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Art Art Feature News News Blog

Metal Museum to Start Construction in Overton Park

At Thursday’s groundbreaking ceremony for the Metal Museum’s transition to its new home at the former Memphis College of Art building, Carissa Hussong showed off her decked-out hardhat, complete with diamonds and black flames sprawling across the cap. “Yes, the diamonds are real,” she said. “’Cause who doesn’t need a hardhat with their name and diamonds on it?”

The hardhat, she revealed, was gifted to her on her first day on the job 17 years ago by James Wallace, the museum’s founding director who preceded her. It was always destined that the museum would expand in some way, though it wasn’t always known that it would take over the Memphis College of Art’s campus. That suggestion wouldn’t come until 2018, and even then it was met with some hesitation, until eventually that hesitation subsided as the move became more and more logical. 

“The museum has been called a hidden gem. This has a lot to do with our current location,” said Richard Aycock, the museum’s board president, at the ceremony. “Our programs have changed lives, and I can’t tell you how excited we are about the possibilities this expansion gives us to expand our educational opportunities. It will increase our educational offerings sixfold in a place that’s easily accessible by foot, by bike, by car, or by public transportation. The expansion gives us room and space to teach advanced metalworking techniques to more students.

“In addition to addressing the needs of our community, we are very excited and honored to become a part of the Overton Park family and to continue the Memphis College of Art’s legacy of art and education.”

Part of honoring the college’s legacy also means honoring its original architecture and architects Roy Harrover and Bill Mann, so the museum engaged the help of Los Angeles-based wHY Architects and Memphis-based LRK. 

“This project is a true example of how you can work with the existing fabric to highlight its unique features, and then thoughtfully add on to it to serve future generations,” said Krissy Buck Flickinger, senior associate architect with LRK. 

Quoting from the original National Register nomination for Overton Park, she continued, “‘The building is an outstanding example of contemporary architectural design, distinguished by its freestanding concrete sunbreak, folded plate roof structure and generous roof terraces, and balconies, all of which will be preserved and will live on.’

“The historic materials will be used, restored, and retained. I already talked about the folded plate roof. We have terrazzo floors. We have steel windows that are all original and in beautiful condition. We’re restoring the 350-seat auditorium. We’re reimagining the library and the cafe space. … And we’re letting the once art studio spaces live on as art gallery spaces. … And the second vital piece to this project is the addition of the innovative metalworking facility with its own expressive design that draws inspiration from and complements Rust Hall.”

The designs are complete, and construction is ready to begin, with a projected completion date of 2026. 

The museum’s current site at 374 Metal Museum Drive will eventually be converted into a space to host an artist-in-residence program, as well as an events space. 

As Aycock reminded guests at Thursday’s event, “The Metal Museum is the only institute in the United States dedicated to the art and craft of fine metalwork. There is nowhere else in the world where you can go and look at a beautiful exhibition of exquisite metalwork, then go to the shop and watch that metalwork being made, and even take a class and make some with your own hands. It is a special place. It is a place that metalsmiths from all over the world come and that many here in this country call home.”

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News News Blog News Feature The Fly-By

MEMernet: Minecraft, Kroger, and Pooh Shiesty

Minecraftin’

Instagram user Eric Huber is recreating Rust Hall, the iconic building central to the former Memphis College of Art campus, in Minecraft. The whys of this project don’t matter at all. It’s simple internet genius.

Posted to Instagram by @erichber

Krogerin’

A Nextdoor Kroger bash is still burning after user Patti Ward complained last week that, after 30 years of shopping at the Union Avenue location, she’ll “never again” shop there.

The post racked up 229 comments. The discussion ranged from whether or not the issue was an issue at all, Big Brother, other Kroger locations, other stores, missing Seessel’s, and a proposed 30-day ban on bashing Kroger on Union. The post followed a March 15th post from Rita Baker calling the Union Kroger “the worst grocery store on the planet.”

Explainin’

This week YouTuber Memphis Newz broke down the confusion over rapper Pooh Shiesty’s recent diss of South Memphis, his own neighborhood.

“Sometimes when a rapper gets big, their neighborhood will turn against them,” Memphis Newz said. “A lot of the time, it’s the rapper’s fault because they’ll be doing some hoe-ass shit.”

