06/10/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 06/10/2026 11:30
More than 10,000 Bruins will cross commencement stages this season, marking the culmination of years of hard work, discovery, growth and perseverance. They come from every corner of UCLA and every corner of the world, united by a shared commitment to learning, service and making a difference.
And they are already leaving their mark on the world. Among them are future physicians advancing cancer research, engineers who built a self-playing piano capable of doing the impossible, advocates working to expand opportunity and inclusion, artists and musicians pushing creative boundaries, and scholars whose curiosity carried them across disciplines, continents and communities. Though their paths have been remarkably different, each has found a way to turn passion into purpose.
As the graduates of the class of 2026 prepare to turn their tassels and take the next step - in classrooms, laboratories, hospitals, studios, startups, public service and beyond - we are proud to share just a few of their stories. Together, they reflect the talent, creativity, resilience and spirit that continue to define UCLA.
From memory to medicine: A son's journey toward a cure
For Aidan Le, the fight against cancer is more than a scientific challenge. The UCLA senior, who will graduate with a degree in neuroscience, lost his mother to the ovarian cancer when he was 8 years old. Through research at UCLA and beyond, he has been helping advance efforts to better understand and treat the disease that shaped his family's life.
Courtesy of Aidan Le
Aidan Le as a baby with his mother (left), and in his UCLA graduation regalia
Le found researchers and mentors at the UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center who helped transform his personal motivation into scientific discovery. He immersed himself in ovarian cancer research, studying how cancer cells communicate and exploring potential therapies. He gained experience in academia and industry, including an internship at Bristol Myers Squibb, where he helped investigate new approaches to translating scientific discoveries into life-changing treatments for patients.
Now, Le has been accepted into the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute for a Ph.D. program in medical science and has been offered prestigious research opportunities at MIT and Boston's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute His long-term goal? To become a physician-scientist who leads discoveries in the lab and brings them directly to patients, especially those in marginalized communities who often face the steepest barriers to care.
"That's my hope," Le said. "I don't know that the future holds for sure, but I know my mom is looking over me. It will be extremely rewarding to achieve this knowing that I did it all for her."
Read more about Aidan Le on UCLA Newsroom.
From the lab to the runway to a Fulbright, this graduate is just getting started
One week, Amadu Tadesse might be conducting cancer research in a UCLA laboratory and the next be walking a fashion runway or competing on the soccer field. Now, as he prepares to graduate with a double major in microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics and African American studies, Tadesse is adding another chapter to an already remarkable journey: a Fulbright year in Ethiopia.
Courtesy of Amadu Tadesse; Linda Wang/UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center
Amadu Tadesse walking a fashion runway (left) and donning a white coat in the lab.
Drawn to research as a sophomore, Tadesse joined the lab of physician-scientist Steven Jonas and quickly distinguished himself with an eagerness to learn and an instinct for asking big questions. Over three years, he progressed from having never handled a pipette to leading research projects focused on rare pediatric cancers and gene-editing technologies.
In Ethiopia, Tadesse hopes to deepen his connection to his family's roots while helping establish the country's first national pediatric cancer registry. After that, he'll begin an M.D.-Ph.D. program, combining research and medicine in a career dedicated to improving lives.
"I'm excited for the opportunity to build a deeper connection with my family there while doing something that could have a positive impact on their lives," Tadesse says.
Read more about Amadu Tadesse on UCLA Newsroom.
Graduating senior helped build community and belonging for international students
Thousands of students come to UCLA from around the world each year. Helping them feel connected, supported and heard became a defining mission for Keya Tanna during her time on campus. The psychology major and graduating senior - born in India, raised in Oman and most recently from Dubai - spent the past year representing international students through the Undergraduate Students Association Council, working to strengthen community and advocate for their needs.
Trever Ducote/UCLA
Key Tanna
Tanna entered student government without prior USAC experience but quickly made an impact. During a year marked by uncertainty for international students nationwide, she authored a resolution urging UCLA to protect these students and organized events that helped Bruins build connections, access resources and find a sense of belonging. From town halls to dance classes, her efforts focused on bringing students together while making information and support more accessible.
