Christmas came early for the Woodruff Arts Center, which announced Friday morning that it has received a $38 million grant from the Woodruff Foundation.
The largest gift in the Midtown art center’s 46-year history includes $25 million in endowment matching funds — including support for musician positions with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra — and $13 million for capital improvements. Those capital funds will support a complete renovation of Alliance Theatre performance, education and public spaces.
The renovation will be so major for the Alliance spaces in the Memorial Arts Building, which have not significantly changed since it opened in 1968, that the theater will have to secure a temporary home for one full season.
The news is a jolt of positive news for the Woodruff after a nine-week lockout of ASO musicians this fall, the second in two years, that drew harsh criticism of arts center leadership by the players and their supporters. Management said it had no choice but to seek musician concessions after the ASO ended 12 consecutive years with debt, including $2 million in fiscal 2014.
The four-year collective bargaining agreement finally reached Nov. 8 calls for the ASO, which was reduced to 77 full-time musicians this season from 88 in the 2012 agreement, to grow to 84 players by the end of year three and 88 by the end of year four.
The Woodruff Foundation matching funds, which the ASO will share equally with the fellow arts center divisions the Alliance and High Museum of Art, obviously positions the the orchestra to reach that contracted requirement if the funds can be matched.
A Woodruff spokesman said Friday that other entities have expressed strong interest in endowing the 11 positions.
Other endowment funding will support educational and artistic programming at the High, Alliance and arts center, according to the announcement.
The physical improvements planned for the Alliance are phase one of a yet-to-be-announced long-term plan to improve the Memorial Arts Buildings public and performance spaces, including Symphony Hall.
The Woodruff Foundation’s “generosity has been instrumental in our success for nearly 50 years, and this added support will help all of our arts partners to adapt and thrive for decades to come for the benefit of the community,” arts center president and CEO Virginia Hepner said.