Fellows
Our fellows push the vision of MADWORKSHOP forward year by year. Handpicked from the most competitive design programs and burgeoning studios, these remarkable thinkers bring their ideas from concept to reality during the course of their fellowship.
Elise Co
2023 Affiliated Fellow at the American Academy in Rome
Elise Co
2023 Affiliated Fellow at the American Academy in Rome
Elise Co is co-founder of Aeolab, a design and technology studio in Los Angeles building dynamic interfaces, generative behaviors and advanced, high-fidelity functional prototypes of alternate/future devices and systems. Elise has helped design and implement data visualizations, hand-powered electronic prototypes, robotic appliances, and multi-screen kinetic installations for clients such as Honda, BMW, Sony, Samsung, and Disney.
She is a Professor in Interaction Design and Graduate Media Design Practices at ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, where her teaching is frequently around emerging technologies and strategic prototyping. She has also taught at the Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst in Basel, Switzerland; the University of Minnesota; SCI-Arc; and USC. Her work has been shown internationally, including at the Milan Triennale, Istanbul Design Biennial, NEMO Amsterdam, MOMA, SIGGRAPH, and IMRF Tokyo. Elise holds a Master of Science degree in Media Arts and Sciences and a Bachelor of Science degree in Architecture from MIT.
Her creative practice involves making-based research into materiality, embodied knowledge, and consciousness, at the intersection of textiles and computation.
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Marek Djordjevic
2022 Affiliated Fellow at the American Academy in Rome
Marek Djordjevic
2022 Affiliated Fellow at the American Academy in Rome
Marek Djordjevic, born in Belgrade, Serbia, graduated from ArtCenter College of Design and embarked on a 15-year career at BMW Group, working on designs for BMW, Mini, MG, Land Rover, and Rolls-Royce. Notably, he shaped the Rolls-Royce Phantom family of models and the experimental, centenary one-off: Rolls-Royce 100EX. In 2005, upon leaving his positions as chief of exterior design at Rolls-Royce and creative director at BMW Designworks, he founded Marek Djordjevic Inc., a consultancy offering creative services leveraging his automotive brand, concept and design expertise. Working together with his teams, he focuses on developing valued brands with clear vision, designing desirable vehicles and products with inspired purpose, and engaging more customers with meaningful experiences. Additionally, Djordjevic serves on a part-time basis as Design Director at HHCP, a design agency founded by Shiro Nakamura, former SVP and CCO of Nissan. A long-standing professor fostering student talent for over 20 years, Djordjevic is currently also the Chair of Transportation Design at ArtCenter. He was awarded the inaugural MADWORKSHOP fellowship representing ArtCenter at the American Academy in Rome, where he explored the intersections of architecture, urban planning and mobility. Djordjevic furher engages with the industry through workshops, lectures, and expert panels, aiming to innovate and inspire the transportation sector.
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Nhan-Nhi Lillian Nguyen
2022 Fellow
Nhan-Nhi Lillian Nguyen
2022 Fellow
Nhan-Nhi Lillian Nguyen is a multi-disciplinary designer and artist from Honolulu, Hawaii. She received her Bachelor of Architecture degree from the University of Southern California in 2020 and Master of Design degree from Central Saint Martins, London, in 2023. Lily has been a versatile member of our team, having worked on many architecture, furniture, social media, and graphic design projects at MADWORKSHOP.
During her teenage years at Punahou School, she founded her first business on Etsy called BonjourLily, making hand-made headbands. Toward the end of her USC School of Architecture studies, she reignited her passion for ceramics, leading her to further her design studies in London.
Lily has now established her own design and art practice. Her current work in 3D printed ceramics is heavily influenced by her undergraduate studies in architecture. She is primarily interested in material transformations and boundaries and potentials of craft in the digital age, which she has manifested as a playful enquiry into how human touch and error can intervene in machine processes.
Lily’s works have been featured in Seventeen, Vogue, London Design Week, London Craft Week, HIVE, and UAL: Showcase.