Drawn to UCLA by its global outlook and diverse communities, Tanna found opportunities to create the kind of welcoming environment she always wanted. And the globetrotting will be on the move again this fall, when she begins a master's program in health psychology at University College London.
"I was ecstatic and grateful for the opportunity to study at UCLA and learn from faculty I had admired for a long time," she says. "Being far from family and everything familiar was difficult at times, but it also pushed me to grow a lot as a person and build a sense of community here."
Read more about Keya Tanna on UCLA Newsroom.
2 graduating students just built a self-playing piano that can do the impossible
Most engineering projects don't end with a player piano slamming all 88 keys at once. But for Karina Bender and George Grigoryan, graduating seniors at the Samueli School of Engineering, that was exactly the goal. Over the course of more than a year, the pair designed and built a self-playing piano in the Samueli Engineering Makerspace, transforming an ambitious idea into what one faculty member called the most impressive project in the space's nearly eight-year history.
David Esquivel/UCLA
Karina Bender (left) and George Grigoryan
The project combined mechanical engineering, electronics, software and plain persistence. After countless redesigns and moments when they wondered whether the piano would ever work - "there's no way," Grigoryan recalls thinking - the breakthrough finally came when it played a recognizable rendition of Chopin's "Revolutionary Étude."
"When I first heard music come out of the piano, I was thrilled," Grigoryan said. "I never had one of those 'yippee!' moments when something was done when I was like, 'Oh, this is so cool!'"
But the duo wasn't satisfied with simply making a piano play itself. They also engineered the system to do something no human can: play all 88 keys simultaneously. "And it doesn't sound good - but it sounded amazing," Bender says.
This fall, Bender will begin an M.D.-Ph.D. program through USC and Caltech, while Grigoryan heads to UC San Diego for graduate school. Their piano, meanwhile, will remain in the Makerspace - and continue to inspire future Bruins to dream a little bigger.
Read more about Karina Bender and George Grigoryan on UCLA Newsroom.
Bringing it all back home: Children of farmworkers and the health of the communities that raised them
"I always wanted to leave the clinic crying of happiness because I was doing exactly what I wanted to do as a medical student."
For Karla Murillo, medicine has always been personal. The daughter of a Mexican immigrant and a first-generation college student from Bakersfield recalls her mother work demanding farming jobs in the Central Valley and navigating the health challenges that come with that physically taxing labor.
Courtesy of Karla Murillo
Karla Murillo
Denise Jimenez-Tapia grew up less than 15 miles away, in Lamont, California, also a first-gen student and child of farmworkers, remembers waking at 3 a.m. to help her father pick cherries as a young teenager. She knows firsthand the barriers many families in her community face when it comes to accessing health care.
As students at the David Geffen School of Medicine - and newly graduated doctors - both were determined to create opportunities not only for themselves but for others from backgrounds like their own.
Murillo, a quadruple Bruin - she earned two undergraduate degrees and a master's in epidemiology in addition to her M.D. - has spent years combining medicine, public health and advocacy. Through UCLA's PRIME-LA (Programs in Medical Education), she has focused on addressing health disparities and mentoring students from underrepresented backgrounds. And through the UCLA Mobile Eye Clinic, she has helped expand access to vision care for underserved populations, including immigrant workers and low-income communities.
Instragram/PRIME-LA
Denise Jimenez-Tapia
Jimenez-Tapia, also PRIME-LA participant who is also earning a master's in business and administration, built lasting connections and while developing the skills needed to care for patients in underserved communities. She hopes to use those skills to run a nonprofit to address language barriers, health care access disparities and improve the overall health of farmworking communities.
Both Murillo and Jimenez-Tapia will remain at UCLA Health for their residencies, Murillo in ophthalmology and Jimenez-Tapia in family medicine.
