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Featuring work by graduate students earning their degrees this year, RISD Grad Show 2023 highlights the creativity of students at all stages of the thesis process, from sketches and drafts to completed works. The show is presented both as an in-person exhibition at the Rhode Island Convention Center (open to the public May 25–June 3), and as a digital publication that showcases work by RISD grad students across 19 advanced degree programs.
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The Landscape Architecturegraduating class of 2023
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RISD Landscape exists at the intersection between ecological systems, human and non-human communities, and built environments. Through creative practices, landscape architects critically reflect on ethical, social and ecological issues, disciplinary and interdisciplinary relations, and practices pertaining to the domains of Landscape Architecture and its allied fields. They explore design approaches to address the effects of climate change, urbanization, social justice, and environmental degradation.
This year, twenty-three MLA students have work featured in the Grad Show. They were encouraged to consider Landscape as a Commons to critically reflect on current challenges and envision future possibilities for the complex contemporary conditions and territories of the 21st century. They took this defining moment as an opportunity to develop approaches to site specificity, imagine strategic and multi-scalar landscape frameworks, and to constantly bridge between theory and practice to resituate the discipline. Their work investigates issues and examines conditions spreading across the globe: from the localized environments in and around Providence and the state of Rhode Island, to the East Coast and the whole territory of the United States, and to geographical and social conditions around the world.
This year, twenty-three MLA students have work featured in the Grad Show. They were encouraged to consider Landscape as a Commons to critically reflect on current challenges and envision future possibilities for the complex contemporary conditions and territories of the 21st century. They took this defining moment as an opportunity to develop approaches to site specificity, imagine strategic and multi-scalar landscape frameworks, and to constantly bridge between theory and practice to resituate the discipline. Their work investigates issues and examines conditions spreading across the globe: from the localized environments in and around Providence and the state of Rhode Island, to the East Coast and the whole territory of the United States, and to geographical and social conditions around the world.
RISD Landscape exists at the intersection between ecological systems, human and non-human communities,...read more
RISD Landscape exists at the intersection between ecological systems, human and non-human communities, and built environments. Through creative practices, landscape architects critically reflect on ethical, social and ecological issues, disciplinary and interdisciplinary relations, and practices pertaining to the domains of Landscape Architecture and its allied fields. They explore design approaches to address the effects of climate change, urbanization, social justice, and environmental degradation.
This year, twenty-three MLA students have work featured in the Grad Show. They were encouraged to consider Landscape as a Commons to critically reflect on current challenges and envision future possibilities for the complex contemporary conditions and territories of the 21st century. They took this defining moment as an opportunity to develop approaches to site specificity, imagine strategic and multi-scalar landscape frameworks, and to constantly bridge between theory and practice to resituate the discipline. Their work investigates issues and examines conditions spreading across the globe: from the localized environments in and around Providence and the state of Rhode Island, to the East Coast and the whole territory of the United States, and to geographical and social conditions around the world...read less
This year, twenty-three MLA students have work featured in the Grad Show. They were encouraged to consider Landscape as a Commons to critically reflect on current challenges and envision future possibilities for the complex contemporary conditions and territories of the 21st century. They took this defining moment as an opportunity to develop approaches to site specificity, imagine strategic and multi-scalar landscape frameworks, and to constantly bridge between theory and practice to resituate the discipline. Their work investigates issues and examines conditions spreading across the globe: from the localized environments in and around Providence and the state of Rhode Island, to the East Coast and the whole territory of the United States, and to geographical and social conditions around the world...read less