The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Woodruff CEO stepping down

- By Bo Emerson

After three years at the head of the Southeast’s largest arts organizati­on, Doug Shipman, president and CEO of the Woodruff Arts Center, has announced he will be leaving his post Aug. 31.

“It has been an honor to lead one of Atlanta’s most important institutio­ns,” Shipman said in a statement. “I informed the board in February of my departure, and we have worked together to respond to the impacts of COVID-19 and undertake a smooth leadership transition.”

Woodruff Arts Center board chair Doug Hertz said, in a statement, “We are sorry to see Doug leave the Woodruff Arts Center after three very successful years, but we respect his decision and wish him the best in the next phase of his career.”

Hala Moddelmog, former president and CEO of the Metro Atlanta Chamber, will assume the role of Woodruff CEO on Sept. 1. Moddelmog has served as a Woodruff trustee, governing board member and co-chair of the Alliance Theatre board.

Shipman became the leader of the arts center in 2017. He _ blank>rose to prominence as the founder and CEO of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, which opened in 2014, after more than 10 years of planning and fundraisin­g.

Shipman guided that center for a year, before stepping down in 2015.

In a brief email about his plans for the future, Shipman wrote, “I am definitely staying in Atlanta. As for what’s next — (I) need to transition well here before I can settle on what’s next.”

However, he posted a statement online that made it clear that he will be more politicall­y involved than he has been during his tenure at the Woodruff, and describes the present moment as a turning point in American life.

“This moment is the seminal moment in my lifetime,” he wrote, “the moment that will define how my generation

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Doug Shipman

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