The Foundation for Art and Preservation in Embassies is a non-profit 5013, non-partisan organization dedicated to enhancing the United States' image abroad through American art. Founded as a public-private partnership in 1986, FAPE works with the U.S. Department of State to contribute fine art to U.S. embassiesaround the world. FAPE's donations include works by more than 145 American artists placed in over 70 countries. Headquartered in Washington D.C., FAPE has raised over $42 million in art and monetary contributions.
FAPE History
FAPE was established in 1986. The organization was founded by Leonore Annenberg, Wendy W. Luers, Lee Kimche McGrath and Carol Price. As spouses of former U.S. ambassadors and with Mrs. McGrath as the Director of ART in Embassies at the State Department, FAPE's founders recognized a need to build upon the State Department's ART in Embassies Program by providing permanent works of art that would endure the tests of time in embassies across the world. FAPE's Chairman is currently Mrs. Jo Carole Lauder. FAPE's President is Ann L. Gund and FAPE's Vice President is Eden Rafshoon. The Director of FAPE is Jennifer Duncan. For a full list of FAPE's board members, please see: https://web.archive.org/web/20090417003108/http://fapeglobal.org/board.html
FAPE Projects
FAPE's restoration projects include the historic eighteenth-century Hôtel de Talleyrand, in Paris, once headquarters for the Marshall Plan and now an American embassy annex building; Winfield House, the Embassy Residence in London, which is supported by an endowment established by Leonore and Walter H. Annenberg through the Annenberg Foundation; restoring the treasures of the Petschek Palace, the U.S. Embassy Residence in Prague; preserving ancient statuary in the gardens at the U.S. Embassy in Rome; and the complete refurbishment of public rooms at the U.S. Embassy Residences in Warsaw and Beijing. Funding has also been provided by FAPE for restoration projects at the U.S. Embassy Residences in Brussels, Budapest, Buenos Aires, Madrid, Paris, and Vienna. To celebrate the millennium, in 2001 FAPE assembled an unprecedented GIFT TO THE NATION¬, consisting of 245 American artworks representing more than 145 artists that have been placed in permanent locations in embassies around the world. FAPE understands the importance of our country's presence overseas and strives to increase art’s dynamic role in promoting America’s culturee abroad. By partnering with American artists, FAPE gifts encourage cross-cultural understanding within the diplomatic community and the international public. The organization fulfills this mission in two ways:
In April 2008, FAPE established The Leonore and Walter Annenberg Award for Diplomacy through the Arts to honor distinguished American individuals who have demonstrated outstanding achievements in furthering global understanding of the United States. Honorees must demonstrate long-term excellence and innovation in the exchange of creativity and ideas that represent the rich and diverse culture of the United States. U.S. Supreme CourtJustice Stephen Breyer was the first recipient of this award.