Posted to YouTube by Memphis Newz

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News News Blog

Memphis City Council Preview: Reduced Speed Limit, Rust Hall, and Water Bottles

City leaders hope to reduce the city’s default speed limit from 30 miles an hour to 25 miles per hour. The proposal will be in front of Memphis City Council members when they meet Tuesday.

The proposal is from Manny Belen, the city’s director of engineering, and reached council review through Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland’s office.

The current, 30-mile-an-hour default speed limit applies to all roadways where a speed limit has not been formally established through an engineering study, reads the proposal.

“The majority of roadways governed by this default speed limit typically include residential/neighborhood roadways and roadways in the Downtown area where there is a higher percentage of pedestrians, bike riders, and other vulnerable users,” reads the document.

For this, the engineering division recommended lowering the default speed limit to 25 miles per hour. However, the same office can designate certain streets or sections of street as “speed zones” in which higher speeds would be allowed.

Metal Museum to Rust Hall

Council members will also review a 100-year lease to the Metal Museum for Rust Hall in Overton Park.

Council documents say Metal Museum leaders have raised $12 million to renovate the building. In total, the museum hopes to raise $35 million for the project, a total that includes $13 million for an endowment to fund the long-term maintenance of the building.

“The Metal Museum’s goal is to renovate Rust Hall into a public museum, preserving the mid-century building designed by acclaimed Memphis architect Roy Hanover and increasing the number of people who are able to explore and experience the iconic building each year,” read the documents. “With expanded space for its programs in an accessible and visible location, the museum anticipates serving approximately 80,000 visitors per year from all areas of Shelby County and from across the globe.”

Under the agreement, the Metal Museum would have two years to complete the renovation and occupy the building. If it can’t, the property reverts back to the city of Memphis.

Cemetery Clean-Up
Council members will consider a move to spend $15,000 to clean up some area cemeteries. The effort is joined by the Shelby County Commissioners, which will share the cost of the project.

The proposal claims city and county officials “have each received numerous complaints about blighted cemetery properties on Rose Hill Road, Hernando Road, Mitchell Road, Elliston Road, and East Parkway.

No More Bottles

Cuyahoga Recycles/Facebook

A proposal would prohibit the city from buying or selling single-use bottled water. Council member Dr. Jeff Warren sponsored the proposal.

In his proposal, Warren notes that fossil fuels are an integral component in the production of plastic bottles. Burning fossil fuels, he said, is “the primary cause of climate change, is toxic to Memphis and the planet” and that “ending our reliance on them is an existential necessity.” Also, the bottles “that are discarded on Memphis streets wash into our storm drainage system causing flooding in our streets and [they] pollute our water.”

Instead, Warren suggests Memphians drink the city’s “sweet water,” which ”is readily available for citizens and visitors to enjoy.“

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News News Blog

Q & A With MCA President Laura Hine

MCA President, Laura Hine

As reported in this week’s Memphis Flyer cover feature “Art of the Deal,” the Memphis College of Art was severely impacted by a declining enrollment. But what does that really mean? And was it merely the kiss of death to a small, private college already struggling with a low endowment and debt?

There’s some context necessary for understanding college enrollment and trends in higher education. An institution’s reputation, and the kinds of training programs it offers are meaningful of course. There will always be a Harvard, probably. But enrollment numbers are also aligned with things as basic as birth rates, and one of MCA’s last major economic crises came about in the 80’s, as the last members of the enormous Baby Boomer generation reached the end of their formal education. Enrollment dropped from 246, which was an all-time high in 1976, to 207 in 1980. After losing only 39-students, the school was described as being, “under siege financially,” and it faced faculty layoffs, major changes to academic culture, and an $80,000 shortfall.

When wages are stagnant while tuitions go up colleges are taxed with finding larger and larger amounts of financial aid. Unemployment, on the other hand, can increase some enrollments as displaced workers look to acquire skills, marketability, etc. while a warming economy (conversely and counterintuitively) shrinks enrollment by sucking those potential students back into the workforce.

90% of MCA students have traditionally come from within a 300-mile radius of the school so, in this case, proximity and convenience have driven enrollment.

MCA’s interim President Laura Hine understood that the Overton Park-based art college’s future was tied to smaller, realistic headcounts, a 21st-Century curriculum, and funding models that hedged against the natural ebb and flow of enrollment. She also knew that enrollment was just one part of a three-pronged threat the school was facing — a threat that included crippling real estate debt, and an endowment too low to sustain the school during harder times.

