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Dan Grossman: LOO king good

December
6
2024
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After two decades "chasing the creative pursuit" at Martha Stewart and BarkBox, delivering projects for Gatorade and Rooted, and thriving as a director at powerhouse consultancy Smart Design, Dan Grossman (B.F.A., industrial design, 2005) knows his stuff. "My industrial design superpower is where design and business intersect," he says. "When you take on a project as a designer — it could be a chainsaw or a blender or flushable wipes — you unlock something in your brain that sticks with you for life."
 
Today, the gregarious, genial New Yorker is cofounder of LOO, the new, plant-based brand of bathroom wipes that come in snazzy, 100% recyclable packaging. "With LOO, we’re committed to making a better wipe," Grossman says. "We come from a deep bench of professional experiences and hold ourselves to a high standard. We’re proving LOO is market fit."

LOO Wipes product shot

Flush life: new LOO Wipes.

Now swipe back: Twenty-five years ago, teenage Dan was attending Ardsley High School in Westchester County, thinking he’d stay local for college. "Then I saw that SCAD had just done the EXO Spyder Concept Car. That’s when I learned about industrial design, like, wait, it’s computer art plus building things? I knew from day one that I wanted to study industrial design."
 
Grossman recalls a "really interesting era" at SCAD before the advent of smartphones. "Industrial design was focused on the fundamentals: sketching and CAD modeling. There was a professor named John Kolko who got us reading and talking about user behavior and cognitive decision-making when interacting with a product. The whole world of digital product design began happening. That was all highly formative for me."
 
During his junior year, Grossman took a big step into the creative world as a chainsaw-drawing intern at Husqvarna. He followed this with a stint at NiCE LTD designing perfume packaging for Hugo Boss. "I went from thinking about the engineering challenges behind leaf blower ergonomics to designing a little glass bottle that evokes emotion," he says. "My industrial design experience at SCAD prepared me to move between those two worlds, and really see them as part of the same world."
 
Victor Ermoli, Dean, SCAD De Sole School of Business Innovation and School of Design, speaks glowingly of Grossman: "When Dan was a student and I was his professor, his leadership qualities were already impossible to miss. He advocated fiercely for his fellow students and approached every challenge with an unwavering determination to succeed. I’m incredibly proud to see how he's thrived in an industry that's constantly evolving. In 2020, we were thrilled to bring Dan back as our industrial design alumni mentor, where he reviewed student portfolios, collaborated with our IDSA (Industrial Designers Society of America) student chapter, and guided students on how to land that crucial first job after graduation. Dan continues to embody the very best of SCAD's industrial design program — passionate, driven, and always ahead of the curve."
 
Today, Grossman lives in Grand Rapids, Mich., where he and his wife Kate run loveit.studio. A punk rocker at heart (he just saw NOFX on their farewell tour), he continues to feel a profound connection to The University for Creative Careers.
 
"Studying industrial design at SCAD prepared me to enter a trade I was passionate about," says Grossman. "Best of all, I’m still passionate about it."

Dan Grossman headshot

Superpowered design: connect with Dan Grossman.

SCAD scales Summit!

November
27
2024
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A "Watershed Moment for Wellness" across the pond provided multiple milestones for SCAD. At the Global Wellness Summit 2024, held Nov. 4-7 in St. Andrews, Scotland, two of the three finalists for the Shark Tank of Wellness Competition were new graduates from SCAD Atlanta. Sofía Sánchez (B.F.A., advertising, 2024) and Aimar Diaz Tatá (M.F.A., advertising, 2024) each presented projects that earned them top recognition and significant cash compensation.
 
SCAD advertising professor Gauri Misra-Deshpande guided the projects and led the trip. "I'm incredibly proud of how Sofía and Aimar represented SCAD at the Summit, and how the judges recognized their excellence," Misra-Deshpande says. "The most important aspect of their projects is wellness, which means empathy, innovation, design and storytelling, all coming together in a collaborative environment. They both learned and earned a lot from the experience."
 
