Racing Industry Participants Shine in Common Wealth of Kentucky Project

What do an award-winning chef, a rising young country music star and a reigning champion trainer have in common?

All three are featured in the Common Wealth of Kentucky Project, an exhibit going on now through Oct. 1 at LexArts Gallery in Lexington, Kentucky. Along with chef Ouita Michel and singer Walker Montgomery, trainer Brad Cox is one of 70 Kentuckians who shared their life story for the collection, which is the culmination of a year-long project for impressionist painter Kelly Brewer and partner Beth Pride, a writer and digital storyteller.

Visitors can explore the gallery and connect with each Kentuckian on a multi-sensory level as they observe the portrait of the participants, read a short summary of their lives, and even scan a QR code with a smart-phone camera to listen to the participant's voice as they share portions of their own story.

The project was inspired by Brewer's mother, Jo B. Robertson, who passed away in 2020. Brewer decided that she wanted to paint portraits to honor her mother and raise money for the Jo B. Robertson Charitable Foundation, which was established to continue Robertson's legacy of helping to educate, house, clothe and feed the less fortunate. Brewer turned to Pride, the wife of Godolphin's Dan Pride, for assistance.

“We decided that we would call it the Common Wealth of Kentucky and that it would reveal the richness that the people who comprise this state are made of and the commonalities that we all have,” said Pride. “We hoped to do our best to break down these artificial barriers that really, at the end of the day, are not real.”

 

Together Pride and Brewer, along with advocate Jill Johnson, spent the next year traveling throughout the Commonwealth as Brewer painted Kentuckians from all walks of life while Pride collected their stories.

They met with Jeff Broadwater, a United States Army major general who served in Kuwait during Desert Storm and was deployed to Iraq twice, and Lou Anna Red Corn, the first Native American Commonwealth Attorney in Kentucky. They talked to Pedo Mann, a coal foreman in Eastern Kentucky, and Gentille Ntakarutimana, who was a Burundian refugee as a child and is now a legal assistant for Morgan and Morgan.

Louisville native Brad Cox is not the only racing industry member to appear in the collection. The sport is a common theme throughout the exhibit. Keeneland is represented by President and CEO Shannon Arvin along with well-known ringman Cordell Anderson. Other members of the sport who are featured include Lane End Farm's Bill Farish, Airdrie Stud's Bret Jones, Phipps Family Stable racing manager Daisy Phipps Pulito and Hall of Fame jockey Steve Cauthen.

“What we really tried to do is build a unique impression of who these people are and find something that maybe everyone doesn't know about them,” explained Pride. “Daisy was in the sports television industry for years and Bill was a personal aide to President George H.W. Bush. Everyone has something unique that really differentiates them, but we also found that we have so many things in common as human beings and we're all connected through our humanity no matter our background or where we're going.”

Participants also included political figures like Lexington mayor Linda Gorton as well as Kelly Craft, the former United Nations Ambassador who recently launched her campaign for Kentucky governor. Lexington locals will recognize names like Kentucky Sports Radio's Matt Jones and Bluegrass Hospitality Group founders Brian McCarty and Bruce Drake.

Each of the portraits on display are available for purchase through a super silent auction format where the bid amount is hidden from the public and managed confidentially. The auction will continue through Friday, Oct. 1.

“We're very grateful for the response,” Pride said. “We had about 400 people there on opening night and LexArts has told us that the traffic for the exhibit has been triple what they are accustomed to.”

The exhibit has also been encapsulated in the form of a book, which was written and sound-produced by Pride and features the original artwork by Brewer (the book is available in the gallery, at the Keeneland Mercantile in Lexington or can be purchased here).

As Pride reflected on the project, she said that in many ways, Kentucky horse racing represents a microcosm of the Commonwealth as a whole.

“The horse business is one of those industries where there is a lot of competition within the industry, but it's also an industry that has external criticism,” Pride said. “It's the same with bourbon, parimutual betting and coal mining. What happens is that the people in the industry are friendly competitors because they know they need to be bonded in a singular purpose of promoting and advocating for the horse and for the industry. That spirit where everyone is in it together is reflected all throughout Kentucky.”

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New Connections Corner To Debut At 2022 Thoroughbred Makeover

With a little less than a month to go before the 2022 Thoroughbred Makeover kicks off Oct. 12 at the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, connections of retired racehorse entries planning to attend may be wondering how to find more information on their particular horses. With that in mind, Erin O'Keefe, Development Director for the Retired Racehorse Project, spoke about a new feature at this year's event: Connections Corner.

“Former connections of competing horses will be able to come to the booth, located in the TCA Covered Arena, to find out ride times, ring locations, and stabling information, as well as be directed to those locations if needed,” said O'Keefe. “We want to encourage anyone who was involved with the Makeover horses (breeders, consignors, trainers, former owners, etc) to come out and see these horses thriving in their second careers, and possibly even meet their new connections.”