Hine spoke to The Flyer for this week’s Art of the Deal cover story. Here’s a transcript of the conversation. It has been edited for length, focus, and clarity.

Memphis Flyer: I know you’ve been at the school for a while now. But you’ve only been in your current position for what six or eight months, right?

Laura Hine: I came here in the academic year 2014-15 as the VP for Advancement and when Ron retired in the middle of last semester I was asked if I would take the position and I said yes I will.

When you came on as interim President, did you have any idea you’d be the person who’d announce the school was closing?

No I didn’t. I’ve been here, and there’ve been serious economic and financial challenges. Of course I was aware of those. But it wasn’t a thought in my mind that it would come to this. Someone asked me would you have taken the job had you known this would be the outcome and that’s a really hard question for me to answer because I love the school. But this has been the worst professional experience of my life in terms of the sadness and the heartbreak of it all. You have jobs, and you work hard. I’m not afraid of any of that and I’ve done that my whole life. But I’ve never had the same passion and love for something as I have for the school, so I think that’s what’s made it different from any of the work I’ve ever done before. The board and Ron had approached me at some point prior to my being asked to take up the job — more or less rather suddenly. Would I have an interest in applying for the president’s job at the end of Ron’s tenure and I said yes, it’s possible I would throw my hat in the ring. Then Ron decided to retire and the college needs someone to step into the position, so I accepted it on the interim basis. We never made it to the process of full National search because we were otherwise occupied .

Looking back at some of the media when Ron Jones first joined MCA — He often seemed like maybe he wasn’t fully aware of what he was stepping into — or that the problems got much bigger, much faster than anticipated.

He inherited some situations I think that probably caught him a little bit unaware and he very quickly had to spring into action and take some steps that would stabilize the college. There were issues related to accreditation, and he stabilized that. So much has been written about the real estate debt. I know the college sold some properties at the time. There were some active layoffs. Your instructional cost is the largest line item in your budget — as it should be. But I think there were some faculty layoffs, and at that time we got to the accreditation problems etc.

It did seem like a lot happening at once.

When I got here people said, “You jumped on a sinking ship.” I said, “Well, it was listing.” But there’s always an opportunity for stabilizing a sinking ship.

I think there’s a sense — related to the abruptness of the announcement — that the school wasn’t exploring all its options, beating every bush…

We’re running annual campaigns and fundraising. So, to say we haven’t been out in the community raising money is just not true. There are various events for fundraising. To say we aren’t beating every bush is just wrong. I would say, within the major donor funding community, there was no stone left unturned. People raised the issue of Sweetbriar, when the alumni came in and saved them. Well historically, if you look throughout the entire college’s history, our alumni are not wealthy people. And they have been asked to give and give. They are part of every campaign to raise money. But to look to them to provide the kind of funding this institution needs, it’s just not there. The funding capacity is just not there. They can help in other ways or support the school in other ways. But they don’t have the capacity to give on a large scale. The problem with that — Let’s say you have a pretty successful campaign and it yields $2,000,000. Well that’s that’s one year. But unless you have ongoing commitments, and know you can count on those commitments, what happens here is, you get into a situation — and this was at the front of the minds of the board when they made their vote — you don’t know that you have funding lined up to teach them out. Could you have raised enough money to maybe get you through a year? Fine, you’ve now admitted new students but you have no funding commitments that will sustain the institution over a longer period of years. There is no private college of any kind that doesn’t rely on its donors to survive and the major donor community here has been extraordinarily generous to this college over a very long period of years. But the efforts to line up multi-year commitments didn’t materialize. So then you have a situation.
[pullquote-1]I know the teach-out is scheduled to end in 2020. Will you still have students then? Or faculty? Or will they transfer to other schools, get other jobs?

