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Amber Art and Design muralists present Hixson-Lied Visiting Artist Lecture

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Muralists Linda Fernandez and Keir Johnston, founding members of Amber Art and Design, will present the next Hixson-Lied Visiting Artist & Scholar Lecture on Thursday, Oct. 9 at 5:30 p.m. at Sheldon Museum of Art’s Ethel S. Abbott Auditorium. The lecture is free and open to the public.

Fernandez is a multicultural artist, muralist and educator specializing in public art and community engagement. She is a founding member of Amber Art and Design, an artist collective based in Philadelphia that creates public art through engagement with community members.

Her work features bright colors, designs and symbols that reflect her Caribbean heritage. She's inspired by the ways in which nature, architecture and history weave together to tell stories of people and the places they call home. Her work merges themes of identity and home across physical, social and cultural divides by exploring Caribbean heritage through a diasporic lens.

Fernandez earned a Bachelor’s degree in art education from Tyler School of Art, a certificate in contemporary art from Metafora Escola de Arte Contemporaneo in Barcelona, Spain, and a Master’s in public administration from Austin W. Marxe School of Public and International Affairs. She is an alumna of Community Arts Education Leadership Institute, National Urban Fellows and the Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute’s Intercultural Advocacy Fellowship.

Johnston painted his first mural as a teenager while studying fine art at California State University at Northridge. That early experience sparked a deep appreciation for the collaborative nature of mural-making and the power of public art to engage diverse communities.

Over the years, Johnston has worked with a wide range of populations—including incarcerated youth, prisoners serving life sentences, elders, students, and individuals with disabilities—leading them in mural production and community-based art projects.

As a founding member of Amber Art & Design in 2013, he has been instrumental in projects that tackle themes of race, class, poverty and inequality. His notable works include Colorful Legacy: Building Brotherhood, a mural developed through community dialogue around violence and trauma experienced by men of color in Philadelphia, and Philly’s Firsts, which celebrates the city’s rich legacy of innovation and history-making events.