PROFILE

Rob Walker


About

Rob Walker is a technology and culture columnist for Yahoo News. He is the former Consumed columnist for The New York Times Magazine, and has contributed to many publications. He is co-editor (with Joshua Glenn) of the book Significant Objects: 100 Extraordinary Stories About Ordinary Things, and author of Buying In: The Secret Dialogue Between What We Buy and Who We Are.

Books

Rob Walker: BookSignificant Objects: 100 Extraordinary Stories About Ordinary Things 
Edited by Rob Walker and Joshua Glenn
Fantagraphics, 2012

Amazon >>

“Finding magic in unexpected things.” — NPR’s All Things Considered

“Like a Salvation Army staffed by brilliant writers...” — GalleyCat

“The short stories are lovely. Some allude to an object's brush with fame; others suggest heartache, loneliness and the occasional bar fight. Each story casts a strange spell on the objects, and on our perception of them.” — The Economist's More Intelligent Life

“To those who don't believe in the transcendent power of a good story ... behold: the Significant Objects project.” — AdWeek.com


Rob Walker: BookThis Consumer Heaven: 55 Explorations from the Frontiers and Back alleys of 21st Century Consumer Culture 
Rob Walker
KDP, 2012

Amazon >>

To me, criticism in the sphere of consumer culture is not a matter of reviewing, endorsing, or attacking products, or otherwise providing shopping tips. As a critical subject, consumption is about buyers and sellers, the many ways the two come together — and why. That's the framework I used when I picked out Consumed columns to gather here, because that's the framework I used when I sat down every morning for seven years and tried to sort through the possibilities to determine what I should be writing about. — From the Introduction


Rob Walker: BookBuying In: The Secret Dialogue Between What We Buy and Who We Are 
Rob Walker
Random House, 2008

Amazon >>

One of the five best nonfiction books of 2008
Salon

One of the Ten Best Business Books of 2008
Fast Company

One of the Best Business Books of 2008
USA Today

“Fascinating … A compelling blend of cultural anthropology and business journalism.”
— Andrea Sachs, Time Magazine

“An often startling tour of new cultural terrain.”
— Laura Miller, Salon 

“Few observers have plumbed the subterranean poetry of marketing as thoroughly as Walker.”
— Farhad Manjoo, The New York Times Book Review

“Walker fills his richly reported book with insights from cutting-edge marketers, entrepreneurs and artists. … His thinking is provocative.”
— Kerry Hannon, USA Today 

“Walker … makes a startling claim: Far from being immune to advertising, as many people think, American consumers are increasingly active participants in the marketing process. … [He] leads readers through a series of lucid case studies to demonstrate that, in many cases, consumers actively participate in infusing a brand with meaning. … Convincing.”
— Jay Dixit, The Washington Post

"It's enlightening and fun to follow Walker’s metamorphosis … to fascinated explorer of U.S. consumer marketing. He has a flair for branding [and] an affinity for people who seek cultural alternatives. … there’s plenty of substance here, and plenty for marketers to ponder.”
— Andrew O’Connell, Harvard Business Review

“Walker makes all this cultural observation compelling; he is a good reporter and storyteller, with a sharp eye for the comic.”
— David Billet, The Wall Street Journal

“If you find yourself in this book and don’t like what you see, at least it’s not all your fault. Blame marketing – and thank Walker for the insights.”
— Carlo Wolff, The Boston Globe

The most trenchant psychoanalyst of our consumer selves is Rob Walker. Buying In is a fresh and fascinating exploration of the places where material culture and identity intersect.
— Michael Pollan, author, In Defense of Food

Rob Walker is a gift. He shows that in our shattered, scattered world, powerful brands are existential, insinuating themselves into the human questions “what am I about?” and “how do I connect?” His insight that brand influence is becoming both more pervasive and more hidden — that we are not so self-defined as we like to think — should make us disturbed, and vigilant.
— Jim Collins, author, Good to Great

Rob Walker is a terrific writer who understands both human nature and the business world. His book is highly entertaining, but it’s also a deeply thoughtful look at the ways in which marketing meets the modern psyche.
— Bethany McLean, co-author, The Smartest Guys in the Room


Rob Walker: BookLetters From New Orleans
Rob Walker
Garrett County Press, 2005

Amazon >>

Amazon.com Best Travel Books of 2005.