“Whether members of the Thoroughbred industry are highly involved in aftercare and retraining, or want to learn more about how horses transition out of racing, there is something to be gained from seeing the incredible work so many trainers put in over the last 10 months to retrain these remarkable athletes,” O'Keefe continued. “Aftercare is a multifaceted issue, and there are many approaches needed to fully address ensuring these athletes can thrive in all phases of their lives. The Makeover showcases one piece of the aftercare puzzle, and is a great opportunity to learn more about Thoroughbreds after racing and cheer on former connections once again.”

“Everyone smiles in the winner's circle, but I would encourage former connections (and any industry participant) to come out to the Makeover and see another side of the successful Thoroughbred. It might be different, but I bet they'll still end up smiling.”

For more information about the 2022 Thoroughbred Makeover, please visit: https://www.therrp.org/.

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FanDuel Racing to Broadcast Keeneland September Coverage

FanDuel Racing will showcase the breeding and sales sectors of the horse racing industry with a special broadcast of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale. The all-day coverage of Book One–presented by Runhappy—will air Monday, Sept. 12 and Tuesday, Sept. 13 from 1:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. ET each day. As the sale continues, there will be daily sales reports on FanDuel Racing. The coverage begins with a special “Rising Stock” feature that is scheduled to air Saturday, Sept. 10 at 9:00 a.m. ET/6:00 a.m. PT. It will feature expert insights from Scott Hazelton and Gabby Gaudet, who will be reporting live from Keeneland, alongside Christina Blacker who will be anchoring the coverage from the FanDuel studio in Los Angeles.

“Our special coverage of the Keeneland September sale is always one of the highlights of the calendar,” said Kevin Grigsby, the Senior Vice President of Programming and FanDuel TV executive producer. “We are excited to be back in Lexington. Our network has built a valued partnership with Keeneland and the central Kentucky breeding community over the years and we look forward to promoting this cornerstone of the sport.”

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Legal Appeal Filed Against Lexington’s Soccer Complex

In the ongoing concern over approval for a soccer complex in an agricultural-rural zone of Lexington's Fayette County, the Fayette Alliance, Greg Goodman, Don Robinson, and Lisa Lourie have appealed the Board of Adjustment's approval of a conditional use proposal by Anderson Communities in conjunction with and on behalf of Lexington Sporting Club to develop commercial soccer facilities on land that was once Ashwood Training Center on Russell Cave Road.

Fayette Alliance, a non-profit of citizens dedicated to achieving equitable, sustainable growth in Lexington-Fayette County through land-use advocacy, education, and research, has also filed an Open Records Request to uncover additional information regarding the process by which recommendations for approval were made and ultimately adopted.

“This proposal threatens Lexington's signature agricultural and equine industries by reversing course on the historic land-use precedent that protects the land they depend on from inappropriate urban development–something our community has honored for decades,” said Fayette Alliance Executive Director Brittany Roethemeier. “Not only did the Board of Adjustment dismiss the earnest testimony of dozens of concerned citizens and hundreds of letters written in opposition, but they also ignored all of the most protective of the Planning Staff's 19 recommended conditions of approval that were designed to mitigate the adverse consequences generated by the soccer complex. Fayette Alliance questions the legal basis for the approval of this proposal, and we look forward to making our case against it in court on behalf of the entire Lexington-Fayette community.”

Anderson Communities did not present any studies or traffic management plans at the hearing. According to the Fayette Alliance, Anderson Communities also did not engage with the Division of Traffic Engineering beforehand. In addition, according to the Fayette Alliance, the Board of Adjustment also disregarded a local law requiring them to review “potential impacts to any identified environmentally sensitive area,” such as the millions of gallons of polluted stormwater that the development would potentially generate and feed into nearby Cane Run Creek. According to the Fayette Alliance, the conditional use request was approved without requiring the applicant to address the concerns raised during an environmental expert's testimony.

“The purpose of the [agricultural-rural] zone is to preserve the rural character and nationally significant soils that are synonymous with the Lexington we know and love. We are therefore disturbed by the approval of this disruptive proposal, especially given the substantial amount of unrebutted testimony about safety concerns over existing roadway capacity and adverse environmental impacts,” Bruce Simpson of Rose Grasch Camenisch Mains PLLC said. “The entire process has lacked transparency and buy-in from the community.”

On Thursday, the Planning Commission will consider two zoning ordinance text amendments (ZOTAs) that would permit lights, concessions, and retail sales at the site as well as a 10,000-person stadium, thousands of surface parking spaces, and commercial use in the nearby Economic Development zone. Approval of these ZOTAs would potentially bring unintended consequences to the Bluegrass farmland that has supported the community's sustainable and responsible growth since it came under protection in 1958.

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