About Sally Reynolds

Sally Reynolds’ interest in etiquette and social interaction has led her to presenting seminars designed for young attorneys embarking on a new career to teaching table settings to middle school and high school students. She participated in the Texas Tech University Rawls College of Business Women’s Leadership Conference as a concurrent session speaker addressing Formal Informality or Informal Formality: Etiquette Issues for the 21st Century, and was invited to speak to the MBAE students at St. Edward’s University for the Foundation for Entrepreneurial Excellence. She continues to teach her course, Professional Polish: Etiquette for Success to participants in the Rice University Continuing Studies Program, and to corporations, law firms, and not for profit organizations.

In addition to her teaching, she maintains her keen interest in the arts. Since beginning her business in 1977 as a dealer, consultant and curator of fine art, Mrs. Reynolds has been responsible for the commissioning of eleven public sculptures, served as curator of several corporately underwritten public exhibition spaces, and as a consultant to individuals and corporations in the acquisition of fine art. She has fulfilled a wide variety of leadership responsibilities for not-for-profit organizations and foundations including the Houston Chamber of Commerce, Cultural Arts Council of Houston, University of Houston Moores School of Music, University of Texas Health Science Center, Rice University, Friends of Fondren Library, YWCA, The Women’s Home, Stages Repertory Theatre, Texas Children’s Hospital Pi Beta Phi Library, The Women’s Fund, Olshan Foundation, Texas Commission on the Arts, and the Houston Symphony. She is currently serving on the Board of Trustees of the Friends of the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, DaCamera of Houston, the Houston Symphony League, the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts, and as a Commissioner of the Houston Municipal Art Commission. She is a member of the 2001 Class of Leadership Texas.

She received the Volunteer of the Year Award, College of Humanities, Fine Arts and Communications, University of Houston in 1992, was recognized as one of Houston’s Pioneer Women and Today’s Leaders in 1994, and in 1997, received the Fredell Lack Award from Young Audiences for outstanding contributions to education and the arts. In 2005 she was honored by the University of Houston Moores School of Music and the Moores Society for eighteen years of support of the school. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication from Fresno State University and a Master of Arts degree in Mass Communication Studies from the University of Houston.