Women of Town Hall: ‘Portrait of Progress’ will honor the history – The Ridgefield Press

Posted: October 24, 2019 at 11:48 am

Artist Suzanne Benton with her portrait of Alice Paul.

Artist Suzanne Benton with her portrait of Alice Paul.

Photo: Tina Sarno / Contributed Photo

Artist Suzanne Benton with her portrait of Alice Paul.

Artist Suzanne Benton with her portrait of Alice Paul.

Women of Town Hall: Portrait of Progress will honor the history

From the voting booth to Town Hall, the Womens Suffrage Centennial will be honored in Ridgefield next year.

The Board of Selectman approved the Women of Town Hall portrait project presented by local artist Suzanne Benton at its Oct. 2 meeting.

We have one aim and that aim is to join the very timely 2020 Womens Suffrage Centennial celebration here in town and honor the unsung women who work here in town hall, Benton told the board. All their work is crucial to the underpinnings of society and this 2020 project offers them the recognition they deserve.

The 24 portraits that will be displayed at Keeler Tavern at a gala next year before being moved back to town hall where they will be hung, Benton explained.

They will form a grid that depicts universality of womens life in America, she said.

The first portrait of suffragette Alice Paul is done, Benton said, and the rest of the portraits will depict current members in Ridgefields town hall.

Ive done Alice Paul, she said. The first one is done. Ive gathered 23 other artists to do the other portraits. The artists range from a Ridgefield High senior to myself. ... Im definitely the eldest.

Benton said the goal was to set up a studio in town hall and have a drawing table and a stool. Over the next several months, the workers will meet with the artists to have their portrait drawn.

The original title of the project was Portrait of Progress: From the Voting Booth to Town Hall. The selectmen settled for a shorter moniker the Women of Town Hall portrait project

Were a new organization, we started this back in April, Benton said. ... Our request is simple: We want to become members of the Friends of Ridgefield. ... We have 100 percent support from the women in town hall.

Experience and costs

Benton has already created a similar project down in St. Petersburg, Fla., where she spends her winters.

We did 36 women in Florida, she said, we got a grant from the state which helped immensely with the costs.

She said she wasnt able to secure such a grant from the state of Connecticut.

I guess its because were not diverse enough, Benton said.

She sought nonprofit status on the Friends of Ridgefield umbrella so she could apply for local grants from the Lewis Fund, the Ridgefield Thrift Shop and the Ridgefield Rotary Club.

We cant apply for these if were not recognized as a nonprofit, she said. Grants and fundraising will be much easier if we say its deductible. ... Our status as a nonprofit can end when we mount it in town hall in October 2020.

As for costs, Benton said the panel boards and the mounting would be the biggest expenses. She also planned to give the artists a little something as well as provide coffee and some light snacks for them and their subjects during the portrait process.

Its about community. Its about getting to know these people, she said. These women are delighted by the attention. Theyre thrilled.

The time is now

Benton urged the projects timeliness.

This is the 100th anniversary, its the right, she said. Time will pass so now is the time to recognize these individuals and what they represent. Ridgefield has a real history of feminist activity and we should honor it and bring awareness to it.

If enough money is raised, then Portrait of Progress could become more than just drawings hung up in Ridgefields town hall, according to Benton.

Wed like to do a catalog or something thats long-lasting that can go around. ... We have a high school student whos interested in doing video for us and maybe it will become a template for a similar project elsewhere in the state, she said. ... But all were asking for tonight is to to become Friends of Ridgefield so we can fundraise here in town and get this project off the ground here. ... We have a better chance of covering costs if were under your umbrella.

Longevity

While the selectmen were eager to approve the project and the nonprofit status, the talks did hit a short snag over where and for how long the 12-by-10 inch portraits would be hung.

Where are these going to be hung? Is it permanent? asked Pond Road resident Ed Tyrrell resident from the crowd.

Benton said that her plan was to have them hung in town hall near the tax collectors office.

Up in Keeler Tavern first for the exhibit and then install them in town hall, she said. The idea is it for it to be permanent.

Permanent? balked First Selectman Rudy Marconi. ... I dont think weve ever hung anything forever. Theres nothing permanent in this building other than the tribute to World War I and World War II veterans.

Thats prime real estate, Selectman Bob Hebert added. Im not so sure.

Benton replied that the idea was to have that prime real estate to showcase the women and the artists work.

Its a beautiful wall, she said.

Selectwoman Barbara Manners offered the project one year on the wall from 2020 to 2021.

Well keep it there for a year and then find another location, Marconi agreed. At the library or the town hall annex or maybe even up at the high school.

It has to be an accessible place, Benton countered. The one down in Florida is at a college somewhere that has a lot of foot traffic like that.

The selectmen ultimately agreed to OK the artwork and the temporary mounting in town hall, and Marconi told Benton they would get the approval from town counsel to have the Women of Town Hall project fall under the Friends of Ridgefield umbrella.

This holds as much water as other things weve covered in the past, said Selectman Steve Zemo, who seconded Heberts motion to approve.

Its very worthwhile, Selectwoman Maureen Kozlark agreed. And it is a short-term program. Its not an open-ended timeline. Were talking about fundraising and artwork that will be done within the year. All the work will be over by next October.

For updated activities and more information about this project search Ridgefield Suffrage Centennial on Facebook or email

Alice Hayes at alice

hayes.43@gmail.com.

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Women of Town Hall: 'Portrait of Progress' will honor the history - The Ridgefield Press

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