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Leading Lady

Leading Lady

ALUMNAE SPOTLIGHT

HISTORY ALUM PAYS IT FORWARD

RUCKER ADVOCATES FOR DIVERSITY AND EQUITY Marjorie Rucker ’00, executive director of The Business Council Inc., is transforming the economic and social landscape for marginalized populations in Milwaukee — and beyond. For her efforts, the Milwaukee Business Journal recognized her as one of 2020’s Women of Influence at an awards ceremony in September. IN MILWAUKEE BUSINESS COMMUNITY For six years, Rucker has led The Business Council Inc., a membership association affiliated with the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce (MMAC) that matches diverse businesses (those owned by women, LGBTQ+, veteran and ethnically diverse populations) with corporations and public sector entities that are looking to diversify their business partnerships. Through this work, the council drives economic growth in diverse communities, which ultimately leads to increased revenue generation, a larger workforce and increased education throughout Wisconsin. Since 2005, The Business Council Inc. has helped its members produce at least $170 million dollars’ worth of business worldwide.

Rucker is also chair of the Ethnic and Diverse Business Coalition, which works to improve the business environment in Wisconsin by advocating for or against policies that are harmful or beneficial for ethnic and diverse businesses. The work requires leadership skills, confidence and a passion for service, all of which she credits to her Mount Mary education. “If it weren’t for Mount Mary, I don’t think I would have had the confidence to succeed,” Rucker said. “Being surrounded by women and many nontraditional students in age and background really opened my eyes to the world and what I could achieve.” Rucker was undecided on her major when she started at Mount Mary but had the goal of attending law school. She chose history, a decision she made with the help of history professor S. Linda Marie Bos, SSND, who helped her realize that history majors are prepared for whatever they choose to do in the world because their perspective is both

local and global. This ability to maintain diverse perspectives in her work, in combination with her law degree, ensures Rucker is successful in creating change that ripples far beyond the city of Milwaukee. It’s a perspective she believes will help create positive change in the world. “We need to be open to learning and listening. Even if we don’t agree or embrace it, we need to maintain human dignity and respect,” Rucker said. “No matter what your personal beliefs are, you can still have a positive impact if you are still willing to learn.” And in 2000, a new Mount Mary tradition started with Rucker — she became the first student speaker to deliver a Commencement address to her fellow graduates. “I thought, ‘if I can do this now, what can I do in the future?” she said. “I learned I can have an impact, no matter how small. We all have the ability to create positive change, now and for future generations.”

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EASY ACCESS Thank you to the Mount Mary University Alumnae Association for leading the way and helping make Bergstrom Hall a welcome and accessible place for all. The new elevator was installed in early fall. FALL 2020 | 17

Professor, administrator, creator KAPITAN STEPS OUT FROM BEHIND THE DESK

As Lynn Kapitan prepares to retire at the end of the academic year, her exhibit this fall in the Marian Gallery visually captured the creative energy that has been her constant companion. Her ongoing drive for creative expression has nourished her through 35 years of teaching, serving in leadership roles and “through countless hours of meetings,” said Kapitan, professor and director of Mount Mary’s professional doctorate in art therapy. Artmaking has accompanied me through all my various roles,” she said. “In this exhibit, I wanted to show the range of these experiences through art.” The theme of balancing day-to-day life and creativity could be seen throughout the exhibit. The largest object that proves her point is her very own desk, which was transported from her office in Fidelis Hall, across campus and into the gallery for this exhibit. Artifacts from her career, such as a gavel

My lens on art is deeply informed by art therapy. Art-making serves as a witness and practice that keeps me centered, grounded, open and able to be in relationship with other people.

Lynn Kapitan, professor and director of Mount Mary’s professional doctorate in art therapy

from her tenure as president of the American Art Therapy Association, sat alongside hand-bound journals of her sketches and watercolors. The exhibit underscores the act of Kapitan stepping out from behind the desk, in a very literal and figurative way. Kapitan joined Mount Mary in 1985 as the director of the pre-master’s art therapy institute, and then founded and directed the master’s program and subsequently the doctorate in art therapy. When she started at Mount Mary, she was the mother of one, with another child soon on the way. She is now a grandmother with two grandchildren. Some of Kapitan’s pieces represent the push-pull of having a career and parenting. A sculptural object in the image of a barbed-wire fence speaks to the topic of separation. “The themes that touch me on a personal level are ones that I express on a transcendent level,” she said. “The image of a fence speaks to the larger notion of sacrifice, of being caught up in something.” One wall was dedicated to the drawings she created during faculty and other meetings. Having her sketchpad enabled her to focus better and tap into creative and visual

thinking. Some of them still have the ragged edges from the spiral-bound notebook. These were mounted to the wall appropriately — using office supplies such as push pins and binder clips. Kapitan has held an active presence in art therapy, both nationally and around the world, writing, editing academic journals and actively contributing to the emerging field. She established a professional relationship with Cantera, a nongovernmental organization in Nicaragua almost two decades ago. In addition to her research and consulting work there, she brought many art therapy students to intern and work in urban and rural communities throughout the country. She incorporated art therapy into hundreds of Cantera’s social action projects, from programs for street children and mural making with rival gangs, to leadership training for a rural women’s cooperative, post-trauma interventions, and more. Her art from these experiences captures the sense of turmoil and hope she has encountered. One piece, “Managua, Nicaragua (December, 2018): Refuge,” displays an image of a peace vigil, framed by a news account of community violence. This news account is sliced into thin slats and painstakingly stitched together, showing the fragmentation of Nicaragua’s postwar, post-conflict society and efforts to mend it again. Kapitan says that each piece of artwork reflects a piece of her heart and mind, but one small drawing in particular illustrates the origins of the creativity that has taken her through life. The picture is a small lithograph self-portrait from the age of 5. She is smiling and wearing a large straw hat. “Who am I now compared to who she was?” Kapitan paused to reflect. “She was looking for her way into the world, she wanted to journey,” Kapitan recalled. “She wanted to be out from behind the desk.” Surrounded by the creative output from her many years of professional life, Kapitan has reached that place indeed. Learn more about Lynn Kapitan’s accomplishments at Mount Mary magazine.mtmary.edu.

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