“The work that we’re doing in our studio is enriched by being educators,” says Park, adding that the studio’s projects around “preserving cultural history, disseminating knowledge in ways that creates impact”, make them better teachers. She continues: “We learn from our students as well because we’re in this constant cultural dialogue with them about how they understand information, how they learn, how they work with digital products and so on.”
In early 2022, the school published a book that delineates its history and approach, titled 1, 10, 100 Years: Form, Typography and Interaction at Parsons. Among the book’s authors were Caspar Lam and YuJune Park, assistant professors of communication design at Parsons and founders of New York and Hong Kong-based design consultancy Synoptic Office. For Lam and Park, these two sides of their careers – teaching and studio practice – are inextricable from one another, with learnings from the classroom continually feeding into project work and vice versa.
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One of the pivotal moments in Parsons’ history was in 1972, when the school made a distinction between design and advertising.
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