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Keith Harin

feature / alumni / diversity / influencing-change
June 14, 2023

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Influencing Change: DEI at ArtCenter – June 2023

A Pride Thing

Almost anyone who has stepped inside ArtCenter has experienced the centerpiece of the College’s Hillside Campus. For over 30 years, Keith Haring's untitled mural has greeted students along a busy stretch of campus opposite the library, as Haring intended, serving as a daily source of inspiration to flourishing artists and designers dedicated to social change. 

In 1989, to mark the occasion of the second annual World AIDS Day, ArtCenter invited Haring to paint a mural at Hillside. Haring agreed, on one condition—the piece would remain in place until the eradication of AIDS. 

For two days in late November, Haring painted the colorful, abstract mural freehand—scaling scaffolding, boombox beside him—captivating students as they watched his vision unfold. Many in our community still remember applauding his first brush stroke. 

Haring died 10 weeks later at the age of 31. The energetic and whimsical work—with subtle, still timely themes of healthcare and inequity—remains the only mural he would paint in Los Angeles.

On June 21, as part of Pride, ArtCenter President Karen Hofmann is hosting "A Public Thing," a celebration of Haring's art, activism and commitment to making art accessible.

The in-person and online event—in conjunction with The Broad’s exhibition Keith Haring: Art is for Everybody—will include panel discussion and screening of a short film with rare audio of Haring reflecting on the approach and meaning of the mural.

The event will be held in the Ahmanson Auditorium (with limited seating), and livestreamed on our website and certain spots across campus. I invite you all to pull up a chair for what I'm sure will be a riveting, historically significant event.

We’ve also reserved a number of spots for current students; if you’d like to attend in person, please contact lauren.mahoney@artcenter.edu from your ArtCenter email to save your seat.  

Aaron Bruce

As we approach Juneteenth, I’d like to recommend Anthem, a film in tune with the coming celebrations and reflections on our past. 

Aaron I. Bruce, MIBA, Ph.D., Chief Diversity Officer

Proud by Design

"graphic

Throughout June, HMCT is hosting a series of online presentations highlighting the work of contemporary LGBTQIA+ designers. On Wednesday, June 21, 1–2 p.m., Ramon Tejada (he/him), an independent designer and educator, and Silas Munro (he/they), founder, Polymode, an LGBTQ+ and minority-owned design studio, will join HMCT's Gloria Kondrup and Clifford Pun for an insightful discussion. 

Spotlight: IdentificarX Curators

diptych image featuring art by Leo Equiarte and identificarX graphic.

I'd like to continue to highlight the many diverse curators for IdentificarX, ArtCenter’s coming exhibition celebrating our Latinx/e alumni community. I'm pleased to share that Leo Equiarte (BFA 09 Illustration)—muralist, printmaker, art facilitator and independent curator—is curating the work by our Illustration alums and will serve as the lead on the installation of the exhibition at DTLA. Alongside Tim Campos, ArtCenter Admissions’ associate VP of recruitment and outreach, Leo is also developing a community project with Self-Help Graphics in conjunction with IdentificarX. The exhibition will take place this fall, September 28–December 9, at ArtCenter’s DTLA space in downtown Los Angeles.


My Must-See

diptych image featuring scenes from the film Anthem.

As we approach Juneteenth, I’d like to recommend a film in tune with the coming celebrations and reflections on our past. “The Star-Spangled Banner,” written in 1814 and based on a British melody, was adopted as the U.S. national anthem in 1931. The song sparks a range of emotions, from patriotic pride to cynicism and terror—so what if we wrote a new one to reflect America today? In Anthem, acclaimed composer Kris Bowers (When They See Us, King Richard) and Grammy-winning music producer Dahi (Kendrick Lamar, Drake) take a trip through the country's diverse music meccas, as they journey through deeper discussions about race, history and national identity—culminating in the recording of a new song and sound. Produced by Ryan Coogler, the documentary premiered at the Tribeca Festival earlier this month, and will be streaming on Hulu June 28—I hope you’ll add to your queue.

True Colors

ArtCenter

Thanks to everyone who joined us for our annual Rainbow Flag Raising Ceremony (despite the uncooperative weather). We're planning what's sure to be another colorful Pride Celebration for Friday, June 30. Mark your cals and be sure to follow us on Instagram for more details. I also invite you to join the San Gabriel Valley Pride Tour with live performances, food, music and more at several locations throughout the month. And if you're feeling festive, the group is looking for volunteers.


Well Being

ArtCenter

I'd like to thank everyone who joined us for the Art and Wellness Expo on June 1, especially on (yet another) rainy day. I appreciated the chance to talk about culturally responsive wellness, along with all the learnings and interests shared—from yoga and acupuncture to ballroom dancing and, of course, the very therapeutic puppy corner.



Since we’re moving into summer, I’ll be taking a break from the newsletter in July. I plan to travel abroad to teach classes on corporate social responsibility and learn about global health. I look forward to picking up our conversation in August.

As always, if you know someone who’d find these topics of interest, please invite them to subscribe

Aaron I. Bruce, MIBA, Ph.D.

Vice President, Chief Diversity Officer
ArtCenter College of Design