“These stories now function as 21 silent little jazz funerals: exuberant, celebratory and tragic.”
The New York Times Book Review

“The book has a deeply personal way of relating to the reader no matter what Walker is writing about…. A fantastic read … It is more than just a good book. Its insider-outsider perspective and street-level historical explorations make it essential for anyone interested in New Orleans.”
— Maximum Rock n Roll

Letters from New Orleans tells the stories that you've never heard before and that you just can't hear while jaunting through the muggy city during Jazz Fest or Mardis Gras. … Fresh and poignant.”
— Forbes.com

“In Letters from New Orleans, Walker contemplates, almost wistfully, various notions of denial and self-invention and loss — those masks that symbolize the city aren't lost on him. And his pointed, witty insights about the city won't be lost on readers.”
— The (New Orleans) Times-Picayune

“Seeing the city through Rob Walker's eyes reveals a place at once familiar and yet different.”
Chicago Tribune

“The quality that makes Walker's 'modest series of stories about a place that means a lot to [him]' rewarding reading is his immersion in the local. ... Walker's book, 'not a memoir, a history, or an exposé,' won't help a tourist get around in New Orleans, but it will help him or her see beyond the tour guide's pointed finger.”
Publisher's Weeekly

“This book is far more than a poetic testament to a strange and wonderful town. It's a story about a city boy who recognizes the need to slow down and observe carefully — a story of a couple who learns to let our word's odd richness really sink in. I recommend it to anyone who feels life is going by too fast.”
— Po Bronson, author, What Should I Do With My Life?

“Rob Walker is a wonderful writer with a gentle yet comprehensive inquisitiveness, the rigorous, observant eye of a journalist, and the light, poetic touch of an artist. He has managed to make New Orleans — a city that has been documented and written about for centuries — seem completely fresh and unfamiliar and wholly compelling. Letters From New Orleans is a lovely book, and so much more.”
— David Rakoff, author, Fraud


Rob Walker: BookTitans of Finance: True Tales of Money & Business
Rob Walker with artist Josh Neufeld
Alternative Comics, 2001

Amazon >>

2011 iPad Version >>


“Dissections of executive arrogance and mismanagement. … Superman never pounded businessmen-gone-bad the way Titans of Finance does.”
— James M. Pethokoukis, U.S. News & World Report 

“Sharp and fearless. The comic book is hilarious — or it would be if it weren't all true. Recommended reading.”
— Nell Minow, The Corporate Library

“I have always been fascinated by the men behind the curtain, the actual faces that make up faceless corporations. Titans of Finance is an amazing and much needed work that shows that the machine is made not only made of real people, but made of really odd people. My only complaint is that I didn't think of it first.”
— Rich Mackin, author, Dear Mr. Mackin

“A delightful book, fascinating reading, and an amazing accomplishment. A+.”
— Cliff Biggers, Comics Buyers Guide

“A fine antidote to the free-enterprise hype ladled out by ‘capitalist tool’ media outlets like Forbes and Money. … Hilarious.” 
— Scott Gilbert, Comics Journal

“A brilliant use of the medium.”
— James J. Cramer, former hedge fund manager; journalist; founder, TheStreet.com

“These accounts of the lives of the sometimes rich and frequently unscrupulous hit the mark with their irony and sharp observations.”
— Harvey Pekar, author/creator, American Splendour


Rob Walker: Book Where Were You? 
Rob Walker 
Feed Books (Annual Zine/E-Zine: 2006 - present) 

The latest in an ongoing series of notations concerning high-profile or otherwise notable deaths. Since 1992 have I recorded “where I was” when I learned about such passings, along with whatever thoughts I have about the person who has died. The present volume covers deaths that occurred in 2010.

