About Joye

Joye in Aiken is a nonprofit organization dedicated to making the very best in the performing arts available to our citizens, and especially our students. In 2016, Joye was awarded the Elizabeth O’Neill Verner Award (South Carolina’s highest honor in the arts) for its Educational Outreach Program. 

Founded in 2008, Joye in Aiken is the heir to, and the very embodiment of, Aiken’s longstanding tradition of nurturing excellence in the arts. The organization takes its name from Joye Cottage, a great house that once stood at the center of a social circle that included America’s most prominent families. More than a century ago, Joye Cottage hosted performances by some of the world’s greatest artists, attended by some of the nation’s most well-known arts patrons.

Today, Joye in Aiken carries that legacy forward, but with a difference. Where in earlier times only a few in our area were able to enjoy those truly world-class experiences, now the organization brings that same magic to a much wider and more diverse audience. In the last 17 years, we have brought over 700 musicians, actors, and dancers at the top of their disciplines (primarily from The Juilliard School) to participate in the weeklong Performing Arts Festival held each March, where a wide variety of events are made available to the public at low or no cost. Even more importantly, through our Outreach Program, those artists have taught, mentored, and inspired over 50,000 area schoolchildren.

The name “Joye in Aiken” is meant to honor the central role that Joye Cottage once played in our history while suggesting the very nature of the program itself, which has brought boundless joy to so many of our citizens. Through our Festival and Outreach Program, we share experiences with families and students, young and old, from all backgrounds and walks of life, representing the highest and most joyful reaches of artistic endeavor.

The legacy continues.

Gregory White Smith

Joye in Aiken was founded in 2008 by Dr. Sandra Field, who died in 2025, and Gregory White Smith, who suffered from brain cancer for almost 40 years (through 13 brain surgeries), died of the disease in 2014.

Smith was the co-author of 18 books, including Jackson Pollock: An American Saga, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1991, and Van Gogh: The Life, which Michiko Kakutani called “magisterial” in The New York Times and Leo Jansen of the Van Gogh Museum called “the definitive biography for decades to come.”

Smith was a singer and also a choral conductor who helped prepare choruses for such conductors as Seiji Ozawa, Mstislav Rostropovich, and Leonard Bernstein.

In 1989, Smith purchased Joye Cottage and finished restoring it just prior to his death twenty-five years later.

Board of Directors

Steve Naifeh, Chairman Emeritus

Dr. Sandra Field, Chairman Emeritus (posthumous)

Eric Boetsch, President

Cathy Merrifield, Vice President

Carter Hopkins, Treasurer

Ellie Joos, Secretary

Mary Fran Crook, Executive Director

Jack Benjamin

Russell Joel Brown

James Capalino

Bill Cunningham

Cliff Dyches

Kimberly Fontanez

Greg Harlow

Jane Hottensen

Magdalena Kuhn

Lauren Lawson

Martha Lockhart

Jennifer Lyon

Lauren Ploch

Arthur “Buzz” Rich

Cissie Sullivan

Eric Gordon (ex officio, City of Aiken)

Andrew Siders (ex officio, Aiken County Council)