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Applied Research Day – Langara’s annual showcase of current research and innovation projects – took place on Thursday, March 24, 2022. Faculty, staff, and students came together to share their scholarship projects, showcase their accomplishments, and trade ideas. With more than 20 projects on display, the event introduced attendees to the wide variety of research taking place at the College and provided inspiration for future research projects and scholarly activity.

2015 Design Build Intensive: MFA in Applied Craft + Design

 

The MFA in Applied Craft + Design degree program (AC+D) in Portland, OR (a joint program of Oregon College of Art and Craft and Pacific Northwest College of Art) begins each year with a 10 day pre-semester, collaborative Design Build Intensive project intended to help students get to know each other and learn how to work together by designing and building a project for an actual client who will benefit from the students' skills.

 

This year's collaborator is Outgrowing Hunger whose mission is "to get healthy food into the mouths of Hungry People". The organization "transforms unused private, public and institutional land into Neighborhood Gardens, where healthy food, resilient community, and economic opportunity spring up together". For this Design Build Intensive the AC+D students will focus on the East Portland Neighborhood Garden (EPNG), which provides personal gardening and fresh produce work-trade opportunities.

 

The East Portland Neighborhood Garden has plots that range from 360 – 1550 square feet, tended primarily by 115 Bhutanese, Burmese refugee and Latino immigrant families who literally live off of the garden's harvest. Many must commute up to two miles on foot to get to the garden, after which they often work 6 – 8 hours a day tending, harvesting and preparing traditional fermented vegetables. The entire site is almost 100% garden space with little area for rest and relief, not to mention protection from the rain and sun.

 

There is so much AC+D can do for EPNG!

The magic of the AC+D Design Build Intensive is the conversation and connection that happens between two communities who normally would not have come together. EPNG and ACD will meet to collaboratively discover the true needs of the community. It is clear already that there is much that can be improved. The design process will not begin until the students meet with the gardeners, but to give a sense of the potential scope the project could include: benches with shaded cover for tired gardeners and nursing mothers; raised beds with ADA accessibility for the Senior Gardens; a protective shed to secure the five wheelbarrows; a privacy shield for the portable restroom; a removable cover for the outdoor kitchen used to prepare the harvests for community and fundraising events, and the list goes on…

 

AC+D DESIGN BUILD: MAKING A DIFFERENCE THROUGH MAKING

Designers in education and industry fields routinely and assuredly assert that design thinking strategies can deliver the “game-changing” ideas needed to address the critical and complex problems of our times. Frequently, however, it seems we’re seduced by and fall in love with the promise(s) of these ideas, and are less committed to following through with their actual realization with the same degree of passion. The AC+D Design Build Intensive is an effort to provide a ‘proof of the pudding is in the eating’ model of design education and practice of the first year MFA AC+D students working together designing and building a project for an actual client.

Emphasizing a philosophy of civic engagement, The AC+D Design Build Intensives are selected based on their potential to benefit an organization or population that generally does not have access to the services of designers, builders and makers. These projects put design thinking into action and solve local community problems.

 

Photos by Jodi Jack

Austin Community College Round Rock Campus Applied Tech Open House on Friday, April 21, 2017.

 

Photo by Catalin Abagiu, ACC Marketing Photographer

Adhesive graphic applied to cinder block. Printing and installed by Taylor Visual Group. 3M Avery FLEXcon

Alumicor Partition System designed and constructed by Taylor Visual Group

312.953.4136

www.taylorvisualgroup.com

3D letters made by our A2 Applied Art and Design Students who are currently developing experimental typography for their Good Luck Card Project

Inside the Fachhochschule Köln / Cologne University of Applied Sciences. For any usage, please ask permission at www.evrim-sen.com.

 

2015 Design Build Intensive: MFA in Applied Craft + Design

 

The MFA in Applied Craft + Design degree program (AC+D) in Portland, OR (a joint program of Oregon College of Art and Craft and Pacific Northwest College of Art) begins each year with a 10 day pre-semester, collaborative Design Build Intensive project intended to help students get to know each other and learn how to work together by designing and building a project for an actual client who will benefit from the students' skills.

