The article highlights a collaborative experimental dining project, “Farm is Table,” co-created by visiting Interior Design professor Allan Wexler, in which the table is literally embedded into the earth to explore hyperlocal food, ecology, and the blurring of art, agriculture, and architecture.
Designing Her Way to Her Dream Job
Recent alumna Renata Dominguez always knew she wanted to work in design. Now, just one year post-grad, she’s thriving at one of the biggest international branding agencies.
Seeing the City: Tours, Talks, and More
From Pratt Institute News
This fall in New York City, students went to the newly renovated Frick, explored innovative materials at a circular design brand, and heard from famed director Spike Lee.
Exploring the Role of Values in Art and Design Education
From Pratt Institute News
Hosted on Pratt’s Brooklyn campus, the 2025 AICAD Symposium featured sessions on climate literacy, community-based learning, and interdisciplinary collaboration.
Repair. Rest. Repeat.
From Pratt Institute News
Mending Circle, one of Pratt’s newest student clubs, sets aside time for care and community.
Open Studios, Endless Possibilities
From Pratt Institute News
Pratt’s annual MFA Open Studios were complemented by the first-ever Open Fields artist resource fair, making for an electric day of events celebrating artistic practice and the resources that sustain it.
Designing Digital Interfaces for Real-World Clients
From Pratt Institute News
Graduate student Shreesa Shrestha, MSIXD ’26, is making the most of every opportunity at Pratt as she balances client projects, community-building initiatives, and a prestigious Product Design Fellowship at The Museum of Modern Art.
Architecture Students Make Strong Debut at Design Competition
From Pratt Institute News
The Pratt team earned national recognition and the honorable mention award for a project centered on food, culture, and connection in Kansas City.
The Latest
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39 Reasons to Love New York
New York Magazine’s “39 Reasons to Love New York Right Now” spotlights a citywide rise in art-school enrollment and notes that Pratt’s drawing and painting programs hit their highest enrollment levels in nearly 15 years, underscoring strong demand for a creative education.
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Alex Strada with Gaby Collins-Fernández
In this Brooklyn Rail conversation, artist Alex Strada discusses Public Address, her citywide public art project formed through deep interagency collaboration and informed by her broader socially engaged practice—including her role as the Fine Arts’ Civic Engagement Fellow at Pratt Institute, where she previously developed the community-centered project Collective Mobilities.
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Jeremy Scott Accepts Legends Award at Pratt
The WWD article celebrates designer and Pratt alum Jeremy Scott as a 2025 Legends Award honoree, tracing how his Pratt education and perseverance after early rejection shaped his creative journey—from aspiring ceramicist in Missouri to globally recognized fashion visionary whose bold, unconventional designs reflect the transformative power of a creative education.
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New York art students navigate creativity in the age of AI
NBC News Now spotlighted two Graduate Communications Design students and spoke with Chair Gaia Hwang about how Pratt’s designers are reimagining creativity in the age of AI.
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A Long Sunrise Walk to Start the School Year
The New York Times highlights Pratt’s annual tradition where first-year students join President Frances Bronet and Vice President for Student Affairs Delmy Lendof for a sunrise walk across the Brooklyn Bridge, a bonding ritual that helps them connect with one another and the city.
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NYC art schools see record-high application numbers as Gen Zers clamber to enroll
The article highlights a surge in applications to NYC art schools, with Pratt seeing record enrollment and waitlists for its fine arts programs as Gen Z pursues creative, hands-on careers in response to an AI-driven world.
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Kadir Nelson, BFA Communications Design ’96, discusses his forthcoming illustrated book Basketball and his love of the game in an interview with Rolling Out. “I begin with an idea, I create a sketch. Sometimes I do studies if it’s a very complex painting, and then I’ll transfer my sketches to a canvas, and I create the canvas, so it’s very traditional. I really enjoy the medium of oil painting because it’s something that the old masters used and it stands the test of time. Working with it is a bit more familiar to me than working with other mediums.”
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Art and Design Education faculty members Borinquen Gallo, adjunct professor – CCE, and Katherine Huala, associate professor, will be workshop presenters at the NYSATA Region 8 Inaugural Winter Symposium at the MoMA Cullman Education Center this January. This is a full day of professional development for art educators centered on the Ruth Asawa exhibition.
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TheyDream, the most recent feature film by William D. Caballero, BFA Computer Graphics ’06, was selected to premiere at Sundance 2026 in the NEXT category. The film, a mix of live action and animation, was also highlighted as a standout in Filmmaker Magazine and Deadline.
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The Associate Degree Department hosted the Fall 2025 XYZ Playtest, an ongoing game dev showcase and playtesting event. Students and alumni from the AOS Game Design program, BFA Game Arts program, and other neighboring university game programs got together to showcase games they’ve been developing throughout the fall semester. From a library book sorting video game to a tabletop game about lucid dreaming, there was a lot of creativity and talent on display.
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SC103, the clothing brand founded by Sophie Andes-Gascon and Claire McKinney, both BFA Fashion Design ’15, opened a “Jewel Box of a Store” in New York City, reports Vogue.
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Tomokazu Matsuyama, MFA Communications Design ’04, was featured in Whitehot Magazine on the occasion of his new exhibition Liberation Back Home at the SCAD Museum of Art in Savannah, Georgia. “Liberation Back Home isn’t just an exhibition; it’s a proposal for how identity might operate in a world where purity myths are collapsing and hybrid life is the norm,” writes Emann Odufu. “Matsuyama offers a model of cultural perception that feels increasingly urgent in an America struggling over belonging.”
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Visiting Assistant Professor of Film/Video Chris Radcliff’s film We Were the Scenery has been shortlisted at the 98th Academy Awards® for Best Documentary Short Film. “When we started this project, we had no way of knowing where it would take us. We only hoped that in the year 2025, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, we’d be able to find a way to share Cathy’s family’s remarkable, yet until now, untold story with an audience. We never could have imagined how far it would go, or how deeply their story would resonate with people around the world.”
Prattfolio
Methods & Materials
Fall 2025
“Whatever Is Happening Now Is Never Going to Happen Again”
AI Is Offering New Visions for Architecture and Opportunities for Architects to Shape Its Future