"Medicine is all about sacrifice. I really learned sacrifice from our farmworkers and from my parents," Jiminez-Tapia says. "I wouldn't be where I am if I didn't come from where I came from. My passion for serving farm workers has been my anchor. My education is my parents' ultimate harvest."
Read more about Denise Jimenez-Tapia on the UCLA Health Newsroom and watch a video about Karla Murillo.
Graduating Bruin's journey from foster care to helping others heal
A small orange teddy bear is one of Allana Martinez's earliest memories, a symbol of stability after a childhood shaped by foster care, kinship care and adoption. Now graduating with a degree in psychobiology, Martinez has transformed those experiences into a passion for helping others, finding community, mentorship and purpose through UCLA's Bruin Guardian Scholars program.
Courtesy of Allana Martinez
Allana Martinez with family (left) and as a young girl.
Martinez initially doubted whether the program was for her. But after getting involved, she discovered a supportive network of peers and mentors who helped her embrace a part of her identity she had once minimized.
"BGS has just allowed me to make that a proud part of my identity," she says. "It's given me community, and it's allowed me to reclaim my story in that way."
That sense of belonging helped shape Martinez's college experience and future goals. Drawing strength from her own journey, she found a way to support others facing similar challenges and demonstrate that difficult beginnings do not define what's possible.
As she graduates and heads to Azusa Pacific University's master of social work program, where on a full-ride scholarship, she leaves UCLA with a deeper sense of confidence, purpose and connection - and a commitment to helping others heal.
Read more about Allana Martinez on UCLA Newsroom.
Building a community around Black filmmaking
Courtesy of Amber Payne
Amber Payne on set for her short film "Shilo on the Frontier."
Amber Payne grew up on the South Side of Chicago and came to UCLA's School of Theater, Film and Television drawn by the legacy of the L.A. Rebellion - the wave of UCLA filmmakers who transformed independent cinema in the 1960s and '70s.
Once there, she discovered the legacy still had gaps to fill. After learning a Black upperclassman had gone three years in the film program without meeting another Black undergraduate, she founded the Black Film and Theater Initiative to create the community she felt the program needed.
Her own work moves through genre filmmaking: a horror Western, a vampire story set against the AIDS crisis and the crack epidemic. She's already putting her BA in film and television as a freelance writer for Jordan Peele's MonkeyPaw Productions.
"TFT fosters independent filmmakers and just the passion for storytelling," she says. "I felt I would really fit in here."
Read more about Amber Payne on the UCLA GoArts website.
A diamond in the dugout: How one Bruin took his love of baseball to the big leagues
Inspired by the data-driven world of the film "Moneyball," JJ Svenson turned a lifelong love of baseball into an education in sports analytics. As a student manager for the Bruins baseball team, he found a unique way to combine his passion for the game with his interest in statistics, gaining experience both in the classroom and behind the scenes at Jackie Robinson Stadium.
Don Liebig
JJ Svenson flanked by his father (left) and UCLA baseball coach John Savage (right).
During his time at UCLA, Svenson has deepened his understanding of how data shapes decision-making in sports, learning from faculty mentors and baseball coaches alike. His work with the team offered a firsthand look at the inner workings of a top collegiate program, while his statistics coursework helped him develop the analytical skills that first drew him to the sport.
"I have been able to use our [baseball] program's data, along with the coding knowledge I have learned in my classes, to build a multitude of reports, predictive models and interactive applications for the benefit of our program and coaching staff," he says.
Svenson is now putting those lessons to work with the Detroit Tigers, where he's started his career in professional baseball analytics. It's the latest chapter in a journey that started with a childhood love of the game and led from the UCLA dugout to the big leagues.
Read more about JJ Svenson on UCLA Newsroom.
Watch: How UCLA's center for scholarships 'truly changed my life'
For graduating seniors Lev Afonine, Chris Bryant and Jenni Creamer, support from UCLA's Center for Scholarships and Scholar Enrichment helped make their college dreams possible. Through scholarships, mentorship and guidance, the center provided more than financial assistance over its three decades - it has created opportunities for academic growth, leadership and personal discovery.
