Skip to main content

Rendering the future of design education

Environmental design students unveil plans in first-ever partnership with Phoenix Art Museum


|
May 01, 2018

If you had the opportunity to build your ideal career path at a pace and in a space tailor-made just for you — what would it look like?

That was the question design students at Arizona State University put to the test in the spring of 2018. The result: a creative-response showcase that will be unveiled at the Phoenix Art Museum on Friday.

Dubbed “The Experimental Room,” the semester-long project tasked students in the Environmental Design programAlmost 100 students from ASU's Bachelor's of Environmental Design program participated in the project to present the future of design education. in ASU’s Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts to grapple with what it means to design for an increasingly uncertain future in our human-made surroundings — and then come up with solutions.

“This year we started with something full of potential,” said the program’s coordinator, Elena Rocchi. “We’re seeking to teach lifelong learners who dream intensively, who want a hand in creating their own future.”

That future could mean a significant reduction in recidivism and a more educated prison population, according to the students behind one of the design concepts featured in “The Experimental Room.” In tackling the complex issue of how to create a system that keeps people in our free society, the group entered into a multi-step process that involved some self-reflection in the form of self-portrait collages, ethnography research, community engagement and creativity.

Under Rocchi’s guidance, students and their instructors built a hybrid classroom into the galleries of the Phoenix Art Museum, which also granted them access to texts and other materials. The articulation of their efforts manifested in a multimedia exhibit of wire-frame modules, illustrations, renderings and companion booklets that will be on display in the museum’s Cummings Great Hall.

The night of the exhibition, which falls on downtown Phoenix’s culturally imbued First Fridays Art Walk, will also include diverse performances from the students from 6 to 10 p.m., as well as unique and individual chairs — a lot of them.

Student designers will bring an object of personal significance to sit on while channeling the idea of putting down roots and getting comfortable in the environmental space they have designed for themselves and the community in which they live.

“We are invited to Phoenix Art Museum during First Friday to present students' dreams of their careers as a special exhibit,” Rocchi said. “We seek to weave ourselves and ASU more deeply into the fabric of the community.”

The debut of “The Experimental Room” at the Phoenix Art Museum marks ASU Design School’s first-ever exhibition partnership with the museum. It comes in the midst of an intentional redesign of the school under the directorship of design industry leader Jason Schupbach and the restructuring of the Environmental Design program. The program seeks to create a deep awareness and knowledge of issues that influence the design of built environments and the design of artifacts with focus on sustainability, innovation and technology.

If you go: 'The Experimental Room'

Where: Phoenix Art Museum, 1625 N. Central Ave.

When: 6-10 p.m. Friday, May 4.

Admission: Free, as part of the museum's participation in First Fridays.

Top photo: A self-portrait collage by Environmental Design student Georgiana Costinean. Photo courtesy of Vincent Malouf 

More Arts, humanities and education

 

A female humanities lab student stands in front of an audience while speaking into a microphone

Students host gun culture storytelling event with an intergenerational audience

According to Bobbie Reed — a resident of Arizona State University's senior living retirement community center, Mirabella — guns were much less prevalent in society when she was growing up. “I don’t…

Incarcerated women come together during the final performance in front of jail staff and ASU Gammage donors.

ASU Gammage program brings the arts to incarcerated women

Laughter might not be the first thing you expect to hear when arriving at Maricopa County Estrella Jail, the all-women prison facility in south Phoenix. But it was there on a recent afternoon, down…

A group of girls in a gym playing volleyball

Maryvale girls gain confidence through volleyball program

Life as a teen or tween can be tough, particularly for girls. That's why an Arizona State University partnership with a community center in West Phoenix is building confidence in girls through…