Fellow Spotlight: Alexis Boyd

Meet our 2021-22 Sherman Fairchild Fellows. As part of our institutional values and commitment to diversity, equity, accessibility, and inclusion, the Sherman Fairchild Fellowship is a comprehensive, yearlong paid program that includes hands-on experience, mentoring, and professional development. 

Alexis Boyd

Why are you interested in working at a museum?

I am an artist, writer, and researcher whose work engages Black critical and fabulative ecologies through visual and literary works and a transdisciplinary research practice. I have a BA in English and a BS in Applied Mathematics from Howard University, and I’ve recently earned my Research Master’s in Artistic Research from the University of Amsterdam. My time as a graduate student of Artistic Research gave me a unique opportunity to incorporate my theoretical research interests and artistic practice into a polyvalent and mixed media engagement, which has instilled within me a deeper appreciation of the importance of the practice and critical study of visual art and their webs of conceptual, historical, and socio-cultural significance. I believe that the artistic engagement emerging from “historically marginalized” communities is critical to the development of conceptual tools to face an increasingly ecologically precarious future and can serve as a limitless source of answers for past and future ideological and socio-cultural concerns.

What brought you to The Phillips Collection?

I am interested in working at a museum because, while I love art and art spaces and am interested in curatorial research, I can think of no better site to intimately engage with the various narrative, ideological, historical, political, and deeply situated stakes in the meaning making of art. I am excited to be at The Phillips Collection because I am really looking forward to being a part of an intentional, institutional effort to critically interrogate and consciously account for the role art institutions have played in maintaining systemic inequity.

Please tell us about your work at the Phillips over the summer, and the projects that you will be working on during your fellowship. What do you hope to accomplish during your fellowship?

As a 2021-22 Sherman Fairchild Fellow, I have the exciting opportunity to work with the DEAI and Curatorial departments on the museum’s Institutional History initiative. This summer, I’ve been responsible for completing the preliminary historical and archival research. It has been incredibly interesting doing a deep dive into The Phillips Collection’s history and its relationships with various situated and intersectional communities and cultural institutions in Washington, DC. We hope to broaden the historical narrative to consider the institutional, ideological, socio-cultural, economic, and political arrangements that have led to The Phillips Collection as we know it today. We also aim to interrogate the ways the museum has benefited from and contributed to systems of oppression.

What is your favorite painting/artist here?

The first to come to mind is Simone Leigh’s No Face (Crown Heights). There is something fabulatively brilliant within the disjointure and synthesis in her exploration of Black female subjectivity while subverting the visual expectations of a subject, in the work’s intimacy and the very specific social and historical scenes it calls upon, and in its beautiful and unsettling organicism.

If you were to describe the Phillips in one word, what would that word be?

Earnest.

What is a fun fact about you?

I’m a terrible texter, but, as a result, I’ve gotten a few of my friends to agree to writing each other handwritten letters, which I’m super excited about!

Fellow Spotlight: Karina Gaytan

Meet our 2021-22 Sherman Fairchild Fellows. As part of our institutional values and commitment to diversity, equity, accessibility, and inclusion, the Sherman Fairchild Fellowship is a comprehensive, yearlong paid program that includes hands-on experience, mentoring, and professional development.

Karina Gaytan

Why are you interested in working at a museum?

I am interested in working at a museum because I enjoy the process of learning things, and what better way to learn and to help others learn than to work at a museum.

What brought you to The Phillips Collection?

Prior to working at The Phillips Collection, I did not know about it until I was browsing for post-graduation plans. When I came across the Sherman Fairchild Foundation fellowship on the Phillips website, I felt it would be a great step forward towards a career in museums. I had always been interested in working at a museum but had not yet gotten the chance to work for one. I just graduated from Trinity Washington University in spring of 2021, so my junior and senior year were during the pandemic, and it made it hard to find these kinds of opportunities. Though my fellowship has been completely online, I have been able to work with the Phillips virtually.

Please tell us about your work at the Phillips over the summer, and the projects that you will be working on during your fellowship. What do you hope to accomplish during your fellowship?

Over the summer, I was learning to create and send out surveys for those who attended Phillips events. The data from the surveys is used to evaluate the different events. This helps to get a better understanding as to who is attending what events. Knowing this is important because we can see how to retain the returning audience and explore options for new audiences. Now, my projects include working with the volunteer program and continuing my summer surveying projects.

During my time here, I’d like to learn more about museum operations. Museum operations are of interest to me because I feel that these are often overlooked when people think of museums. When someone thinks of a museum, they tend to visualize what is on display, not so much the people and the work that went into making the displays possible.

What is your favorite painting/artist here?

My favorite piece from the collection is Leo Villareal’s Scramble. It is fun to stand in front of the piece and watch the colors slowly change.

If you were to describe the Phillips in one word, what would that word be?

If I had to describe the Phillips in one word it would be cozy.

What is a fun fact about you?

A fun fact about me is that I have never had to pay for a haircut.

Fellow Spotlight: Gary Calcagno

Meet our 2021-22 Sherman Fairchild Fellows. As part of our institutional values and commitment to diversity, equity, accessibility, and inclusion, the Sherman Fairchild Fellowship is a comprehensive, yearlong paid program that includes hands-on experience, mentoring, and professional development. 

Gary Calcagno

Why are you interested in working at a museum?

While I could write a whole paper on this question, I’m most interested in working in museums because I love learning. And not just learning about art and history, but about different cultures and peoples who can teach us new ways of looking at the world.

What brought you to The Phillips Collection?

I learned about Duncan Phillips and his collection in one of my graduate seminars, so when the centennial exhibition Seeing Differently opened, I made sure to get a ticket to visit the museum. I read more about what The Phillips Collection does and learned about the museum’s partnership with the University of Maryland. Since I’m interested in academic affairs in museums, I was eager to get involved and decided to apply for the Sherman Fairchild Foundation Fellowship. I’m hoping to learn more about how museums develop these partnerships and how museums can support education across institutions and communities.

Please tell us about your work at the Phillips over the summer, and the projects that you will be working on during your fellowship. What do you hope to accomplish during your fellowship?

As a Sherman Fairchild Foundation Fellow, I’m working in the DEAI (diversity, equity, access, and inclusion) department and focusing on our partnership with UMD. We’re working with a professor at the Center for Literary and Comparative Studies to develop an anti-racism lecture series that will be co-sponsored by the Phillips. I was first tasked to research potential speakers who are working on projects that address salient issues across disciplines. Since a lot of us can work remotely, we can reach out to people across the country and provide platforms for important conversations. You can learn more about the series, Antiracism: Communities + Collaborations and stay tuned for the first program of the season in November!

What is your favorite painting/artist here?

I really enjoy the works we have on display by Honoré Daumier. Especially To the Street and The Uprising which are about the French revolution of 1848. I like the hazy painted technique and warm color palette with the mass of persons that give you a sense of the energy of revolt. His prints and illustrations are fun, too!

If you were to describe the Phillips in one word, what would that word be?

Prismatic

What is a fun fact about you?

Before starting kindergarten, I went to visit family in Peru with my mom and when we came back I forgot how to speak English and had to re-learn it.