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Social Media Content Design

Here, you'll find some various social media projects I've been involved in. Throughout my career, I've had experience in the design, copywriting, and strategic planning aspects of social media content production.

MARIA + ALBERTO DE LA CRUZ ART GALLERY

AT GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY IN WASHINGTON, DC

During my time at the Georgetown University Art Galleries as the Graduate Curatorial and Marketing Intern, I worked on social media content  surrounding multiple exhibitions and educational programming. Notably, in an exhibition with artist Chemi Rosado-Seijo, I got to work directly with the artist in content production, communicating his vision to the Georgetown community. I was solely responsible for the Galleries' Instagram during my time there, writing, designing, and producing all content seen here.

Chemi Rosado-Seijo: Communidades en Movimiento / Communities in Motion (2019)

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"Green is very important in Puerto Rico because it means hope... we say 'verde esperanza'." 💚🐊

We are just one week away from the opening of our upcoming spring exhibition, Chemi Rosado-Seijo: COMMUNITIES IN MOTION/ COMUNIDADES EN MOVIMIENTO. 🤘

Stop by next week for our opening reception Wed, Jan 29 from 6-9PM.

➡️ Thurs, Jan 30 come on back for a Public Dialogue between Chemi and his D.C. collaborator Ben Ashworth, where they will discuss the relationship between contemporary art & skateboarding.

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🚨TONIGHT! 🚨

Our spring exhibition COMMUNITIES IN MOTION/ COMUNIDADES EN MOVIMIENTO opens to the public with a reception from 6-8 PM 🎉

These sculptures were made in collaboration with local DC residents and Georgetown students during a workshop this past fall. See these and other unique art pieces in #ComunidadesEnMovimiento

discuss the relationship between contemporary art & skateboarding.

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Taking a moment to reflect on the universality of the world right now, we want to take a look back at the work of @georgie.friedman that was exhibited with us in Spring 2019 for our last week of #WomensHistoryMonth

Her hypnotic video & sound installations serve as a transformative contemplative space. Take a #MuseumMomentOfZen to look at and listen to this piece and reflect on what’s going on in this world. How can we learn from this time? How has nature responded to this shift in human presence?

📹: @georgie.friedman, “Eye of the Storm III” from Vortex, 2019

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✨Happy first day of #WomensHistoryMonth ! ✨

Throughout the month, we will be highlighting the different women artists in our past and future exhibitions.

🎨: Mary Kelly’s Flashing Nipple Remix features a restaging of the 1971 Miss World protests, as a part of her 2005 installation Love Letters. This piece, like many of her pieces, address gender constructs and #feminism in modern societal contexts.

This work and more by Kelly will come to GU Art Galleries in our Fall 2020 exhibition, Mary Kelly: To Witness The Future.

THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION

WASHINGTON, DC

As the Marketing and Communications Intern at The Phillips Collection, I had the unique opportunity to create weekly stories and daily posts for the museum's exhibitions, public programming, and special events. 

For all of the work below, I functioned as the sole designer with some help for copy and editing from my team's leadership. You will find special highlighted stories for artist birthdays, special events, and artist talks. I worked directly with artists Kennedy Yanko and Zach Herrick for their featured content, delineating their artistic processes.

Exhibitions:

Bonnard to Vuillard: the Intimate Poetry of Everyday Life (2019)

Moira Dryer: Back to Business (2020)

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💫 Last Minute holiday gift ideas 💫

1. A $60 membership to The Phillips Collection .... that's it. 😀 🎨

Bruce Davidson, Woman with Painting in Shopping Cart, 1964

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Join us TOMORROW Thursday, November 21 for a conversation with artist Kennedy Yanko (@kennedyyanko). Yanko is a Brooklyn based artist who works with found objects (usually salvaged metal scraps) and paint skins to create gestural, dynamic sculptural forms. She often incorporates the movement of her body to create works—in some instances immersing her limbs or whole body under a rubber sheet onto which she tosses paint and “dancing” in a way that unpredictably alters the paint’s natural dispersal.

Tickets are still available to see her speak on November 21 at 6:30pm. Visit phillipscollection dot org for details on our "Conversations with Artists" series.

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@HowardHodgkin 's work deals with emotion, psychology, and memory. Torso is painted on a wooden panel that melds seamlessly into its frame; this reinforces the presence of the work as an object. Concentrated dabs of color on top of others speak to Hodgkin’s admiration for Edouard Vuillard and Georges Seurat (sound familiar?). His broad, sweeping strokes of dazzling red and green are reminiscent of his fellow countrymen John Constable and Thomas Lawrence.

This work and more from our permanent collection are on view now.

🎨 #HowardHodgkin, Torso, 2000

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Happy first day of #Hanukkah to everyone celebrating! 🕯️

Marc Chagall came from a Hasidic Jewish community in Paris; this painting was done while his family fled to the French countryside during the onset of WWII in 1939. Despite this upheaval, it was a turning point in Chagall's development, ushering in a new cohesiveness and order--qualities that infuse The Dream with profound harmony. Chagall recalls Rembrandt's painting The Jewish Bride in his depiction of the poignant moment and tender gestures of the lovers.

🎨 Marc Chagall, The Dream, 1939

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