There’s a lot of groundwork and networking to do before you apply for a first job. Sascha Flowers, NYSID’s Career Services and Internship Coordinator, is an employment expert and career coach with deep experience in placing designers in jobs that point them toward professional development.
Read MoreBy 1992, architect and designer Jack Travis had already traveled through much of Europe and journeyed to Senegal. But it was his trip to South Africa that year that changed the way he sees the world.
Read MoreNYSID BFA students on their semester abroad in Portovenere, Italy.
Read More“Through a scholarship at NYSID, I am able to provide someone with the education to pursue a career in our incredible industry and to do it in a city that nurtures by virtue of all it has to offer….”
Read MoreOn Tuesday, May 3, the New York School of Interior Design held its Gala 2022 at the University Club of New York, securing $700,000 for scholarships, a record-breaking number of funds raised at this annual event. It was the first in-person celebration for the NYSID community in more than two years.
Read MoreOn Wednesday, May 25, 2022, the New York School of Interior Design honored the Classes of 2020, 2021, and 2022 with a traditional Commencement ceremony at 92NY’s Kaufmann Concert Hall.
Read MoreNYSID has a new Associate Dean, Daniel Harper, who has primary oversight of the undergraduate programs. His responsibilities will extend into aspects of every degree program.
Read MoreIn June, NYSID gained a new Director of Admissions with an abundance of experience and a data-driven plan to bring the College to new audiences of potential students (and their parents).
Read MoreWhen Wilson Yang ‘22 (MFA1) began Thesis Preparation, he knew he wanted to integrate his passion for his first career of fashion design with his new calling of interior design.
Read MoreFor her capstone project, Wunjin Hwang ‘22 (MFA2) was drawn to the high-end fashion brand Maison Margiela for two reasons. The first is that the brand regards fashion as a form of artistic expression.
Read MoreAllie George ‘22 (BFA) wanted her thesis to be a marriage of her two great passions, interior design and fashion, and for many years she’s been an admirer of Hubert de Givenchy’s “classic, elegant, and sophisticated style.”
Read MoreWhen Janice Julianti ‘22 (BFA) set out to design what would become “The Kingsland: Affordable Housing Apartments for Seniors and the Disabled,” she was struck by the way the COVID-19 pandemic isolated seniors, and drove many into poverty.
Read MoreDavid Sprouls, president of the New York School of Interior Design, welcomes readers to the Spring 2022 issue of Atelier.
Read MoreNYSID alumna Laura Hodges ‘09 designed this beautiful home for a couple downsizing from a 6,000-SF suburban home to 2,000-SF in the city of Baltimore.
Read MoreSuzy Genzler ’12 (BFA), program director of NYSID’s Master of Professional Studies in Healthcare Design, talks with Maureen Carley-Vallejo ’95 (BFA), principal and senior healthcare interiors leader at Perkins Eastman.
Read MoreNYSID alumna Christina Peters ’09 (BFA) is a senior associate at Perkins Eastman with expertise in design for aging and healthcare design. She sometimes works with principal Maureen Carley-Vallejo on the design of hospitals, but her deepest level of experience is in the planning and design of senior living communities.
Read MoreNYSID MPSS advisor William Browning on biophilia, the subject of his latest book.
Read MoreNYSID MPSS advisor William Browning on biophilia, the subject of his latest book.
Read MoreShruti Kashikar (MFA1 student), Ryan Biggs (BFA, ’21), and Dalia Cunow (BID student) are parents of young children who set out to reinvent themselves through a NYSID education. They say simultaneously parenting and studying at NYSID is challenging, and worth it. Here are their insights, along with those of Penni Morganstein, PsyD, NYSID’s director of counseling services.
Read More“I always told myself if I was able to climb the ladder of success and get to the top, I would not pull the ladder up after myself. I would leave it down for others to climb.”
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