Prior to the Summit, the advertising students prepared for their competition by honing their presentation skills with SCADamp coach Greg Skura. In Scotland, Sánchez and Diaz presented their business ideas to industry "Wellness Sharks" Mia Kyricos, founder of Kyricos & Associates LLC, business development director Karen Campbell of Chiva-Som International Health Resorts, and Agilysys SVP Frank Pitsikalis. Following rigorous Q&A sessions, the winners were announced: Sofía and Bond-sai won first place and $5000, while Aimar won $2000 for third place for Radical Truthical.
 
Bond-sai, inspired by the tree that gives it its name, is a sculptural and practical "emotional ecosystem" in the domain of smart wearables and mood lamps. The product was developed during Misra-Deshpande's ten-week class Collaborative Studio: Creating the Brand Solution (ADBR 480), where Sánchez was part of a seven-person student team that created a data-driven 92-page process book and brand video.

Bond-sai ad

Lighten up: Global Wellness Shark Tank-winning student project, Bond-sai.

"Our team included multiple international students, all intensely familiar with the challenge of being in a new place, away from family, and trying to stay connected with those you love," explains Sánchez, a Guatemala City native who came to SCAD on a bowling scholarship. "Bond-sai offers an opportunity to show how you're feeling, visually, through colors, and to demonstrate how we're connected and help with mental health. It comes with a companion app where friends and family can see accurate readings of each other's stress levels through an Apple Watch or Fitbit. You can see the lights of your friends and family on the tree and know when they need a check-in."
 
Diaz's graduate thesis project, a card game called Radical Truthical, was inspired by classic games including Cards Against Humanity and Monopoly. "My game supports mental health by focusing on media literacy and how to learn discernment," says the Venezuela-born, Texas-raised Diaz, who attended SCAD on an educator scholarship. "I intentionally made Radical Truthical engaging for teens and young adults, and made sure the game isn't hyper-political, so while it covers political topics, there's pop culture too. With the over-consumption of social media, it's important to put your phone away and have a fun game that provides a low-stakes environment to have high-stakes conversations."

Radical Truthical

Facts: Aimar Diaz Tatá's award-winning game, Radical Truthical.

Both Sánchez and Diaz aim to take their products to market, encouraged by the enthusiasm they garnered at the Wellness Summit. They are grateful for that experience, and the "guiding light" of the mentor they call "Professor Gauri."
 
"Industry leaders were surprised and impressed when they learned that our student projects were completed in such a short time," says Misra-Deshpande. "This is our sixth year winning and it is safe to say that SCAD is a well-known name in the wellness community."

Global Wellness Summit banner

Sofía Sánchez would like to thank and include her Bond-sai student teammates ("It was a total team effort!"): Achal Agarwala, Annia Ortega Monegro, Harrison Steppe, Kriya Shah, Jack Selden, and Jenna Weisenbach.

Top (l-r): Sofía Sánchez, Professor Gauri Misra-Deshpande, Aimar Diaz Tatá. (Image courtesy: Global Wellness Summit.)

Kate Aronowitz named Executive in Residence

November
22
2024
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SCAD is proud to announce Kate Aronowitz (B.A., graphic design, 1997), GV (Google Ventures) Lead Operations Partner, has been named Executive in Residence at the university. Aronowitz will mentor students from the university's top ranked De Sole School of Business Innovation, School of Design, and School of Foundation Studies.

In her new role, Aronowitz will travel to all three SCAD locations — including Savannah and Atlanta, Ga., and Lacoste, France — to visit classes, review portfolios, and offer mentorship to talented SCAD students. She will provide her unique vision and expertise in collaborations with academic leaders to review portfolios and develop new curriculum design processes for the SCAD De Sole School of Business Innovation, School of Design, and School of Foundation Studies, furthering the university's recognition as the global leader for art, design, and innovation in higher education. Aronowitz's presence emphasizes SCAD's commitment as the preeminent source of knowledge in the disciplines of graphic design, industrial design, advertising, social strategy, design management, creative business leadership, and service design, among others.

