D-CRIT Thesis Symposium and 2NDFL Issue Two Launch

Fri May 15 2026 at 05:00 pm to 08:00 pm UTC-04:00

SVA Theatre | New York

SVA MA Design Research, Writing and Criticism
Publisher/HostSVA MA Design Research, Writing and Criticism
D-CRIT Thesis Symposium and 2NDFL Issue Two Launch
Advertisement
Join us for rapid-fire thesis presentations, sharp dispatches, and the launch of 2NDFL Issue Two—celebrating the D-Crit Class of 2026.
About this Event

Join us for rapid-fire thesis presentations, sharp dispatches, and the launch of 2NDFL Issue Two—celebrating the D-Crit Class of 2026.

The program will feature rapid-fire thesis presentations, short readings, and conversation exploring the shifting contours of design, culture, and society—followed by a reception and publication launch in the lobby.

Please note: this page will be updated as details are finalized.

Featured thesis presentations (Class of 2026):

  • Mo Alabi
  • Tash Nikol Smith
  • Vlad Ilkevich
  • Deborah Doering
  • July Winters

Additional faculty and alumni participants to be announced, including department chair Molly Heintz, lead thesis advisor Alex de Looz, Eric Schwartau, Brian Droitcour, and more (TBA).


About 2NDFL
2NDFL is our publication—and also the floor where D-Crit happens: second thoughts, second opinions, second drafts. It’s the space between boots-on-the-ground reporting and rigorous research, where ideas travel up from the street and down from the clouds—toward clarity, consequence, and context.

"The diverse range of thesis topics often surprises the guest critics who join us for students’ 'work-in-progress' presentations during the academic year. How can Iranian stamps, fertility treatments, and a 1980s rock concert, for example, be part of the same conversation around our seminar room table? The common thread is the mode of analysis: the lens of design. Starting with the designed artifacts—objects, entities, or systems produced to serve a specific purpose– students consider what a design is made of, who made it, and why. It’s an unassuming start to a research journey that may go on to epic, unexpected places over the course of two semesters and, we hope, beyond. Bigger and broader questions of cultural diplomacy, economic exploitation, or social impact unfold and cross-pollinate. New, and often more urgent, levels of conversation and debate flourish. Ideas gain strength and clarity in the written word, all sustained by the common ground of design."

—Molly Heintz, Program Chair


Advertisement

Event Venue & Nearby Stays

SVA Theatre, 333 West 23rd Street, New York, United States

Tickets

USD 0.00

Icon
Concerts, fests, parties, meetups - all the happenings, one place.

Ask AI if this event suits you: