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Meet Pratt’s Puppet Masters

It started with a handshake. “We call our handshakes sacred. And when we handshake on something it has to happen,” said Kylie McLaughlin, BFA Fine…
Pratt students observing the Gowanus Canal

Working Toward Climate Justice

From a floating food forest to reclaimed textiles, Pratt is fostering climate resilience, literacy, and sustainability in New York.
A group of students gathered around a table during a classroom activity. One student wearing a navy blue 'GAP' hat is selecting a card from a grid of green-backed cards spread across the table, while others watch attentively. The setting is a brightly lit classroom with chairs and a projector visible in the background.

Where Do Pratt Students Go After Graduation?

New data reveals the success of recent Pratt graduates.
Two people walking on a wooden boardwalk through a lush wetland filled with vibrant greenery and autumn foliage. One person gestures toward the landscape, framed by tall trees and a dramatic sky filled with clouds, with the golden light of sunrise casting a warm glow.

Land-Based Learning in the Catskills

From a fossil forest to an ecological preserve, Pratt’s Master of Landscape Architecture program learns from the land in upstate New York.
Two people standing in a brightly lit art studio with large windows overlooking an urban skyline. One person with long hair wears a black jacket, while the other, with short hair and tattoos, wears a vest and jeans, examining an object in their hands. The studio is filled with art supplies, a workbench, and wall-mounted artwork, including a patch of artificial grass with small flowers and a green canvas with painted clovers.

Dock 72 Studios Debut in Style

Brooklyn Navy Yard’s Dock 72 buzzed with excitement as members and friends of the Pratt community recently gathered to celebrate the opening of new facilities…
Large, fabric-covered letters spelling out 'PLAY' are mounted on a white wall. Each letter is crafted from different textured fabrics in earthy tones like brown, orange, and gray, with various patchwork patterns and raised square shapes. A small informational sign and sample fabrics are displayed on the wall below the letters.

This Class Takes Play Seriously

Solving problems and working together can be tricky business—but sometimes the answer is in loosening up and having some fun. From bean bag tosses to…
Ashley Carvajal, BFA Photography ’25, at the student-run WPIR radio station on campus (Edward Hernandez, BFA photography ’25)

Seeing the Big Picture

From Pratt’s studios to the Met Gala, Ashley Carvajal, BFA Photography ’25, finds opportunities to expand her creative vision and build a supportive community.

The Latest

The Daily Hub

A roundup of ideas and projects from around the Institute

  • Visiting Assistant Professor of Fine Arts Andrew Woolbright wrote an article for the Brooklyn Rail about alternative site curation and the inaugural exhibition of The Campus. “Where and how and when, if ever, does art have the mandate to intervene?” asks Woolbright. “What gives presence, and what denies it? When do we mean when we reference the ‘public’?” 

  • Studio S II, co-founded by Jeremy Silberberg, MFA Interior Design ’19, and Erica Sellers, was featured in The New York Times for the renovation of a townhouse in Ridgewood, Queens. “We like having a strong point of view,” Silberberg told the Times. “We wanted to combine something futuristic or machine-like with the corporeal.” Studio S II was also featured in StirWorld.

  • Assistant Professor of Film/Video Christopher Radcliff’s film We Were the Scenery will premiere at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. “Making this film has truly been a journey, taking us to Vietnam, the Philippines, and California, and through the creation of poetry, prose, and a multichannel installation companion piece in search of a way to center Vietnamese perspectives, and a story, otherwise excluded from our imagination and iconography of the Vietnam War.”

  • Adjunct Professor – CCE of Interior Design Alex Schweder is included in an article on the “12 museums just outside NYC perfect for a day trip.” His installation “ReActor” at Art Omi, made in collaboration with Ward Shelley, is a “44-foot by 8-foot ‘habitable sculpture’ that sits atop a 15-foot concrete column and rotates 360-degrees. Schweder and Shelley live in the sculpture periodically, which moves in response to its inhabitants’ movements, exterior forces, and interior conditions, according to Art Omi.”

  • Vincent Celano, BArch ’93, was featured in Forbes. “The experienced entrepreneur, designer and traveler continues to emphasize elements of authenticity and sustainability by implementing personalized approaches, thoughtful conceptualization and collaboration with local artists and makers.”

Prattfolio

Looking at Us

Fall 2024

Ways of Seeing

Traditions, clubs, spaces, places, events, happenings, and hidden gems that make Pratt our place