Former President of Three Maricopa Community Colleges Passes Away

Tuesday, January 14, 2025
Myrna Harrison, President of GateWay Community College, 1985 to 1988.

Myrna Harrison, President of GateWay Community College, 1985 to 1988.

Myrna Harrison, former president of GateWay, Rio Salado and Phoenix College, passes away at the age of 93. 

Myrna Harrison was born in Hollywood, CA in 1932. Her father was an animator and director at Screen Gems, the animated division of Columbia pictures, her mother a hat designer. Her family moved to New York City in 1943, where she attended Music and Art High School. After briefly attending the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, she returned to New York City to study art, first with Morris Davidson, then Jack Tworkov, finally at the Hans Hofmann School of Fine Art, in New York, and Provincetown, MA. 

She showed her works in numerous shows in the 1950s, and supported herself with a variety of jobs: night shift at Western Union; sales clerk at a department store, a tourist shop and a custom sandal shop; temporary office help. She married Earl Pierce, a painter in 1954. She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and a Master’s Degree in English from New York University. 

In 1960, Myrna and Earl moved to California, where she was a teaching assistant at UC, Berkeley. She remained in California for the next fifteen years, teaching in North Richmond and at Laney College in Oakland. She served as Assistant Dean of Instruction at Contra Costa College and Dean of Instruction at San Jose City College. While in California she showed at various private and public galleries. 

In 1980, Myrna moved to Phoenix, Arizona to serve as President of Rio Salado College from 1980 to 1985. She then served as President of GateWay Community College from 1985 to 1988, and President of Phoenix College from 1988 to 1993. 

She retired in Wickenburg, Arizona to a studio overlooking a saguaro-filled canyon. Her expressionist, color-saturated paintings of the Sonoran Desert, canyons and mountains surrounding her studio and home evoke the vibrant, fierce landscape of the southwest.

An active member of her community, she served on the Board and as Acting Director of the Desert Caballeros Western Museum in Wickenburg as well as a Board Member and President of the Phoenix Art Museum’s Asian Art Council.

Harrison donated a number of her paintings to Phoenix College, which are now installed in the Administration Building. At PC’s recent donor appreciation event, Harrison was recognized and visited with Dr. Kimberly Britt to see the installed paintings. 

Harrison recently had solo exhibitions at the Sedona Art Center and Sedona Heritage Museum (2024), James Ratliff Gallery, Sedona, AZ (2001, 2002); Cortland Jessup Gallery, Provincetown, MA (1994, 1995); Coconino Center for the Arts, Flagstaff, AZ. (1995) She has also shown in group shows throughout the US, Europe and Japan. She frequently traveled in Asia -- Japan, Thailand, Singapore, Cambodia and Vietnam. In 2000 she spent three months in Beijing studying Chinese and touring the Silk Road. Her work is currently carried by the Sedona Art Center. Her work has been collected by various art museums in the United Sates including the Phoenix Art Museum, the Desert Caballeros Western Museum in Wickenburg, the Provincetown and Cape Cod museums in Massachusetts. 

Myrna Harrison was a remarkable advocate for education. In honor of her legacy across the Maricopa Community Colleges, an endowment in her name has been established at the Maricopa Community Colleges Foundation, supporting students across MCCCD. 

Donations can be made online at https://bit.ly/40YWYzm. Designate your gift to the Myrna Harrison Memorial Fund.

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