In ten years, if a UNC student majoring in business is able to capitalize on University resources to sculpt, paint, sing or dance, Hogan Medlin’s vision for the campus will be complete.
That vision — to be drafted by a gathering of artistic leaders from the campus and Chapel Hill community at large — forms the backbone of what Student Body President Medlin hopes to call his legacy at the University.
On Friday, Medlin formally launched the Arts Innovation Steering Committee, a group that aims to direct the future of arts education and creation at UNC.
And with members as varied and influential as Executive Director for the Arts Emil Kang, the chancellor’s special assistant for innovation and entrepreneurship Judith Cone and UNC’s first lady Patti Thorp, the committee stands a chance of influencing campus policy in a year already packed with far-sighted academic planning documents.
“This is a real opportunity to push out some strong language on where the arts can and should be going,” Medlin, himself a former UNC Clef Hanger, said on Friday.
Whatever plan the committee finally drafts will be presented as a call to action at the March meeting of the University’s Board of Trustees — Medlin’s final meeting as student body president.
The committee faces an uphill battle of sorts as it attempts to shape campus conversations on the arts.
The Board of Trustees is already set to process the implications and suggestions in the University’s new academic plan — to be released in the coming weeks — and the Chancellor’s recent report on innovation initiatives, Innovate@Carolina.
But Medlin is confident that his committee can synthesize the findings of these other reports, he said.