Council Members
The California Arts Council consists of eleven members, nine appointed by the Governor, one appointed by the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and one appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly. The members serve staggered terms. Council Members serve without salary, elect their own chair and vice chair, and meet throughout the state to encourage public attendance. The Council establishes general policy and approves program allocations. Gubernatorial appointees are subject to Senate confirmation. Click here to download the Council Bylaws (PDF).
Interested in being considered for an appointment by Governor Newsom to a position on the Council? Visit this link for details on the appointment process: https://www.gov.ca.gov/appointments/
Click here for a historical list of previous California Arts Council members.
Nashormeh Lindo
Chair, OAKLAND
Nashormeh N.R. Lindo is an artist, arts educator, consultant, and curator. Her work as a renowned photographer, printmaker, and painter has been exhibited both nationally and internationally. As an artist, Lindo’s recent work explores the way one medium informs another, utilizing her photographs for surface design on textiles. As an educator, Lindo teaches art classes to children in Oakland and is a former adjunct instructor of African American Art History at City College of San Francisco. She currently serves as an independent museum consultant for the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Oakland Museum of California, lecturing and writing on the impact of African-American history and heritage to visual culture, as well as its music and literary counterparts. She has previously held the title of Manager of Educational Programs for the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture at New York Public Library and Coordinator of Community Services at the Baltimore Museum of Art, and is a trustee emeritus of the Brandywine Offset Institute. A native of Philadelphia, Lindo received her M.S. in museum education from the Bank Street College of Education, and her B.A. in Art from Pennsylvania State University. She lives and works in the Bay Area with her husband, actor Delroy Lindo, and their son, Damiri.
Lindo was appointed to the California Arts Council by Governor Jerry Brown in October of 2014 and reappointed in February 2017. From April 22, 2016 to January 25, 2018, Lindo served as Vice Chair. On January 25, 2018, she was elected 21st Chair of the Council. Her current term expires January 1, 2021.
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Larry Baza
San DiegoLarry Baza is a professional arts administrator with more than three decades of experience in advocating for the arts at the local, state and national level. He is the immediate past Chair of the San Diego Arts Commission. Baza has served on the boards of various nonprofit arts organizations and provided his expertise as a panelist for arts commissions and foundations. In his professional career, he has directed and managed San Diego arts organizations and businesses including Centro Cultural De La Raza, Sushi Performance and Visual Arts, Fingerhut Gallery, and Community Arts of San Diego. His wealth of knowledge and experience includes affiliations, consultancies, site visits and panel participation with multiple arts organizations including the National Endowment for the Arts, California Arts Council, California Association of Local Arts Organizations, Chicano Federation of San Diego County, National Association of Latino Arts and Culture, and the San Diego Community Foundation.
Baza was appointed to the California Arts Council by Assembly Speaker Toni Atkins in February of 2016 and reappointed by Senate Pro Tem Toni Atkins in January of 2020. From January 25, 2018 to December 31, 2019, Baza served as Vice Chair of the Council.
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Lilia Gonzáles-Chávez
FresnoLilia Gonzáles-Chávez is a native of Fresno County, where she has been an active advocate for the arts for over 40 years. She served on the board of the Fresno Art Museum and the board of the Fresno Arts Council prior to being appointed Executive Director in August 2011. In 2016, she was appointed to the Board of Trustees of the State Summer School for the Arts by Governor Jerry Brown and was reappointed in 2018. She is a performing artist with over 30 years teaching and performing ballet folklórico. She has worked in the education and the arts fields first as a teacher then advancing through management and leadership positions in public and nonprofit organizations.
As Executive Director of the Fresno Arts Council, she has led the organization to provide arts services in the state prison system and the local jail. Under her leadership, the Fresno Arts Council has increased outreach to rural communities with a designated Rural Outreach Fund to support the transportation of artists and audiences to and from rural parts of Fresno County, created a teaching artists training program to increase participation of local artists in the schools, and is credited for establishing the Fresno Poet Laureate program.
Chavez is a co-founder of Arte Américas, the Latino cultural arts center in Fresno, and served as its principal administrator for 10 years. Known for her work with underserved residents, she was awarded the Judge Armando Rodriguez Legacy Award for Social Justice and Arts Access in 2018.
Chavez was appointed to the California Arts Council by Governor Gavin Newsom in Febraury of 2020. Her term expires January 1, 2024.