UCLA College
Chris Bryant in a still from a video about the Center for Scholarships and Scholar Enrichment.
These three Bruins followed different paths at UCLA, from entrepreneurship and research to community engagement and scholarship, but each credits the center with helping them thrive. Their stories highlight the lasting impact of donor support and the role scholarships can play in opening doors that might otherwise remain out of reach.
As they prepare to graduate, all three are looking ahead to the next chapter while carrying with them a shared commitment to paying forward the opportunities they received.
As Afonine says, "Beyond the funding itself, the incredible people at the Center for Scholarships and Scholar Enrichment … have truly changed my life."
Read more about impact of the Center for Scholarships and Scholar Enrichment on UCLA Newsroom.
Hunger gains: How an appetite for food studies unlocked a fruitful UCLA experience
What started with a love of nutrition blossomed into something much bigger for graduating UCLA senior Lumina Chan. After transferring from UC Santa Barbara, she found an unexpected home in UCLA's food studies minor, where she combined her interests in health, sustainability and community through hands-on work at the Jane B. Semel Healthy Campus Initiative Community Garden.
David Grey
Lumina Chan
As a garden coordinator and food studies student, Chan has helped cultivate everything from herbs and onions to cherry tomatoes and chili peppers - and discovered that food is about far more than what's on a plate. Through coursework, gardening and community partnerships, she gained a deeper understanding of the social, environmental and political forces that shape how people eat and access nutritious food.
Whether harvesting produce for the campus food closet or helping students learn budget-friendly cooking skills, Chan found a way to turn her passion for nutrition into community impact - and a UCLA experience as fruitful as the garden itself.
"I'm just really happy to see how the food and basic needs community at UCLA is growing, and how many meaningful connections can be made through this work," she says.
Read more about Lumina Chan on UCLA Newsroom.
From Hollywood to healing: A producer's newest chapter in healthcare
In the lead-up to her graduation from the UCLA Joe C. Wen School of Nursing, Priya Swaminathan added another accomplishment to her considerable résumé: published author. A former film and TV producer, Swaminathan recently released "Deepa, M.D.," a children's book that blends humor, heart and medical mystery while helping young readers better understand their bodies, emotions and resilience.
Courtesy of UCLA Nursing
Priya Swaminathan
Swaminathan's path to nursing was anything but conventional. After nearly two decades in the entertainment industry making movies, she enrolled in UCLA's master's entry clinical nurse program in search of what she hoped was a deeper way to serve others. Along the way, she discovered that the storytelling skills she honed in Hollywood could help her connect with patients and families in entirely new ways.
The inspiration for "Deepa, M.D." grew from both personal experience and professional purpose. Drawing on her daughter's hospitalization and her own lifelong fascination with medicine, Swaminathan created a young heroine who solves medical mysteries while learning to navigate life's challenges. The result? A story that reflects the themes that have shaped her own journey: curiosity, compassion and finding strength in unexpected places.
Read more about Priya Swaminathan on the UCLA Nursing website.
Disability, determination and the pickleball court
Professional pickleball player Riley Joe has spent much of his life defying expectations. Born with arthrogryposis multiplex congenita, a joint-related disability that required numerous surgeries throughout his childhood, the Bruin found both a competitive outlet and a platform for advocacy through sports. This June, he graduates with a double major in psychobiology and disability studies and a mission to make the world more inclusive.
Courtesy of Riley Joe
Riley Joe
Joe's journey to pickleball began almost by accident, after a friend invited him to a local court and he quickly fell in love. Success followed, including sponsorships that allowed him to compete using specialized ankle-foot orthotics.
But he realized that athletics were about more than competition. Through his UCLA studies and personal experiences, he developed a deeper understanding of how systems can create barriers - or opportunities - for people with disabilities.
