The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Callanwold­e expansion to be 'transforma­tional'

Fine arts center raising $8.5 million to add two buildings, with continued emphasis on underserve­d population­s.

- By Elizabeth Crumbly

Callanwold­e Fine Arts Center is a phoenix risen from the ashes if there ever was one.

Gleaming woodwork, soaring ceilings, immaculate grounds and a custom pipe organ twined through the bones of the main house made the estate one of Atlanta’s finest before it fell into ruin and faced possible demolition in the early 1970s. Because of a community and a family that stood by it, however, Callanwold­e found a second life as a fine arts center.

Now a planned expansion is set to position it as a go-to arts resource for area population­s who might not otherwise be served. On April 16, a ceremony at the center’s historic mansion will mark the public launch of “Build. Inspire. Grow.,” an $8.5 million fundraisin­g campaign for facility expansion.

“It wi l be transforma­tional for the neighborho­od, for greater DeKalb County,” Callanwold­e Foundation board president Glenn Warren Jr. told the AJC. “It will allow Callanwold­e to do so many more things with the underserve­d. … I’m really excited to get shovels in the ground.”

Expanded facilities, programs

Warren is a member of Atlanta’s fabled Candler family, which contribute­d to the city’s notoriety through founding of the

Coca-Cola Co. and ties to Emory University. His great-great-grandfathe­r, Charles Howard Candler, had the home built in 1917.

The center will continue to promote enjoyment of the arts through the traditiona­l programmin­g it has historical­ly provided to the community, but it expanded its mission a couple of years ago, Warren explained, to put more of a focus on the area’s underserve­d population­s. Those include veterans experienci­ng PTSD, low-income seniors and public school students who benefit from learning support.

The expansion of programmin­g included

students from DeKalb’s Cedar Grove Elementary School who qualify for Title 1 supplement­al learning services. They made portraits, took in jazz music and celebrated other art forms for a week last summer as part of the center’s Art Scholars program. Afterward, the Callanwold­e Foundation, which oversees programmin­g, took note of their “amazing” artwork and asked how to ramp up these efforts, said Callanwold­e Fine Arts Center executive director Andrew Keenan.

A plan for two new buildings was the answer.

The plans

Callanwold­e’s 27,000square-foot Gothic Tudor mansion looms over the 12-acre grounds in a network of arches, bays and half-timber work. Right now, Keenan said, it can house about 50 program participan­ts at a time.

A pottery building, carriage house and conservato­ry are “bursting at the seams” right now, he said. The new structures will allow Callanwold­e to serve double the number of participan­ts who currently come for art, dance, pottery instructio­n and more.

The planned Mr. and Mrs. William C. Warren III Flex Arts Building, at nearly 10,300 square feet, will house studios for dance, painting and drawing overlookin­g a swath of Atlanta’s signature forest. The second building — possibly to be named after a future donor, Keenan said — will be mainly for pottery and should alleviate a long waitlist. At just under 2,300 square feet, it will house two new studios upstairs. There will be an expansion of the existing outdoor kiln yard, and the bottom floor will accommodat­e workspaces for four new pottery program assistants.

The mansion will be home to yoga, gallery space and poetry and creative writing instructio­n. Additional parking likely won’t be a considerat­ion, Keenan said, because the population­s served — schoolchil­dren and adults who travel by bus — won’t need it.

The new pottery building will sit immediatel­y beside the mansion, and the Flex Arts building will be situated across the facility’s largest parking lot from the existing jewelry studio. Plans are designed to minimize tree and root displaceme­nt and to replace any trees removed.

The DeKalb County Board of Commission­ers recently pledged full support for the project, which will happen under the oversight of the county’s Department of Recreation, Parks and Cultural Affairs, according to the department’s director, Chuck Ellis.

“As property owner, all improvemen­ts and changes are approved by the county,” Ellis said. “We work closely with Callanwold­e Fine Arts Center’s director and staff, and they have shared their master plan with the department.”

It’s important, Callanwold­e leader Keenan said, to leave room for fluidity.

“We have a pretty good handle on exactly what we want to do in the very short term,” he said. “I just know that over time, things change … I like options and to be more flexible with the demands of the public.”

A groundbrea­king

The facility could host a groundbrea­king as soon as the end of the year, Keenan said, if fundraisin­g comes together and the “herding cats” process of constructi­on stays on track.

The Callanwold­e Foundation is in charge of plans for expansion and the resulting programs. DeKalb County, which has owned and maintained the buildings and grounds since 1972, will handle improvemen­ts to the facility.

He said there’s “a plus and minus” to having the county handle the phased constructi­on, which could take up to five years.

“The plus is it’s much more cost-effective because they have a lot more clout so they can lower squarefoot cost,” he said. “But the process takes a little longer because they have other projects.”

Fundraisin­g is already well underway. As of early April, the campaign, which has been in a quiet private phase, was more than 80% funded with $1.54 million needed to meet the overall goal. Individual­s and area foundation­s have helped with donations. The community has a history of supporting Callanwold­e, dating to the time when citizens raised money to save it, but an expanded mission has meant a change in needs.

“Callanwold­e was saved by individual­s in the community, and it’s a really good formula,” Keenan said. “We relied on earned revenue for a long time. … Now, with all the work we’re doing with underserve­d communitie­s, we’re having to rely on contributi­ons.”

Warren, 38, is a native Atlantan. He grew up around relatives who inhabited Callanwold­e when it was a residence. The family has long made a point, he said, to have at least one of its members on the board.

“I hope that our relatives are looking down smiling at us as we try to continue that family legacy in giving back to the community through Callanwold­e,” he said. “I’m never going to be an artist, I’m not a dancer, I’m not a musician, but I do care deeply about two things: the underserve­d and that part of our mission, but also, just carrying on the family legacy of what came before me.”

 ?? COURTESY OF CALLANWOLD­E FINE ARTS CENTER ?? Callanwold­e Fine Arts Center’s Expression­s program provides a half-day immersion in art, music and movement for students who have been in the United States for less than a year and have limited English proficienc­y. ESOL teacher Ingrid Blum (second from left) assists some of her students with their paintings.
COURTESY OF CALLANWOLD­E FINE ARTS CENTER Callanwold­e Fine Arts Center’s Expression­s program provides a half-day immersion in art, music and movement for students who have been in the United States for less than a year and have limited English proficienc­y. ESOL teacher Ingrid Blum (second from left) assists some of her students with their paintings.
 ?? ?? A rendering of the larger of two buildings planned for Callanwold­e Fine Arts Center’s campus, the Mr. and Mrs. William C. Warren III Flex Arts Building. Nearly 10,300 square feet, the structure will house dance, painting and drawing classes and other programmin­g.
A rendering of the larger of two buildings planned for Callanwold­e Fine Arts Center’s campus, the Mr. and Mrs. William C. Warren III Flex Arts Building. Nearly 10,300 square feet, the structure will house dance, painting and drawing classes and other programmin­g.
 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF CALLANWOLD­E FINE ARTS CENTER ?? Callanwold­e Fine Arts Center board President Glenn Warren Jr. (second from left) admires the paintings of participan­ts in the center’s Art Scholars Program.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF CALLANWOLD­E FINE ARTS CENTER Callanwold­e Fine Arts Center board President Glenn Warren Jr. (second from left) admires the paintings of participan­ts in the center’s Art Scholars Program.

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