There will be students all the way up till commencement May 2020. We are staging a transfer fair on November 9th. But let me explain to you how this works. We are professional Fine Art and Design School. The way art curriculum is built doesn’t translate easily to other environments.The pool of credits that are accrued here by our students are studio credits. So the longer student goes in our environment and uses their federal financial aid, the more obligated we are to see them through to degree completion. When we talked to our accreditors after the board vote trying to get some guidance on accreditation during a period like this, we asked about what would be appropriate for the teach out. They said, “well, we’ve unfortunately had too many of these kinds of conversations because of the failure rate of small private liberal arts and fine arts schools. And the answer is how long can you teach out? There are some schools they just go ‘we’re closing the doors tomorrow. We don’t have the means to carry on. We don’t have the funding in the resources to carry on.’” And that’s what happens. In this instance we looked at how long can we carry on if we liquidate our assets and how long can we carry on and teach out students. You know, there’s no book or roadmap on how you do this with compassion and understanding for all of the people who are going to be impacted, so in my mind it was imperative that we come out as soon as possible and share the information. The accreditor said, “You can wait till the spring,” and I said, “There’s no way we’re going to do that because what happens you’re going to have students your continuing to accrue credits without in the information that they need? This is something that’s going to impact their lives.”

What about faculty?

Decisions about faculty are going to be based on student need. You go back to what’s our mission? It’s to educate students. So faculty decisions will be made based upon what faculty are needed to serve the students. So you have to look at things like do program analysis. What are the larger what disciplines? What are the largest populations of students that we need to serve? So the faculty that are needed to serve those students are the faculty who will remain. In a general sense there are never any guarantees about faculty saying through four years. Faculty go and come and make career choices and decisions based on their life circumstances. based on student need.

I’d like to talk a little about the real estate debt. I know a lot of it happened before you got here, and I don’t want you to feel like you have to answer questions right now if those questions are better suited for someone else, or feel like you’re putting words in other people’s mouths.

I’m pretty familiar with the history because I’ve had to become familiar with it. Because it’s been a financial challenge for the school. So I’m familiar with a snapshot of the incurred debt. That was in the first decade of the 2000s. And it grew to over $11-million. And I think there’s always this notion — and it’s human nature to point the finger of blame but 3 fingers always come back — I just don’t like to collapse into that. There were some detractors. And these steps were taken during probably what you would say was a more hopeful time. There was an expansive vision. That just frankly didn’t materialize. And the folly of it? There’s some validity to that. It’s kind of a “you build-it-and-they-will-come” versus “there here and what are we going to do about it?” All the while you have the wild ticker tape of nationally declining enrollments running in the background.

I don’t think I realized it was as high as $11-million.

It has been a financial albatross around this institutions neck for many years. When I first came here in there was a board-led fundraiser and the philanthropic community showed up for this institution in a big and mighty way. And we took that money and we reduced debt by 31%. We had multiple loans and the interest rates were pretty high. So what we did was, we found out about a bond issue tax-exempt refinance mechanism. So we can colidated our debt, went through that refinance, and got interest rates down to 3.67%. Over the life of the loan it would save the institution about $800,000 in interest, so it was a very smart thing to do. At the same time we looked at Nissan [Graduate School] downtown, and when you looked at the operational expense associated with having a building that far from where we are, it was about a $230,000 a year expense just operating the shuttle and security down there. So a decision was made to sell the building.

Let’s talk some more about enrollment.

We’ve seen declining enrollment. The other thing: Recruiting students here is one thing and retaining students here is another. This is something I wasn’t really aware of when I started working here. I always had this impression there’s a pretty affluent student body of the College of Art. These are kids who can pursue a fine art degree etc. And I want to be careful here because I don’t want to disparage any of our existing students — it’s important me that that doesn’t happen. There are no shame cooties for this institution that you’re serving kids who are largely coming out of poverty. These are talented kids and we change their worldview and they go out and they’re different people when they leave here than when they came in. But their financial barriers are considerable and present a lot of challenges. You started to see more and more pressure in the post-recession era on colleges and universities every institution struggles with enrollment, with no exception. There is a fight for every headcount in every college, in every University. In the post-recession era it starts to catch up. With the Disappearance of the middle class normal families the middle class families ability to pay a fine and liberal arts schools tuition. You have things that occur at the state level like Tennessee making the first two years of community college free. It’s hard to say no to two free years of school, and that deals a blow to institutions like us.

I’ve heard mentions that there may have been missed opportunities in terms of identifying emerging disciplines and developing curriculum…

I think there were some missed opportunities to build out programs here in areas where you’re seeing enrollment upticks… Everything is digital in terms of the interest and demands of students on a national level. They’re looking for design programs, user experience, user interface, app development and that kind of cutting edge design program. And we have some classes here, but there wasn’t an emphasis on that in our curricular developments. Due to the generous support of some of our donors we had some consultants come in to help spur thinking and passion for program changes and development but those consultancies didn’t lead to any actions in a period where we didn’t have any time to waste.