"Growing up, I was told a lot of times that I wouldn't be able to achieve certain things, but here I am," says Joe, who will pursue his master's degrees in public health and business administration at Columbia University. He hopes eventually to work across healthcare, law, research and policy to improve systems that shape people's lives.
"Disability," he says, "is part of my life and perspective, but it does not limit the kinds of spaces I belong in or the work I want to do."
Read more about Riley Joe on UCLA Newsroom.
Creative artistic detours, remarkable destinations
A spirit of exploration and discovery - and a willingness to forge their own path - has defined the UCLA experience for both graduate student Hunter Blackwell and undergrad Sarah Lustgarten. Now their peers have selected them to deliver the commencement speeches at the UCLA Arts' graduation ceremony.
UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture
Hunter Blackwell
Blackwell didn't take the traditional path to architecture. Having studied glass at the Rhode Island School of Design, he spent years designing and building everything from sculptures and furniture to architectural fabrications before arriving at UCLA. Along the way, he discovered that architecture offered something he'd been searching for all along: a place where art, design and critical inquiry could come together.
Graduating with a master's degree in architecture, Blackwell has embraced the complexity of shaping the built environment, from grappling with Los Angeles' urban challenges to collaborating across disciplines. "I realized I could actually bring all of my skills and interests into one place with architecture," he says. He hopes to teach after graduating.
UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture
Sarah Lustgarten
Lustgarten had no plans to become an artist. In fact, she initially enrolled as a global studies major before finding herself drawn into art classes and creative spaces across campus. What began as curiosity quickly became a calling. She eventually transferred into UCLA's Department of Art, added a second major in communication and embraced a practice that bridges visual and verbal forms of expression.
Today, her work is driven more by experimentation than any single medium. She often transforms overlooked everyday objects into thought-provoking artworks, inviting viewers to reconsider the stories and meanings hidden in plain sight.
"I feel like that's when I have the most fun," she says of her creative process. "That's when my art feels like it has my hand in it the most."
Where surf meets science, she is engineering the future
"The ocean has taught me almost everything I know. It's unpredictable, and in that uncertainty, I've learned patience, intuition and trust," says Lilie Kulber, who will graduate with a bachelor's degree in engineering. "Surfing taught me that to reach your best self, you have to let go of the outcome and be fully present in the moment."
Courtesy of Lilie Kulber
Lilie Kulber
That trust in intuition has defined her UCLA career. Arriving on campus as a business economics major, Kulber soon discovered her true passion at the intersection of engineering, health and innovation. Inspired by a family tradition of science and medicine, she switched to bioengineering. She has spent her undergraduate years exploring regenerative medicine, wearable health technologies and the power of engineering to solve real-world problems and create a more sustainable future.
Outside the classroom and lab, she has continued to excel in the sport that first taught her resilience and perspective - as a member of the UCLA's 2023 national collegiate women's surf championship team and as the team's co-captain. Her love of the ocean also inspired her to start UCLA's Surfrider Foundation Club, dedicated to protecting coastal ecosystem. And as president of Clean Consulting at UCLA, a student-run organization she has helped businesses adopt more sustainable practices. Seeing companies act on the team's recommendations has been one of her proudest achievements.
"Movements start with community," she says. "When people feel included, supported and connected to a larger purpose, growth happens organically."
Read more about Lilie Kulber on the UCLA Samueli website.
Reggae, rhythm and music industry reinvention
UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music
Racquel Bernard
Racquel Bernard, who will graduate with a doctorate in ethnomusicology, has spent years listening to how Black women reggae artists use their voices to challenge conventions and express resistance in ways that often go unrecognized. Her research explores the political power embedded in sound itself, from harmonies and vocal registers to performance styles and musical traditions.
And Bernard isn't just studying the musical form - she's creating it. Born in Jamaica and raised in Florida, she performs under the name Jahmi Roc.
"Part of what I'm doing here is recovering bodies of knowledge that are created by these women artists," she says. Through her music and scholarship, she is helping to amplify those voices that have often been left out of reggae's history.
UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music
Aditi Sreenivas
Aditi Sreenivas, who grew up navigating Indian and American culture, always loved music but she never imagined it would become her career. That changed at UCLA, where the former political science major discovered the Herb Alpert School of Music's music industry program, which opened her eyes to the many ways people can shape the future of music. Now, the graduating senior is launching a career at Apple Music while thinking about the industry's next chapter, including the opportunities and challenges of AI and the importance of creative community.
"Music will always exist. People will always create and share art," she says. "At the same time, technological progress is inevitable."
Read more about Racquel Bernard and Aditi Sreenivas on the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music website.
Kindred spirits: Embracing opportunity and resilience connects UCLA graduating seniors
One wouldn't think that a student of education who moved to the United States from Japan and has two grown children would share core personal values with an 18-year-old professional actor from Ventura County on a pre-law track.
David Esquivel/UCLA
Mayu Sasame (left) and August Maturo
But as it turns out, one of the youngest and one of the most senior graduates going through commencement ceremonies have more in common than meets the eye. Mayu Sasame and August Maturo both came to UCLA as transfer students two years ago and will earn bachelor's degrees with majors and minors. Both have loving family members who will be in the audience at commencement - family members who offered endless encouragement along the way.
Sasame came to UCLA after earning associate degrees in Japan and California, bringing with her a deep commitment to education and social change. Maturo, who completed three associate degrees before arriving in Westwood, found a community where he could pursue his passion for learning while preparing for a future beyond acting. Despite their different backgrounds, both seized every chance to grow, learn and challenge themselves during their time on campus.
Now preparing to cross the commencement stage, Sasame and Maturo share a common message for their fellow graduates: Setbacks are part of the journey and perseverance matters. Their stories reflect the many paths that lead to UCLA - and the ways a college experience can transform ambition into purpose, no matter where a Bruin begins.
Read more about Mayu Sasame and August Maturo on UCLA Newsroom.
How 2 students turned compositions into a cultural celebration
It started with a text from a stranger.
UCLA student Mickey Hashim had watched fellow student Gael Saldana's junior recital on a projector in his apartment and reached out with a question: Would Saldana arrange music for a Southeast Asian cultural festival? That exchange produced SEA Fest, held at the Fowler Museum in spring 2025. It was anchored by a jazz orchestra performing new compositions from Filipino and regional folk songs Saldana had researched by calling his grandmother.
Hashim (courtesy of Mickey Hashim); Saldana (Jessica Wolf/UCLA)
Mickey Hashim performs in his senior recital (left), and Gael Saldana performs in his junior recital.
Hashim, who came to UCLA from Malaysia before finding in ethnomusicology a field where music and mathematics converged, also organized UCLA's first Pride Ball. Saldana, who grew up in Pomona studying jazz with Youth Orchestra of Los Angeles, pursued an artistic inquiry into jazz as emotional music - a practice that earned him admission to Berklee College of Music for graduate study.
Both hope SEA Fest continues beyond them and credit the festival with demonstrating what UCLA's music community can build together.
"It's not just about the culture," Hashim says. "It's about the sense of community, and the wondrous experience of creating and performing together."
Read more about Mickey Hashim and Gael Saldana on the UCLA GoArts website.
From 'Big Bang' to big impact: Finding a calling in science education
When Thomas Lehman arrived at UCLA, he knew he loved science. What he didn't yet know was that his time on campus would spark a passion for something equally important: helping others discover it. Now, Lehman is graduating with a major in environmental science and honors in environmental systems and society and will soon begin a fully funded master's program in education at Harvard.
Courtesy of Thomas Lehman
Thomas Lehman
Lehman credits UCLA's Chuck Lorre Scholars Program - which provides Big Bang Theory Scholarships to low-income STEM students - with helping him find his footing during his first year. The scholarship gave him the freedom to embrace campus life, build confidence and pursue opportunities both inside and outside the classroom. Once he did, he immersed himself in research, academics and a growing interest in science education.