"We are thrilled to welcome Kate Aronowitz as Executive in Residence for our Schools of Design, Business Innovation, and Foundation Studies," said SCAD Chief Academic Officer Jason Fox. "Kate's longstanding commitment to serving her alma mater as a professional and alumni mentor is amplified by this new role. Her wealth of experience at companies like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Wealthfront, as well as her current role as GV's Lead Operations Partner will provide invaluable insights to our talented SCAD students, faculty, and staff, furthering the SCAD mission to prepare talented students for creative professions. We are proud of Kate, and this appointment as Executive in Residence, which underscores SCAD's commitment to nurturing the next generation of dreamers, makers, and industry leaders."

Aronowitz is a seasoned design executive who has built and led world-class design teams at several iconic Silicon Valley companies. She began her career at eBay, where she joined the first user experience team and became a Senior Manager of User Experience and Design. She joined LinkedIn as Director of Design and started its user research team, and at Facebook (now Meta), she was the company's first design executive. In her current role at GV, she leverages her extensive experience to empower portfolio companies, advocating for incorporating design thinking into high-level business strategies.

"SCAD gave me the foundation I needed many years ago to launch my design career, and ever since, the university has remained committed to doing the same for generations of designers," said Aronowitz. "I'm thrilled to return as an Executive in Residence, eager to spend time in the classroom offering industry perspective and mentorship to students, while collaborating with faculty on the future of design education—spanning from graphic design and user experience to the evolving impact of artificial intelligence. With more opportunities than ever for design to shape the world, I believe SCAD is truly at the heart of it all!"

Aronowitz has been an influential leader at SCAD, participating in the inaugural SCAD AI Summit earlier this year, sharing her insights on the AI literacy expected from emerging designers and the exploration of AI's impact on the design world. She served as co-chair of the Fortune Brainstorm Design conference and has been recognized as one of the most influential designers by notable publications Fast Company and Ad Age.

For more information, visit scad.edu.

Film Fest in person: ‘One Step Away'

November
1
2024
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"No dream is too big," said Sabrina Spanta (B.F.A., fashion, 2016) from the stage of Trustees Theater. "You're only one step away."
 
The Afghani-American fashion designer was speaking from the heart, and from experience. On Thursday afternoon, she appeared alongside director Leslie Merlin (B.F.A., film and television, 2005) following a screening of "One Step Away." The powerful, 12-minute documentary focuses on the designer's courageous journey, depicting her early childhood in Afghanistan, her emigration to the United States as a nine-year old, her life growing up with adoptive parents in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, her time at SCAD studying fashion design, and her experinece competing on the top-rated Bravo TV show "Project Runway."
 
"I have so many girls in Kandahar looking up to me," Spanta says in the film. "If I could save two more lives, then this is the time."
 
Those two lives wound up being her younger sisters, who were living in Afghanistan under Taliban rule. Spanta wrote a letter to President Wallace asking for help. Wallace responded within an hour, which began what Spanta called "a two-year mission working with SCAD, in between almost losing hope." The effort's ultimate success means Spanta reunited with her sisters — both of whom are currently studying architecture at SCAD Atlanta.
 
The film highlights the transformative power of art. It also sends up a flare of hope for a future where women are free from persecution. Following its Oct. 31 premiere during the SCAD Savannah Film Festival, Spanta and Merlin appeared together on-stage.
 
I will never forget coming to the USA," Spanta said. "There were so many shocking first moments, most notably seeing my adoptive mom wearing pants, instead of a dress, and driving a car." That moment inspired Spanta's senior collection at SCAD, refashioning and refitting traditional Afghani menswear into trend-setting womenswear, including the creation of her signature X-Pant
 
The Q&A allowed Spanta to speak on how the documentary came to be. "When my sisters came, I met with President Wallace and the girls in her office. We were talking about just being able to tell the story, there are so many people out there who need to be inspired. That led to me getting an email from Leslie [Mann, filmmaker] that said, ‘I'd love to meet.'"
 
Mann: "I'd read about her and her siblings and was interested in the telling the story. We jumped on a phone call to see if she'd be interested in doing the documentary project. She was, and thanks to our producer and writer Keri Brooks, we were able to accomplish this story together."
 
"One Step Away" was followed by a screening of "Champions of the Golden Valley," director Ben Sturgulewski's feature documentary about the raw, passionate, and inclusive competitive skiing scene in Bamyan, Afghanistan — and what happened when the Taliban again came to power.

