The Morning Call (Sunday)

Design museum including 2 inclusive emoji in collection

- By Leanne Italie

NEW YORK — The Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonia­n Design Museum has acquired two emoji that have helped broaden diversity for users of the tiny pictures, becoming the third museum to add emoji to their digital collection­s.

The New York museum acquired the “person with headscarf” and “inter-skintone couple” emoji for its burgeoning collection of digital assets. The museum plans an exhibition on the significan­ce of the two through interviews and images, but the pandemic has put an opening date in limbo, said Andrea Lipps, Cooper Hewitt’s associate curator of contempora­ry design.

“The desire to acquire these particular emoji arose from what we were seeing as the desire for inclusion and representa­tion of various groups and communitie­s and couples on the emoji keyboard,” Lipps told The Associated Press in an interview ahead of Thursday’s announceme­nt.

The hijab emoji, as it’s informally known, was submitted in 2016 to the Unicode Consortium, a nonprofit that oversees emoji standards with voting members from the world’s top digital companies. It arrived on phones and computers in 2017. A then 15-year-old Saudi Arabian girl, Rayouf Alhumedhi, attracted worldwide attention as she campaigned for its inclusion. She was selected as one of Time magazine’s most influentia­l teens of 2017.

Roughly 550 million women in the world wear the hijab, Alhumedhi among them, yet there was no emoji to represent them. The same was true of skin tones, and advocates remain vigilant in getting multiracia­l family emoji on keyboards, beyond the two-person couple options.

The interracia­l couple emoji was submitted to Unicode in 2018 and arrived on devices last year, giving people their first chance to combine multiple skin tones in a single emoji. It builds on the advocacy work of Katrina Parrott, a Black, Houston-based entreprene­ur inspired to create diverse skin tones in emoji after her daughter lamented she couldn’t properly represent herself on keyboards.

As a third-party developer, Parrott was the first to put out multiracia­l emoji through her own app, iDiversico­ns, five years ago. She advocated as a non-voting member of Unicode for the consortium to do the same for a wide array of devices. Acampaign leading to the inclusion of interracia­l couples, later spearheade­d by the dating app Tinder and others, received a Webby Award last year. Parrott was not involved in developmen­t of the couples emoji but noted the significan­ce in promoting greater diversity.

Parrott had no technical experience when she took on her project, but as a former NASA contract worker in logistics, she knew howto put together a team.

“We said we don’t want to do just an app for African Americans. We want to represent the world because everybody was feeling the lack in emojis,” Parrott told the APof her pioneering app. “We did African American skin tone, we did Asian, Caucasian, folks from India and those who are Latino and Hispanic. We covered all the bases.”

Now 19 and a sophomore at Stanford University, Alhumedhi said she decided to get involved after realizing she had no way to represent herself in a WhatsApp group chat with friends when they switched from photos to emoji in their profiles.

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