About Gateway

Gateway is the community newsletter of Pratt Institute. It is published monthly by the Office of Communications, in the Division of Institutional Advancement. For a list of contributors, click here.

Visit Pratt's Homepage

Visit Pratt at www.pratt.edu!

ANNOUNCEMENTS

DEADLINE EXTENDED FOR 125TH ANNIVERSARY LOGO COMPETITION

The 125th Anniversary Logo Design Competition has been extended through January 31, 2011. All alumni, students, faculty, and staff are eligible to enter.

Read the design brief and learn how to enter.

Pratt Institute is holding a competition to find the best logo design to mark the Institute’s 125th anniversary. Beginning in September 2011, Pratt will begin marking the Institute’s 125th anniversary with 16 months of events, lectures, and exhibitions. The winning design will become the official logo for invitations, programs, and other materials used in connection with the lectures, exhibitions, and other events and activities taking place in honor of Pratt’s 125th anniversary; it will be used on all anniversary-branded materials such as street banners, invitations, and commemorative products.

ALUMNI, FACULTY,  STAFF
INVITED TO PARTICIPATE IN
PRATT’S 125TH ANNIVERSARY
MEMORY PROJECT

As part of Pratt’s 125th Anniversary celebration, we’re launching the Pratt 125th Anniversary Memory Project, which will document the recollections of Institute alumni, faculty, and staff over the past 125 years. Pratt’s history spans some of the most important events of the 20th century—events that helped shape our culture and continue to influence society. Now, we’re turning to you to help us capture and preserve these precious stories.

Do you remember the elevated train that once ran through campus? The exhilarating classes with your favorite professor? The mood on campus and your response to the Vietnam War or the aftermath of September 11, 2001?  We invite you to share your most compelling memories and images of Pratt Institute through the decades. Selected submissions will appear in a special commemorative issue of Prattfolio, on the Pratt website, and in promotional and other materials related to Pratt’s 125th Anniversary. 

The deadline for submitting your memories is February 15, 2011! You may send your submissions to the 125th Anniversary Memory Project, including photographs (300 dpi at 100%, if possible), via email to 125memory@pratt.edu. Please include your contact information and Pratt affiliation, including degree and year if you are an alum.

STUDY ABROAD IN COPENHAGEN, DENMARK INFORMATION SESSION

Are you a current graduate or undergraduate student who wants to learn about cutting-edge Scandinavian design? Do you want to study architecture, furniture design, textile design, urban design, information design, and much more with faculty from the Royal Academy, Danish Design School, and the University of Copenhagen? If so, find out more about the Architecture and Design Program in Cophenhagen for students at the next DIS/Copenhagen Study Abroad information session:

Tuesday, February 15, 12:30 PM

Steuben Hall, 4th Floor

 

Archives
Tuesday
Jan112011

EYE ON ALUMNI

Jasmine Lam, M.S. Interior Design ’98

 

It was only after a few years spent working as a movie agent in Los Angeles that Jasmine Lam (M.S. Interior Design ’98) realized her true calling lay in interior design.

“After being an agent and representing other people who had artistic talents, I wanted to do something that used my skills and talents,” she says.

She talked it over with her father, an architect, who was skeptical.  “‘I’ve never even seen you draw,’” she recalls him saying. 

Still, Lam knew she had a good visual memory for space, color and texture.

“I grew up with a father who’s very passionate about architecture. We spent every vacation and weekends looking at homes and buildings. I always knew I had an eye for it.”

Lam now owns an interior design firm in the West Village, where she specializes in high-end residential design. Though she has experience in commercial and retail spaces, she loves working on the details that make up a residential design project.

“A lot of custom details go into residential design—furnishings, decorative hardware, accessories, art work.  In my projects I am involved in every single thing that exists in a home. I design custom linens for almost all of my projects, and the majority of furniture we use is custom-designed.”

Lam lived most of her life in Southern California, then moved to New York to attend Pratt, having chosen the school in large part because of its campus environment.

Once at Pratt, she took advantage of the Institute’s interdisciplinary offerings, taking furniture design and color courses in the Department of Industrial Design, and spending a semester in France through the School of Architecture program.

To this day, Lam credits the semester abroad for teaching her how crucial travel is for an interior designer. “I do a lot of travel where I’m looking at design, and that stems from the semester I did in France. We looked at so many buildings that I never would have seen had I been just a tourist.”

After graduation, Lam joined the firm Gensler New York, where she worked on, among other things, the Gucci flagship store on Fifth Avenue, the American Express Travel and Aveda prototype stores, and the Sao Paulo office of Goldman Sachs.

After four years, Lam struck out on her own, and has now owned her firm for about 10 years. She also served as an adjunct professor in the Undergraduate Interior Design department for a semester.

Currently, Lam is working on a 10,000-square-foot home and 2,000-square foot pool house in Bridgehampton, Long Island, as well as an apartment on Fifth Avenue on the Upper East Side, a Soho loft, and a triplex in the West Village.  She and the two designers who work for her have about a dozen projects lined up for the year, mostly in the New York area.

She hopes to do more work abroad, especially in China, and has begun work on an Art Deco residential development project in Shanghai where the three model units total 30,000 square feet.  She is also developing a private label home décor line which will be launched in 2012 in China, and will be sold through the e-commerce sites MSN China and yobrand.com.

“I’ve been told I’m good at creating luxurious spaces and creating comfort in a very elegant way.  The one year course I took in color has given me the tools to develop finished palettes for all my professional projects,” she says.  

Photo: Courtesy of Jasmine Lam 

Friday
Jan072011

COCKTAILS AND CONVERSATION FOR TEXAS ALUMNI

Left: (L-R) Matthew Baldwin (M.F.A. '90), Leah Stubbs (M.F.A. '95) and Louie Lino (B.F.A. Painting '79) Right: (L-R) William Brown (B.F.A. Graphic Design '93) and Jamil Muhaisen (B.F.A. Photography-Media Arts '97)

Pratt alumni from the Austin, Texas area gathered on December 6 for cocktails and conversation at the Driskill Hotel in downtown Austin. About 20 alumni attended, representing a wide range of class years and majors. 

The Pratt Institute Alumni Association will host more events around the country this year. Visit alumni.pratt.edu for an updated schedule.

Photo: Robert Reed