Gift to help the Isabel foster a more inclusive community

Gift to help the Isabel foster a more inclusive community

A $3.5-million gift in honour of the late Jennifer Velva Bernstein, Artsci鈥89, will help the Isabel host more artists from diverse cultures and backgrounds.

By Communications Staff

June 18, 2020

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The Isabel will use the gift to support artistic programming and educational training at the centre, including covering the costs to bring more top performers and emerging artists to Kingston.

Tricia Baldwin, the director of the鈥 Isabel Bader鈥疌entre for the Performing Arts, takes pride in offering audiences a鈥痙iverse mix of world-class artists and socially engaged performances.& Performing arts events such as those about the Indigenous residential school experience and musical acts from around the globe expose audiences to different cultures and perspectives, which Ms. Baldwin says helps contribute to a more inclusive society.

鈥淲ith socially engaged art, you are actually bringing in a point of view of an under-represented group to the majority,鈥 Baldwin says. 鈥淭he Isabel is a very beautiful place to share music and ideas. It can help create a more knowledgeable and better society.鈥

A recent $3.5-million donation will allow the Isabel to offer more programming that fosters that inclusive environment. Marjorie Ernestine Bernstein made the gift to Queen鈥檚 in honour of her late daughter, Jennifer Velva Bernstein, Artsci鈥89.

Jennifer Velva Bernstein loved鈥痶he arts鈥痑nd was passionate about social causes. She earned film degrees from both Queen鈥檚 and Webster University in St. Louis, as well as a Master of Social Work from Washington University in St. Louis. She鈥痙ied in a bus crash鈥痠n 1995 while on a humanitarian mission to Haiti organized by the People to People Project, a private charitable group.

鈥淲e are so grateful for the Bernstein鈥檚 family鈥檚 belief in the Isabel and belief in the role of arts in society,鈥 says Baldwin. 鈥淥ur philosophy of programming and inclusion matches Jennifer鈥檚 efforts to try to make this a better world.鈥

In鈥痳ecognition of the gift, the Isabel鈥檚 main 566-seat performance hall has been renamed the鈥 Jennifer Velva Bernstein Performance Hall.

The Isabel will use the gift to support artistic programming and educational training at the centre, including covering the costs to bring more top performers and emerging artists to Kingston. It will also help subsidize tickets and events, allowing people to enjoy more festivals such as鈥 Ka'tarohkwi Festival of Indigenous Arts < 鈥痑nd the鈥 Isabel Human Rights Festival 鈥痑nd student initiatives鈥痶hrough the MyIsabel Alma Mater Society program 鈥痵uch as鈥痑nd the鈥 Project Afro-Odyssey.

Baldwin feels it is important for students to carry that value of diverse programming into their future careers.

鈥淚 believe that a university has the ability to communicate to its students that the performing arts have worth beyond entertainment,鈥 says Ms. Baldwin. 鈥淏y producing, presenting, or attending socially engaged arts on social justice topics, students learn that artists can be creative initiators and champions for social change. This enables them to see the possibilities for their own participation and roles in creating a fairer world when they graduate.鈥

Queen鈥檚 Announces Investments in the Arts

The gift to the Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts is among a number of hilanthropic investments Queen鈥檚 is announcing in support of the arts this month, including gifts to the Department of Art History and Art Conservation from The Jarislowsky Foundation and Dr. Isabel Bader, LLD'07 . Follow Queen鈥檚 Alumni on , , and for the latest news.