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Art of the Olympians
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The Craftsmen and Artisans at John Grey Painting and SanibelFaux.com are proud to have participated in the painting and decorating of both, the exterior as well as the interior gallery space, public areas, and office suite of the new home to the Art of the Olympians Al Oerter Center of Excellence. John Grey Painting worked closely with Stephen Gaczkowski of The Sherwin-Williams Company to have the materials donated for exterior painting.

In addition to the Art of the Olympians Al Oerter Center of Excellence project, John Grey Painting and SanibelFaux.com are excited to be and have been involved on other projects in the river district of historic down town Fort Myers. Including the exterior painting of two buildings (Salon Nicholas and Fort Myers Court Reporting) at 1st Street and Hendry, the exterior painting of the Historic District Holiday Inn and currently interior renovations of the 4th floor of the Historic District Holiday Inn.

Downtown Fort Myers museum shows off Olympian art


By CHARLES RUNNELLS, crunnells@news-press.com, January 29, 2010

In ancient times, The Olympics championed that lofty, well-rounded ideal. Competitors strived for excellence in sports, but also in music, poetry and art. The tradition continued when the modern Olympics started in 1896.

Fast forward to 2010 and the upcoming winter Olympics, and you won't find any gold medals handed out for painting or calligraphy.

Still, that doesn't mean Olympians don't strive for excellence outside of the sports arena.

The new Art of the Olympians museum wants to show visitors that the mind-body-spirit ideal is alive and well and on display here in Fort Myers.

"The Greeks had it right," says museum co-founder Cathy Oerter. "They wanted to create the perfect citizen."

The downtown Fort Myers museum opens today in the former City Pier Building with a reception from 5 to 7 p.m. The event features cocktails, dancing performances and special guests such as Olympic javelin thrower Roald Bradstock.

The museum and gallery features paintings, sculpture, photos and other art by Olympians from the United States, Italy, Australia, Puerto Rico and other countries.

Art of the Olympians was the dream of Oerter's late husband, Olympics discus champion Al Oerter, who died in 2007 after working on the project for about two years.

In the early days, Oerter's famous name opened many doors for the museum project - including the rare right to use the Olympics logo and sell Olympics merchandise. He also helped pull in paintings, sculpture and other artwork by major athletes such as sprinter Florence Griffith-Joyner and ice skater Peggy Fleming.

"It will be a symbol of what they can offer," Black says. "Those rings represent a global community."

Organizers and the United States Olympic Committee claim the museum could generate $25 million for the Southwest Florida economy every year. That would come largely through visiting Olympics fans, Olympians and Olympic governing bodies from more than 200 countries.

Lydia Black, director of the Alliance for the Arts, certainly thinks the museum could be a big national and international draw - especially when it gets permission to fly the Olympic flag over the Caloosahatchee River.

Organizers originally planned a $1.8 million museum, but they've since scaled that back (the museum may eventually move elsewhere in downtown Fort Myers). They spent about $500,000 renovating the new building, according to local decathlon and bobsled champion Liston Bochette III.

The museum is housed in the white-and-beige City Pier Building across from Harborside Event Center. Painted ribbons ring the building in Olympics colors.

Organizers are calling this a "soft opening" - although all the art and most other features are already up and running. A grand opening will follow sometime this spring.

Between now and then, organizers plan to work out details of upcoming art shows, school programs, educational programs and guest speakers (Olympic athletes will speak there from time to time).

Still to come, for example, is a motion-activated audio system that lets people hear prerecorded narration when they step in front of artwork.

That doesn't mean there isn't already plenty to impress at the museum - particularly in the upstairs art gallery loaded with Olympian art. The room's modern design features ambient and track lighting, clean lines and a stunning view of the Caloosahatchee River.

Downstairs, you'll find a coffee shop, a small Olympics memorabilia museum, a multipurpose room and a gift shop.

Cathy Oerter says she and other organizers wanted the museum to be impressive.

"That was Al's hope," Oerter says. "That this would be as Olympic an experience as possible."

Her husband isn't around to see his idea come to fruition, but Cathy Oerter says he'd be pleased.

The project has taken four years to complete, she says, and sometimes it's hard to believe it's finally here.

"It's a happy time," Oerter says. "Every time I walk in the door, I smile."  
Art of the Olympians


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