Golden State Mutual Collection Tour & Presentation

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About

A tour of the Golden State Mutual collection exhibit led by Dr. Jill Moniz.

About the Collection


In November, 2015, Los Angeles County acquired 125 artworks that were originally part of the Golden State Mutual Life Insurance art collection. The Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company was once the largest African American owned business in the West. William Nickerson, Jr. started the company after he moved to Los Angeles in the 1920s and discovered that many Black residents in the city could not obtain life insurance policies. The company amassed one of the largest collections of African American art in the United States. William Pajaud, who worked in the public relations division, founded the collection. An established artist himself, he became the curator of the collection and oversaw its growth over 22 years, collecting more than 200 artworks by well-known artists such as Richmond Barthé, Hale Woodruff, Charles Alston, Varnette P. Honeywood, Charles White, Betye Saar, David Hammons and Willie Middlebrook. In 2007 the company went out of business and was forced to sell the art collection to cover debts. LA County Second District Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas heard about pieces from the art collection being sold off throughout the United States. He felt strongly that the remainder of the collection should stay intact and in Los Angeles County. He wanted to make this important collection more accessible and known to the citizens of Los Angeles County. Two other Golden State Mutual art exhibits are currently on view at the A C Bilbrew Library and the Willowbrook Senior Center, also curated by Dr. Jill Moniz.

Jill Moniz, PhD, was born in Ankara, Turkey. She graduated from Hawaii Loa College with a BA in Humanities and earned her MA and PhD from Indiana University in Cultural Anthropology, with a concentration in visual culture. She became an assistant professor of Sociology at Rosemont and Cabrini Colleges in Pennsylvania in 1997. Dr. Moniz moved to California in 2005 and began working on community engagement programs at the Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach, California. In 2006, she became Head Curator at the California African American Museum in Exposition Park in Los Angeles. From 2008-2013 she served as the curator for the Dr. and Mrs. Leon O. Banks Collection of Contemporary Art before shifting her focus back to a community based practice. Since becoming an independent curator, Dr. Moniz has curated exhibitions of Los Angeles based artists, created public art projects and installations, has written for and about artists such as Mark Bradford, John Outterbridge and Betye Saar, and lectured about art in LA and beyond. She is currently editing the volume 85 Years of BLACK Art in LA with contributions from Tavis Smiley, Dr. Joe Lewis and Dr. Bridgette Cooks, among others. She lives in Culver City, California with her sons.