Buy from Feed Books >>

“Utterly Addictive.”
— David Shields, author, Reality Hunger: A Manifesto

“The entries themselves are straightforward and unsentimental. Collectively, they serve as a phenomenological study of fame and mortality. Their effect is both cumulative and sublime."
— Jim Hanas

“Your zine is great! And only mildly depressing.”
— Actual Reader

 “Very interesting … I was bummed that in the end everyone died!”
— Another Actual Reader

Projects

The Hypothetical Development Organization, founded in 2010, by G.K. Darby, Ellen Susan and Rob Walker, is dedicated to the recognition and extension of a new form of urban storytelling. Members of this organization begin the narrative process by examining city neighborhoods and commercial districts for compelling structures that appear to have fallen into disuse — “hidden gems” of the built environment. In varying states of repair, these buildings suggest only stories about the past, not the future. As a public service, H.D.O. invents a hypothetical future for each selected structure. Unlike a traditional, reality-based developer, however, our organization is not bound by rules relating to commercial potential, practical materials, or physics. In our view, plausibility is a creative dead end. That is to say: We are not trying to fool anybody. H.D.O. creates convincing renderings of these imagined future uses. These renderings are, in the tradition of the form, printed onto large signs, and shared with the public in general. Each structure selected by H.D.O. will, for a time, present to the world the fascinating potential future we have invented. Members of the Hypothetical Development Organization come from a variety of fields, such as photography, architecture, journalism, publishing and design. However, this project is a labor of love. It is a new form of fiction. But also, it’s real.

The Hypothetical Development Organization: New Orleans Edition, made its debut in December 2010. Visit HypotheticalDevelopment.com (and our Facebook page) for more information about and documentation of the project — or see the monograph Implausible Futures For Unpopular Places.

“A full-fledged conversation around urban storytelling, the heights of public imagination and reclaiming unused space.”
— Core77

Significant Objects, founded in 2009 by Joshua Glenn and Rob Walker, is an experiment in the relationship between narrative and value. The hypothesis: Stories are such a powerful driver of emotional value that their effect on any given object’s subjective value can actually be measured objectively. This notion was tested by recruiting top-notch creative writers to invent stories about bottom-rung secondhand objects — and selling those objects on eBay with the invented narrative as the product description. The initial experiment sold $128.74 worth of thrift-store flotsam for $3,612.51; a sequel was even more successful. Full results can be explored at SignificantObjects.com, and in a forthcoming book from Fantagraphics.

“If this is a cynical marketeer’s scam, rather than a mildly romantic social experiment, then consider me conned. Significant Objects combines one of the oldest of all media — the near-improvised short story — with the reinvigorated writer-reader relationship afforded by Web 2.0. What a thrill to be the nominal owner of a tale told by a favourite author, and to possess the very thing that inspired them — even if that significant object is too darned ugly for any sensible person’s mantelpiece.” 
— Couch Surfer, The Independent of London

On Twitter: @SignificObs

The Unconsumption Project, is dedicated to mindful consumer behavior and creative reuse. Its flagship manifestation is the popular Unconsumption Tumblr and Twitter feed. The project also includes a wiki-in-progress. A collaborative effort, Unconsumption was founded and is overseen by Rob Walker, the Editorial & Community Manager is Molly Block and current contributors are Clifton Burt, Steve Chaney, Brian W. Jones, Deirdre Nelson, Lee Sachs and Shanna Trenholm.

“Americans don't truly care about things. What we care about is getting new things — constantly upgrading to the bigger and better and more fashionable. Unconsumption sets itself out against this tide, looking at products beyond that pivotal moment of purchase to how things are actually used, reused, and repurposed. If this sounds awfully theoretical, it shouldn't.”  
— Consumerist

On Twitter: @Unconsumption

MLK BLVD: This open-source, open-ended photojournalism project began in 2005, with the creation of a Flickr pool welcoming images of Blvds., Drives, Avenues, Streets, Ways, etc., named after Martin Luther King, Jr., from all around the United States. With hundreds of contributions, it led to the creation, in 2007, of MLKBLVD.wordpress.com, which highlights particularly interesting images, and includes occasional links to relevant articles, essays, and other material. Prior examinations of MLKs have, by necessity, been filtered through perspective of an individual or small group; this project aims to open up the subject to many interpretations, neither embracing nor rejecting any particular point of view, or pre-existing assumption. With contributions from more than 50 cities and towns, MLK BLVD welcomes you to join in with your own.

Prior coverage of this project:
http://mlkblvd.wordpress.com/coverage/ 

Public Speaking

Rob Walker — a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine and co-founder of many creative projects — is a provocative voice on consumer behavior, marketing, design, technology and popular culture. Michael Pollan calls him "the most trenchant psychoanalyst of our consumer selves." He is represented by The Lavin Agency.

