Skip to content

Cornish College President Raymond Tymas-Jones Retires

Tymas-Jones led Cornish for six years, shepherding the college through the pandemic

By Nat Rubio-Licht July 29, 2024

Cornish-College-Building_1600x900
Photo courtesy of Cornish College of the Arts

Dr. Raymond Tymas-Jones, president of Cornish College of the Arts, has retired from his position after six years. His last day with the institution was July 25.

Raymond Tymas-Jones Ph. D. served as the president for Cornish College of the Arts since July 2018.
Photo courtesy of Cornish College of the Arts

Former Cornish College Board Chairman Emily Parkhurst has stepped in as interim president as the board conducts a national search for a permanent replacement. Parkhurst served on the board for five years, two of which she acted as chairperson.

Tymas-Jones became the 10th president of Cornish College in 2018 after serving as the dean of the College of Fine Arts at the University of Utah for 12 years. During his tenure at Cornish, he led the college through the Covid-19 pandemic, rebuilt community programs, and initiated a campus unification plan, Cornish Board Chairperson Marianne Francis said.

“We wish him all the best in his retirement and reflect fondly on his time and service at Cornish,” Francis said.

Parkhurst is the founder and CEO of Formidable, a media company geared toward high-level women executives. Parkhurst spent her early career as an adjunct professor at several colleges in Maine, where she also covered education at a newspaper in Falmouth. Parkhurst moved to Seattle in 2012, and eventually served as a reporter, editor, and then publisher at the Puget Sound Business Journal. She is also a former professional musician.

Emily Parkhurst stepped in as interim president for Cornish College of the Arts.
Photo courtesy of Cornish College of the Arts

“The Seattle arts community holds a special place in my heart,” Parkhurst said. “As an artist and musician, as well as a business leader, I see the incredible value Cornish brings to its students and the arts community. I am honored to assist in this transition for this important institution.” Cornish College boasts a student population of more than 500, offering Bachelor of Fine Arts degrees in the performing and visual arts, a Bachelor of Music degree, and year-round public programs and extension courses.

Ahead of the fall semester, campus consolidation work has progressed, with the college transforming the Main Campus Center as well as other important classroom spaces. The college has added a wet studio and additional paint studio to support growing student interest, soundproof rooms for music practice, and new computer labs.

The fall semester marks the college’s 110th anniversary.

Note: Emily Parkhurst is married to Seattle magazine Executive Editor Rob Smith.

Follow Us

Five Ways to Make the Most of a Seattle Summer

Five Ways to Make the Most of a Seattle Summer

Rooftop cocktails, rose gardens, waterfront walks, farmers markets, and one very big Seattle Center party.

I have lived in the Pacific Northwest long enough to expect it, and still, late spring catches me by surprise. The mountain returns for the season, suddenly part of the almost-daily view again. The grass isn’t (so) soggy anymore. Dinner can happen outside, and the city gets a little easier to love. Here are five…

Cities Only Work if We Show Up

Cities Only Work if We Show Up

The case for small business, creative density, and why culture is a team effort.

I have always been in love with cities. I joke with friends that I have crushes on cities the way they have crushes on good-looking strangers. Sometimes—as with Paris and London—my unrequited crush meant finding an excuse to move there. With Seattle, however, that initial attraction grew into a long-term relationship. I arrived here as…

Up In Smoke: The Little-Known Story of Seattle’s First Marijuana Initiative

Up In Smoke: The Little-Known Story of Seattle’s First Marijuana Initiative

A 1974 ballot campaign came up short, but helped set the stage for legal weed in Washington.

Like many American cities in the early 1970s, Seattle was once a hotbed of political and civil unrest. This era of discontent officially kicked off on May 5, 1970—one day after the Ohio National Guard shot students at Kent State University, killing four and wounding nine. In response, thousands of Seattle-area student protestors shut down…

Trupanion CEO Margi Tooth Leads the Pack

Trupanion CEO Margi Tooth Leads the Pack

As the CEO of the largest pet insurer in the United States understands the importance of collaboration—and building a trusted team.

Growing up on a farm in the United Kingdom, Margi Tooth dreamed of channeling her love for animals into a career as a veterinarian. Although she took a different path—working in market research and business development before moving into the insurance sector—she still ended up with a job that helps animals. Tooth is the CEO…