Join Lucille Tenazas as she talks about her work, spanning her origins as a young student in the Philippines to her current role as an endowed professor at Parsons School of Design at 2 p.m. ET on Tuesday, April 5. This annual event is being held online and is open to the public.
MICA is pleased to announce Lucille Tenazas — whose groundbreaking creative career opened up graphic design to diverse influences and personal voices — as this year’s William O. Steinmetz ’50 Designer-in-Residence. The Steinmetz program is MICA’s most prominent annual design event, named after MICA alumnus, faculty member and trustee William O. Steinmetz (1927–2016).
In addition to the April 5 webinar, Tenazas will also lead an online design workshop with MICA students from 12-4pm. on Tuesday, April 11.
Tenazas is the Henry Wolf Professor of Communication Design at Parsons School of Design, where she served as Associate Dean of the School of Art, Media and Technology (AMT) from 2013–2020. She founded the MFA Design Program at California College of Arts (CCA) in 2000.
Her work as a designer and teacher bridges theory and practice in a process of self-discovery. Tenazas builds layers of typography and image that embrace poetic expression. She received the National Design Award in Communication Design from Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum and the AIGA Medal for Lifetime Achievement.
“When I came to the US to study graphic design in 1979, I arrived with no baggage of history,” Tanazas said. “I asked, how can I refer to the foundations of Western typography but make it my own? How can I synthesize ideas from the Bauhaus or Swiss modernism and go beyond them?”
Born in Manila, the Philippines, Tenazas has taught and practiced in the United States since 1979. As a graduate student at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan in the early 1980s, she was exposed to the work of Eliel and Eero Saarinen and Charles and Ray Eames. She is an authority in the evolving state of design education and has conducted workshops in institutions throughout the United States, Asia and Europe.
“MICA is proud to share Lucille Tenazas’s voice with our students and with the wider design community,” says Ellen Lupton, MICA faculty and the College’s inaugural Betty Cooke and William O. Steinmetz Design Chair.