Past Appearances and Talks:

MAY 2013 Significant Objects: A Conversation with Elizabeth Merritt
Rob Walker and Elizabeth Merritt of the Center for the Future of Museums talk about objects, stories, and the museum context.
American Alliance of Museums: Annual Meeting and MuseumExpo

JUNE 2013 School of Visual Arts D*Crit Summer Intensive (with Adam Harrison Levy, Steven Heller, Alice Twemlow, and others)

DECEMBER 2012 Significant Objects: Do Good Stories Make Objects More Valuable?
Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) Conference. Chicago, Illinois.

JULY 2012 Significant Objects Book Launch
With co-editor Joshua Glenn, and contributing writers Luc Sante, Shelley Jackson, Matthew Sharpe, Ben Greenman, Annie Nocenti, Jason Grote, and Mimi Lipson. The Strand. New York, NY.

JUNE 2012 Stories, Consumed
On objects, narratives, and significant consumption. Keynote at The Ad Club "Consumed" Edge Conference. Boston, MA.

FEBRUARY 2012 A Conversation with Bobbi Patterson
Rob Walker and Bobbi Patterson of Emory University’s Department of Religion talk about one of the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism — that suffering is caused by desire — and the complexity of navigating contemporary consumer culture. 

NOVEMBER 2011 The Language of Objects
Hosting an evening of imaginative responses to the exhibition Talk to Me: Design and the Communication between People and Objects, with Kenneth Goldsmith, Ben Greenman, Leanne Shapton, and Cintra Wilson. MoMA, New York, NY.

MAY 2011 As Real As it Gets: Imaginary Objects and Fictional Critiques
Keynote at School of Visual Arts Design Criticism Conference. New York, NY

DECEMBER 2010 Implausible Futures For Unpopular Places
Lecture on Hypothetical Development Organization project at Grand Arts. Kansas City, MO
 
OCTOBER 2010 Imprint Culture Lab 2010: Conversations
Panelist (with Alex Bogusky, John Maeda). New York, NY

APRIL 2010 Significant Objects
PSFK Conference keynote. New York, NY

OCTOBER 2009 Creating A New Craft Culture
Keynote at American Craft Council conference. Minneapolis, MN

JUNE 2009 HOW Design Conference
Keynote. Austin, TX

MAY 2009 If You Follow Me I Will Follow You Back
Keynote at “Blowing Up The Brand,” New York University conference. New York, NY

Articles + Essays

ARTICLES

Etsy Goes Pro
Wired, October 2012

Tumblr Follows Its ♥
The New York Times Magazine, July 12, 2012

What It Takes To Be A ’Tuber
The New York Times Magazine, June 28, 2012

A Product of Creative Friction
The New York Times Magazine, June 3, 2012

This Brand Is Your Brand
OnEarth Magazine, May 31, 2012

MakerBot’s Meta-Tools
Fast Company, January, 2012

Politics As Entertainment

The New York Times Magazine, January 4, 2012
 
The Dog Ate My Paycheck
Marketplace, December 16, 2011

Recognizably Anonymous

Slate, December 8, 2011

A Visual Object for the Digital Era

The Atlantic, December 2011

The New York Times, October 23, 2011

The Language of Objects
MoMA.org, October 21, 2011

The Cult of Bang & Olufsen
Wired, October 2011

HiLobrow, September 16, 2011
 
Replacement Therapy
The Atlantic, September 2011

Not All Consumers Are Equal
Marketplace, August 18, 2011

The Trivialities and Transcendence of Kickstarter
The New York Times Magazine, August 5, 2011

