Sherry Barrat Named New Board Chair for the Kravis Center

0
441

RAYMOND F. KRAVIS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS ANNOUNCES SHERRY S. BARRAT CHAIR OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  

New Board Members, Evan C. Deoul and Ava L. Parker, also Elected at End of Season Meeting 

(West Palm Beach, Fla.) – At their last meeting of the season, the Board of Directors of the Raymond F. Kravis Center for the Performing Arts elected Sherry Barrat as Board Chair starting July 1. Ms. Barrat succeeds Jeffrey Stoops, who served as Board Chairman for the past three years. 

“The Kravis Center is excited to announce Sherry Barrat as its new Board Chair,” said Kravis Center CEO Diane Quinn. “Her dedication, commitment, and generosity to the Kravis Center spans nine years and her business acumen and financial expertise has been invaluable to our organization’s mission. Bringing a wealth of experience and passion for the arts, she will help guide and ensure the continued growth of this performing arts center as we enter our 30th Anniversary season.” 

Ms. Barrat has held several leadership roles on the Kravis Center Board including serving as its Vice Chair, Finance Committee Chair, and Governance/Nominating Committee Chair. She has also been a member of the Employee Relations Committee and continues to serve on the Executive Committee. Ms. Barrat is the Lead Director of NextEra Energy, Inc., the largest generator of wind and solar power in North America and the parent company of Florida Power & Light.  She also serves as a Director of the Prudential Insurance Funds, which oversees $170 billion of client investments, and of Arthur J. Gallagher & Co, the world’s fourth largest insurance broker.

Ms. Barrat retired as Vice Chair of The Northern Trust Company in 2012, a global banking, asset manager and asset custodian headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, where she was a member of the corporation’s Management Committee. She was President of Northern Trust’s global wealth management business from 2006 – 2011, Chairman and CEO of Northern Trust’s Western US Region from 1999 – 2005, and President of the Palm Beach Region from 1992 – 1998. 

Ms. Barrat is a board member of the Community Foundation of Palm Beach and Martin Counties.  She and her husband, Tom, reside on Singer Island.  

“I attended the Kravis Center opening in 1992,” said Ms. Barrat. “I have enjoyed being a patron, supporter and Board member and look forward to expanding my role with this premier organization. As we enter our milestone 30th season, I am honored to be elected the sixth Board Chair and look forward to helping shape the future of this world-class performing arts center.”

Evan Deoul and Ava Parker were elected new Board members and will serve for three-year terms. 

Mr. Deoul is Senior Managing Director at AB Bernstein, where he leads Bernstein’s Private Client practice in West Palm Beach with oversight for their Miami, Cleveland and Minneapolis Private Client offices. He currently serves as a member of the Kravis Center Investment Committee and Finance Committee, as well as the Kravis Center Corporate Partners Executive Committee. Mr. Deoul is also on the Investment Committee and Board of Trustees for the Jewish Community Foundation of the Jewish Federation of Palm Beach County. He is a founding board member of Advisors for Philanthropic Impact and a co-founder and Board President of Philanthropy Tank, a program that fuels and inspires the next generation of Changemakers. Mr. Deoul and his wife Joan, reside in Palm Beach Gardens. 

Ms. Parker has served as president of Palm Beach State College (PBSC) since 2015. She is the first female president in the history of the institution, founded in 1933. Under her leadership, the College opened a fifth campus, improved student success rates, increased enrollment growth, and developed a Cross-Cultural Equity Institute. PBSC also achieved a top GOLD ranking in the Florida College System in 2017.

Ms. Parker is chair-elect for the American Association of Community Colleges and serves on the Board of Directors for MasTec, an American multinational infrastructure engineering and construction company; Professional Bank, a Florida-based community bank; and Orchid Island Capital, a publicly traded specialty finance company. She is on the Advisory Board of the Community College Research Center; is a member of the Orange Bowl Committee, Achieve Palm Beach County Executive Champions, and the West Palm Beach Federal Courthouse Committee. In 2021 “Palm Beach Illustrated” recognized Ms. Parker as one of Palm Beach County’s “Most Influential Business Leaders,” along with Florida Trend’s 2020 Florida 500 issue. Palm Beach Illustrated named her a returning member of the Palm Beach Top 100, recognizing Palm Beach County’s most influential community and business leaders. Ms. Parker and her husband, Joe Gibbons, and their two children, Bailey and Parker, reside in Wellington.

Other officers elected to serve one-year terms for 2022-2023 are Vice Chair Paul Leone, Vice Chair Monika Preston, Treasurer David Lambert and Secretary Bradley Hurston. Other Kravis Center Board members include past Chairs Jeffrey Stoops, Michael Bracci, Jane Mitchell, William Meyer and Alexander Dreyfoos, as well as Penny Bank, Sherry Endelson, Lourdes Fanjul, Stuart Frankel, Robert Fromer, Irene Karp, Norma Klorfine, David Mack, Bill Peterson and Richard Sloane. Ex Officio members of the Board are Palm Beach County Commissioner Mack Bernard, West Palm Beach Mayor Keith James and Kravis Center Chief Executive Officer Diane Quinn.

Reaching the by-law mandated term limit, James Harpel was elected to the position of Life Trustee following his 12 years of service to the Board, of which he served four years as Board Secretary. Mr. Harpel chaired the Investment Committee and Operations Committee and served on the Executive Committee.  

The Kravis Center is a not-for-profit performing arts center located at 701 Okeechobee Blvd. in West Palm Beach, FL. The Center’s mission is to enhance the quality of life in Palm Beach County by presenting a diverse schedule of national and international artists and companies of the highest quality; by offering comprehensive arts education programs – serving nearly 3 million students since its inception; by providing a Palm Beach County home for local and regional arts organizations to showcase their work; and by being an economic catalyst and providing community leadership in West Palm Beach, supporting efforts to increase travel and tourism to Palm Beach County. For more information about the Raymond F. Kravis Center for the Performing Arts please visit kravis.org