One Step Away

Watch "One Step Away" on Film Freeway.

The SCAD Savannah Film Festival continues through Sat., Nov. 2.

Abby Hollis: when revolution calls

October
24
2024
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The revolution wears overalls. Specifically, the LIVSN x Gnara Ecotrek women's overalls with patented GoFly zipper technology for "easy trailside relief," as modeled in plum truffle by Abby Hollis (B.F.A., fibers, 2020) and featured in WGSN's trend forecast on inclusive design.
 
"As a small brand, we don't always have the same levers that big brands can pull in the supply chain or in end-of-product-life logistics," explains Hollis, LIVSN's director of product and sustainability. "What we can do is prioritize making the best products possible and designing those products so they have both physical and emotional durability."

Ecotrek Overalls: as nature intended

The idea that fashionable outdoor clothing should be ethical is a core tenet at LIVSN. That proved crucial when founder and CEO Andrew Gibbs-Dabney recruited Hollis to come aboard full-time in 2023. Today, the Northwest Arkansas native applies her own consumer skepticism and years working at the loom to the company ethos: "LIVSN creates versatile, well-made clothing for people who value experiences more than stuff."
 
"On the scale that we're planning to grow, I want us to put our money where our mouth is," Hollis says. "That means investing in software to help with impact tracking, and pursuing B Corp certification, which binds us to our mission to create products and systems that maximize function and minimize harm. We're thrilled to be making those initial investments and we plan to grow our efforts moving forward."
 
SCAD design for sustainability professor Scott Boylston is rightly proud of his former student. "Abby exemplifies the revolutionary sustainability professional," Boylston says. "She asks probing questions that help her teams see project potentials in new ways, and she brings her full and passionate self to every endeavor, inspiring those around her. She does all this with a joyful attitude, even in the most challenging of situations."
 
Combining compliance with pushing boundaries is one challenge. As Hollis points out: "A sustainability team typically makes rules for designers to follow. The way fibers and sustainability were taught to me at SCAD allowed me the space to exist in both those rooms, and that's really valuable."
 
In addition to LIVSN life, Abby serves as a devoted co-founder of the nonprofit Ozark Fibershed and a board member at Ozark Folkways. She leads the annual Ozark Folkways Fiber Camp, which was hosted at Folk School in Fayetteville this year. "At camp we have a great mix of home-schooled farm kids, artsy public-school kids and more, and they all have really interesting conversations together. I think camp is my favorite week of the year — it really makes me the designer and strategist that I am."
 
While Abby is a generous conversationalist, it's a beautiful day in Bentonville, and time for her to pull on her overalls and get outdoors. "It all comes down to making good products that aren't designed to go out of style," she emphasizes. "That seems like it shouldn't be revolutionary, but it is."

Abby Hollis Forager

Abby rocks the LIVSN Forager Jacket.

Product photos courtesy LIVSN. 

Banner photo of Abby Hollis by Lillie Haddock.

SCAD impresses at SESAH 2024

October
18
2024
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Architectural historians use annual conferences as opportunities to showcase and see new research, scholarship, and analytical approaches, and to hone public speaking skills. These gatherings are also great opportunities to connect with colleagues from across the country, to learn about host cities through tours and presentations, and for students and recent graduates to network for internships and jobs.

A unique regional conference is the annual meeting of the Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians (known as "SESAH" and pronounced see-saw), which attracts architectural historians, historic preservationists, social historians, architects, and independent scholars. This year's meeting, held in Marietta, Georgia from October 2-5, saw SCAD's best-ever showing, with a total of nine presentations by faculty, students and alumni — the largest representation from any institution. Additionally, architectural history chair Robin Williams served as a panelist at the opening plenary panel discussion featuring representatives of the three major architecture programs in Georgia: SCAD, Georgia Tech and Kennesaw State University.

"I am proud of an exemplary presence by SCAD at this year's SESAH conference," said Dr. Williams. "Our students displayed the fruits of the School of Building Arts' ‘Peer Practice Session' conference presentation rehearsals, which provided valuable feedback from faculty, SCADamp coaches, and their peers. The results were elevated and impressive."