The Swan Song of the Top 40
The New York Times Magazine, July 15, 2011

Foursquare's Branding With Badges
Slate, July 5, 2011

Failure Chic
Marketplace, June 16, 2011

Hiring “The Crowd” for a Design Job
Slate, May 31, 2011

Advertising That's “Relevant” — But to Whom?
Marketplace, May 23, 2011

Disliking “Dislike”
Marketplace, March 31, 2011

The Propaganda of Concern
Slate, March 22, 2011

The Sound of Radiolab
The New York Times Magazine, April 7, 2011

Ghosts In The Machine
The New York Times Magazine, January 9, 2011

The Unlikely Success of Boing Boing 
Fast Company, December 2010/January 2010

Taking Lulz (Sort of) Seriously 
The New York Times Magazine, July 16, 2010

The Song Decoders
The New York Times Magazine, October 14, 2009

Tobias Wong on Consuming Consumer Consumption
Theme, December 2007/January 2008

Can A Dead Brand Live Again? 
The New York Times Magazine, May 18, 2008

Handmade 2.0
The New York Times Magazine, December 16, 2007

TV Land 
The New York Times Magazine, March 18, 2007

The Guts of a New Machine 
The New York Times Magazine, November 30, 2003


CONSUMED

Fun Stuff (Digital Collections)
The New York Times Magazine, February 11, 2011

Go Figure (Scalies)
The New York Times Magazine, February 4, 2011

Global Entertainment (Digital Maps) 
The New York Times Magazine, December 30, 2010

Hearing Things (Music Objects) 
The New York Times Magazine, September 10, 2010

Brilliant Mistakes (Digital Antiquing) 
The New York Times Magazine, July 25, 2010

Valuing $0 (Gifts) 
The New York Times Magazine, May 13, 2010

Rewind (The Cassette) 
The New York Times Magazine, April 23, 2010

Slightly Used (Best Made Ax) 
The New York Times Magazine, April 3, 2010

Stuffed (Hoarders) 
The New York Times Magazine, December 17, 2009

Immaterialism (Digital Goods)
The New York Times Magazine, April 29, 2009 

The Accidental Icon (Fail Whale) 
The New York Times Magazine, February 12, 2009 

Venturesome Consumers (The iFart App)
The New York Times Magazine, January 28, 2009

Talk Is Cheap (The "New Frugality")
The New York Times Magazine, December 12, 2008

Subliminal Branding (Team Speedo USA Parka) 
The New York Times Magazine, October 3, 2008

Shared Memories (Scrapbooks, physical and digital)
The New York Times Magazine, September 12, 2008

This Joke's For You (Brawndo)
The New York Times Magazine, May 4, 2008

Things That Look Like Other Things (Handsoaps)
The New York Times Magazine, January 13, 2008

Imaginary Brands (Last Exit To Nowhere T-shirts) 
The New York Times Magazine, November 18, 2007 

Timeless Object (Counterfunctional watches) 
The New York Times Magazine, October 28, 2007

Not Necessarily Toast (Back To Basics Egg & Muffin Toaster)
The New York Times Magazine, April 8, 2007

Merchant Memories (Mall of America Souvenir Merch)
The New York Times Magazine, March 4, 2007

Unconsumption (Freecycle) 
The New York Times Magazine, January 7, 2007

Animal Pragmatism ("Critter" Wine Labels) 
The New York Times Magazine, April 23, 2006

Original Tastemaker (Ladies' Home Journal Houses)
The New York Times Magazine, March 5, 2006

The Story of O's (Cheerios) 
The New York Times Magazine, February 19, 2006

For Kicks (SBTG Customized Sneakers)
The New York Times Magazine, March 3, 2005

Making Babies (Reborn Dolls)
The New York Times Magazine, February 2, 2005

The Good, The Plaid and The Ugly (The "chav" hat.)
The New York Times Magazine, January 2, 2005

Pattern Recognition (Realtree High Definition Camouflage)
The New York Times Magazine, October 17, 2004

The Filth Epiphany (Dyson vacuums)
The New York Times Magazine, August 8, 2004


COMMENTARY & ESSAYS

What Percent Are You, Really? 
Marketplace, November 29, 2011

Disliking "Dislike" 
Marketplace, March 31, 2011

Collecting: Bicentennial Quarters
DesignObserver.com December 9, 2010

The Hidden: Filtering "Friends" On Facebook
TheAtlatntic.com, October 4, 2010

Clutter, Objects, Joy
Murketing.com, March 4, 2010

Shopping Our Way To Safety (Review) 
The Journal of Industrial Ecology, February 2010

Site and Sound: One Home, Sixteen Objects and the Things We Listen to Now
Essay for Rewind, Remix, Replay exhibition at Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, January 20, 2010

