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AROUND THE
NATION
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In Focus
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Michael Gillette works to make Humanities Texas as noticeable as the handsome mansion it is restoring and using as a new headquarters.
By REBECCA ONION
A visitor to Humanities Texas’s new headquarters, in downtown Austin,
is liable to get the grand tour from the council’s director, Michael
Gillette. The hundred-year-old Byrne-Reed House is encased in a sheath of
modernizing office décor and was given a stucco façade in the 1970s. But
framed photographs on its walls, of young people in 1920s dress grouped on
its old Prairie-style porch and of a bride standing on the pre-renovation
stairs, show that the place was once a gracious old residence, done in a
style that Humanities Texas likes to call “Texas eclecticism”—a mixture of
Art Nouveau, Romanesque, and Mission styles, built with materials drawn
from Texan sources such as native pine and limestone.
Wielding a flashlight, Gillette makes sure that I can see where the
skeleton of the building retains its beautiful brick arches. “Look up there,
behind the acoustic tiles,” he says. And sure enough, when I peer beyond the
ugly flecked grey ceiling, I can get a glimpse of the building’s past—and of
what Gillette plans for its future.
Gillette, who started at Humanities Texas in 2003, sees his mission at the
organization as a large-scale version of this tour initiating me to the
potential of the Byrne-Reed House—an extended effort to increase public
appreciation of the humanities in Texas. He’s the first to admit that the
humanities council in Texas has had a visibility problem. People used to call
on the organization, he laughs, “to get kittens out of trees.” But under his
leadership, the organization has changed its name, updated its logo, and
undertaken a major campaign to move into Byrne-Reed House. The old headquarters
was in an undesirable location far away from downtown, “with about the
visibility of a post office box,” Gillette says. The next step is raising the
money to complete the renovation, which will reveal the council’s new home in
its historic glory.
Humanities Texas wants to make itself more accessible to the smaller
organizations—local museums, libraries, historic centers, and any others who
do the humanities—around this giant state. “This job really makes you realize
how big this state is,” he says.
Gillette speaks as an authority on things Lone Star. A lifelong Texan, he was
born on the Gulf Coast, holds a PhD from the University of Texas at Austin, and
spent fifteen years working at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library before
moving on to a stint as director of the Center for Legislative Archives at the
National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), his last job before returning
to Texas to take up the reins at Humanities Texas.
Gillette sees part of the council’s role as “disseminating the talent and
resources of museums, libraries, and universities throughout the state”—a goal that
requires careful attention to geographical distribution. He hands me a map of the
state, pinpointing the places where the council has sponsored traveling exhibits,
given grants, held grant workshops, and drawn attendees for its teachers institutes.
Humanities Texas does seem to be getting the word out: “Sixty-eight of our grantees
last year were first-time applicants,” Gillette says. The dots tend to cluster in the
Dallas/Fort Worth, Austin, Houston, and San Antonio areas, but there are also
impressively far-flung dots in the empty spaces in between.
I also spot some triangles denoting organizations that Humanities Texas,
dispersing NEH funds, helped out in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Rita in
2005—libraries requiring books, or organizations sustaining infrastructural damage.
“We were happy to be able to get them money with a minimum of red tape,” Gillette
says.
Through its summer teachers institutes, Humanities Texas has been able to
collaborate with major cultural institutions and address the culturally diverse
communities of the state. Institutes have addressed immigration, the history of
the American West, and borderlands themes, while helping to cultivate an impressive
list of Texas humanities powerhouses as partners: the Bob Bullock Texas State
History Museum, the University of Houston, the University of Texas at El Paso, Texas
Christian University, Texas Tech University, Fort Worth’s Amon Carter Museum, the
University of Texas at Austin, the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum, UT’s
Center for American History, and NARA. “Each time we hold an institute, the
application pool is larger,” says Gillette with satisfaction.
Gillette’s goals for Humanities Texas in the coming years include finishing the
renovation of the Byrne-Reed House, which will eventually host lectures and exhibits
on its first floor, as well as continuing the council’s commitments to existing
programs: traveling exhibits, teachers institutes, small-scale grants to community
organizations, outstanding teaching awards, and public lectures. Through all of
these efforts, Gillette hopes to bring this big state in under the Humanities Texas
roof—both figuratively and literally.
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| Rebecca Onion is a freelance writer in Austin, Texas.
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Humanities, November/December 2007, Volume 28/Number 6
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