by Megan Mesack | Oct 4, 2024
Francis Vallejo is an award-winning, Detroit native, American artist whose works have been exhibited in major national publications, art galleries, and museums. Vallejo earned his Bachelor’s degree from Ringling College of Art + Design and his M.A. from Savannah College of Art + Design. He has since created artworks for a host of notable clients and exhibits. Vallejo’s Jazz Day, written by Roxane Orgill and published by Candlewick Press, was the recipient of the Boston Globe Horn Book award for Best Picture Book. His illustrated book, Anansi Boys, written by Neil Gaiman, and published by The Folio Society, has won Spectrum Gold, the D&AD Pencil, and other awards. He recently received a prestigious 2023 Kresge Visual Arts Fellowship. He currently serves as Section Lead & Associate Professor of Illustration at the College for Creative Studies.
by Megan Mesack | Oct 2, 2024
Three CCS alumni from varying design backgrounds will come together for a conversation centering the rise of AI in design industries, and how the use of AI has affected their own practices and sectors. The panel will be moderated by CCS Provost, Tim Flattery (‘87, Transportation Design).
by Megan Mesack | Sep 23, 2024
Join us for an exciting evening with Daniel Casey as he shares his insights and experiences in film. This event will take place on Thu Oct 03 2024 at 7:00 PM on CCS’s Ford Campus in the Walter B. Ford II Building, Wendell W. Anderson Jr. Auditorium. Don’t...
by Megan Mesack | Sep 11, 2024
Mai Xiong, a 2007 Alumna of the College for Creative Studies’ Communication Design department and current Michigan State House Representative, will be speaking about key issues impacting American democracy. She will discuss the role of state and federal constitutions...
by Megan Mesack | Aug 7, 2024
LaKela Brown traces the origin of her current work through examination of subjects, materials, and processes, which encompass the foundation of her practice. In her Woodward Lecture, Brown will speak about ethnobotany, adornment, and molding and casting as a form of record keeping.
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