Graduate students Anna Jose (M.F.A., architectural history), Emi Higashiyama (M.F.A., architectural history), and Elizaveta Kavunets (M.A., art history) illustrated the breadth of interests with presentations on the overlooked works of American architect William Parsons in the Philippines, the lost and surviving opera houses in Georgia and their surprising multi-functionality, and the fantasy paper architecture drawings of Alexander Brodsky and Ilya Utkin in 1980s Russia, respectively. Architectural history undergraduate Hannah Dinning analyzed the emergence of playground spaces in the early 20th century and their role in shaping children. Architectural history professor Kelly Ritter discussed representations of slums in Shanghai in mid-20th-century popular media. Chair Williams presented on how Savannah's downtown urban plan shaped and tamed the impact of automobile infrastructure in the 20th century.

Three alumni also presented papers: Mike Walker (B.F.A. architectural history, 2016), Glen Umberger (M.F.A. architectural history, 2015), and Elizabeth Clappin (M.F.A. architectural history, 2016). Ruben Acosta (M.F.A. architectural history, 2010) completed his term on the SESAH Board of Directors as the Florida representative. Alumnae Alesha Cerny (M.A. architectural history, 2011) and Bethany Laskin (M.F.A. architectural history, 2024), and SCAD Atlanta architectural history professor Daniel Williamson also attended.

Each year SESAH awards a pair of travel grants to graduate students to support their participation in the conference. Among the eleven students applying, architectural history graduate student Emi Higashiyama received the highest score from the award committee, which selected her for the Elisabeth Flynn-Chapman Student Travel Grant.

"Receiving a travel grant frees me up from economic demands and allows me to forge connections that are so necessary for building a new career," Higashiyama said. "As a non-traditional international student, attending a conference with such a gregarious group of experts is the highlight of my time as a graduate student in architectural history. I can't wait till SESAH is in Savannah in 2026!"

Congratulations to everyone involved in a highly successful SESAH 2024, and special thanks to SCAD's Institutional Recognition office and SCAD's School of Building Arts for offering important support covering student travel costs. 

SCAD at SESAH 2024

SCAD at SESAH 2024: Mike Walker; Professor Kelly Ritter; Emi Higashiyama; Anna Jose; Ruben Acosta; Hannah Dinning; Elizabeth Clappin; Bethany Laskin; Alesha Cerny; Glen Umberger; Chair Robin Williams; Professor Daniel Williamson. (Not pictured: Elizaveta Kavunets.)

Anthony Barbara gets pretty prickly

October
16
2024
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The cactus prays for rain. In a parched landscape, with only a cow skull for company, this sombrero-wearing gaucho — actually an anthropomorphic, pink-tufted saguaro known as Prickly Pete — is in big trouble. And trouble, it turns out, has a name: Loogie Lou.
 
This is the colorful, campy set-up of "Dry Dry Desert," the frankly fabulous, self-published, 16-page comic book by Anthony Barbara (B.F.A., sequential art, 2022). Embracing influences including Looney Tunes, El Tigre, Fallout: New Vegas, and his own childhood trips to the American southwest, Barbara has delivered a new modern hero in steadfast and stylish Prickly Pete.
 
"I've always liked succulents," says Barbara of his cactus protagonist. "They're super resilient plants able to survive in extremely harsh climates. And they're also a little bit dangerous."

Prickly Pete cover

Spiky specialist: Anthony Barbara's comic book cover.

Pete's origin story is inextricable from Anthony's own. A native of Babylon, Long Island, Barbara came to SCAD as a budding cinephile, preceded by his encouraging cousin Greg Spessot (M.F.A. themed entertaiment design, 2022; B.F.A. production design, 2018). After taking FILM 100, Anthony searched for and found his ideal major: "Sequential art has the same storytelling aspects that I was looking for in filmmaking, combined with my love of illustration and character design."
 
These qualities are in abundance in "Dry Dry Desert," as Sergio Leone-worthy tension leads to Pete's showdown with Loogie Lou. "I beat out the story in a sketchbook, then go straight into thumbnailing to get a good foundation for the composition and page flow," explains Anthony of his process. "Once I feel satisfied, I scan and print out the thumbnails at low opacity on larger paper, like an under-drawing for me to fill out the more refined details in pencil and ink."

