Skip to content

Exploring the Role of Values in Art and Design Education

Hosted on Pratt’s Brooklyn campus, the 2025 AICAD Symposium featured sessions on climate literacy, community-based learning, and interdisciplinary collaboration.
A tabletop cluttered with various crafting supplies, including colorful yarn, buttons, fabric scraps, and scissors. Two hands are visible: one holding a decorated piece of fabric, while another points towards a sock-like item with a blue pattern. A wooden tool and small containers with pins and sequins are also present on a vibrant plaid tablecloth.

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.

Celebrating Creative Legends

From Pratt Institute News

Legends 2025 raised vital funds for student scholarships and honored distinguished creative icons Jeremy Scott and Mavis Wiggins, with awards presented by Heidi Klum and Cindy Allen.

Nurturing Exquisite Relations

From Pratt Institute News

Cocreated with alumni, faculty, and students across the Institute, a recent exhibition presented by Pratt’s School of Art embodied mentorship, collaboration, and support for the LGBTQIA+ community.

The Latest

The Daily Hub

A roundup of ideas and projects from around the Institute

  • Associate Professor of Sculpture and Integrated Practices Cassils received an eight-page portfolio review of their durational performance Undersight in the latest issue of Artforum. Cassils writes, “My work suggests that trans rights must be linked with all of our other political movements. My wish is for my work to be part of a continuum of cultural production created by disenfranchised communities who work in solidarity to liberate ourselves from systems and regimes that deny us our humanity. My hope is that art can be a part of the struggle for justice everywhere that people are fighting to live, heal, and have their humanity honoured amidst violent conditions. I strive for liberation, compassion and for a world that insists upon both gentleness and justice.”

  • Game Design students Nai’im Muhammad and Fides Wong, both AOS Game Design and Interactive Media ’26, had the opportunity to showcase their projects at Game-A-Palooza 2025, a first-of-its-kind NYC games showcase held by IGDA and the NYC Mayor’s Office of Media & Entertainment. Accompanied by Visiting Instructor of Associate Degrees Laura Reyes Arias, the students’ games were play-tested by fellow developers and members of the general public who provided valuable feedback on various elements of the games.

  • Chief Librarian at the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center at Howard University Christina Vortia, MSLIS ’15, was interviewed for Fine Books magazine’s Bright Young Librarians series. “One of the most beautiful aspects of this role is connecting these books, which I see as ancestors, to their descendants. It is deeply moving and spiritual work,” she said. 

  • Pratt Center was named among the recipients of the first-ever NYC Nightlife Grant, provided by the New York City Department of Small Business Services (SBS). “The New York City Office of Nightlife is proud to award the first-ever NYC Nightlife Grants to nonprofits whose initiatives support safer, more inclusive, and sustainable nightlife businesses and communities,” said ONL Executive Director Jeff Garcia. “We are excited to see these ideas come to life across the city, helping New York City remain the world’s nightlife capital.”

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