ASU and Herberger Institute are leading the country in ensuring everyone gets a chance to share their story, including training more Latinx and indigenous designers and artists than any other place in the nation. But designers and artists from underrepresented groups remain underrepresented in the arts, design and in higher education institutions. To help change that, Herberger Institute launched Projecting All Voices. The Projecting All Voices initiative supports equity and inclusion in design and the arts so that, in Dean Steven J. Tepper’s words, “cultural life in the United States honors and represents the full creative diversity of the country’s population.”
Projecting All Voices, which includes scholarships, mentoring, fellowships, internships and guest artist residencies, helps address the lack of diversity in arts, design and entertainment, said Jake Pinholster, Herberger Institute associate dean for policy and initiatives.
“There’s a breath between graduation and first opportunity,” Pinholster said, explaining that in the time it takes to land a decent job, graduates from underrepresented communities often leave the their field to secure a more immediate steady paycheck.
“We need to give them that first opportunity,” Pinholster said. He added, “Our goal is to create a pipeline — and an expansive and deep reservoir at the end of that pipeline.”
Supported by ASU Gammage, Projecting All Voices seeks transformation in educational and cultural institutions to enable the full expression of all creative voices and calls for the Herberger Institute to research, design, prototype, implement and disseminate a new system of programs for confronting field-level issues of equity and inclusion in both higher education and the arts.
ASU’s Herberger Institute announced Liz Cohen (pictured here), associate professor of photography, will lead the institute’s Projecting All Voices initiative.
A Colombian-American photographer and performance artist who previously taught at the Cranbrook Academy of Art, Cohen makes interdisciplinary work that examines topics including immigration, nonconformity and resistance.
“Projecting All Voices aims to use the academic setting to support, promote and generate solidarity for artists of color at different stages of their careers,” Cohen said. “As we work to accelerate the careers of artists of color within ASU and nationwide, we continue to examine issues of equity and inclusion within the Herberger Institute. And as the largest school of design and the arts in the country, the institute is well positioned to host a national network of arts professionals to discuss how we can transform the arts and culture industries into more equitable, inclusive and just economies.”
In addition to being included in numerous exhibitions, from the El Paso Museum of Art to the Venice Biennale, Cohen’s work has been written about in The New York Times, Art in America and Lowrider Magazine. She received her MFA degree in photography from the California College of the Arts, and holds a BFA in studio art from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and a BA in philosophy from Tufts University.