Prickly Pete color page

Cactus catch can: a page from Prickly Pete.

 
Toy fans will be pleased that the Prickly Pete universe is not confined to the page. Barbara has created articulated action figures of his masked luchador "Saguaro Sol." Those eight-inch-tall toys have their own hand-made origins in SCAD's sequential art program.
 
"I took Conceptual Maquette Design [SEQA 326] and 3D Action Figures Design [SEQA 436], both taught by John Larison. Those courses were extremely valuable for the sculpting techniques I learned, and working in 3D went on to inform my illustration and give me a firmer understanding of what I was putting on the page. I realized that by making a maquette, I became a better draftsman."
 
Larison, affectionately known as "The Resin Rogue," has taught at SCAD for 25 years, helping develop the sequential art curriculum along with associated minors including design for 3D action figures.
 
"As a student Anthony was serious yet fun, driven and inquisitive," Larison (M.F.A. sequential art, 1998) says. "He always had a ready smile, willing to take part in any group task, unafraid to get his hands dirty whether printmaking, sculpting or creating comics. Anthony exemplifies what it means to be a sequential major, and he is now one of our most helpful alumni and peers. He means a lot to our department and our community."
 
As SCAD grows, the local landscape has proved fertile ground for young comics artists. Barbara has continued living in Savannah after graduation, and in January he was artist-in-residence at the emporium known as Neighborhood Comics. "Selling my work directly to people and seeing them enjoy it is so rewarding," Anthony says.
 
This Saturday, Oct. 19, Barbara will appear at SAVage FST, a comics and zines event in Savannah. It's a great opportunity to pick up the new issue of Prickly Pete, peruse hand-hewn action figures, and chat with the creator about his love of Tex Williams and 1950s western swing music. As Pete's papa promises: "There is more to come!"

 

Anthony Barbara self portrait

See more of Anthony's work at his online home.

Simran Monga's sustainable excellence

October
9
2024
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Human-centered design is on the move! Esteemed alum Simran Monga (M.F.A., design for sustainability, 2024) has joined Catapult Design this fall on a six-month fellowship, the newest beneficiary of an ongoing partnership between Catapult Design and SCAD. The alliance helps young SCAD graduates apply design as a tool for transformative change by providing them with the opportunity to work with Catapult's experienced changemakers .
 
"I am thrilled to receive the opportunity to contribute to the impact-driven organization that is Catapult Design," Monga said. "My experience at SCAD in the design for sustainability program was transformative, equipping me with valuable insights in systems thinking and social innovation. I see this fellowship as a chance to grow, learn something new every day, and connect with the inspiring network of global partners and clients that Catapult brings together."
 
"We are excited to welcome Simran as our new fellow at Catapult Design, and I am delighted to continue this partnership between SCAD students and Catapult designers," said Catapult Design CEO Angela Hariche. "I look forward to the innovative solutions that will be discovered with Simran bringing her skills and energy to the team. Welcome, Simran!"
 
Monga, an Indigo Design Award winner and recipient of the SCAD Design for Sustainability Endowed Scholarship, presented her master's thesis "Lights, Camera, Climate Action" in spring 2024. In August, she was named India's Best Design Student 2024.
 
"Growing up in a family deeply rooted in cultural values, I learned the importance of 'sewa' (selfless service) to our community and 'jugaad' (innovating with limited resources) in shaping the essence of life," Monga said. "These values have informed my personal and professional journey and resonate deeply with Catapult's mission to uplift underserved populations through innovative design."
 
Monga expressed gratitude to the faculty at SCAD, including professors Scott Boylston and Saty Sharma, and service design chair Kwela Hermanns, for proving the confidence and skills to explore this exciting opportunity. "At SCAD, I was able to find the deep intersection between visual communication, design research, and sustainability, all aimed at uplifting communities and the environment. At Catapult, I look forward to contributing to incredible human-centered design and research projects focused on gender equality and global healthcare."
 
