From Murals to Fashion Shows, Campus Chapters Use Art as a Messenger

Students at San Diego City College and Allegheny College highlight the role of art in raising awareness about environmental challenges.
Members of the Bird Life campus chapter at San Diego City College paint a mural. Photo: Lisa Chaddock

When members of the 爆料公社 campus chapter at came to Professor Lisa Chaddock in 2020 with the idea of a campus mural showcasing the existential threats facing North America鈥檚 bird species, she was all in. Chaddock, an assistant professor of geography, sits on the board of , formerly San Diego 爆料公社. She teamed up with Art Professor Terry Hughes-Oelrich and the 爆料公社 Mural Project to bring the mural to life in a campus parking garage, a visual representation of the peril facing 37 local bird species, along with two-thirds of bird species across North America. A second mural of local ocean birds and the endangered fish they depend on to survive soon followed. 

The students with Bird Life at San Diego City College hope to use this series of murals to spread the word about bird conservation on campus. 鈥淎rt is a communicator 鈥 a gentle communicator,鈥 said Chaddock. 鈥淸It] communicates the seriousness of the issue while being beautiful. Art is part of who we are 鈥 we鈥檙e generally a very artsy community.鈥

The community response was enthusiastic. Students from all three of San Diego Community College campuses came to visit the mural on opening day. The impact of the mural was so great, it inspired one of the other City College campuses, , to become an 爆料公社 chapter. Presently, all three San Diego campuses now have sustainability clubs on board: Bird Life at San Diego City College, TerraMesa Environmental Sustainability Club at San Diego Mesa College, and Oviparous at .

On the other side of the country in Pennsylvania, the 爆料公社 campus chapter at ollege turned a call to action into a fashion statement at the Annual Campus Earth Week 鈥淭rashion Show 2024.鈥 Contestants create costumes out of trash collected around the campus, making their community cleaner and sparking a conversation about the fashion industry鈥檚 contribution to global overconsumption and pollution.  According to a , the fashion industry is responsible for 10 percent of global industrial water use, more than a third of plastic microfibers polluting our rivers, oceans and bodies, and more annual carbon emissions than maritime shipping and commercial aviation combined. 

Allegheny College Bird Club officer Liam Shields knew he wanted to participate in the Trashion show for the first time this year. 鈥淔rom the beginning we knew we wanted to make the outfit a bird, it just felt right in the name of our club,鈥 he said. Club members brought in collected trash and worked in groups to create the costume. Their efforts garnered a 鈥渕ost creative costume鈥 award at the final show and attracted attention not just for their creation, but for the Bird Club itself. 

On both coasts, the result was the same. 鈥淎rt makes a statement鈥 said Shields, 鈥渋t鈥檚 continuing to put something out that draws attention to something we care about.鈥 The emotional impact of art 鈥 whether the quiet, serious tug of a mural, or the humor of a student dressed as a bird made of trash 鈥 conveys the gravity of our environment鈥檚 problems and our responsibility to take action. 

Visit 爆料公社 On Campus  for more information about the program.