Remove 2013 Remove Exhibition Remove Industrial Design Remove Programming
article thumbnail

Meet the Jury of the AZ Awards 2024

Azure Magazine

At Arizona State University, she is the director and founder of the Indigenous Design Collaborative , a community-driven design and construction program that brings together tribal community members, industry and a multidisciplinary team of ASU students and faculty to co-design and co-develop solutions for tribal communities.

article thumbnail

Meet the Jury of the 2023 AZ Awards!

Azure Magazine

We are pleased to welcome this superlative group of leaders in the fields of architecture, landscape architecture, interiors and product and furniture design to adjudicate the submissions to our international program, now in its 13th year. If you haven’t already, you can enter the AZ Awards at awards.azuremagazine.com! JERRY VAN EYCK

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Dot Dot Dot Is the Most Influential Design Magazine You’ve Never Heard Of

Eye on Design

Not to be confused with the more popular usage coined by Anthony Dunne and Fiona Raby, who saw product and industrial design as a tool for critiquing new technologies, Dot Dot Dot’ s flavor of critical design explicitly sees graphic design, in itself, as a critical activity.

Magazine 111
article thumbnail

“When You Carefully Put Two Buildings Together, That’s When the City Begins”: A Conversation with Yung Ho Chang

Azure Magazine

His buildings, especially his Vertical Glass House (Shanghai, 1991-2013) and Split House (2002), have beautiful stories to tell. These designs are also among the earliest uncompromisingly modern and concept-driven buildings in China. But I was also interested in pursuing industrial design. I was quite lost.

article thumbnail

Where did this interaction come from??—?a brief history of interaction design

UX Collective

In 1961 , Allan Kaprow defined “Happenings” as a form of [performance] art in streets, garages, and shops as opposed to the general exclusive approach of art galleries and exhibitions. If visitors kept quiet in the exhibition space, they would only see their mirror images.