The Board of Directors of the Arts Council of Mendocino County is pleased to announce the 19th Annual Mendocino County Arts Champion Award recipients. 

Arts Champions, nominated each year by community members and selected by the Arts Council board will be formally recognized with a proclamation by the Board of Supervisors meeting on November 9th, 2021. The 2021 Arts Champions in the following categories are: Artist: Corine Pearce; Arts Organization: Gualala Arts Center; Business: Black Oak Coffee; Educator: Blake More; Individual: Larry R. Wagner; Honorable Mention: MEDIUM Gallery.

Corine Pearce, Arts Champion in the Artist category, is a basket weaver, herbalist, dancer, storyteller and cultural educator with ancestry from Lake and Mendocino counties. Corine has taught classes on basket weaving, traditional uses of native plants, land stewardship, fire ecology, and traditional ecological knowledge for over 25 years. 

Corine is the author of Pomo Cradle Baskets: An Introduction, a 2020 inaugural Luce Indigenous Knowledge Fellow, is a 2020 Jennifer Easton Community Spirit Award recipient, and is currently featured in the PBS program Craft in America’s “California” episode and the California Indian Conference Teaching and Learning Exhibit “California American Indian Culture and Arts Pedagogy.” Her basketry has been featured in numerous media articles, art galleries and museum exhibits, including an upcoming collaborative show at the San Francisco de Young Museum (see www.corinepearce.com). In the words of her nominator, “Corine works tirelessly to revitalize local tribal arts and traditions; … her weaving heals and restores both the land and the people, connecting future generations to a living cultural identity.” 

Gualala Arts Center is honored for its years of diverse arts programming, and for rising to the challenges of the pandemic with grace, never abandoning its mission to support and encourage arts in the community of the South Coast. “Gualala Arts implemented online exhibits, outdoor concerts, and kept art alive in our community even during the pandemic,” writes one nominator. Another said, “This past year, with COVID raging and art centers closing their doors, Gualala Arts reimagined itself using low-cost tools to create an online platform for artists and the community to experience their annual Art in the Redwoods (59th!) exhibit, … then dedicated resources to assist artists with the transition to online, … (and) share this acquired knowledge and experience with other arts organizations.” 

Black Oak Coffeethe 2021 Business Arts Champion, is an award-winning locally-owned coffee roaster that has supported more than 100 community organizations making a difference in Mendocino County and beyond. In the words of their nominator, “They offer an inviting and well-visited gallery space free of charge to local artists (and) have hosted gallery shows for Advanced Art students from Ukiah High School. This is a place that feels like it belongs to the youth as much as anyone else in our community.”

Blake More, honoree in the Education Category, elevates teaching art and poetry to rock-star status for her students. She radiates energy and skill in a head-spinning number of categories: literary arts, digital media, performing arts, fashion design, clothing construction, and more. She might arrive to lead a Poetry Out Loud workshop in a bedazzled art car, dressed in a hand-made costume. She ignites a passion for poetry recitation at the high school level year after year, calling forth the dreams, hopes, and feelings of students in classrooms throughout the county in original poetry.

Resident of California’s Mendocino Coast since the late 90s, Blake More’s creative work embraces visual art, poetry, video, performance, costume design, teaching, functional mixed media art/life pieces and hand-painted art cars.  A UCLA graduate and lifetime member of Phi Beta Kappa, she has avoided a “real job” since 1989, and makes her living as a graphic designer, artist in the classroom, painter, costume designer and poet. Co-producer/emcee of Dragons’ Breath Theatre, she sits on the Arena Theater Board, is Area Coordinator for California Poets in the Schools, hosts a monthly poetry & jazz series and produces live music shows on the South Coast of Mendocino. She also hosts an hour-long public affairs program called Be More Now on KZYX&Z FM Mendocino and a Saturday evening poetry show called Cartwheels on the Sky on KGUA FM.  Author of all sorts of things, Blake is working on her latest book of poems now. To explore more of Blake’s creative world or read her blog, please visit her latest website, bmoreyou.net.

Larry R. Wagner, this year’s Arts Champion in the Individual Patron category, “lives and breathes supporting the arts” according to his nominator. He has been a major donor, supporter, and volunteer for the arts since moving to Fort Bragg in 1993. Larry paid for improved seating at Mendocino Theatre Company and remodeled an apartment for the Mendocino Art Center. He has donated thousands of hours over many years as a professional photographer for numerous local not-for-profit organizations including Symphony of the Redwoods, MeCCA (Mendocino Center for Circus Arts), Flynn Creek CircusWinesong!Mendocino Music Festival, and the Mendocino Film Festival. He has published three volumes on Artists of the Mendocino Coast, and just completed the design of Lost and Found: Assemblage Artists of Northern California, presenting the work of eight Mendocino County assemblage artists. Larry has also mentored three high school seniors from Fort Bragg High School, was president of the Mendocino Theatre board of directors in 1996, served as vice-president of the Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens’ board from 1994 to 1997, and assisted in the development and formation of the Mendocino Promotional Alliance. He has also consulted with the Mendocino Art Center Leadership Team in assuring its survival through the pandemic, and teaches photography classes for MAC and the Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens.

MEDIUM Gallery,a new exhibition space in Ukiah that presented its first exhibit, Prologue, in July 2021, was awarded an Honorable Mention for the grit, determination, and inclusive vision of its three founders: Chris Pugh, (an ACMC board member) Lillian Rubie, and Meredith Hudson. In the words of their community nominator, “This group of Inland Mendo locals worked to achieve their goal of a new community space for artists of all levels and styles to share their work free of charge. Their gallery is inviting and professional, and also accessible to artists who may be emerging or have not shown before. They are engaging the community with thought-provoking calls for entry, and it is great to have a fresh place for more art in Ukiah. The more voices we hear and see, the better!”   

The Mendocino County Arts Champion Awards are annually announced in October to coincide with National Arts and Humanities Month, a coast-to-coast celebration of culture in America.

Artist in the Spotlight

Event Spotlight

Rick Estrin & The Nightcats

March 30
at Arena Theater
in Point Arena.