Design for sustainability professor Boylston returned the compliment: "We are thrilled to see Simran accepted as this year's Catapult Fellow. Our program is fortunate to mentor a diverse group of talented designers who are committed to driving positive change in the world, and even among this group, Simran excelled throughout her two years with us. It continues to be an honor to align directly with Catapult Design, an organization we have long admired."
 
The efficacy of the partnership is reflected by the fact that inaugural Catapult Fellow Haleemah Sadiah (M.F.A., design for sustainability, 2021) is currently a senior designer at Catapult.

Embracing this positive continuity, CEO Hariche said: "As we welcome Simran to the Catapult Design team, we look forward to working alongside her and with future graduates of the SCAD design for sustainability program."

Simran casual

Connect with Simran Monga!

 

Thames & Hudson and SCAD proudly present 'Class of 2024'

September
13
2024
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Thames & Hudson and SCAD jointly announce the release of Class of 2024, a special, limited-edition book showcasing the work of ten emerging photography talents, all current SCAD students or recent graduates. The vibrant anthology, published as part of Thames & Hudson’s 75th anniversary and designed by Tyler Basa (B.F.A., graphic design, 2022) is a deeply individual look into the future of photography.
 
“I am delighted to introduce Class of 2024 – an outstanding collection of photographs presented by ten talented students and recent graduates from SCAD," said Sophy Thompson, CEO & Publisher, Thames & Hudson. “Throughout our storied history, Thames & Hudson has remained committed to championing the voices and visions of young and emerging artists in parallel with the publishing of leading writers and artists from around the world. It is in that spirit that we have collaborated with SCAD to publish this book."
 
Introduced in the artists' own words and illuminated by essays from established writers, curators and editors, the photographs span genres including portraiture, landscapes, fashion commissions,  private projects, collages, and film stills. In total, the book offers up ten compelling and imaginative ways of looking at the world today in all its complexity. Guided by the strength of the creativity within its pages, Class of 2024 captures a moment in time, providing a platform for emerging talent and inspire lovers of photography.

ICP Photobook table

Fest in class: on display at ICP NY Bookfest. Photo: Mitchell Ritter.

“This unique project which began in a SCAD classroom and is now launched into the world through Thames & Hudson, publishers of the some of the most significant and influential photography books, proving that photography and education have never been more active or important," said Michael James O’Brien, chair of photography at SCAD. “Class of 2024 reflects the breadth and depth of the SCAD photography program itself as it manifests the full spectrum of photographic communication in 2024 and for the future." 

At SCAD, it is a fundamental view that photography bridges cultural divides to document human history and reflect its beauty. Students learn through this prestigious program how to frame their own distinct point of view, learning the full spectrum of photography — historic and analogue processes through modern and next-generation digital technologies.
 
The contributing photographers include five SCAD current students and five recent alumni representing several of the university’s preeminent degree programs including photography, advertising and branding, graphic design, and fashion design. The featured artists are Tyler Basa (Jackson, New Jersey); Ying Chen (Shanghai, China); Davis Clem (Knoxville, Tennessee); Joel Dubroc (Mandeville, Louisiana); Will Foerster (Deland, Florida); Kourtney Iman King (Decatur, Alabama); Vino Pan (Taipei City, Taiwan); Shan Shi (Shijiazhuang, China); Xavier Thompson (Fayetteville, Georgia); and Wisdom Warner (Stone Mountain, Georgia).

Basa Shi O

Class capture (l-r): Basa, Shi, and O'Brien at ICP NY.

The publication of the book was celebrated with events at Photo London Fair in May of this year, and in early September at ICP Photobook Fest, with appearances by photographers Tyler Basa and Shan Shi, professor of photography Michael James O’Brien, and New York magazine design editor Wendy Goodman.
 
Notably, Basa;'s contributions to the book include photography, text, and art direction. “To work with the best of the best at Thames & Hudson, to be among the pages alongside the bewilderingly talented photographers at SCAD, to provide a glimpse at the future of photography, and to be in presence for the books' debut and be given the opportunity to speak at both Photo London Fair and International Center of Photography’s 2024 Photobook Fest in New York City have all been great honors and experiences," Basa said.

