Milwaukee Magazine

Katie Avila Loughmille­r

Connection Through the Arts

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LIKE MANY ADOPTEES, KATIE

Avila Loughmille­r grew up with questions about who she was and where she came from. Art helped. The 36-year-old, who was born in Colombia, sees the arts as a vehicle for piecing together her identity as a Latinx woman – and a way to connect those with minoritize­d identities. That’s one reason she was so rattled by the lack of Latinx representa­tion in the Milwaukee art scene when she moved here in 2016 to work on the Beer Line Trail developmen­t project. “I thought, there have to be other Latinx women artists in Milwaukee,” she says. So together with fellow artist Gabriela Riveros, Loughmille­r founded LUNA – Latinas Unidas en las Artes – to cultivate a sense of community among Latinx artists who, like them, felt detached and unrepresen­ted in their art endeavors. Along with connecting Latinx artists with one another, the initiative provides a much-needed platform for women and non-binary people of color to collaborat­e and share their art with the community. “These artists weren’t getting shows, or they were getting tokenized at them,” Loughmille­r says. “Creating our own exhibition­s, we could control our story and the narrative of what we wanted to present.” The collective also aims to educate the Milwaukee community about their culture. In 2019, for example, LUNA hosted an exhibition celebratin­g the role of hoop earrings in Latinx culture. Their work also extends into the city: LUNA was recently hired to create three ofrendas, or altars, at Forest Home Cemetery to honor Dia de Los Muertos (Day of the Dead). LUNA also adds color and diversity to the city by collaborat­ing on large-scale murals. In spring 2019, then-County Executive Chris Abele commission­ed LUNA to paint a mural in the Milwaukee County Courthouse, and in July 2021, the collective collaborat­ed with over 20 community members to create a mid-block street mural in the Walker Square neighborho­od. Throughout the workdays, Loughmille­r says, neighborho­od residents came out offering up their own supplies to bring the mural to life. That work, Floración, or Blooming, depicts a woman’s face surrounded by colorful flowers, representi­ng growth and connection to her surroundin­gs – similar to what LUNA has cultivated in Milwaukee. Says Loughmille­r: “Those three days really nailed in my belief that art can bring people together and build community.”

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