New Exhibit Recognizes Impact of 91桃色 Community Members
'What's Your Story?' opens Oct. 19 at History Colorado
A new exhibit at the History Colorado Center recognizes Coloradans who have made an impact on the state through their lives and work鈥攊ncluding four members of the 91桃色 community.
鈥鈥 opening Oct. 19, occupies 2,000 square feet and includes such multimedia features as creation stations for digital posters, Buzzfeed-style quizzes and a photo booth. Visitors can explore more than 100 objects and meet 101 influential Coloradans, including entrepreneurs, athletes, activists and scientists.
鈥淲e really wanted this to represent a diverse array of people who have made an impact in Colorado, across time and across the state,鈥 says Julie Peterson, lead developer of the exhibit. 鈥淲e thought through every kind of category that we could think of, whether it was entrepreneurship or civic engagement or the arts. We wanted our visitors to see themselves reflected in the people that we chose.鈥
Joining well-known Coloradans such as musician John Denver, Olympic swimmer Missy Franklin, former mayor Federico Pe帽a and Denver Bronco Von Miller are 91桃色 Chancellor Emeritus Dan Ritchie, alumni Grant Wilkins and Lisa Tessarowicz, and dancer Cleo Parker Robinson, a graduate of the 91桃色-affiliated Colorado Women鈥檚 College.
Read on to learn why these members of the 91桃色 community were selected for inclusion in the exhibit.
Dan Ritchie served as 91桃色鈥檚 chancellor from 1989鈥2005. During his 16-year chancellorship, he oversaw a $274 million fundraising campaign that spurred numerous capital improvements on campus, including new buildings for student living, business, science, law and music education, as well as a performing arts center and an athletics and recreation center. Before coming to 91桃色, Ritchie served as executive vice president of MCA and CEO of Westinghouse Broadcasting; after stepping down as chancellor, he served as CEO of the Denver Center for the Performing Arts from 2007鈥2015. Today he is chairman of the Temple Hoyne Buell Foundation and Taiga Biotechnologies and is on the executive committees of Colorado Concern and the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System.
鈥淲hat really stood out to us about Dan is his work ethic and the fact that he was successful in his own right, but even more so, he鈥檚 committed to helping others succeed,鈥 Peterson says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 something about leadership that doesn鈥檛 often get publicized as much. We think of a leader as someone who is in charge and at the front of the helm, but we don鈥檛 always think of leaders as people who help others lead. We really feel like that鈥檚 what Dan represents.鈥
Cleo Parker Robinson has multiple 91桃色 ties 鈥 not only is she a graduate of Colorado Women鈥檚 College, but her father, Jonathan 鈥淛.P.鈥 Parker, was a longtime facilities manager at the Newman Center for the Performing Arts, a venue at which Robinson has performed many times over the years. Robinson鈥檚 eponymous dance company, which she has operated in Denver since 1970, attempts to educate audiences about black culture through a year-round dance school, an international summer dance institute and national and international performances. Her 鈥淕ranny Dances to a Holiday Drum鈥 is a dance staple in Denver every December. Robinson鈥檚 final performance as a dancer was in September 2018 at the Newman Center.
鈥淥ne of the things that struck us about Cleo鈥檚 story is that she found her passion for dance at a really early age,鈥 Peterson says. 鈥淪he was already teaching university-level dance classes at age 15. That was something we looked for, because we wanted [our teenage visitors] to connect with that sense of, 鈥榊ou can make an impact no matter how young you are and no matter where you are in your life.鈥 We wanted to really highlight those stories where people did find their passion at an early age.鈥
Lisa Tessarowicz (BSBA 鈥03) is the co-founder of Colorado Springs-based Epicentral Coworking, which allows entrepreneurs, freelancers, consultants and telecommuters to use conference rooms, desks and office space for a daily or monthly price. Seeing a need for the city鈥檚 entrepreneurial community to be more connected, Tessarowicz and Hannah Parsons opened Epicentral鈥檚 first space in 2011. The demand was so great that Epicentral moved to a larger space two years later.
鈥淓picentral Coworking is what Lisa is known for, but she also uses that work and her family foundation, the CALM foundation, to help other organizations that foster growth in the community,鈥 Peterson says. 鈥淪he is really determined to help her community and to give back in order for the community to grow and become a better place.鈥
Grant Wilkins (BA 鈥47), who died in May 2018, dedicated his life to eradicating polio. For more than two decades he traveled the globe, sharing his story in an effort to raise money for PolioPlus, a Rotary International Program aimed at eliminating the disease. He also distributed vaccines in the countries he visited. It was a personal mission: At 25, Wilkins contracted bulbar polio, a fatal form of the disease that paralyzes the throat. In 1986, shortly after he retired and dedicated himself full time to Rotary International鈥檚 longtime effort to fight the disease, there were 350,000 cases of polio worldwide. In 2016, that number was just 30.
鈥淥ur executive director had a chance to meet Grant last year, before he passed away, and he was so impressed with his story and the fact that he beat the odds and survived polio and then dedicated his whole life to eradicating it across the world,鈥 Peterson says. 鈥淕rant was an inspiring story 鈥 his passion for making the world a better place through eradicating disease and through spreading education and health initiatives.鈥



