Ariel Davis

Chair

Dedicated to supporting community centered leaders as they design processes and programs that align with their vision and values, Ariel Elizabeth Davis is a communications and culture administrator based in Mount Rainier, Maryland.

Ariel has a robust background working to support organizations that uplift cultural expression across diverse communities.  She is the co-founder of The Arts Administrators of Color Network, a non-profit organization she helped establish in 2016. There, she stewarded programs that provide professional development and networking opportunities for arts leaders throughout the United States. She served as co-chair and chair of the board for the organization for several years, and led the board of directors through its strategic planning process as well as it’s hiring of the organization’s first full time Executive Director.

She also served as Senior Manager of Impact Communications at The Save the Music Foundation, where she supported the organization in producing content that showcased the impact of the organization’s 25 year body of work. As a part of the team for The Lewis Prize for Music, an organization that provides financial support for after school and out of school music organizations across the country, she led their communications efforts and helped set the groundwork for it’s philanthropic efforts. Her philanthropic efforts also led her to work with the Baltimore Children & Youth Fund, where she served as Director of Communications.

As Program Manager for the Social Impact department at The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Ariel helped manage large scale projects and events geared towards amplifying the work of artists throughout the performing arts sector on local and national levels. As a community engagement and communications consultant, she spent time as the Interim Director of Community Partnerships at Levine School of Music, and the Director of Communications for Baltimore Pride Festival.

Her first consulting project took place with the Inner City Youth Orchestra of LA, where she helped to gather insights and cultivate the project alongside the LA Chamber Orchestra, and the USC Thornton School of Music. This work was funded by the Mellon Foundation. She currently volunteers her time supporting The HBCU Jazz Education Initiative as a founding member and Consulting Director. Past professional experiences also include work with National Arts Strategies, The String Queens, The MusicianShip, The Washington Women in Jazz Festival, the International Society for Black Musicians, and Washington Performing Arts.

Ariel has served as a guest speaker for organizations including Georgetown University and Chamber Music America, and has contributed as a grants panelist for the Department of Education, the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, the Maryland State Arts Council, the Arts and Humanities Council of Montgomery County, and the Association of Performing Arts Professionals. You can find her written work in the 2022 publication of A Grassroots Leadership & Arts for Social Change Primer for Educators, Organizers, Activists & Rabble-Rousers.  The volume “highlights authors from around the globe, who have contributed to the ongoing effort to expand the field of leadership from a bottom-up, collective, collaborative, and horizontally-based perspective.”

In 2022, she was named one of the Top 50 Marketers on the Rise by the African American Marketing Association.

Ariel's passion for cultural expression began as a French Horn player. She has performed with various ensembles worldwide, including sharing the Grammy's stage with Lizzo and participating in an international festival in Guadeloupe honoring composer Chevalier de Saint George. She enjoys visiting her hometown of Detroit, Michigan, whenever possible. Ariel is a graduate of Howard University, where she obtained a degree in Music Business.