“Lovie Dovie” by Frankie Brescia, BFA Digital Arts ’22, was named Best Animation at the 2022 SF Queer Film Fest. It will be screened at Fringe! Queer Film Fest in London (September 20-25) and Lovesick Film Festival in Jersey City (September 28).
The Daily Hub
A roundup of ideas and projects from around the Institute
-
-
Eugene Kim, MArch ’26, is a recipient of the 2025 Center for Architecture Design Scholarship. “This recognition means a lot to me, especially as I continue to explore what it means to design with empathy, clarity, and purpose that I have been pursuing since the first day I decided to pursue spatial design,” he told the School of Architecture News Page.
-
Danielle Shumskas, BFA Fine Arts (Painting) ’25, was chosen for the Byrdcliffe Artists-in-Residence program, which provides exceptional artists with “uninterrupted creative time” at the Byrdcliffe Arts Colony in Woodstock, NY.
-
“Unveiling” by Alanna Fields, MFA Photography ’19, was listed among the “Queer Standouts” at Contact Photography Festival 2025 by Yohomo. “Her interest reaches backward to a time before she was born—long before our contemporary moment, in which queer identities and iconography are increasingly detached from their origins, commodified, and casually tried on at will.”
-
Professor of Fashion Design and Black Dress exhibition co-curator Adrienne Jones spoke to Essence about this year’s Met Gala, its theme “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style,” and the history of Black fashion design and styling. “There’s more than three colors in the crayon box,” she said. “Where was the vibrancy? I think of African tailors, of Caribbean elegance—rich color, texture, vibrance. That’s what I wanted more of.”
-
Nidhi Jairam, BID ’28, was awarded second place in the 2025 IESNYC Student Lighting Competition. Honorable mentions were awarded to Estefania Martinez-Aleman (Fefi), MID ’26, George Batska, BID ’27, and Zara Braun, BID ’27.
-
President Frances Bronet is featured on the 2025 Power Players in Arts & Culture list by PoliticsNY and amNewYork. She reflects on the civic and economic role of the arts in New York City and the ongoing Pratt Shows 2025. “It’s my favorite time of year – Pratt Shows season. These public exhibitions showcase the culminating work of our graduating students across disciplines. Vibrant, urgent, and thoughtful, the shows celebrate years of creative inquiry, imagining new futures, and offer a glimpse into what matters most to the next generation of artists, designers, architects, and creative thinkers.”
-
Hyperallergic reviewed Part II of Pratt’s Fine Arts MFA thesis exhibition Inside/Out. “The spatial fissures in the work of Pratt’s 2025 MFA graduate students resonate in what feels like an increasingly disjointive time,” writes Daniel Larkin. “By challenging viewers’ perception of space to gesture towards these indeterminate horizons, these artists open up a new view to think through these perilous times.”
-
Adeeba Rana, MSLIS ’13, was interviewed by New York’s PIX11 about the reopening of the The Bedford Branch Library, where she is the branch manager. “Bed-Stuy is full of artists and thinkers and makers, and really this community flourishes when there’s a library space to help those things happen.”
-
Adjunct Associate Professor of Fine Art Ross Knight was interviewed in Office Magazine about his sculptures, which are described as “playful, irreverent, and touchingly close to everyday life.”
More Pratt Institute News
Research Open House 2025 Awards Recognize Community Engagement, Sustainability, and Design Projects

Snapshot 2025: Before They Graduate
From Pratt Institute News

Guggenheim Fellowship Awarded to Film/Video Faculty Member Matías Piñeiro
From Pratt Institute News