 

This year's collaborator is Outgrowing Hunger whose mission is "to get healthy food into the mouths of Hungry People". The organization "transforms unused private, public and institutional land into Neighborhood Gardens, where healthy food, resilient community, and economic opportunity spring up together". For this Design Build Intensive the AC+D students will focus on the East Portland Neighborhood Garden (EPNG), which provides personal gardening and fresh produce work-trade opportunities.

 

The East Portland Neighborhood Garden has plots that range from 360 – 1550 square feet, tended primarily by 115 Bhutanese, Burmese refugee and Latino immigrant families who literally live off of the garden's harvest. Many must commute up to two miles on foot to get to the garden, after which they often work 6 – 8 hours a day tending, harvesting and preparing traditional fermented vegetables. The entire site is almost 100% garden space with little area for rest and relief, not to mention protection from the rain and sun.

 

There is so much AC+D can do for EPNG!

The magic of the AC+D Design Build Intensive is the conversation and connection that happens between two communities who normally would not have come together. EPNG and ACD will meet to collaboratively discover the true needs of the community. It is clear already that there is much that can be improved. The design process will not begin until the students meet with the gardeners, but to give a sense of the potential scope the project could include: benches with shaded cover for tired gardeners and nursing mothers; raised beds with ADA accessibility for the Senior Gardens; a protective shed to secure the five wheelbarrows; a privacy shield for the portable restroom; a removable cover for the outdoor kitchen used to prepare the harvests for community and fundraising events, and the list goes on…

 

AC+D DESIGN BUILD: MAKING A DIFFERENCE THROUGH MAKING

Designers in education and industry fields routinely and assuredly assert that design thinking strategies can deliver the “game-changing” ideas needed to address the critical and complex problems of our times. Frequently, however, it seems we’re seduced by and fall in love with the promise(s) of these ideas, and are less committed to following through with their actual realization with the same degree of passion. The AC+D Design Build Intensive is an effort to provide a ‘proof of the pudding is in the eating’ model of design education and practice of the first year MFA AC+D students working together designing and building a project for an actual client.

Emphasizing a philosophy of civic engagement, The AC+D Design Build Intensives are selected based on their potential to benefit an organization or population that generally does not have access to the services of designers, builders and makers. These projects put design thinking into action and solve local community problems.

 

Photos by Mario Gallucci

2015 Design Build Intensive: MFA in Applied Craft + Design

 

The MFA in Applied Craft + Design degree program (AC+D) in Portland, OR (a joint program of Oregon College of Art and Craft and Pacific Northwest College of Art) begins each year with a 10 day pre-semester, collaborative Design Build Intensive project intended to help students get to know each other and learn how to work together by designing and building a project for an actual client who will benefit from the students' skills.

 

This year's collaborator is Outgrowing Hunger whose mission is "to get healthy food into the mouths of Hungry People". The organization "transforms unused private, public and institutional land into Neighborhood Gardens, where healthy food, resilient community, and economic opportunity spring up together". For this Design Build Intensive the AC+D students will focus on the East Portland Neighborhood Garden (EPNG), which provides personal gardening and fresh produce work-trade opportunities.

 

The East Portland Neighborhood Garden has plots that range from 360 – 1550 square feet, tended primarily by 115 Bhutanese, Burmese refugee and Latino immigrant families who literally live off of the garden's harvest. Many must commute up to two miles on foot to get to the garden, after which they often work 6 – 8 hours a day tending, harvesting and preparing traditional fermented vegetables. The entire site is almost 100% garden space with little area for rest and relief, not to mention protection from the rain and sun.

 

There is so much AC+D can do for EPNG!