I know Ron Jones wanted to upgrade, or modernize enrollment. And he brought in someone from a different kind of academic environment. From the for-profit environment. Can you speak to what kinds of changes were made? Did they work?

The new changes in enrollment didn’t work out as we intended it to. That’s clear. The thinking was, we needed to look at the pressures that exist in the macro environment — Like community college, free tuition etc. There was the fight for every headcount and I think that the choice was made to bring in someone who had a very aggressive approach to enrollment. And I think the short answer I’m willing to give is I don’t think that person was a good cultural fit here here, and I wasn’t shy about saying it.

This happens at a time when a lot of colleges are struggling and failing. I was hesitant to describe it as a trend, but the more I look...

It’s a trend. It’s an absolute trend.

But is MCA just a statistic? Just part of that trend or it’s story — how we arrived here — unique even inside that trend?

I think it’s truly a combination of all of it. You cite the national trends the declining enrollment in the traditional and fine arts. There are three factors that determine the fate of an institution and we had on all of them: declining enrollment, low endowment, and debt. That’s 3 combined factors that will sink an institution. If you have a large endowment that sustains you. We don’t have that. It’s important to note to this institution has maintained the corpus of its endowment. You read about the colleges like Sweetbriar, where they were dipping into the Corpus of their endowment to sustain themselves and to keep their operations going. We haven’t done that but when you look at the size of our annual drawdown — we have a 5% drawdown policy. So with an endowment of about 4.7- 4.8 million, 5% comes to $225,000 to $255,000 annual draw down on a 10 or 11 million dollar budget. It doesn’t help us. I mean, it does help us, but only to that amount and then there’s no more. I’ve seen it written over the last week,people saying, “It’s just not that much money. It’s onlu 6.9 million dollars right?” We have all three of those kisses of death for an institution of higher education in a post-recession environment. You have to look at statistics. I think closure rate has doubled in the last decade. We’re not unusual. We talk to our accreditors, and there is a heartache in higher ed nationally. If you ask a person like me, especially in the political environment we’re in right now, I don’t think there’s ever been a more important time for the liberal arts and the fine arts. I think this dynamic is a tragedy at a time when we need people who are educated in this fashion — people can change the world with their worldviews, through their expansive thinking.

You mention conventional wisdom — It’s only $6-million. Which is a lot of money, but I think when other institutions have raised that kind of money, I understand why people might say that.

To go back in address the debt issue, you have several plans for consideration, but we could not secure multi-year commitments and that’s what you got to have. Say you raise a million dollars and admit new students then next year you go to the same people who dug deep, and they don’t have it the next year. So it really is a process. Will the major donor community sustain this institution for years while we put a plan in place? It’s interesting to me that people are telling me, “sell everything south of Poplar. Eliminate your debt. Invest in Rust Hall. Well, that was the plan — go back to what we used to be. Lower expectations on head count. Go back down to a sustainable size. We couldn’t line up the commitments.

You sound like an urban planner talking about sprawl…

Right? Forget growing your way out of it. You’re not going to grow your way out of it. So that was a plan that we weren’t able to line up commitments for. and I think the reason was — there was a feeling, all the while this is going on — we missed our enrollment goals by a lot. Where did we land on enrollment this year? 35% less than we’d projected. Is that the remnants of enrollment is a process or is it truly just a product of the times in terms of the declining enrollment. That resulted in an even greater deficit, and I think it was kind of determinative in a sense, that the model that the school has had just isn’t viable.

It’s probably easier to sell the idea of expansion though — whether it’s a good idea or not— than shrinking. You can see expansion in the landscape. Shrinkage? What you see is absence — negative space.

Like, “Can someone just give me a visual on what Rust Hall will look like if we do these kinds of programs?” Because you can go and you can sell that. I think that’s probably part of it. There’s a weariness that sets in too. Our donors have been so generous to this institution, and they are called upon to support the community and other nonprofits in ways that are just constant. In fairness to them, it’s probably just weariness.

I think I read that the school’s budget model is based on something like 80% tuition and 20% fundraising, is that still accurate?

