Silence, Fear, and Urgency in Design Practice: October 21, 2025


What do I look like to a machine? Computer vision algorithms “see” me as a series of boxes that can be recognized and named, a group of points whose relationship to one another predicts my emotional state, and so on.
A series of self portraits attempts to reclaim my image from this reductive algorithmic gaze, while prompting additional questions: what ways of knowing are illegible to a machine? In what ways do I want to be known, to myself and to others?
On October 21, the Mason Gross Design community welcomed Livia Foldes, a Brooklyn-based cultural worker whose practice explores gender, labor, intimacy, and power across art, design, technology, and activism. Her work asks how and why machines are taught to understand, and often misunderstand, our bodies and the identities they carry. Livia’s projects have been supported by The Photographers’ Gallery, NEW INC, and the Goethe Institut, reflecting her deep commitment to using design as a tool for critical reflection and social change.
In her talk, Livia traced her journey from working in San Francisco during the height of the tech boom—when rapid growth and gentrification transformed the city, to pursuing graduate studies in Design and Technology at Parsons. These experiences grounded her practice in ethics and activism, and led her to question the systems that shape our digital lives.
Livia shared a range of projects that examined bias in machine vision, erased internet histories, and the overlooked contributions of sex workers to digital culture. Through works such as Machine Portraits and Browser Histories, she revealed how technology mirrors structures of power, determining who is visible and who is rendered invisible.
Reflecting on her teaching and creative process, Livia spoke about the need to build design practices that balance urgency and sustainability, to challenge injustice without burning out, and to critique systems while caring for oneself and one’s community.
She closed her lecture with a meditation on fear and silence, reminding students that design exists in tension: between art and commerce, critique and complicity, innovation and responsibility. The real work of design, she suggested, begins when we find the courage to speak, to question, and to act with both empathy and conviction.