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The Daily Hub

A roundup of ideas and projects from around the Institute

  • Ken Tisa, BFA ’68, was featured in Mutual Art. “Ken Tisa’s new exhibition ‘Portals’ celebrates his artistic legacy, featuring works by 17 former students inspired by his introspective, dream-based teaching approach,” writes Maya Garabedian. 

  • Insectopolis: A Natural History, a new graphic novel by Fine Arts alumnus Peter Kuper, was featured in PRINT magazine, Comics Beat, and The Nation. “One of the things I hope to accomplish with Insectopolis is for readers who are not big enthusiasts of insects to recognize how hugely important they are in our day-to-day life and for the sustenance of our planet,” Kuper told The Nation. “Without pollinators, we wouldn’t have chocolate or coffee, and grocery store shelves would be mostly empty.”

  • Mark Fingerhut, BFA Digital Arts ’15, is featured in Artnet in a review of his “4D software poem,” Halcyon.exe: The Ride. “Most of the work’s recurring imagery—birds in the sky, boats at sea, storm-swept streets, and walks on sunny days—could be different symbols for the idea of “touching grass,” getting offline and into the world, even as the work captures the feeling of being pulled deeper and deeper into a digital wonderland, as one fascinating oddity clicks on to the next.”

  • Genevieve Garlock, MArch ’25, is featured in Archinect for her research into fire mitigation strategies following the increasing fire risk in Sea Ranch, California. Garlock “was inspired to resolve a challenge inherent in subdivision design that results when property lines overlap with fire hardening zones. In doing so, her work also forges the possibility for [a] new understanding [of] shared responsibilities and resources, and whether it is best to care for property in a collective or as private individuals.” 

  • Yiyao Tang, BFA Interior Design 18, has been included in the group exhibition Rich Land, Poor Land at Carriage Trade through July 27, 2025. The group exhibition, which examines the politics of landscape and expropriation, referencing Stuart Chase’s depression-era land use study Rich Land, Poor Land. The show features work by artists including Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange, Nancy Holt and Robert Smithson, and Michael Ashkin, among others.

  • Duke Riley, MFA Fine Arts (Sculpture) ’06, has been chosen as the Wassaic Project’s honoree at their 2025 Summer Benefit. “We’re proud to be honoring the one and only Duke Riley this summer,” said Wassaic Project Co-Directors Eve Biddle, Bowie Zunino, and Jeff Barnett-Winsby. “Duke is one of our earliest artists-in-residence, whose work—whether developing intricate scrimshaw pieces out of shoreline trash or piloting a homemade submarine into the path of a cruise ship—has always served as a model for the kind of fearless approach and meticulous craftsmanship we hope to inspire in our artists and our students.”

  • Neel Soni, BFA Film ’24, was longlisted for the 2025 BAFTA Student Awards for his film Babli by Night. “The film follows the story of Babban, a Muslim, transgender forest guard battling societal as well as familial indifference, seeking solace among nature, and grappling with an unexpected HIV diagnosis,” Soni wrote.

More Pratt Institute News

Graduate Architecture Student Quinn Gregory Named 2025 Fulbright Finalist

From Pratt Institute News

Gregory will spend nine months in Europe to study how bicycle theft undermines collective efforts to increase urban cycling.
Two graduates in caps and gowns celebrate outside, smiling and holding a Pratt diploma folder, with one tossing their cap in the air.

Hats Off to Pratt’s Class of 2025! 

From Pratt Institute News

Graduates accepted their diplomas during an exuberant Commencement at the iconic Radio City Music Hall. Honorary degrees were bestowed upon Claudia Rankine, Annabelle Selldorf, and Stefan Sagmeister.