The magic of the AC+D Design Build Intensive is the conversation and connection that happens between two communities who normally would not have come together. EPNG and ACD will meet to collaboratively discover the true needs of the community. It is clear already that there is much that can be improved. The design process will not begin until the students meet with the gardeners, but to give a sense of the potential scope the project could include: benches with shaded cover for tired gardeners and nursing mothers; raised beds with ADA accessibility for the Senior Gardens; a protective shed to secure the five wheelbarrows; a privacy shield for the portable restroom; a removable cover for the outdoor kitchen used to prepare the harvests for community and fundraising events, and the list goes on…

 

AC+D DESIGN BUILD: MAKING A DIFFERENCE THROUGH MAKING

Designers in education and industry fields routinely and assuredly assert that design thinking strategies can deliver the “game-changing” ideas needed to address the critical and complex problems of our times. Frequently, however, it seems we’re seduced by and fall in love with the promise(s) of these ideas, and are less committed to following through with their actual realization with the same degree of passion. The AC+D Design Build Intensive is an effort to provide a ‘proof of the pudding is in the eating’ model of design education and practice of the first year MFA AC+D students working together designing and building a project for an actual client.

Emphasizing a philosophy of civic engagement, The AC+D Design Build Intensives are selected based on their potential to benefit an organization or population that generally does not have access to the services of designers, builders and makers. These projects put design thinking into action and solve local community problems.

 

Photos by Mario Gallucci

trying out capture nx2. trying to decide if it will be worth the upgrade

 

Applied basic basecoat and one ink wash...dry brushing to follow

part of an installation of Jean Paul Gaultier for ELLE Decoration an Cité de l´architecture & du patrimoine. although I think the orange chair wasn't part of the exhibition...

Our knives just sliced through veggies, to stack in our bowl.

PH.D M.A.Sc, M.Eng, B.Sc. (Eng) Convocation 2013

Austin Community College Round Rock Campus Applied Tech Open House on Friday, April 21, 2017.

 

Photo by Catalin Abagiu, ACC Marketing Photographer

2015 Design Build Intensive: MFA in Applied Craft + Design

 

The MFA in Applied Craft + Design degree program (AC+D) in Portland, OR (a joint program of Oregon College of Art and Craft and Pacific Northwest College of Art) begins each year with a 10 day pre-semester, collaborative Design Build Intensive project intended to help students get to know each other and learn how to work together by designing and building a project for an actual client who will benefit from the students' skills.

 

This year's collaborator is Outgrowing Hunger whose mission is "to get healthy food into the mouths of Hungry People". The organization "transforms unused private, public and institutional land into Neighborhood Gardens, where healthy food, resilient community, and economic opportunity spring up together". For this Design Build Intensive the AC+D students will focus on the East Portland Neighborhood Garden (EPNG), which provides personal gardening and fresh produce work-trade opportunities.

 

The East Portland Neighborhood Garden has plots that range from 360 – 1550 square feet, tended primarily by 115 Bhutanese, Burmese refugee and Latino immigrant families who literally live off of the garden's harvest. Many must commute up to two miles on foot to get to the garden, after which they often work 6 – 8 hours a day tending, harvesting and preparing traditional fermented vegetables. The entire site is almost 100% garden space with little area for rest and relief, not to mention protection from the rain and sun.

 

There is so much AC+D can do for EPNG!

The magic of the AC+D Design Build Intensive is the conversation and connection that happens between two communities who normally would not have come together. EPNG and ACD will meet to collaboratively discover the true needs of the community. It is clear already that there is much that can be improved. The design process will not begin until the students meet with the gardeners, but to give a sense of the potential scope the project could include: benches with shaded cover for tired gardeners and nursing mothers; raised beds with ADA accessibility for the Senior Gardens; a protective shed to secure the five wheelbarrows; a privacy shield for the portable restroom; a removable cover for the outdoor kitchen used to prepare the harvests for community and fundraising events, and the list goes on…

 

AC+D DESIGN BUILD: MAKING A DIFFERENCE THROUGH MAKING

Designers in education and industry fields routinely and assuredly assert that design thinking strategies can deliver the “game-changing” ideas needed to address the critical and complex problems of our times. Frequently, however, it seems we’re seduced by and fall in love with the promise(s) of these ideas, and are less committed to following through with their actual realization with the same degree of passion. The AC+D Design Build Intensive is an effort to provide a ‘proof of the pudding is in the eating’ model of design education and practice of the first year MFA AC+D students working together designing and building a project for an actual client.

