Design Lecture Series: Chris Hamamoto

On Wednesday 2/24, 10am EST, please join us for a lecture by Chris Hamamoto called “Versioning.” Link is available at spring2021-seminar.designforthe.net.

Chris Hamamoto is a Bay Area-based designer. He is an Assistant Professor at California College of the Arts, and has also lectured or given workshops at Letterform Archive, OCAT Shenzhen, The Book Society in South Korea, SUNY Purchase, Meiyi Art Academy in China, and RISD, among others. His work has been exhibited in the Gwanju Design Biennale, Brno International Graphic Design Biennial, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, and Typojanchi, as well as published in C Magazine, IDEA Magazine, and the Walker Art Center’s Gradient.

Design Lecture Series: Silas Munro

On Wednesday 2/17, 10am EST, please join us for a lecture by Silas Munro called “Bearing Witness: A Designer’s Struggle For Integrity.” Link is available at spring2021-seminar.designforthe.net.

In the fall of 1962, James Baldwin gave a lecture at Community Church in New York City entitled “The Artist’s Struggle for Integrity.” The speech was later broadcast via Radio on WBAI. In the talk, Baldwin grapples with defining terms like “artist” or “integrity.” He concludes that an artist or designer must confront the dilemma that they are “bearing witness helplessly to something which everybody knows, and nobody wants to face.” Munro will explore how his mutable practice as a designer, educator, writer, researcher, historian, poet, surfer, and activist has attempted to create a form of integrity in the face of racism, homophobia, classism, stigma, and other forms of exclusion. This attempt at integration is reflected in his lived experience as a queer biracial man and the experiences of his clients and students. Munro is particularly interested in the often unaddressed post-colonial relationship between design and marginalized communities. His practice sheds light, opens up space, and speculates on new futures for more inclusive design disciplines.

On the Letterform of the Age by Bo-Won Keum!

Who gets to set the standards for communication, and why? Bo-Won Keum, Triple Canopy’s associate designer, addresses this question in “On the Letterform of the Age,” an essay on the role of the designer in shaping how people make meaning out of language. In considering the current state of design, Keum revisits the work of Bauhaus designers who advocated for the transformation of typography in response to the rise of the typewriter and printing press, as well as dramatic changes in the habits of readers. “The efforts by Bauhaus masters to update and standardize type for the machine age prefigured current discussions about the form and function of design in the digital age,” Keum writes, “and the need for typography to adapt to various surfaces, formats, and operating systems.”

Design Lecture Series: Amelia Winger-Bearskin

On Wednesday 2/10, 10am EST, please join us for a lecture by Amelia Winger-Bearskin called “Decentralized Storytelling.” Link is available at spring2021-seminar.designforthe.net.

Amelia Winger-Bearskin is an artist/technologist who helps communities leverage emerging technologies to effect positive change in the world. She is a Senior Technical Training Specialist at Contentful in the SF Bay Area. In 2019 she was an invited presenter to His Holiness Dalai Lama’s World Headquarters in Dharamsala for the Summit on Fostering Universal Ethics and Compassion. She founded IDEA New Rochelle, which partnered with the NR Mayor’s office to develop citizen-focused VR/AR tools and was awarded the 2018 Bloomberg Mayors Challenge $1 million dollar grant to prototype their AR Citizen toolkit. She is a Google VR JUMP Start creator, co-directing with Wendy Red Star a 360 video story about Native American Monsters which was selected for a McArthur Grant through the Sundance Institute Native New Frontiers Story Lab 2018. It is on display at Newark Museum beginning February 2019. Amelia is the founder and host of wampum.codes podcast and the host of Contentful + Algolia’s Developer Podcast DreamStacks. She is Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) of the Seneca-Cayuga Nation of Oklahoma, Deer Clan.

Design Lecture Series: McKenzie Wark

On January 27, 2021, the Rutgers Design Lecture Series, Spring 2021, kicked off with McKenzie Wark, who introduced “The Cis Gaze (and its others).”

For upcoming talks, please visit spring2021-seminar.designforthe.net.

McKenzie Wark is the author, among other things, of Capital is Dead (Verso Books), Sensoria (Verso Books), Reverse Cowgirl (Semiotexte) and various other things. Her next book is Philosophy for Spiders: On the Low Theory of Kathy Acker, to be published by Duke University Press in fall 2021. She is currently editing a special issue of eflux journal on trans | fem | aesthetics, to be published in Spring 2021. She was awarded the Thoma Prize for digital art writing in 2019. She is professor of culture and media at Eugene Lang College, the undergraduate liberal arts division of The New School, in New York City.