On was an interdisciplinary graduate periodical established by RISD graduate students in 2006. It featured essays and student work that related to a general issue theme. On was intended as a quarterly publication, but it is unclear if further issues beyond the first were ever published.
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Graduate Thesis Exhibition 2020 Poster
Campus Exhibitions and Graduate Studies
Like their peers around the world, graduate students completing thesis work remotely in spring 2020 were forced to relocate, reassess and adjust their practices. They also needed to forego the highly popular public exhibition of their final bodies of work, which traditionally runs for two weeks in late May.
Instead, RISD Grad Show 2020 celebrates the creativity and determination of more than 200 graduate students who earned their master’s degrees this year. The growing collection of work presented online—from concepts and sketches to completed pieces—will be on view beginning summer of 2020. Work was exhibited in physical form in the RISD Museum’s Chace Center galleries as soon as it was safe to reopen, limited to the RISD community only, in October of 2020.
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Realistic utopia : utopian architecture exhibition at Arcosanti
Xiao Fang
Many people believe that only when a design is built can it be called architecture. Architecture, however, was never solely about built form. And unlike other types of design, architecture depends on imagination and visualization: only the architect knows how the space works before it has actually been built. Thus, it is necessary to test the design on paper before it has been realized and many times architectural designs are heavily modified or abandoned for economic, political or environmental reasons.
Meanwhile, architects also design spaces knowing they will never be built, to exercise ideas or push toward new realities. From ancient times to the present, there have always been architects who incorporate their social, political, and philosophical ideals through media other than construction. They explore technical materials that seem impossible, new architectural languages in urban contexts, and the deep connection between architecture and the environment. Even though these utopians never had the chance to realize their works, their experimental, inspiring ideas have left us precious treasure.
Why did architects design these utopias? How have their designs and ideas influenced architecture, urban development, and society as a whole? Through designing creating an exhibition on utopian architecture at Arcosanti, an experimental utopian town in Arizona, this thesis will bring unfulfilled dreams to life. The proposed exhibition will combine reconstruction of featured utopian architecture as scale model pavilions scattered in the landscape surrounding Arcosanti, and a new pavilion to represent contemporary notions of utopia. The space that hosts the exhibition is also an exhibit, and as the pavilions are generated from the exhibition content. Each pavilion will not only be a model representation of the utopian design ideals of its designer, but also hold exhibitions of other similar utopian proposals. The exhibition melds with Arcosanti and will be an exploratory tour around the entire site. The reconstruction of historical utopias within a living utopian community will communicate different possibilities for architecture, and suggest a yet more ambitious utopian future.
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New Observations #136 | Conciousness and Contact -The Awakening-
Mia Feroleto
New Observations is a non-profit, contemporary arts journal written, edited, and published by the arts community. For more information visit newobservations.org.