Purchase Class of 2024 here.

Banner photo by Mitchell Ritter.

SCAD MOA announces fall exhibitions

September
12
2024
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The SCAD Museum of Art is proud to announce the fall 2024 season of exhibitions, uniting works by forward-thinking creators who represent varied identities, viewpoints, and artistic movements. Reflecting upon the legacies of history while engaging directly with contemporary culture, the nine new exhibitions attune viewers to the power of the human experience, and the dynamic expressions of artists seeking connection to the world around them.
 
"The SCAD Museum of Art serves as a bold and brilliant beacon for lovers of visual ideation across the globe, said SCAD President Paula Wallace. “Our fall shows feature a charismatic lineup of contemporary artists from India, Italy, Kuwait, and beyond — and we welcome back SCAD alum Anya Molyviatis for her debut solo museum exhibition in the SCAD MOA Alumni Gallery. If you're ready to see the world with new eyes, join me at the SCAD Museum of Art this fall. The space draws you in, irresistibly. No passport required!"
 
SCAD MOA welcomes George Clinton to Savannah for the first museum exhibition of his wildly unconventional paintings and drawings that defy expectations with an imaginative Afrofuturist aesthetic centering improvisation and joy. Clinton will present this year's Jacob and Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Lecture, placing his work in context with the lineages of African American storytelling. The museum is further honored to partner with Dia Art Foundation on a focused exploration of the innovative practice of Minimalist artist Dan Flavin (1933–96), whose pivotal works established a defining formal language of light and space.
 
In new and recent works, Anthony Olubunmi Akinbola critiques the commercialization of culture while uplifting the nuanced roles of everyday objects within Black life and individuality. Blending myth and purported fact in an evocative, grounding installation, multidisciplinary sculptor and filmmaker Monira Al Qadiri explores the complexities of the Persian Gulf's past and future. In her debut solo museum exhibition, SCAD alum Anya Molyviatis (B.F.A., fibers, 2021) merges technology and craft in intricate weavings that augment perception. Artist collaborators Thukral and Tagra contemplate the intersection of the digital and natural worlds in hyperrealistic paintings marked by analog pixels and glitches. Examining the connection between image-making and identity, Pop-Deco illustrator Olimpia Zagnoli transforms her graphic designs into bold portraits for a site-specific installation in the museum's public-facing Jewel Box vitrines. Beloved fashion designer Isabel Toledo is also celebrated with a posthumous exhibition of her work curated with her husband, artist, and fashion illustrator Ruben Toledo.
 
SCAD MOA chief curator Daniel S. Palmer said: "This new season of exhibitions at the SCAD Museum of Art will be unparalleled in the institution's recent history. With creators from across the globe working compellingly in nearly every medium, audiences are sure to be astonished by the art on view. Ranging from a historically significant display of American Minimalist Dan Flavin's most important series to the first solo museum exhibition of P-Funk cultural icon George Clinton's paintings and dynamic installations from Anthony Olubunmi Akinbola, Monira Al Qadiri, Anya Molyviatis, Thukral and Tagra, Isabel Toledo, and Olimpia Zagnoli, these exhibitions are certain to amaze and inspire."
 
The museum's fall exhibitions season reflects the prestige and relevance of SCAD's top-ranked degree programs, from painting, photography, and sculpture to fashion, fibers, industrial design, illustration, and film and television. Students, alumni, and visitors can engage with the artists and curators at complementary programming, including an opening celebration, artist talks and conversations throughout the week, and an electrifying performance by George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic.

signature image for George Clinton exhibition

George Clinton, Alice in My Fantasies, c. 1999, acrylic and markers on canvas, 30 x 24 in. Private collection. 

Join the opening celebration Thursday, Sept. 26, 6 p.m., at SCAD MOA, 601 Turner Blvd. in Savannah.
 
For more information, visit scadmoa.org.

Banner image: Anthony Olubunmi Akinbola, Party in the USA (HELL YEAH!!!), 2023, durags on aluminum and wood frame, 72 x 144 ½ in. Courtesy of the artist and Night Gallery, Los Angeles. Photography by Nik Massey.