Service Learning class hosts military cultural preservation experts
Anna Hillary’s “Service Learning: Art, Culture and Community” class at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design (MIAD) hosted two special guests recently: Colonel Andrew Scott DeJesse, Director for the U.S. Army’s Monuments Officer program, and Captain Blake Ruehrwein, Cultural Heritage Preservation Officer for the U.S. Army.
“Throughout the semester, students explore different ways their professional careers in art and design, as well as their creative skills more generally, can potentially serve their communities, cities, and even the greater world we live in,” says Hillary, Ph.D., assistant professor, Writing & Humanities.
Monuments officers are cultural heritage professionals in the U.S. Army who protect and preserve culture and cultural heritage during conflict, according to the Monuments Men and Women Foundation.
“As artists themselves with BFAs (in addition to their advanced graduate degrees in other areas), COL DeJesse and CPT Ruehrwein related well to the students and encouraged them to think deeply about why they create what they create,” Hillary says.
“This visit seemed like an opportunity for students to learn about a way government relates to art, particularly in a productive way,” explains Hillary. “It also seemed to offer a perspective on another form of service that would help us think profoundly about the myriad ways service, community and culture intertwine and matter not just to a neighborhood within a city, but also to the entire country as a whole.”
“They made me think that within the system there’s a spark of hope. I never could have imagined that two military personnel were going to have the same viewpoints as us,” said one student after the visit.
“We were left thinking through ways that culture is used to dehumanize in war, and students made connections to a similar process of dehumanization that happens to marginalized groups within a country. Students also thought through what it meant to try and instigate social change from outside of the system, as we’ve been talking about in class with relation to their service work, versus enacting social change within the system, such as within the U.S. government,” Hillary says.
Learn more about MIAD’s required Service Learning Program, which enacts MIAD’s values of COMMUNITY and KINDNESS – providing students with real-world engagement with our local community and cultivating a culture of social responsibility.
News
MIAD elects new trustees Paul Fletcher and Jacqualyn Laughlin
Paul Fletcher, a principal product designer at LinkedIn, and Jacqualyn Laughlin, co-founder of Invisible Ink Partners, were elected members of the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design’s Board of Trustees at the college’s annual meeting in June.
Double ASID award winner is inspired by nature and internships
Rising senior at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design (MIAD) Adam Wold ’27 received two awards in May from the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID). The Interior Architecture and Design (IAD) major won the Silver Award in the Commercial category and the Bronze Award in the Residential category.
MIAD faculty, alumni shine at WI Visual Art Achievement Awards
Professor Leslie Fedorchuk and alumni of the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design (MIAD) received four of the eight individual 2026 Wisconsin Visual Art Achievement Awards for “their significant contributions to the state’s creative culture.”
National Society of Illustrators honors 13 MIAD students
Works by 13 students and recent graduates of the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design (MIAD) were selected from among 4,550 nationwide submissions to receive 2026 honors from the national Society of Illustrators.
Pallas Textiles competition provides real-world experience
First-place winner Sophia Simonson ’28 created Refractions as part of her MIAD studies in Interior Architecture and Design. She is one of 20 students studying at MIAD through a cross-registration program with Concordia University. MIAD students Kaitlyn Powers ’26 (Illustration) and Natalie Spetell ’27 (Product Design), both of whom have minors in Communication Design, received Honorable Mentions.