The Fashion Institute of Technology held its commencement exercises for all associate
and baccalaureate degree candidates in six ceremonies at Central Park's Rumsey Playfield
on May 19 and 20, 2026. It held its School of Graduate Studies Commencement and Hooding
Ceremony on May 18, 2026, in the Haft Theater on FIT's campus. More than 3,865 students were awarded associate’s and bachelor’s degrees in 31 majors
and 126 students were awarded graduate degrees in seven majors.
Undergraduate Ceremonies
May 19 and 20, 2026 Rumsey Playfield, Central Park, New York City
Speakers
Brandice Daniel, Founder and CEO, Harlem’s Fashion Row and ICON 360, and International Trade and Marketing
BS ’12
Chris Mazzilli, Founder, Gotham Comedy Club, and Menswear Design and Marketing AAS ’85
Abigail DeVille, Artist, and Fine Arts ’09
Jeriana San Juan, Costume Designer, and Fashion Design BFA ’04
Malene Djenaba Barnett, Artist and Textile Designer, and Textile/Surface Design BFA ’96, Illustration AAS
’94
Brandice Danielspoke onTuesday, May 19, at the10 am and 1:15 pmceremonies. Daniel is the founder and CEO of Harlem’s Fashion Row (HFR), an agency
she launched in 2007 to create opportunities for designers of color within the global
fashion industry. Raised in Memphis, Tennessee, she built HFR to provide access, visibility,
and connections long denied to multicultural talent. Under her leadership, HFR has
partnered with major brands including Nike, LVMH, Tommy Hilfiger, and Gap; notably,
the Nike LeBron James x HFR collaboration sold out in under five minutes.
In 2020, Daniel founded ICON360, a nonprofit that has contributed over $1 million
to HBCU fashion programs and Black designers. That same year, HFR received a major
donation from the CFDA andVogue, and Daniel was recognized inVogue. A respected speaker, she has led programs for companies like TikTok and H&M and
has been featured in leading publications.
She holds a Fashion Merchansiding degree from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
and an International Trade and Marketing degree from the Fashion Institute of Technology
and has received numerous honors for her impact and leadership.
Chris Mazzilli
Chris Mazzilli spoke on Tuesday, May 19, at the 4 pm ceremony. Mazzilli is a New York–born entrepreneur, producer, and classic car expert whose career spans
entertainment, hospitality, and automotive restoration. A graduate of the Fashion
Institute of Technology’s Menswear program, he has built a diverse résumé that includes
stand-up comedy, television production, and business ownership. His credits include
Gotham Comedy Live, The Lost Corvettes, and Downey’s Dream Cars, the latter earning
an Emmy Award.
A leading authority on Chevrolet Corvettes and muscle cars, Mazzilli owns a renowned
collection and operates top-tier restoration businesses. He is also the owner of Gotham
Comedy Club, a celebrated venue that has hosted icons like Jerry Seinfeld and Robin
Williams.
Beyond business, he co-created major sweepstakes initiatives benefiting veterans and
environmental causes, blending his passion for cars with philanthropy and innovation.
Abigail DeVille spoke on Wednesday, May 20, at the 10 am ceremony. DeVille is an American artist known for immersive installations that transform found materials
into powerful explorations of history, race, and memory. Born in New York City, she
draws on the layered narratives of urban spaces to examine overlooked stories, particularly
those connected to the African American experience. DeVille often incorporates discarded
objects—wood, metal, glass, and everyday debris—reassembling them into environments
that evoke both fragility and resilience.
Her work has been exhibited widely, including at institutions such as the Studio Museum
in Harlem and the Whitney Museum of American Art, as well as in major public art projects
across the United States. Through these installations, she invites viewers to confront
the social and historical forces embedded in the built environment.
DeVille earned her MFA from Yale University and her BFA from FIT, and she has received
numerous honors for her contributions to contemporary art. Her practice continues
to challenge perceptions of space, value, and collective memory.
Jeriana San Juan will speak on Wednesday, May 20, at the 1:15 pm ceremony. San Juan is an Emmy- and Costume Designers Guild–nominated costume designer known for her
distinctive, story-driven work across film and television. Her recent projects include
M3GAN 2.0 and On Swift Horses, a 1950s-set romantic drama. She earned an Emmy nomination for Halston, where her designs brought three decades of the designer’s world to life and transformed
Ewan McGregor into the iconic figure.
San Juan’s work on The Get Down earned her the 2017 ACE Award for Style Influencer of the Year for its cultural impact.
Additional credits include The Mother,The Plot Against America, and The Sinner. She began her career with eight seasons at Saturday Night Live and has designed for theater and global tours.
A graduate of the Fashion Institute of Technology Fashion Design BFA program, she
lives in New York with her family.
Malene Djenaba Barnett spoke on Wednesday, May 20, at the 4:30 pm ceremony. Barnett is an award-winning multidisciplinary artist, textile surface designer, and community
builder whose work explores Caribbean heritage and Black diasporic aesthetics. She
holds an MFA in Ceramics from the Tyler School of Art and Architecture and two degrees
from the Fashion Institute of Technology in Textile/Surface Design and Illustration.
In 2022, she received a Fulbright Award to research African Jamaican ceramic traditions
at the Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts.
Barnett’s practice spans ceramics, installations, woven portraits, and collage, with
exhibitions at institutions including the Museum of the African Diaspora and the National
Gallery of Jamaica. Her work has been featured in major publications such as The New York Times and Architectural Digest.
She is the founder of the Black Artists + Designers Guild and author of Crafted Kinship. Based in Brooklyn, she continues to research and advocate for global Black creative
communities.
On Monday, May 18, at 6 pm, Robert Geronimo spoke to the master's graduates of the School of Graduate Studies. Geronimo graduated from the Fashion Institute of Technology’s Illustration MFA program in
2017. He is currently an art history and comic art professor at Brooklyn College,
where he teaches courses on ancient, medieval, and Renaissance art, as well as visual
storytelling. He went on to become a published comic creator and public-facing art
history educator whose work makes complex visual traditions accessible to wider audiences.
His teaching and creative work center on sacred tradition, myth, and visual culture,
with a particular focus on how historical images continue to shape contemporary imagination.
He defines himself as a mythmaker of monsters, cathedrals, and divine mystery.