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Jodie Evans
Los AngelesJodie Evans has been a peace, environmental, women's rights and social justice activist for over forty-five years. She is the co-founder of CODEPINK that works to stop US Military interventions overseas, promotes diplomatic solutions and Peace. She served in the administration of Governor Jerry Brown and ran his presidential campaigns. She published two books, "Stop the Next War Now" and "Twilight of Empire," and produced several documentary films, including the Oscar and Emmy-nominated "The Most Dangerous Man in America," And "The Square." and Naomi Klein’s; “This Changes Everything”. She sits on many boards, including 826LA, Rainforest Action Network, Institute for Policy Studies, People’s Support Foundation, Center for A New Economy and Drug Policy Alliance.
Evans was appointed to the California Arts Council by Governor Jerry Brown in January of 2019. Her term expires January 1, 2023.
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Kathleen Gallegos
Los AngelesArtist and photographer Kathleen Gallegos is the Founding Executive and Artistic Director of Avenue 50 Studio, Inc., a 501(c)(3) nonprofit arts presentation organization located in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Highland Park. Avenue 50 Studio has been presenting free and low cost programming since its inception. Gallegos’ personal work has been featured in exhibitions at the Mexican Cultural Institute, the Museo de Arte in Mazatlan, Studio Channel Islands Art Center, the Wright Gallery at California Polytechnic Institute, the Instituto Cultural Interamericano in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, and many more.
Gallegos was appointed to the California Arts Council by Governor Jerry Brown in October of 2014 and reappointed in February 2018. Her current term expires January 1, 2022.
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Stanlee R. Gatti
San FranciscoStanlee Gatti was born to immigrant parents in the small mining town of Raton, New Mexico. His father was born in Arpino, Italy and his mother was born in Montenegro. Gatti studied music, physical education and art at the University of Northern Colorado in the 1970s, then architecture and art history at the University of Oregon. After college he worked in event coordination, as a department store window dresser, and at a plant store. He then then moved to San Francisco's Tenderloin neighborhood. He worked as a florist at the St. Francis Hotel in 1978, advancing to Hospitality Manager. In 1985 he was recruited from that position to plan the 75th anniversary opening gala for the San Francisco Symphony after impressing the event organizers – an opportunity that helped launch his career and led him to start his own design firm, Stanlee R. Gatti Designs. In 1996 Mayor Willie Brown appointed Gatti President of the San Francisco Arts Commission. Gatti resigned from the Commission in 2004. Stanlee R. Gatti Designs produces events concentrating on the aesthetic. Gatti has served on the California College of the Arts Board of Trustees, San Francisco Zoo Board of Directors, YBCA Board of Directors, the San Francisco Arts Commission, and the War Memorial Board of Directors.
Gatti was appointed to the California Arts Council by Governor Gavin Newsom in June of 2019.
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Jaime Galli
VICE CHAIR, San FranciscoJaime Galli is a Senior Consultant with Sia Partners and currently engaged with the Brand Marketing team at Instagram. Previously, she was a Senior Strategist at Imprint Projects, leading digital strategy for clients like Google, Levi's Made and Crafted, and Dolby. She's worked as a freelance Marketing and Communications Consultant focused on the arts, culture, leisure, and entertainment sector. Her clients include Fuseproject, Adidas, San Francisco International Film Festival, SF Sketchfest - The San Francisco Comedy Festival, and more. Additionally, she works as an Instructor at the Academy of Art University, teaching Social Media Strategy.
Galli was the former Digital Marketing Manager at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and previously the Senior Marketing and Communications Manager for SFFILM. She has worked in marketing and fundraising for multiple organizations, both in California and Oregon, including Eugene Opera, The Oregon Bach Festival, The Santa Barbara Choral Society, University of Oregon, and San Francisco State School of Music and Dance. She has presented on email marketing best practices, social media strategy, and creative branding, written about leadership and management in arts organizations, and has written and edited courses in social media strategy, content creations, analytics, and management.
Galli was appointed to the California Arts Council by Governor Jerry Brown in October of 2014 and reappointed in February 2018. On December 6, 2019, she was elected Vice Chair of the Council. Her current term expires January 1, 2022.
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Donn Harris
OaklandAfter a rewarding and impactful career in the California public schools, most notably as Principal of the Ruth Asawa School of the Arts and the Executive and Artistic Director of former Governor Jerry Brown’s Oakland School for the Arts, Donn Harris will be engaged in new artistic enterprises beginning in the late spring of 2019. Already a prolific writer of both panoramic fiction and well-informed essays regarding California public schools, Harris will pursue furthering this work by connecting with other thought leaders in the field and finding places of mutual interest and influence. Among his projects are the development of a creativity index for schools to sit alongside their academic rating and advocacy for schools of project-based learning, which could include schools of commerce, technology and even the business of sports.
