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Jen White-Johnson          

Artist, Designer, Educator & Disability Rights Activist

Jen White-Johnson (she/they) is a distinguished Afro-Latina artist, activist, designer, and educator, whose creative expressions delve into the intersection of content and caregiving. With a profound focus on reshaping ableist visual culture, White-Johnson, an artist-educator grappling with Graves disease and ADHD, brings a heart-centered and electric approach to disability advocacy.

Her invaluable contributions to these movements manifest through powerful and dynamic art and media that simultaneously educate, bridge divergent worlds, and envision a future reflective of her Autistic son's experiences. White-Johnson's activism extends to collaborations with notable brands and art spaces, including Coachella, Target, and Adobe, both in print and digital realms.

Her photography and design work have gained recognition in esteemed publications such as Art in America, Juxtapoz Magazine, AfroPunk, and she has contributed insightful essays to publications like "After Universal Design: The Disability Design Revolution" and "An Anthology of Blackness." Notably, White-Johnson's work is permanently archived at The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the National African American Museum of History and Culture in DC.

White-Johnson holds a BA in Visual Art from The University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC) and a MFA in Graphic Design from the Maryland Institute College of Art, where she also imparts her knowledge as a current instructor, White-Johnson resides in Baltimore, MD, with her husband and son.

Speech Topics


  • Art & Design Activism
  • Neurodiversity, Disability, & Self Advocacy
  • Joy as an Act of Resistance
  • Mothering & Caregiving Communities
  • Zine and Collage Making

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