One of Lehman's most transformative experiences came during a study abroad quarter in Australia, where he conducted hands-on ecological research on everything from giant clams to microplastics. Those experiences helped clarify his desire to inspire the next generation of scientists. This fall in Massachusetts, he'll begin working toward his teaching credential and his master's while teaching high school science in Boston.
"When we created the Big Bang Theory Scholars, we hoped it would give students the freedom to explore, grow and dream bigger," says Chuck Lorre, co-creator of the sitcom "The Big Bang Theory," whose family foundation largely funds the scholarships. "Thomas's journey is a wonderful example of that. He arrived at UCLA with a passion for science and leaves with a calling to inspire future generations through education."
Read more about Thomas Lehman on the California NanoSystems at UCLA website.
Software, art and dance: Reimagining the body inside the machine
Chelly Jin came to UCLA's MFA program in Design Media Arts with five years at Microsoft behind her and a creative question she hadn't yet been able to fully inhabit.
Quinn Benson Bates
Chelly Jin installation "Software as Choreography"
The daughter of a graphic designer and an electrical engineer, she built a thesis around a deceptively simple argument: software has never been disembodied. Her inspiration was the ENIAC, the first digital electronic computer, built during World War II and operated by six women who spent days unplugging and replugging cables, flipping switches and turning dials to execute a single calculation. Jin reads that unseen labor as a form of choreography.
"The first software is really a dance," she says.
Her thesis installation at the New Wight Gallery extended the idea through projected video, metal server-rack structures and three networked computers, with Jin and a dancer performing movements abstracted from touchscreen gestures.
Also a violinist, Jin joined the Herb Alpert School of Music's Flux Ensemble in her final year, helping choreograph the movement of instrumentalists through space for an experimental composition.
Read more about Chelly Jin on the UCLA GoArts website.
Graduating architecture couple design from what's already there
EmaLee and Nabil Davidson arrived at UCLA's graduate architecture program already married, already practiced and already fluent in the technical realities of building in real cities - both came up through community college and small professional firms.
Courtesy of EmaLee and Nabil Davidson
Nabil (left) and EmaLee Davidson
This year, Metropolis magazine named both to its Future 100 list of the nation's top emerging architecture graduates. Their shared design philosophy treats digital tools as continuous material and takes the found condition of existing cities as the starting point rather than the obstacle.
"Our generation of architects believes the found condition has stuff on it, and that has to be part of the design approach," Nabil said.
EmaLee's final studio work examines the overlooked surfaces of Los Angeles; Nabil's probes the closed geography of oil refineries. Beyond studio work, both took on high-profile opportunities while at UCLA Nabil contributed to a faculty member's Coachella installation, EmaLee to another faculty member's piece at the Chicago Architecture Biennial - that put their UCLA M.Arch training into the world.
Read more about EmaLee and Nabil Davidson on the UCLA GoArts website.
Four majors, one remarkable Bruin
Most UCLA students spend four years exploring one academic path. Benjamin Krut spent his pursuing four. The UCLA College graduate is the only member of the class of 2026 to earn four majors - art history, comparative literature, Near Eastern languages and cultures, and philosophy - along with a minor in history.
Sean Brenner/UCLA Humanities
Benjamin Krut
Krut's academic journey began in philosophy, but he soon found himself drawn in other directions.
"I enjoyed it, but I felt like there was more I wanted to sink my teeth into," he said. An art history course led to a second major, while connections between art, mythology and storytelling inspired him to add comparative literature. Before long, three majors became four.
For Krut, the goal wasn't collecting majors - it was following his curiosity wherever it led. Drawn to big questions about culture, history, language and ideas, he built an academic path that crossed disciplines and centuries, creating a uniquely interconnected UCLA experience. His achievement illustrates freedom students have to chart their own course and the intellectual appetite that can turn a college education into something truly extraordinary.
After all, sometimes the shortest path isn't the most interesting one.
Read more about Benjamin Krut on the UCLA Humanities website.