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LORRAINE WILD
July 29 - August 2
"Also needed in design education
[is] a more serious consideration of fantasy, surrealism, game playing,
pranks, simulation, bricolage and other forms of marginal subversion
to map out the spaces in between, the entrepreneurial possibilities
as a source of stimulation and creativity in appoaching new media
with a free hand".
Words and Pictures
A communal exploration of expression through words and pictures
and the structures that bind them. Let's play with the building
blocks of ideas, words, images, and sequences. Let's tease 2 dimensions
with 2 more __ time and space. As much fun as a house on legs!
BIO
Lorraine Wild is a designer and educator living and working in Los
Angeles. She has been teaching at the California Institute of the
Arts since 1985 (she was the director of the Program in Graphic
Design from 1985 to 1991). She was a project tutor at the Jan van
Eyck Akademie in Maastricht, The Netherlands from 1991 until 1998.
In 1996 she established her own design practice to focus on collaborations
with architects, curators and publishers in this country and abroad.
Recent projects include the design of exhibition catalogues for
the Canadian Centre for Architecture, the Whitney Museum of American
Art, The Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, and The J.Paul
Getty Trust. Her work has been published in Emigre, Eye, I.D., Print,
Design Quarterly, Studio Voice, and in the anthologies The Graphic
Edge, Typography Now and Typography Now: Two. Her writing has appeared
in numerous periodicals and books, including Emigre, I.D., Print,
Graphic Design in America, Cranbrook Design: The New Discourse,
Lift & Separate, Looking Closer, Looking Closer 2, and The Edge
of the Millennium.
In 2001, Wild was one of three finalists for the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt's
National Design Award in communications design. In 1998, the San
Francisco Museum of Modern Art exhibited 'Lorraine Wild: selections
from the permanent collection', a display of recent work acquired
as part of their collection of significant design produced in California.
Wild also has work in the collections of the Cooper-Hewitt and the
Library of Congress. Wild has received numerous awards from The
American Center for Design, The American Institute of Graphic Arts,
the American Institute of Architects and the American Association
of University Publishers, among others. She was named as one of
the 'I.D. Forty' in 1993 and was a recipient of the Chrysler Award
for Innovation in Design in 1995. She has served on the national
boards of the both the American Institute of Graphic Arts & the
Society for Typographic Arts (now the American Center for Design).
Wild received a bfa from the Cranbrook Academy of Art, and a mfa
from Yale University.
idca
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online
sfmoma
mixing
messages
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