June 1, 2021
Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA). Photo: Gunnar Klack/Flickr.
Just eighteen of 334 board seats at Los Angeles’s most
prestigious arts institutions are held by Black people, the Los Angeles Times
reports. The figure, which accounts for 5.4 percent of board seats at the ten
museums surveyed by the paper, suggests that, despite the advances made in the
art world in the year since George Floyd was killed by Minneapolis police last
May, the systemic shift toward diversity continues to occur at a ponderous
pace. The American Alliance of Museums’ most recent survey of boards, a 2017
query that included about 800 museums, found that 89% of museum board members
in the U.S. identified as white. Forty-six percent of the boards surveyed were
100% white.
People march near the Minnesota State Capitol to honor George Floyd on March 19 in St. Paul, Minn.Stephen Maturen / Getty Images file
The paper additionally queried museums regarding the
number of BIPOC, or nonwhite, people on their boards. Of combined board members
at the Autry Museum of the American West; the Broad; the Getty Trust; the
Hammer Museum; the Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens; the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles;
the Museum of Latin American Art; the Natural History Museums of Los Angeles
County; and the Orange County Museum of Art, just 19.5 percent identified as
BIPOC. For context, 74 percent of the population of Los Angeles County identifies
as nonwhite, with 9 percent identifying as Black. Notably, the Broad’s board
was 100 percent white, while the Autry Museum and the Museum of Latin American
Art reported no Black board members.
Photo courtesy of Christina @ wocintechchat.com via Unsplash
Though the pace of change is slow, “I do think museums are
understanding their future relevance and viability depends on confronting these
issues and less than perfect histories,” AAM president Laura Lott told the
paper. Lott further noted that while consumers might play a role in holding
museums accountable through providing or withholding their attendance, “I think
there could be a lot more transparency to the community about who’s on [a given
museum’s] board, what they’re doing and what their priorities are.”
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