Department Blog
Department news, events, and snapshots of student life at SVA in New York City.
Zoom Info Sessions on December 11th!
〰️
Zoom Info Sessions on December 11th! 〰️
Featured Posts
All Blog Posts
Register For Our 2021 Virtual Open House & Info Sessions
Interested in changing your life with an MFA in Design? Please join us for this year's Products of Design Open House and Information Sessions on November 11th and on December 9th! Attendees will be able to meet faculty, alumni, and current students, see projects, and learn about the courses and fabrication labs. The sessions will be on Zoom, so you can participate from anywhere in the world. There will also be time to answer any Q&As you have!
Watch EI8TH: Our 2021 Thesis Presentations!
On May 14nd, the students of the Class of 2021 presented their Masters Thesis projects at the SVA Theatre—taped without an audience, but safely—and then livestreamed to the world. Enjoy the video in its entirety, with some snapshots of the day below!
Panisa Khunprasert is in the windows of MoMA!
Huge congratulations to Class of 2016 alum Panisa Khunprasert, who is featured in both downtown and midtown windows of the Museum of Modern Art Gift Design Stores! Panisa’s relationship with MoMA began with MFA Products of Design’s annual collaboration with MoMA Wholesale, and the partnership has blossomed ever since. (Panisa’s coasters were the very first product produced as part of that partnership back6 years ago!) Check out some of the snapshots below.
Announcing New Faculty for Fall 2021!
We are thrilled to welcome four amazing new faculty to Products of Design for the Fall 2021 semester!
2021 Core77 Design Awards: Helen Chen Wins in Two Categories!
This year’s Core77 Design Awards were just announced, and Products of Design alum Helen Chen won two awards for one of the projects she created as part of her Masters thesis, Fruiting Bodies: Fungal Futures for Collaborative Survival. The project, Internet of Mycelium was honored with the Student Winner in the Strategy & Research Award category, as well as a Student Runner Up in the Speculative Design Award category. Congratulations Helen!
N-3+Me: Urban Resilience at Human Scale
Regena Paloma Reyes is a service designer, New York City resident, and urban enthusiast. Her thesis, N-3+Me: Urban Resilience at Human Scale, investigates factors that promote adaptability in city-dwellers during times of crisis. Urban communities seem more likely to suffer significant losses in unnatural catastrophes, from infrastructure failure to terror threats due to their high population density. The ensuing collection of research and product design examines how resilience can be at its greatest in urban environments, and how city spaces, diverse populations, and the expansive interpersonal networks that arise therein can be used to create cultures of preparedness at individual, interpersonal, and community scales.
Out From Control: Design Interventions Around Emotional Abuse
Xiaohan Miao's thesis, Out From Control: Design Interventions Around Emotional Abuse, is an in-depth analysis of emotional abuse towards women in relationships. While researching the complexity of emotional abuse, Xiaohan decided to zero in on the healing process from a personal angle—an individual woman’s journey. This body of thesis work proposes solutions to transform the narratives around emotional abuse, raise awareness, validate women's intuition, and takes the form of interventions such as a new social network for victims and the reimagining of self-care through journaling.
Overwhelmed: Work, Play, Time, and Design
Karan Mahendra Bansal’s thesis, Overwhelmed: Work, Play, Time, and Design, investigates Time Poverty in the context of knowledge workers. Defined as the state or condition in which an individual lacks the discretionary time required for activities to build their social and human capital, he asserts that the underlying reason for Time Poverty is not the lack of time, but the lack of choice. Roughly 80% of American knowledge workers feel that they never have enough time to do the things they want to, and collectively fail to utilize approximately 700 million vacation days each year. Startled by the magnitude of this fact, Karan began to explore our complicated relationship with time.
The Uncommon Core: A Design Exploration of Active Education for Kinesthetic Learners
Bethany Fronhofer, who was homeschooled for the majority of her school years, has experienced many types of learning. These ranged from training a team of oxen to writing fiction to taking traditional math and science classes. As a hands-on learner, she was dissatisfied with the heavy bias toward lectures and reading/writing assignments in public school classes. Her thesis, The Uncommon Core: A Design Exploration of Active Education for Kinesthetic Learners, questions how and why educational design prioritizes some styles of learning over others and creates a space to consider new ways of including hands-on learning in curriculums and educational environments.