Making Home—Smithsonian Design Triennial
Event Date: Nov 2, 2024 - Aug 10, 2025; Event City: New York, NY, US Featuring 25 site-specific, newly commissioned installations, Making Home—Smithsonian Design Triennial explores design’s role in shaping the physical and emotional realities of home across the United States, US Territories, and Tribal Nations. The exhibition is the seventh offering in the museum’s Design Triennial series, which was established in 2000 to address the most urgent topics of the time through the lens of design.Installed throughout the Andrew and Louise Carnegie Mansion, each floor of the exhibition is organized by themes that evoke experiences of home:“Going Home” (ground and first floor) considers how people shape and are shaped by domestic spaces. Through reinterpretations of diverse home environments that traverse interior and exterior spaces, this section explores the historical and personal factors that influence home design and its profound impact on people’s experiences, behaviors, and values.“Seeking Home” (second floor) addresses a range of institutional, experimental, and utopian contexts that challenge conventional definitions of home. Installations examine the idea of home through the lenses of cultural heritage, the human body, imagined landscapes, and refuge.“Building Home” (third floor) presents alternatives to single-family construction models, expanding and redefining home to embrace community space, cooperative living, land stewardship, decolonial practices, and historic preservation. Large-scale installations explore building typologies grounded in regional histories and cultural specificity, and address contemporary issues such as housing precarity, environmental advocacy, memory, and aging.PARTICIPANTSAfter Oceanic Built Environments Lab, Honolulu, Hawaii, and Leong Leong, New York CityArtists in Residence in Everglades (AIRIE), Miami, FloridaLa Vaughn Belle, St. Croix, US Virgin Islands Black Artists + Designers Guild, Brooklyn, New YorkLori A. Brown, Syracuse, New York; Trish Cafferky, Boston, Massachusetts; and Dr. Yashica Robinson, Huntsville, Alabama CFGNY, New York, New YorkMona Chalabi and SITU Research, Brooklyn, New YorkNicole Crowder, St. Paul, Minnesota, and Hadiya Williams, Washington, DCDesigning Justice + Designing Spaces, Oakland, California Heather Dewey-Hagborg, New York, New YorkEast Jordan Middle/High School, East Jordan, Michigan Curry J. Hackett, Wayside Studio, Washington, DC, and New York, New YorkHugh Hayden, Brooklyn, New York; Davóne Tines, New York, New York; and Zack Winokur, New York, New YorkHord Coplan Macht, Baltimore, MarylandTerrol Dew Johnson, Tohono O’odham Nation, Sells, Arizona, and Aranda\Lasch, Tucson, Arizona, and Brooklyn, New YorkLiam Lee, Brooklyn, New York, and Tommy Mishima, Bronx, New YorkLenape Center with Joe Baker, Delaware Tribe of Indians, New York, New York, and Oklahoma Joiri Minaya, Brooklyn, New YorkSofía Gallisá Muriente, San Juan, Puerto Rico; Natalia Lassalle-Morillo, San Juan, Puerto Rico; and Carlos Soto, Bronx, New YorkRobert Earl Paige, Chicago, IllinoisPIN–UP, New York, New York Ronald Rael, Oakland, California, and La Florida, Colorado William Scott, Oakland, CaliforniaAmie Siegel, Brooklyn, New York Renée Stout, Washington, DCRead the full post on Bustler
Featuring 25 site-specific, newly commissioned installations, Making Home—Smithsonian Design Triennial explores design’s role in shaping the physical and emotional realities of home across the United States, US Territories, and Tribal Nations. The exhibition is the seventh offering in the museum’s Design Triennial series, which was established in 2000 to address the most urgent topics of the time through the lens of design.
Installed throughout the Andrew and Louise Carnegie Mansion, each floor of the exhibition is organized by themes that evoke experiences of home:
“Going Home” (ground and first floor) considers how people shape and are shaped by domestic spaces. Through reinterpretations of diverse home environments that traverse interior and exterior spaces, this section explores the historical and personal factors that influence home design and its profound impact on people’s experiences, behaviors, and values.
“Seeking Home” (second floor) addresses a range of institutional, experimental, and utopian contexts that challenge conventional definitions of home. Installations examine the idea of home through the lenses of cultural heritage, the human body, imagined landscapes, and refuge.
“Building Home” (third floor) presents alternatives to single-family construction models, expanding and redefining home to embrace community space, cooperative living, land stewardship, decolonial practices, and historic preservation. Large-scale installations explore building typologies grounded in regional histories and cultural specificity, and address contemporary issues such as housing precarity, environmental advocacy, memory, and aging.
PARTICIPANTS
- After Oceanic Built Environments Lab, Honolulu, Hawaii, and Leong Leong, New York City
- Artists in Residence in Everglades (AIRIE), Miami, Florida
- La Vaughn Belle, St. Croix, US Virgin Islands
- Black Artists + Designers Guild, Brooklyn, New York
- Lori A. Brown, Syracuse, New York; Trish Cafferky, Boston, Massachusetts; and Dr. Yashica Robinson, Huntsville, Alabama
- CFGNY, New York, New York
- Mona Chalabi and SITU Research, Brooklyn, New York
- Nicole Crowder, St. Paul, Minnesota, and Hadiya Williams, Washington, DC
- Designing Justice + Designing Spaces, Oakland, California
- Heather Dewey-Hagborg, New York, New York
- East Jordan Middle/High School, East Jordan, Michigan
- Curry J. Hackett, Wayside Studio, Washington, DC, and New York, New York
- Hugh Hayden, Brooklyn, New York; Davóne Tines, New York, New York; and Zack Winokur, New York, New York
- Hord Coplan Macht, Baltimore, Maryland
- Terrol Dew Johnson, Tohono O’odham Nation, Sells, Arizona, and Aranda\Lasch, Tucson, Arizona, and Brooklyn, New York
- Liam Lee, Brooklyn, New York, and Tommy Mishima, Bronx, New York
- Lenape Center with Joe Baker, Delaware Tribe of Indians, New York, New York, and Oklahoma
- Joiri Minaya, Brooklyn, New York
- Sofía Gallisá Muriente, San Juan, Puerto Rico; Natalia Lassalle-Morillo, San Juan, Puerto Rico; and Carlos Soto, Bronx, New York
- Robert Earl Paige, Chicago, Illinois
- PIN–UP, New York, New York
- Ronald Rael, Oakland, California, and La Florida, Colorado
- William Scott, Oakland, California
- Amie Siegel, Brooklyn, New York
- Renée Stout, Washington, DC