Tuesday, March 19, 2024

AMM names 2021 award winners; virtual celebrations to take place in early Nov.

The Association of Midwest Museums (AMM) announced the recipients of the 2021 AMM Awards which will be honored via a virtual awards celebration.

Best Practices Award: Ford House

Monday, November 1, at 4pm CT / 5pm ET

This year’s Best Practices Award recipient, Ford House, the historic estate of Edsel and Eleanor Ford, opened its first major expansion in over 90 years to the public May 26, 2021 — a 40,000 square-foot Visitor Center and 17,000 square-foot Administration Building. The state-of-the-art project added event spaces and exhibition spaces, allowing for expanded program offerings. While these beautiful buildings are intended to enhance the visitor experience, the Visitor Center and Administration Building were designed to be net-zero energy efficient, with great care to emphasize sustainability and the surrounding natural ecosystem. With new classroom and program space within these buildings, Ford House has created not only a new physical space for STEM learning, but also a launching point for discussing topics green-building and eco-friendly design.

Promising Leadership Award: Samantha Sauer

Tuesday, November 2, at 4pm CT / 5pm ET

Samantha Sauer is an archivist, curator and assistant professor of history at Illinois College in Jacksonville, Illinois, who has brought incredible energy to transforming the Khalaf Al Habtoor Archives and the Paul A. Findley Congressional Office Museum into essential campus and community resources. In crafting and fulfilling her vision, Sauer demonstrates an unparalleled level of professionalism and intentionality, creating student-centered projects to explore campus history, highlight diverse collections and voices, and build institutional capacity.

Distinguished Volunteer Award: David Ruffin

Special Video Presentation

David Ruffin is the Director of the African American Gallery at Ethnic Heritage Museum in Rockford, IL, a cultural organization focused on preserving the nationalities of those who founded Rockford’s southwest side — African American, Hispanic, Irish, Italian, Lithuanian and Polish. A self-proclaimed “professional volunteer,” David has spent his 25-year volunteer career at Ethnic Heritage Museum coordinating a wide range of special events, exhibitions and programs such as Kwanzaa: A Black Christmas Celebration and the The Civil Rights Movement exhibition. David has worked diligently to establish and foster relationships with other community organizations and to raise funds in support of the museum’s African American Gallery projects, playing a pivotal role in the sustainability and growth of the entire museum.

Distinguished Career Award: Mary Weiland

Thursday, November 4, at 4pm CT / 5pm ET

Mary Weiland‘s career in museums began 30 years ago at the Minnesota History Center in St. Paul, Minnesota, and worked on many community-based exhibits including exhibits in connection with the African American community, the Minnesota Jewish community and Vietnam Veterans. In 1991, she joined Minnesota Children’s Museum (MCM) as an exhibit developer where she was instrumental in a 2005 expansion of outdoor exhibits in the rooftop ArtPark and played a strong leadership role in establishing a new vision for MCM’s exhibit experiences in its 2017 expansion. She also led the MCM exhibits team in creating concepts for a new children’s museum in Rochester, Minnesota, and developed multiple new traveling exhibits which enabled the museum to diversify its revenue streams and become a leader in the traveling exhibit field.

Groundbreakers Award: Chicago Cultural Alliance

Friday, November 5, at 4pm CT / 5pm ET

The Chicago Cultural Alliance (CCA) is an active consortium of over 40 Chicago-area cultural heritage museums, centers and historical societies that span 30 neighborhoods and 9 suburbs in the Chicago area and represent over 30 different cultures from around the world. True to its mission to “connect, promote and support centers of cultural heritage for a more inclusive Chicago,” the CCA has set a standard for cultural advocacy and innovative community-wide projects over the course of the past year. From Taste From Home: Food Stories for the Culturally Curious to the Cultural Connections visual podcast, they have increased awareness of the diversity of the Windy City, while amplifying and advocating for citywide initiatives such as Indigenous People’s Day.

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