Pérez Art Museum of Miami and Heard Museum now part of program

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In the fall of 2021, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) and Arizona State University’s Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts announced that the Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) had signed on as a new partner in the ASU-LACMA Master’s Fellowship in Art History. PAMM’s first fellow, Emily Valdes, joined what’s now the third cohort of individuals in the three-year degree program.

In the fall of 2022, the program also added the Heard Museum as a partner, and the Heard Museum’s first fellow, Roshii Montaño, joined the cohort, along with three new fellows from LACMA.

The ASU-LACMA Master’s Fellowship was founded in 2018 as a partnership between ASU and LACMA with the aim to culturally diversify the leadership of art museums in the United States. The three-year degree program combines rigorous academic training with on-the-job experience to develop a new generation of diverse curators, directors and other museum professionals, with the goal of investing in the existing pipeline of talent and accelerating the careers of individuals already working on museum staffs. The fellows earn their master’s degree in art history from the ASU School of Art’s distinguished art history program in the Herberger Institute, while also working at LACMA, the ASU Art Museum, PAMM or the Heard.

“We are honored to join our esteemed colleagues at LACMA and ASU,” said Franklin Sirmans, director of PAMM. “Having seen this program come into existence while working at LACMA and then watching the first cohort rise in the ranks of their institutions, we are delighted to be a part of this important scholarly endeavor, and for Pérez Art Museum Miami to be represented by our first fellow, Emily Valdes.””

“To remain a relevant and vital public resource, museums must do better at representing the diverse communities they serve,” said David Roche, Heard Museum CEO.  “Not only through exhibitions and programs, but also by the staff who are making creative and financial decisions for these institutions. There is a particular dearth of Indigenous representation in the museum field, and the Heard Museum believes that it must work to expand opportunities not just for Indigenous artists, but for museum administrators as well.” 

In the summer of 2021, ASU and LACMA celebrated the graduation of the first LACMA-ASU Master’s Fellows.

“Our graduates are already building off their academic training to curate exhibitions, further their research and inform their museum work,” said Michael Govan, LACMA CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director, at the time. “Our collaboration with ASU has been deep and fruitful, and we are thrilled to expand our joint commitment to advance the careers of a new generation of museum leaders by partnering with additional institutions around the country.”

The inaugural cohort of fellows included Dhyandra Lawson, assistant curator in LACMA’s Wallis Annenberg Photography Department; Celia Yang, major gift officer and head of director’s strategic initiatives, Asia at LACMA; Matthew Villar Miranda, ASU Art Museum’s Curatorial Fellow, now a visual arts curatorial fellow at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis; and Ariana Enriquez, assistant registrar at the ASU Art Museum. Both Lawson and Yang were recently promoted, reflecting the scholarship and skill sets that each has been able to bring to their work through their engagement with the fellowship program. Enriquez said in a recent interview with ARTnews that the fellowship program helped her become aware of “the ways that I can make transformative change within my department.” (Read the full ARTnews story about the ASU-LACMA fellowship program.)

“We’re grateful for the many contributions the fellows make in our classes and scholarly lives,” said Angélica Afanador-Pujol, who served as program director for the ASU-LACMA Master’s Fellowship through spring of 2022. “We are proud to continue to support them in their museum careers, and we welcome the addition of PAMM to the program.”

 

Learn more about the current fellows at art.asu.edu/lacma