective Therapy Theater, giving presentations around Hong Kong. In 2012 she lived in Buenos Aires, Argentina for six months where she practiced tango and filmmaking. In 2013 she co-led an Expanded Cinema workshop in Sarasota, Florida with presentations at Two Columns Gallery and Ringling Museum. In 2014 she created an experimental documentary with Jose Carlos Zavarse in Oaxaca, Mexico. That same year she worked as a student Director for Two Columns Gallery.  In the spring of 2015 she attended the New York Studio Residency Program under the Artistic co-Direction of William Powhida and worked as a PR and Social Media intern for A.I.R Gallery in New York.  She's had several group shows in Sarasota and New York including POTLUCK, at the NYSRP studios in Brooklyn. Also, at Two Columns Gallery in Sarasota, she was selected to exhibit at Gesticulating curated by Dan Cameron (2014), and Bamboo Scaffolding curated by Wassan Al-Khudhairi  (2014). She co-curated a group exhibition with Mexican artist Manolo Garibay titled Under Scrutiny (2014). She recently exhibited her work with David Jacaruso in a two-person show titled Tender Friction (2015) at Croslley Gallery. She's been working with (YEArts) Youth Experiencing Art for the past four years, an organization in Sarasota where she's teaches art to children.
 
Media Contacts:
Rich Schineller
rschinel@ringling.edu
941.780.8100
 
Stephanie Lederer
slederer@ringling.edu
941.309.4110

CONTACT: Rich Schineller
         rschinel@ringling.edu
         9417808100