Noted, Without Noteworthiness (The End of the '00s) 
The Awl, December 23, 2009

Balloons (Part of a package on favorite toys)
I.D., September 2009

Active vs. Passive: Forward to Ad Nauseam
Murketing.com, June 2009

If You Follow Me I Will Follow You Back ("Blowing Up The Brand" NYU keynote) 
Murketing.com, May 8, 2009

Surface Effects (2005 essay for Shepard Fairey's Supply & Demand)
Murketing.com, 2005
 
Why We Laff
The New York Times Magazine, December 28, 2003

Let There Be Lite
The New York Times Magazine, December 29, 2002

Me, My Brand, and I
The New York Times Magazine, May 14, 2000

Fauxhemian Rhapsody
The New York Times Magazine, January 23, 2000


Observed


Steven Heller reviews Made in Italy NYC—an exclusive (and free!) exhibition celebrating the rich heritage of postwar Italian graphic design. (Bonus video content here.)

Fascinating new (hybrid) job opportunity at MIT, where they are recruiting an Exhibition and Commons Director to manage an exciting set of public spaces known as “the commons”, the newest of which has been carved out of the redesigned Metropolitan Storage Warehouse on MIT’s campus. The commons is envisioned as an assembly of curated physical sites and a set of related programs with a primary focus on architecture, design, urbanism, art, and technology. for their new building. Details here.

Everything you ever wanted to know about the origins of Dutch design (but were afraid to ask).

A meditation on the history of design—and the rise of strategy—from Jarrett Fuller.

A meditation on analog beauty—and vernacular signage—from Elizabeth Goodspeed.

Richard Stengel makes a compelling case that journalism should be free to save democracy. “According to the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, more than 75% of America’s leading newspapers, magazines, and journals are behind online paywalls. And how do American news consumers react to that?” (Subscription required.) 

Please, please, pleaseget some sleep.

The Supreme Court allows Idaho to ban transgender health care for minors. For now.

Historically, we’ve invested huge resources to keep cities and nature separate. But we now know that the health of the soil and the health of people are the same story. So, what does this have to do with design? Join the unstoppable John Thackara and Milan Politecnico professor Ezio Manzini today at 11 am ET as they discuss this critical—and surprisingly overlooked—environmental issue.

Conducted through audio interviews, Ana Miljački's I Would Prefer Not To is an oral history project on the topic of the most important kind of refusal in architects’ toolboxes: refusal of the architectural commission. (Miljački, an architectural historian and theorist, is also Director of the Critical Broadcasting Lab at MIT.) Produced in conjunction with the Architectural League of New York, this podcast features conversations with a number of fascinating practitioners including Diller + Scofidio's Elizabeth Diller, WXY partner Claire Weisz (who we interviewed in Season Three of The Design of Business | The Business of Design) and Nina Cooke John (a Season Nine guest).

This past winter, a diverse cohort of students from the MADE Program at Brown + RISD and Harvard immersed themselves in a wealth of data provided by the City of Boston with the mission of uncovering novel, meaningful, and joyful perspectives on navigating and understanding the urban environment. Their resulting projects—a series of interactive exhibits ranging from envisioning the evolving contours of the coastline to revealing the secret lives of the city’s trees—will be on view this week at the Boston Museum of Science.

Designers are leaving corporate life in droves, re-designed out of their own jobs. “The strategic design gold rush is over,” reports Robert Fabricant.  So, where are they going? “[A} new class of platforms and networks have emerged, including NeolDesign Executive CouncilChief Design Officer School, Design Leadership Job Board, and Design Leaders.” This isn’t a bad thing, he says. “These platforms specifically target ‘fractional’ design leaders who are looking to support one another, collaborate on projects, better communicate their value, and source new income-generating opportunities, both individually and collectively.” 

A new project designed to amplify Indigenous-owned businesses on Google Maps and Google Search gets high marks from Huitzilli Oronia, a Chicana designer from Denver, Colorado, and the creative production agency Hook.  Oronia contributed Google’s Indigenous-owned attribute icon and associated launch materials to the initiative. “This wasn’t just another campaign; it represented an opportunity to help Indigenous business owners share their heritage and foster deeper connections between the businesses and their consumers,” she says.

