The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WonderRoot director resigns amid criticism

Group of artists wrote open letter blasting Chris Appleton.

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com and Shelia M. Poole spoole@ajc.com

Chris Appleton, the beleaguere­d co-founder and executive director of the nonprofit arts organizati­on WonderRoot, has announced his resignatio­n.

In an open letter posted online Feb. 7, Appleton was criticized by a group of artists and former WonderRoot employees, demanding his removal.

“To ensure WonderRoot can focus on its mission, Chris Appleton has voluntaril­y offered his resignatio­n as executive director, which the Board has accepted,” said a statement released Monday from WonderRoot. “Chris will serve as an adviser to WonderRoot during his transition, including cooperatin­g in the investigat­ion.”

Appleton had already been placed on temporary leave by the organizati­on’s board as it pursued an investigat­ion into the complaints against him.

Appleton did not return requests for comment, nor did members of the board.

Craig Kronenberg­er, who has served as the public face of the board during the investigat­ion, said the statement seems to indicate that Appleton won’t return to his post at the conclusion of the investigat­ion. “That’s the way

I take it,” he said.

Kronenberg­er is president of Stripe Reputation, a “cri- sis and reputation management” company.

Olivia Greene-Knig ht, WonderRoot’s director of operations and finance, is serving as WonderRoot’s acting executive director.

In an open letter to the board, the signers of the Feb. 7 letter claimed “egregious and systemic harm that we have endured at the behest of Executive Director, Chris Appleton’s leadership.”

The letter writers claimed Appleton displayed “rac- ism, classism, and heteropatr­iarchy,” “financial dishonesty” and “mismanagem­ent of basic operations,” including “forcing staff to work in a building without AC or heat.”

The arts and advocacy organizati­on has a long history in Atlanta. It is partially responsibl­e for the mural on the King Memorial MARTA station, and recently helped coordinate the “Off the Wall” project, in which artists painted more than two dozen murals celebratin­g the city’s civil rights legacy in downtown Atlanta and in historic neighborho­ods in anticipati­on of the Super Bowl.

WonderRoot was founded in 2004 as a performanc­e and studio space and a headquarte­rs for the creative arts.

In 2014 the organizati­on received a go-ahead from the city of Atlanta to move from its 4,000-square-foot Memorial Drive location to a 54,000-square-foot former elementary school on the same street.

In the statement released by the board, it thanked Appleton “for his more than 15 years of dedicated service and vital contributi­ons to WonderRoot.”

 ??  ?? Chris Appleton had already been placed on temporary leave by the organizati­on’s board.
Chris Appleton had already been placed on temporary leave by the organizati­on’s board.

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