Department Blog

Department news, events, and snapshots of student life at SVA in New York City.

Zoom Info Sessions on December 11th!

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Zoom Info Sessions on December 11th! 〰️

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Student-Designed Products Launch at the MoMA Design Store!
News, Student Projects Allan Chochinov News, Student Projects Allan Chochinov

Student-Designed Products Launch at the MoMA Design Store!

We are extraordinarily proud that for the entire month of April, the two New York-based MoMA Design Stores are dedicating their windows and in-store displays to the collaboration with MFA Products of Design department! For the launch of 6 new products, an Opening Reception was held in midtown Manhattan last Thursday night. Check out photos below of the packed house, guests, and featured products designed by Products of Design students!

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JUSTICE BY ALL: Revitalizing Civic Engagement in the Judicial System
Student Projects Krithi Rao Student Projects Krithi Rao

JUSTICE BY ALL: Revitalizing Civic Engagement in the Judicial System

Julia Lindpaintner’s thesis work was inspired by her own experience of serving on a grand jury in Manhattan during the summer of 2016. It profoundly changed her understanding of the judicial system, and in particular, the way she saw her role in it. “My mental model shifted,” Julia states. She further explains, “Instead of seeing the judicial system as an autonomous force over which I had no influence, I felt viscerally the way in which we, as citizens, are collectively responsible for the system and the outcomes it produces.”

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Parallel Times: Product Designs From the Future
Student Projects Allan Chochinov Student Projects Allan Chochinov

Parallel Times: Product Designs From the Future

Graduating students of SVA’s MFA in Products of Design present PARALLEL TIMES, an exhibition of artifacts developed through the varied lenses of extrapolated futures. 

Guided by Sinclair Smith in the Product Futuring class, and employing the endangered vernacular of the newspaper, students constructed advertisements for a product accessory representing a utopian or dystopian future—envisioning a world to reach for or avoid. They then used the insights gleaned from these future accessories to refract backwards in time, designing critical products for the here-and-now within Raymond Loewy’s “most advanced, yet acceptable” framework.

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