In 1974, Schmidt Campbell became a curator of the
Everson Museum of Art in
Syracuse, New York, and the art editor at
Syracuse New Times. From 1977 to 1987, Schmidt Campbell served as executive director of the Studio Museum. During her tenure there, she steered the museum from a struggling organization located in a loft space above a liquor store to a 60,000 sq. ft. building and into one of the nation's premier black fine-arts museums with an annual $2 million budget. At the time, the museum was the only one of its kind to be accredited by the
American Association of Museums. Noticing the lack of a facility that could adequately communicate African-American art's "depth and range," she organized a series of exhibitions devoted to the country's leading black artists. At the age of 40, Schmidt Campbell was sworn in as the Commissioner of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs October 1987 by then-New York City Mayor Ed Koch. With an annual $172 million budget, the department provides operating and capital improvement funds to 32 major institutions—including museums, theaters, zoos, and botanical gardens—and grants program money to hundreds of neighborhood arts groups. In 1989, she was reappointed by Mayor Koch's successor,
David Dinkins. At her swearing-in ceremony in 1990, she proposed that the city's budget on drug education should be reallocated to her department for cultural and recreational programs for schoolchildren, saying that "if our children can be addicted to the power of language and the excitement of ideas, if they have the benefit of the time and attention of creative adults who have only the highest expectation of them, if excellence and discipline are the standards set for them, they will rise to the occasion." In May 1990, the
Smithsonian Institution named Schmidt Campbell to be the chairwoman of a 22-member advisory board to study ways to exhibit the heritage of black Americans on the
National Mall, which laid the groundwork for the creation of the
National Museum of African American History and Culture.
NYU Tisch School of the Arts On October 1, 1991, Schmidt Campbell was named dean of the
Tisch School of the Arts at
New York University. During her tenure, Schmidt Campbell expanded the school's arts profile, including digital media in addition to theater, film, and television, increased the recruitment of a more diverse faculty and student body, and led an unprecedented capital campaign for the school. In 2008, Schmidt Campbell established the Tisch Talent Identification Process, a program that recruits high-performing, high-need students to the school. In September 2009, President
Barack Obama appointed Schmidt Campbell as the vice chair of the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities.
Spelman College presidency (2015–2022) Schmidt Campbell assumed the role of president of
Spelman College on August 1, 2015, where she succeeded
Beverly Daniel Tatum. Under her leadership, Spelman moved from 77 to 57 on the
U.S. News & World Report annual Best College rankings and ranked No.1 HBCU for the 13th year in a row. In addition, the college secured the No. 6 spot on U.S. News' inaugural list of Top Performers on Social Mobility. Under her leadership, Dr. Campbell successfully completed the development of the Mary Schmidt Campbell Center for Innovation and the Arts. This building is over 80,000 square feet and is the first academic center to be built on the campus in over two decades Schmidt Campbell retired from Spelman College on June 30, 2022. Her successor is American doctor
Helene D. Gayle. == Awards and honors ==