Schools. Hospitals. Laboratories. Designers and artists do as much work outside their studios and practice rooms as they do inside these spaces.
Courtney Davis, an interior architecture graduate student, spent the bulk of her spring semester in Phoenix’s Sunnyslope community working with Chrysalis, a nonprofit that supports survivors of domestic abuse.
“I’m working with them to redesign a transitional housing casita for families who have moved through the emergency shelter but need housing while seeking education and job training,” Davis said. “I love knowing this design will support these strong mamas and resilient kids.”
Her project is one of several that place designers and artists in public life as part of Design and Arts Corps, one of the Herberger Institute’s signature initiatives, which empowers students to use their creative capacities to advance culture, strengthen democracy and address today’s most pressing challenges.
Leveraging creative skills
Design and Arts Corps addresses a unique 21st-century challenge for colleges: About 85 percent of design and arts graduates worked outside of the arts at some point in their careers, according to a survey of more than 80,000 design and arts alumni by the Strategic National Arts Alumni Project. Most schools do not train design and art students to leverage their creative skills to serve in nontraditional settings like health care, youth development and civic institutions. Herberger Institute does.
“This initiative fundamentally shifts design and arts education to ensure that every student gets a chance to work with a community partner and to deeply understand how they can equitably use their creative talents and imaginations to improve their communities,” said Stephani Etheridge Woodson, theatre professor and director of Design and Arts Corps.
For example, the digital storytelling program iCreate partners Design and Arts Corps students with Phoenix Children’s Hospital. The resident artists work with young patients to create playful explorations of the children’s most creative selves. Last year, two graduate students from the ASU School of Music visited labs with ASU neuroscientists studying Alzheimer’s disease and created original compositions communicating the research they observed and the struggles affecting Alzheimer’s patients, caregivers and the scientists. This spring, film students partnered with local nonprofit organizations to create PSAs.
For her project, Davis said she is thrilled to leverage the design principles she’s learned.
“What I get really excited about as a designer is using principles of trauma-informed care and biophilia to create spaces that are not only functional, but actually contribute to healing and transformation,” she said. “Beauty is care, and design makes a powerful contribution to healing.”