2018 Commencement Speaker at School of Visual Arts, NY at Radio City Music Hall

On Monday afternoon, a triumphant wave of red gowns was on display with just the right amount of pomp mixed with creative circumstance for the 2018 School of Visual Arts Commencement Exercises at the iconic Radio City Music Hall. With some 1,180 graduates receiving degrees, the spirit in the tiered Art Deco space was congratulatory and exuberant.

In the first of the day’s addresses, after an introduction by Provost Jeffrey NesinAriana Storm Ascher represented the bachelor’s degree candidates. A Visual and Critical Studies major, Storm is working on a documentary project “focused on the complex relationship between gentrification and art.”

Storm immediately challenged her fellow graduates to find their place in the world: “Our talent has been coopted for centuries by business. Now it’s time for artists to coopt management and work ethic. There is no reason we, the artists, should not be patrons of the arts. What is your cause, and what will your contributions to the art world mean in the context of the art world at large? Whatever path your creativity leads toward, make sure you are courageous enough to reach for the role of innovator, leader, head honcho. Maya Angelou said, ‘A solitary fantasy can totally transform one million realities.’”

She went on to acknowledge the many routes her peers might follow. “There are infinite ways of being creative. We are all in this together… Kierkegaard said, ‘Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom.’ Don't feel paralyzed by the many avenues you can take. We are lucky to have so much in front of us to solve. We notice things, so use your intuition to make an impact.”

Rhodes then took a stand as a champion of education. “As SVA’s Chairman of the Board Milton Glaser has said, ‘The purpose of art is to instruct and delight.’ Although I am sure that you hold great respect for your teachers, and value what they have done for you, the same cannot be said for the politicians who shape the space in which education occurs.” Rhodes applauded the teachers across our country who are publicly protesting to reverse cuts to education budgets: “If these actions continue, there is hope for restoring the profession of teaching to its rightful place as the most important profession. For it is the only profession without which civilization as we know it will cease, and quickly. The actions of these courageous teachers should give us all hope.”

Joseph F. Patterson, of the SVA Board of Directors, made the final introduction: “Maya Lin is an artist, a designer, an environmentalist, who interprets the natural world through science, history, politics and culture.” A recipient of both the National Medal of Arts (2009) and the Presidential Medal of Freedom (2016), Lin’s introduction to the art world came in 1981, when as a 21-year-old undergraduate at Yale, she won a fierce competition to design the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, which was completed in 1982 and “redefined the concept of a monument, [standing] as one of the most powerful memorials of our time.”

As Lin took the stage, she began, “Art can be a reflection of our time, or it can pose a new way of looking at our world. I think the strongest works accomplish both. But I hope your work will always be a true part of who you are, reflecting not just who you are personally, but the times and experiences that have shaped your lives.”

Looking back on her own graduation, Lin was reminded of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. She described the condescension of D.C. advisors who warned that she was not up to the task. “Nothing could have prepared me for the political maelstrom surrounding the design… It was a highly public battle, where my race, my gender, and my age all caused controversy.” She believes her tender age was her strength. “Youth gives us a sense of being invincible… Try not to become fearful of your vision. Always trust your instinct and intuition.”

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