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Celebrating Creative Legends

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.
A group of five individuals stands together outdoors, smiling and posing for a photo. One person holds a certificate framed with the text "NOMA Barbara G. Laurie 2025 Student Design Competition Honorable Mention, Pratt Institute." They are dressed in a mix of casual and formal attire, with trees and a fence visible in the background, indicating it's late afternoon or early evening.

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.
Two individuals are engaging in conversation while looking at a book in an art gallery. One person has short hair and glasses, wearing a black sleeveless top with a white panel and a long black skirt. The other has long, dark hair in a ponytail, dressed in a bright blue blouse with a bow tie and light gray pants. A large pink artwork is visible in the background.

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.
A stylized skull with a faded green hue sits beside a small, anthropomorphic plant creature with big green eyes and leaf-like features. The background is slightly blurred, suggesting an indoor setting with shelves. A faint light illuminates the scene, giving it a mystical atmosphere.

Scary-Good Short Films by Pratt Alumni to Stream Now

From Pratt Institute News

A Halloween-inspired watch list for the spookiest time of year.
Four artists are creating paintings in a park. The first artist, on the left, sits on a sidewalk, holding a paintbrush and palette, focusing on a landscape. The second artist, in the middle, works on a larger canvas, while the third artist, on the right, uses a paint palette and sits on grass, wearing sunglasses. The fourth artist, also on grass, is finishing a green landscape painting. The surroundings include trees and fallen leaves, indicating autumn.

Capturing Light in Fort Greene Park

From Pratt Institute News

Pratt students took a stroll to paint serene fall scenes.
A woman with dark hair styled in a braid is smiling, wearing large golden earrings and a black outfit. She is engaged in conversation, and people are blurred in the background, suggesting a social setting or event. The lighting is dim, adding to the intimate atmosphere of the gathering.

Archival Fashion by Legendary Designer Mary McFadden Arrives at Pratt

From Pratt Institute News

A portion of the iconic fashion designer’s world-renowned archive has officially relocated to Pratt’s Brooklyn campus. A generous gift from the McFadden family will support ongoing scholarship, preservation, and the promotion of the collection.
A person with a beard and glasses stands next to a display table featuring electronic components. The table has a transparent device with lights, various wires, and wooden pieces arranged on it. The background is a plain white wall, and there is printed information on the table. The individual is wearing a navy blue polo shirt.

Biocircuits Wins 2025 Material Lab Prize

From Pratt Institute News

The winner of the 6th annual prize tackled the growing problem of e-waste.

The Latest

The Daily Hub

A roundup of ideas and projects from around the Institute

  • Swarali Karulkar, MS Dance/Movement Therapy ’16, is premiering her documentary film, Body Unveiled, at the upcoming New York Documentary Film Festival, with its world premiere to follow at the Awareness Film Festival. Body Unveiled explores how trauma is stored within the body and how the key to reclaiming agency and healing lies within. Karulkar produced the film to raise awareness—especially within the South Asian community—about the powerful role movement and the body can play in healing deep-rooted trauma.

  • Fine Arts alumnus Mario A. Robinson was selected as the first-ever Save Ellis Island artist-in-residence. “Mario Robinson is the perfect artist to interpret the south side of Ellis Island. His sensitivity to American history is beautifully told through the stillness found in his paintings,” said Jim Dessicino, museum creative director for Ellis Island.

  • Kay Moon, BFA Fine Arts ’25, received the Sculptors Guild Roosevelt Scholarship. Their work Beings of Light and Fire is on view at the MORA Museum of International Art in Jersey City, NJ, through December. 

  • Gabrielle Nicole, BFA Fine Arts ’13, launched her new jewelry collection, Ruveil, at an event hosted in collaboration with GEM X. The collection is inspired by her work as a sound meditation specialist.

     

  • Assistant Professor of Social Science and Cultural Studies Jan Dutkiewicz wrote an article for Vox about a recent consumer safety report regarding lead in protein powder. “The bottom line is that Consumer Reports’s protein lead scare is—pardon the pun—a big nothingburger. But the questions still remain: Are protein supplements completely safe?”

Prattfolio

Perspective Shifts

Spring 2025

Change Your Gaze

An MFA Communications Design class explores new ways of thinking and making, finding collaborators in the natural world.