Harris has served on the boards of the Engineers Alliance for the Arts, the national Arts Schools Network and the San Francisco Bay Area Theater Company. He remains an advocate for the San Francisco School District’s great innovation, the 135 Arts Project, in which the Ruth Asawa School of the Arts and the MOSAIC Arts Center are moved to the Civic Center block that would place them in the heart of the city’s arts corridor, offering youth an unparalleled opportunity to learn and grow alongside the international artists performing at the various institutions.
Harris received his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts in Theatre Arts from California State University Los Angeles, and holds English Literature and Special Education teaching credentials, as well as an Administrative Services credential from San Francisco State. A passionate commitment to diversity in the arts has marked his work throughout his career.
Governor Jerry Brown appointed Harris to the California Arts Council in December 2013 and reappointed him in February 2017. From January 28, 2015 to January 25, 2018, he served as the 20th Chairman of the Council. His current term expires January 1, 2021.
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Alex Israel
Los AngelesAlex Israel lives and works in Los Angeles. Deeply entwined with his hometown, his work explores popular media, Hollywood, and the cult of celebrity, while positing L.A. as central to an understanding of American culture and the American dream.
His work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at: Le Consortium, Dijon; The Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas; The Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens, San Marino, California; the Astrup Fearnley Museum, Oslo and Fosun Foundation, Shanghai (forthcoming). His work is included in numerous museum collections worldwide including: MoMA, New York; The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; MOCA, Los Angeles; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Centre Pompidou, Paris; The Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; and The Broad, Los Angeles.
Israel’s practice has included high-profile collaborations with Bret Easton Ellis, Louis Vuitton, Rimowa and Snapchat, as well as his own Freeway Eyewear and Infrathin Apparel designs. His ongoing web series, an LA-centric talk show hosted by the artist and titled As It Lays, is streaming on YouTube, and his feature length art film, SPF-18, is now streaming on Netflix, following a tour to high schools across the United States.
Israel was appointed to the California Arts Council by Governor Gavin Newsom in Febraury of 2020. His term expires January 1, 2024.
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Consuelo Montoya
Los AngelesConsuelo (Chelo) Montoya is an artist, educator, and cultural producer specializing in community engagement strategies. She is the Assistant Vice President of Adult Education and Public Programs at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art where she oversees the music, film, docent and public programs. She previously served as Director of Education and Public Programs at the California African American Museum. Under her leadership there, she contributed to the exponential growth of the museum’s attendance through a dynamic offering of public programs. Her Radical Self Care annual series received national recognition by the American Alliance of Museums in their 2019 Trends Watch publication. She was the founding administrator and faculty member in the Master of Public Practice program at Otis College of Art and Design where she contributed to the development of the program over the course of a decade.
Chelo received her undergraduate degree in Fine Art from the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her M.A. in Public Art Studies from the University of Southern California focused on arts administration and community-based arts. She earned a second masters, an MFA in Graphic Design at Otis College of Art and Design, with much of her work dedicated to issues around water and climate change. Her creative practice is largely inspired by her experience growing up in a rural community in the Central Valley of California. She has been extensively involved in working with local artists to produce the SELA Arts Festival at the L.A. River in South East Los Angeles since its inaugural year in 2018.
Chelo sits on the Board of Trustees executive committee of the Vincent Price Art Museum. She was appointed to the California Arts Council by the Speaker of the Assembly, Anthony Rendon, in March of 2020. Her term expires in 2024.
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Jonathan Moscone
San FranciscoJonathan Moscone currently serves as Chief Producer of Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco. Over the past five years, Jonathan has shepherded the civic engagement efforts at YBCA, focusing on creative placemaking, food justice, youth empowerment, and most recently, co-leading the successful ballot measure to restore arts funding for San Francisco artists and organizations.
A native San Franciscan where he resides with his husband Darryl Carbonaro, Moscone chairs the Advisory Committee of San Francisco’s Grants for the Arts and currently serves on the boards of Homeless Prenatal Program and Alice Waters’ Edible Schoolyard Project, having previously served on the board of Theater Communications Group. Prior to YBCA, Jonathan served for 15 years as Artistic Director of the California Shakespeare Theater and is the first recipient of the Zelda Fichandler Award, given by the Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation for “transforming the American theater through his unique and creative work.” Moscone received his MFA from the Yale School of Drama and a Bachelor of Arts degree from Williams College. He continues to pursue directing throughout the country.
Moscone was appointed to the California Arts Council by Governor Gavin Newsom in Febraury of 2020. His term expires January 1, 2024.