Nearly 15 years ago, Dhyandra Lawson got her start at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Then newly graduated from Occidental College in LA, where she studied art history and visual art, Lawson was in need of a job and eager to get a foot in the door at the museum. So she worked in the museum box office. She took her temporary role seriously, treating every day as something of an interview and an opportunity to make connections with art professionals. Eventually, a full-time position opened on the museum’s development team, where she worked for four years.
Lawson was up for a promotion in fundraising when she made the leap to the photography department’s curatorial team in 2012. The transition was a rare opportunity.
“At that time, it was hard because they weren’t really hiring people in entry-level positions in curatorial who didn’t have graduate degrees,” Lawson said.
Working at the largest art museum in the western United States, she had unfettered access to LACMA’s encyclopedic collection of more than 147,000 paintings, sculptures, photographs and other art spanning continents and centuries. As a curatorial assistant, Lawson collaborated with museum curators, managing, researching and caring for LACMA’s collection of art and helping plan exhibitions.
It wasn’t long before Lawson found disparities in the collection and began working to help broaden the artists represented.
This year, Lawson planned a new exhibition as an assistant curator, a promotion she received after graduating from the ASU-LACMA Master’s Fellowship in Art History, which provides emerging museum professionals research support, mentorship from experts and a graduate degree.
As an assistant curator instead of a curator assistant, Lawson’s work focuses primarily on research and writing, and more leadership and ownership in exhibition-making and growing the collection.