Department Blog

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

RSVP FOR OUR ZOOM INFO SESSION ON NOV 1ST

〰️

RSVP FOR OUR ZOOM INFO SESSION ON NOV 1ST 〰️

All Blog Posts

Snapshots from 10NTH: Our 2023 Thesis Presentations!
Thesis, Student Projects Allan Chochinov Thesis, Student Projects Allan Chochinov

Snapshots from 10NTH: Our 2023 Thesis Presentations!

On May 5th, 2023 the tenth group of MFA Products of Design graduates presented their final thesis projects. Friends, family, design professionals, faculty, and staff gathered at the SVA Theatre in New York City to watch and share in the festivities. Ranging in topics from Designing for Disability Inclusion in Space and Design Interventions for Gendered Agency in Latin Partner Dance, to Integrating Art to Enhance Interdisciplinary Learning and Empowering Women in Creative Industries, the graduates shared hundreds of products, services, apps, platforms, and experiences throughout the day-long event. Check out more projects from this year’s graduates, here, and enjoy some snapshots of the day below!

Read More
A Fascination with Noise: Contact Mics, Everyday Objects, and Product Design
Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design

A Fascination with Noise: Contact Mics, Everyday Objects, and Product Design

Contact mics exist at the intersection of experimental music, sound art, analog electronics, and DIY-making culture. In her thesis, Anne Keating explores the design challenge of analog sound circuits, contact mic'd instruments, and the DIY maker culture surrounding the contact mic. She looks at the space occupied by noise artists and boutique guitar pedal makers who build contact mic'd noise devices. She examines how building contact mics serve as a gateway to analog circuit building and why this activity is relevant against the backdrop of digital devices and experiences.

Read More
Do As a Pirate Does: An Unauthorized Hacking Guide to a Creative Future
Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design

Do As a Pirate Does: An Unauthorized Hacking Guide to a Creative Future

Designers hate piracy. We have been told that pirates are the natural enemy of designers and the corruption of this industry. Nevertheless, Zekun Yang still chose piracy as her topic because she believes that we must challenge our assumptions to create change. In her thesis, Zekun acts as a pirate herself to "hack" into the design industry and address the problem of imbalance between designers and users, bringing a more inclusive future. This thesis can be summarized with a simple axiom: Do as a pirate does—it serves as an Unauthorized Hacking Guide to a Creative Future. In what follows, Zekun has designed products to encourage people to act like pirates, critique designs, and invite more people to build, make and design. She has also pirated the way pirates behave and applied it to make a formerly exclusive industry more inclusive.

Read More
The Powerless Metaverse: Inclusivity, Equity, and Ownership
Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design

The Powerless Metaverse: Inclusivity, Equity, and Ownership

Isabell Park's thesis, The Powerless Metaverse: Inclusivity, Equity, and Ownership, investigates the Metaverse through the lens of design to solve complex problems of access, socioeconomic gaps, and more. Metaverse, a recent buzzword, is defined as a digital world currently entered through virtual reality (VR) or augmented reality (AR) that allows people to interact, mimicking the real world. Isabell was inspired to explore the topic when the South Korean government recently decided to significantly invest in the Metaverse. “This funding expanded opportunities for people to enter the Metaverse.” Isabell explains. “With skyrocketing rents and low wages, the socioeconomic gap is significant.” This inequality allowed only the top 10% to afford physical properties—whereas people found the Metaverse to be an opportunity to own digital investments and properties. In Isabell’s design investigations she asks the question, “Does this technology have to lead to such a dark future?”

Read More
Snapshots from N9NTH: Our 2022 Thesis Presentations!
Thesis, Student Projects Allan Chochinov Thesis, Student Projects Allan Chochinov

Snapshots from N9NTH: Our 2022 Thesis Presentations!

On May 6th, the ninth group of MFA Products of Design graduates presented their thesis projects. Friends, family, design professionals, faculty, and staff gathered at the SVA Theatre in New York City to watch and share in the festivities. Ranging in topics from designing towards fat liberation and understanding chronic pain, to “raising a healthier AI” and using technology to nurture distant relationships, the graduates shared hundreds of products, services, apps, platforms and experiences. Look for comprehensive project posts coming up, but for now please enjoy snapshots of the day!

Read More
BIRTH REBORN: Using Design to Address Barriers to Equitable Maternal Care for Black Women
Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design

BIRTH REBORN: Using Design to Address Barriers to Equitable Maternal Care for Black Women

At a time when the maternal mortality rate in the US is soaring, Victoria Ayo's thesis, Birth Reborn: Using Design to Address Barriers to Equitable Maternal Care for Black Women, aims to give voice and power back to black women and mothers. Her project explores how design can build more awareness, facilitate the integration of ancestral knowledge, leverage the community, and help eliminate barriers to equitable birth outcomes. Victoria proposes new realities for collective care, bringing the wellbeing of mothers out of isolation and into solidarity.

Read More
Grandma’s Teeth: An Exploration of Feminine Voice, Power, and Reclamation
Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design

Grandma’s Teeth: An Exploration of Feminine Voice, Power, and Reclamation

Stephanie Gamble’s thesis, Grandma’s Teeth: An Exploration of Feminine Voice, Power and Reclamation, is an in-depth examination of the physical, verbal, and emotional enforcement mechanisms of misogyny. Drawing from her own grandmother’s experience with the violence of misogyny, Stephanie designed a provocative body of work that interrogates and makes tangible how the enforcement mechanisms of misogyny are used to control and silence women. This thesis work proposes solutions that invert current power dynamics and challenge cultural values as a way to incite dialogue, ignite anger and impress upon men the substantial toll these experiences have on the daily lives of women.

Read More
HOME IN PROGRESS:   Designing Systems of Collective Care for Migrant Communities through Food and Multi-Sensory Experiences
Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design Student Projects, Thesis Products of Design

HOME IN PROGRESS:  Designing Systems of Collective Care for Migrant Communities through Food and Multi-Sensory Experiences

Seona Joung, as a first-generation immigrant, has often dwelled in the in-between spaces of two geographies and cultures. Her thesis, Home in Progress: Designing Systems of Collective Care for Migrant Communities through Food and Multi-Sensory Experience, questions how design constructs and narrates a new relationship between people and multiple locations and thus serves as an ideal site to interrogate how immigrants relate themselves to the place of origin and the place of residence. Looking at the consequences of what migration does to the family relationship and social structure that influence our identity and health, her design work offers multilocal strategies that leverage sensory experiences, specifically triggered by food preparation and consuming.

Read More