Autumn Leach Portfolio

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AUTUMN LEACH

EXHIBIT DESIGN PACKAGE

MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS + CULTURE

• Logo design

• T-shirt that was sold in the gift shop

• And title wall for exhibition. Title logo was cut vinyl applied to wall.

• Full page magazine ad

AUTUMN LEACH EXHIBIT DESIGN

NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART

• Title graphics were cut vinyl

• Object labels and text panels were printed Fabritac

NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART

AUTUMN LEACH OUTDOOR SIGNAGE

• Main graphic is printed on alumapanel

• Each exhibit panel is printed and adhered to a magnet so that the magnets were just replaces as shows open and close but the sign didn’t need replaced every time.

AUTUMN LEACH WAYFINDING BROCHURE AND WALL MAP

INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART MUSEUM

• Tri-fold brochure for museum visitors to help navigate the galleries

• Wall map that was repeated at various places throughout the museum

New Mexico Museum of Art

WAYFINDING BROCHURE MAP

NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART

• Custom fold brochure for visitors to locate the shows in the museum galleries

Southwest Rising: Contemporary Art and the Legacy of Elaine Horwitch

April 17, 2021 – January 2, 2022

New Mexico Museum of Art

gallery directory

Breathtaking March 13, 2021 – September 5, 2021

A Fiery Light: Will Shuster’s New Mexico

February 20, 2021 – July 25, 2021

Storytellers: Narrative Art and the West

July 17, 2021 – February 13, 2022

The Museum courtyard fresco panels are by Will Shuster (1934) and by Frederico M. Vigil (1998). In the center of the courtyard is Mountain Fountain by Jesùs Moroles (1984).

AUTUMN LEACH

DATA REPORT

SANTA FE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION

• Report for legislature and community demonstrating graph handling and the use of infographics

SHORTAGE:

We live in an infant care desert in Santa Fe.

As a community, we do not have enough high quality, center-based child care to serve all the infants in need. As a result, families often rely on the informal network of providers, including family, friends and neighbors. While many parents choose to have care provided for their infants and toddlers in these homes, this market remains mostly unregulated and low-income families bear the stress of navigating it.

Although state and federal policymakers have shown increasing interest in early childhood education, this support is often directed to three- and four-year-olds. With positive school readiness results, these investments make sense, particularly in New Mexico where reading, writing, math and graduation rates remain very low. Unfortunately, the sound logic behind this welcome commitment to early childhood education and improved school readiness has so far not extended to improving access to and quality of infant care. Additionally, the public remains mostly unaware of the burden placed on families. It is time to address this critical gap.

To aid in this process, the Santa Fe Baby Fund is releasing this report -- A Critical Shortage: Infant Care in Santa Fe. The Baby Fund, in close collaboration with the Infant Care Workgroup of Opportunity Santa Fe, conducted an analysis of infant care in Santa Fe. Qualitative and quantitative longitudinal data was used to determine the quality and availability of infant care in Santa Fe. The New Mexico Community Data Collaborative contributed archives, interactive maps and analytic work to understanding these issues and made possible the trending analysis. Surveys conducted in 2010 by Coop Consulting, Inc. as well as quantitative data from the Children, Youth and Family Department (CYFD) of the State of New Mexico provided a baseline against which to compare updated surveys and current data. Local and national expert advice shaped analysis and recommendations. Although the data reveal a dire situation, we believe change is afoot. Consider this report a call to action – through coordinated efforts on many fronts we can help ensure that all babies are cared for in safe, nurturing and affordable environments. Please join us in making noise for babies!

Fe Michael Coop, Coop Consulting
SANTA FE BABY FUND | 1

A CRITICAL SHORTAGE:

Change in Total Child Care Sites, Santa Fe County, by Type of Site

From 2010–2018, Santa Fe lost nearly 1/3 of child care capacity. Source: CYFD

OUR ACTION PLAN: AN OVERVIEW

CRITICAL SHORTAGE:

Infant Care in Santa Fe

Support the Workforce: Better prepared, well-compensated and supported teachers are the

Support Home-Based Providers: While center-based care is important, homes will remain where the majority of babies are cared for. We must support home-based providers to become registered and licensed in order to have more regulated care in our community.

Coordinate Public & Private Resources: By connecting the needs and resources from both the private and public sectors, we can create more infant care capacity and serve those most in need.

Advocate: Lasting change will only happen when state and federal policy

FE BABY FUND | 8

AUTUMN LEACH

BUS WRAP

NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY & SCIENCE

• Exhibition specific

• General “Visit Us” bus wrap

AUTUMN LEACH LOGO SAMPLES

CAN CAN

The Goodwin Gallery is temporarily closed to install our next exhibition:

way OF Four Photographic Collections

Opening to the public Saturday, January 20.

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