[2] She received a doctorate from the Department of Art History at the Graduate Center, CUNY in 2020, with her research focused on the artist Norman Lewis and Abstract Expressionism.
[3][4][5] Following the election of President Donald Trump in November 2016, Campbell-Lafleur collaborated with MoveOn.org to encourage artists to protest by creating graphics, signs, and slogans to support the 2017 Women's March and, in her own words, "promote positive change, not perpetuate the negative rhetoric coming from the President-elect.
"[6] In October 2017, Campbell-Lafleur opened a pop-up shop named Anger Management inside of the Brooklyn Museum, with visual artist Marilyn Minter.
Its proceeds would be distributed between Planned Parenthood, the American Civil Liberties Union, or a different charity of artists's choice.
Discussing the show, Campbell-Lafleur commented that "circulating images, like those created by the Anger Management vendors, contributes to a feeling of solidarity".