Yet another social app built around talk, not text! 

Faith Ringgold, the multimedia artist whose soaring work documented race, class, family, community, justice, and the African American experience in the U.S., has died. She was 93. Her work included painting, sculpture, mask- and doll-making, textiles, performance art, and children’s literature. “Few artists have kept as many balls in the air as long as Faith Ringgold,” the New York Times art critic Roberta Smith wrote in 2013. “She has spent more than five decades juggling message and form, high and low, art and craft, inspirational narrative and quiet or not so quiet fury about racial and sexual inequality.”

Nike is under fire for its “needlessly revealing and sexist” Team USA women’s track and field kit. “Wait, my hoo haa is gonna be out.”

AI is rewriting the internet. Here’s what to expect from Microsoft’s Copilot, Google’s Gemini, and OpenAI’s ChatGPT-4. “These AI tools are vast autocomplete systems, trained to predict which word follows the next in any given sentence. As such, they have no hard-coded database of ‘facts’ to draw on — just the ability to write plausible-sounding statements. This means they have a tendency to present false information as truth since whether a given sentence sounds plausible does not guarantee its factuality,” says reporter James Vincent. Yay! The future sounds…?

The National Governors Association has launched a new Health Equity Learning Network to support policy solutions and share strategies to reduce health inequities in the U.S.

Daniel Kahneman, the Nobel Prize-winning psychologist who became known for his groundbreaking work in bias, heuristics, and how people make decisions, has died at 90. Kahneman became widely known for his 2011 book Thinking, Fast and Slow, which aimed to “improve the ability to identify and understand errors of judgment and choice, in others and eventually ourselves, by providing a richer and more precise language to discuss them.”

Maqroo means readable: Leo Burnett Dubai agency has partnered with Omantel telecom network to create a new dyslexia-friendly Arabic font. “Arabic is one of the oldest and most beautiful languages in the world. With 12 million words it is also the most complex, making it even harder for those with dyslexia to learn it,” says Leo Burnett Dubai art director Abdo Mohamed. (It’s also beautiful.)

Wicked looks good.

The much anticipated Humane AI Pin has arrived, an expensive, subscription-based wearable chatbot — or “second brain” — that nobody seems to like very much. Yet, I guess.

Who will represent working-class life?documentary about the UK-based photographer Tish Murtha is asking important questions about which stories are told visually — and supported by the art establishment — and why. “She showed the reality of poverty and deprivation in communities where the misery of unemployment had been allowed to settle by the Westminster political classes who considered it a price worth other people paying for the boon of undermining trade union power,” writes Peter Bradshaw. “But in capturing the faces, particularly the faces of children, Murtha showed her subjects’ humour, optimism and refusal to be cowed.”

An employee who worked as an art installer secretly hung one of his own paintings in the Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich, and we’re not that mad about it. “He was carrying tools; that’s why he went totally unnoticed,” said Tine Nehler, a museum spokesperson. “As a technician, he was able to move around all areas of the building outside of opening hours.”

Marian Bantjes critiques the design and logic (and design logic) of the food pyramid (and pyramids in general).

Lesly Pierre Paul’s New Vision Art School turns to the arts as a way to continue local traditions and keep neighborhood children out of gangs. 

Tahnee Ahtone joins the Nelson Atkins Museum in Kansas City as Curator, Native American Art. She was previously the Director and Curator at the Kiowa Tribal Museum in Carnegie, Oklahoma.

News we love: founded in 2002 by Nínive Calegari, a teacher, and McSweeney's founder (and author) Dave Eggers, 826 Valencia receives a $1 million donation from Yield Giving, a massive philanthropy effort by Amazon co-founder MacKenzie Scott.

Next week, Case Western will host design anthropologist Christina Wasson, who will deliver the 2024 Applying Anthropology to Real World Problems Lecture. Entitled The Participatory Design of Indigenous Heritage Archives, Wasson will describe how she has adapted participatory design methods to develop archives that preserve indigenous languages. (Thursday, April 18, at 4 p.m. in Mather Memorial Building, Room 201.)

Margerete Jahny belonged to a rare demographic of industrial designer: she was East German—and female—and according to design historian Günter Höhne, she was the first East German industrial designer, of any gender, with a university education.



Jobs | April 26