Emphasizing a philosophy of civic engagement, The AC+D Design Build Intensives are selected based on their potential to benefit an organization or population that generally does not have access to the services of designers, builders and makers. These projects put design thinking into action and solve local community problems.

 

Photos by Mario Gallucci

Nero. AD 54-68. Æ As (28mm, 12.72 g, 6h). Lugdunum mint. Struck circa AD 65. Bare head right, small globe at point of bust; c/m: S P [Q R] within rectangular incuse / Victory flying left, holding inscribed shield. RIC I 477; WCN 574; for c/m: Pangerl 26-7.

 

This rare countermark was applied to coins of Nero in Gallia Lugdunensis, either by the administration of Vindex or that of Galba between March and June of AD 68. cngcoins.com

  

UNC Wilmington's College of Health and Applied Human Sciences held its first Alumni Mixer at the Wrightsville Beach Marina and Yacht Club on Thursday, August 1, 2013. - UNCW / Katherine Freshwater

The MFA in Applied Craft and Design welcomes Paul Wong as part of the 2011-2012 Graduate Visiting Artist Lecture Series.

 

Paul Wong has been the Artistic Director and Master Papermaker for over 32 years at Dieu Donné, a non-profit organization for visual artists in NYC dedicated to the creation, promotion, and preservation of new contemporary art utilizing the hand papermaking process. Over his career, he developed and pioneered groundbreaking technical advances in the field of creative hand-papermaking and uses the papermaking process to create major installations and works in paper for exhibitions.

 

January 18, 2012. Photos by: Matthew Miller '11.

Title: Netsuke

Description: netsuke, figure, man opening shell

Credit: Bequest of Robert and Traudi Leitl, Auckland, 1999, collection of Auckland War Memorial Museum, 1999.118.xx

www.aucklandmuseum.com/collection/object/am_humanhistory-...

Applied Research Day, Langara's annual showcase of exciting scholarship and research projects, took place on March 28, 2019. Faculty, staff, and students came together to share their scholarship projects, showcase their accomplishments, and trade ideas. With more than 20 projects on display, the event introduced attendees to the wide variety of research taking place at the College and provided inspiration for future research projects and scholarly activity.

 

Photos copyright Langara College. Photographer: Jennifer Oehler.

AAS have finalized porting their software over to Universal Binaries so they run native on Intel-Macs, including their flagship Tassman soft-synth.

 

(Shameless plug: Robert Voelk, a good friend of mine, has produced a number of demo tracks for AAS. Be sure to have a listen!)

J0421 College of Liberal Arts and Applied Science Miami Regionals Commencement

Applied Machine Learning Days, January 27-29, 2020

@STCC, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland

 

#AMLD2020 @appliedmldays

 

Copyright: ©Samuel Devantery - www.samueldevantery.com

Austin Community College Round Rock Campus Applied Tech Open House on Friday, April 21, 2017.

 

Photo by Catalin Abagiu, ACC Marketing Photographer

After cleaning, scuffing, and cleaning again, then vacuuming the booth, the fuselage was ready for the white UV primer. This coat gets lightly sanded and scuffed before the topcoat goes on.

Applied Machine Learning Days, January 28-29, 2019

@STCC, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland

 

#AMLD2019 @appliedmldays

 

Copyright: ©Samuel Devantery - www.samueldevantery.com

Anita Li placing dipper in the operant tank. We let it sit in the tank for 5-15 minutes to equalize the temperatures in case there are any differences.

Taken with the FormattPhoto App

Following Alterations Applied to Orange Reflector Light that are commonly found on construction sites on streets:

 

-Autolevels

-Slight Blur

-Filter\Effect\Artistic\Fresco

 

With the alterations applied, we get a sense for how much potential this image has, as the filter redfines the image. For instance, the deeper black background blends well with the orange and produces some purple accents towards the top. The image has transformed in the sense that it's more intense, as there is more color separation in the center that draws one's eyes to it, and represents somewhat of a Techno type feel. what I mean is, the ripples can represent a transmission of audio from the center and can further be interpretted as a "speaker." From this prespective, I believe that I was creative and artisitic in transforming a simple reflector light to something totally different.

 

Jacob

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