The Denver Post

Amid heightened sense of urgency, cultural institutio­ns are hiring their own diversity officers

- By Robin Pogrebin

Growing up in a workingcla­ss family in Lawrence, Mass., Rosa Rodriguez-Williams said “museums were not part of my experience.”

It is this outsider understand­ing that Rodriguez-Williams, who is Puerto Rican, said she brings to her new position as the first senior director of belonging and inclusion at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, where she aims to reach “folks who felt sort of like I felt.”

Amid a heightened sense of urgency amid the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement and in the wake of the killing of George Floyd, cultural institutio­ns around the country are hiring their own diversity officers to increase the number of people of color on the staff and board, broaden their programmin­g and address a widely acknowledg­ed pattern of systemic racism.

“We no longer have to persuade each other that we should be doing this at the expense of something else,” said Daniel H. Weiss, president and chief executive of the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, which recently appointed Lavita McMath Turner, an assistant dean at the City University of New York, as its first chief diversity officer.

“Now is the time for us here in our own little world to address these issues,” Weiss added, “which have been plaguing our nation for more than two centuries.”

At the same time, experts warn, long-standing challenges remain — anti-racism goals that are hard to measure; finding funds to pay for these efforts; and assuming that the hiring of one dedicated advocate means the work is done.

“The principles of diversity, equity and inclusion are everyone’s responsibi­lity,” said McMath Turner, adding that she did not feel the burden “to single-handedly change the Met’s 150year history.”

The new generation of executives are coming in with a range of titles — the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles hired Russell Davis as “chief of human resources, equity and engagement”; the Art Institute of Chicago is searching for a “senior vice president of people and culture” — but they have a broad mandate that ranges from recruiting more trustees of color to changing the internal culture.

“She is an agent for institutio­nal transforma­tion,” Dorothy M. Kosinski, director of the Phillips Collection in Washington, said of Makeba Clay, the museum’s first chief diversity officer, who previously worked on similar efforts at the Smithsonia­n and the College of Southern Maryland. “She is leading us on a profound journey of introspect­ion, change, accountabi­lity.”

That Clay was brought on board two years ago speaks to how these issues have been building at cultural institutio­ns

The Los Angeles Philharmon­ic in July establishe­d a diversity, equity and inclusion task force, which includes members of the board, orchestra and staff. Its Resident Fellows program, started in 2018, is now preparing symphonic musicians from underrepre­sented population­s for positions in major profession­al orchestras.

After seventh-graders and a teacher said they had been subjected to racist remarks by staff members and other visitors at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston during a 2019 field trip, the institutio­n apologized, studied the group’s threehour visit on security footage and interviewe­d dozens of people who interacted with the students.

After completing the investigat­ion, the museum publicly committed to “changing protocols and procedures for frontline staff and guards, articulati­ng our expectatio­ns for visitor, staff and volunteer and enhancing ongoing training for all staff and volunteers.”

“Until there is some sunlight that shines on these moments,” said Makeeba McCreary, the MFA’s chief of learning and community engagement, “it’s really easy to act like they don’t happen.”

In October, the museum also announced that Edward E. Greene had been promoted to president of the board — the first African-American person to hold that position in the MFA’s 150-year history.

“Who’s in the room influences who is on the wall,” said Greene, who is part of a new coalition of Black trustees seeking to make their art museums more diverse. “And we are working hard to ensure that broader voices are at the table — specifical­ly Black and brown voices, which have largely been ignored.”

At the Met in June, staff members in a letter urged the museum’s leadership to acknowledg­e “what we see as the expression of a deeply rooted logic of white supremacy and culture of systemic racism at our institutio­n.”

That same month at the Guggenheim Museum, a letter signed “The Curatorial Department” demanded wholesale changes to “an inequitabl­e work environmen­t.”

The Guggenheim has just chosen Naomi Beckwith, a veteran senior curator at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art, Chicago, who is Black, to succeed its longtime chief curator, Nancy Spector, who is white.

“This is not the first time in history that museums have been pushed to think more critically about the artists they show and who they hire,” said Beckwith, who, starting in June, becomes deputy director and chief curator. “The difference this time is you are seeing people of color coming into leadership positions.”

To be sure, there are those who question the sincerity of these efforts in much the same way they criticized as inadequate the statements that cultural organizati­ons put out in the wake of Floyd’s killing.

“I’ve been doing this work for over 22 years,” Rodriguez-Williams of the MFA said, “and I can honestly tell you that is literally always the question that I ask myself: ‘Is this performati­ve or is this real?’ ”

She and other diversity officers say the answer will come from changes both quantifiab­le and subjective: increasing the number of people of color on staffs and boards; providing paid internship­s for people of color; making visitors of color feel like they belong.

McCreary, who in 2018 became the first person of color on the MFA’s leadership team, said institutio­ns need to evaluate managers based on clear criteria. When managers argue that they can’t find candidates of color, for example, organizati­ons should say, “You don’t get to hire anybody until you find someone, or you don’t get a merit increase,” McCreary said. “We have to have consequenc­es.”

“The principles of diversity, equity and inclusion are everyone’s responsibi­lity,” said Lavita McMath Turner, the new chief diversity officer at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art.

James Estrin, © The New York Times Co.

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