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DI Exhibits

Design Innovation hosts two exhibition spaces - the DI Gallery and MuseLab - that offer ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State students, staff, faculty, alumni, and affiliates the opportunity to publicly display their artwork, design, research, or fabrication projects that emphasize cross-disciplinary collaborations and reflect the mission of the Design Innovation Initiative.

Call for Exhibit Proposals: OPEN

Design Innovation is accepting exhibit proposals for installation in the DI Gallery. The proposal process is open to all ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State students, staff, faculty, alumni, and affiliates and offers the opportunity to publicly display artwork, design, research, or fabrication projects within the DI HUB. Exhibitions can be a work in progress, finished expression, example of technological or scientific innovations, or other project, but should emphasize cross-disciplinary collaborations and reflect the mission of the Design Innovation Initiative.

 


Spring 2025 Exhibits

BA Studio Art Capstone Group Exhibit

Wednesday, April 9th - Monday, April 28th
DI Gallery

Taryn McMahon - tmcmaho5@kent.edu 

This exhibit will include work from 14 BA Studio Art seniors who are enrolled in the BA Capstone course. 

 

Speculative Matter

Monday, April 28th – Friday, May 2nd
Blank_Lab

Laure Nolte – lnolte@kent.edu

Within a design lab environment, we will experiment with hyperlocal superabundant biological materials, exploring cross disciplinary frameworks and speculation as a tool to re-imagine "waste" matter through material generation and fabrication. Informed by emerging theories in new materialism, students will produce speculative materials that reveal narratives about urgent ecological concerns. Students will be expected to critically conceptualize the formats through which these materials and narratives are expressed, which could include but are not limited to 1:1 mock ups, physical models, drawings, animations or video. The semester will culminate in a final presentation and exhibition.

 

dissect * enmesh * revive

Thursday, May 1st – Thursday, May 8th
DI Gallery

Koon-Hwee Kan – kkan@kent.edu

This research began as a substantive inquiry in digital artmaking during my FPIL in AY2018‒19. Although I do not consider myself a professional artist, capitalizing on visuals to tell intriguing stories and meaningfully represent data has been my strength in academic writing and has enhanced all 25 of my publications in educational journals and books. My artworks, which have primarily been autobiographical, helped me to explore facets of my identity as an overseas Chinese Singaporean intellectual residing in the United States for over a quarter-century. Creatively interpreting my own intangible memories and lived experiences by partially manifesting them through digitization, I aim to ignite a sense of curiosity and positive nostalgia to empower my online international audience living in a chaotic and contentious world.