I would say that’s about right. There were striking fundraising years, like the first year I was here.There was a major fundraiser. See, you have these years when the philanthropic community comes on extremely. You’ll see that kind of say, “wow that was a pretty good year!” And then you start to see it settling down into just really normal ranges. There’s been so many plans and so many projections. Anyway you slice it we are going to need donor support at about a million to a million .5 every year. That’s the nut.

Do miracles happen?

I think it was High Ground News that asked what it would take. I think I said it will take a $30-million endowment. Well, why $30-million? Because 5% of $30-million is $1.5 million, and we would need to know we had that kind of resource available to us under pretty much any scenario. And that’s where the $30-million amount comes from. So there was a directive from the board to reduce our costs. Cost restructuring is a euphemism for a lot of hard decisions that are made. And I said, “Yes. Okay, we will reduce our costs. I largely come from the for-profit sector so I very much understand when you have a deficit there are two ways to address it. You either cut your costs or you increase the revenues. It’s just that simple. It’s not even a magic formula, it’s very basic. So the board understood that we needed to cut costs. And I think that a lot of hard decisions were made in the cost restructuring that have been demoralizing for the institution on a lot of levels. But where they were a necessary part of a larger plan to create a sustainable future.

How do you mean demoralizing?

I don’t know if anybody else has spoken about layoffs. It creates anxiety in the environment that’s almost palpable the minute you walk in the door, you know? Because it signals to the people that there are issues. And they are financial issues Anytime you go through situations like that it’s fear producing. That’s what I mean by demoralizing.

Photographs by Justin Fox Burks

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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Making Art Work

I’m in Overton Park a couple times a week, either taking my mutts to the dog park or biking through on a weekend ride. It’s truly a beautiful place. The deep woods, the green spaces and trails, the diverse and cheerful humanity jogging and biking, playing golf and soccer, or just sitting on benches watching their children play. It’s the living heart of Midtown.

But, as everyone knows by now, change is coming to Memphis’ “Central Park.” After some prodding from the Flyer‘s Toby Sells, who broke the story a couple weeks ago, the Brooks Museum of Art revealed its intentions to move downtown — likely to the corner of Union and Front Street — to become part of the city’s proposed new riverfront development plan. Museum officials cited a lack of space in the venerable museum’s current building as a primary reason for the decision to move.

Then, on the heels of that bombshell, the Memphis College of Art announced last week that it would close its doors after fulfilling its educational obligations to its current students, probably in May 2020. In a statement given to the media, the school cited “declining enrollment, overwhelming real estate debt, and no viable long-term plan for financial sustainability.”

Rust Hall, the primary MCA building, is a gorgeous, airy, modern-looking piece of architecture, but according to two MCA board members I spoke with, it needs major updating — another expense the college couldn’t find the means to pay for.

So now there are two beautiful city-owned buildings in Overton Park that will need tenants of some sort. There is time to sort this out and come up with answers that make sense for the park and the city. The timetable for Brooks’ move, according to director Emily Balew Neff, is five years or so. And nothing will happen on that front until the city’s proposal to use TMZ funds for the riverfront is approved. And, as mentioned, MCA will be sticking around for two more years.

When these announcements were made, conspiracy theorists began speculating that a grander, more sinister plot was afoot — that, in some mysterious way, the Memphis Zoo was involved or that the two arts organizations were somehow in cahoots to abandon the park.

But as details have emerged, it’s become clear that Brooks is moving because it wants to grow and build a new home. And it doesn’t hurt that a couple of very wealthy and well-connected people are wanting to make that move happen.

MCA, on the other hand, is closing because it created more real estate debt than the institution could handle — $7 million, according to insiders — and paying off those notes became prohibitive. Did the MCA administration over-reach? Was creating a grad school and building new dorms and buying buildings downtown a bridge too far? Could the school be right-sized and survive if brought back to its original scope and mission? We’ll never know, unless a deep-pocketed sugar daddy comes to the rescue.

The fact is, small fine-arts colleges are struggling in other places, as well. Nearly 20 such schools have closed around the country since 2015. And Forbes.com recently ran a story about the many colleges and universities across the country that have leveraged themselves into financial difficulties by over-building and over-borrowing. It’s a trend, and not a good one.

On my visits to Overton Park, I often see an MCA van parked in front of Rust Hall emblazoned with the school’s slogan, “We Make Art Work.” Well, art worked for 80 years. Now? Not so much.

Now, it’s on us to figure out how to “make the park work.”