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Sofia Boarino
2019 Fellow
Sofia Boarino
2019 Fellow
Sofia Boarino was born in Casale Monferrato, a small town hiding between the hills in the north of Italy. After humanistic studies and several internships in design and architectural studios such as ‘Cabinet d’Architecture Arcode’ in France, ‘Designathome Studio’ in Germany and ‘Tom Dixon’ in England, Sofia decided to study architecture and applied to the Accademia di Architettura di Mendrisio, Switzerland in 2014.
Sofia is now in her 6th and last year at the Accademia. She has studied with Mario Botta and Riccardo Blumer and was an integral part of the team for the 2018 MADWORKSHOP Workshop ‘Sentire l’aria’ in Santa Monica, California.
For her fellowship, Sofia will be combining her interests in music and architecture for a site specific, immersive installation in Varese, Italy. The project, ‘Témenos’, reconnects architecture with the individual, the body, and the mind to transform the act of observing art into a sensorial and emotional experience.
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Taylor Abbott
2019 Fellow
Taylor Abbott
2019 Fellow
From the East Bay hills of Moraga, California, Taylor Abbott has always known that he wanted to design. Whether it was rock sculptures on hikes, or assembling LEGOS on the bedroom floor, physical modeling was an early hobby of his. Over time this interest evolved into hand drafting and then into computer applications, all while the mentality remained the same: have fun! Taylor attended the City College of San Francisco before transferring into the University of Southern California’s 5 year Bachelors of Architecture program, where he holds a leadership role in the campus student organization, Trojan Knights.
Taylor’s interest in hands-on fabrication lead him to the Furniture Design class taught by MADWORKSHOP board member R. Scott Mitchell at USC. Taylor’s table design brings customization and meaning to the table top while integrating complex geometries for the sculptural base. Taylor will be working to complete this furniture project as a 2019 MADWORKSHOP fellow.
Alberto Altamirano
2019 Fellow
Alberto Altamirano
2019 Fellow
Alberto was born and raised in Temecula, California, the land of the hot air balloons. Whether building forts as a kid or creating handmade duct-tape wallets with his brother, Alberto has always been a maker and a hands-on designer. He grew up wanting to be an architect and that dream only compounded when he discovered that the majority of architecture school involved model making. Alberto will be graduating in the class of 2019 from the University of Southern California with a Bachelors of Architecture Degree. While a student, he has been an active member of Alpha Rho Chi, a professional architectural fraternity on campus and a teaching assistant. On his spare time, he has also led free trainings on model making for his younger classmates. Alberto caught the eye of the the foundation with his participation in the inaugural class of the MADWORKSHOP Workshops taught by Riccardo Blumer in 2018. For his fellowship, he will be developing a table, chair, and stool set he designed in our Furniture Class taught by board member R. Scott Mitchell.
Kevin Shapiro
2018 Fellow
Kevin Shapiro
2018 Fellow
Born and raised in Orange County, California, Kevin Shapiro has been skateboarding since an early age — a passion that has contributed to his attitudes towards architecture and design. He studied in Mammoth Lakes, Fullerton, and Costa Mesa, California before transferring to Portland State University where he graduated with a Bachelor’s of Science in Psychology. Following his two years in the Pacific Northwest, Kevin was admitted to the University of Southern California School of Architecture where he is currently a Master of Architecture 2018 candidate. As a designer at MADA s.p.a.m., Kevin worked closely with architect QingYun Ma to design and build the “Pole House,” a pavilion hanging from an existing electrical pole in Yushan Town, Lantian County, Xi’an, China completed in 2017.
As a MADWORKSHOP fellow, Kevin will be developing a collapsible plywood chair and table set. The chair was designed to collapse flat for transport, inspired by Kevin’s years consistently uprooting during his undergraduate studies. The table consists of glass and plywood to display and celebrate the coffee table book. Both the chair and the table were designed in a dialogue between hand sketching and 3d modeling. Sketching is vital to Kevin’s design development process in addition to being an avenue for communicating ideas with others.
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Nahal Mohtashemi
2017 Fellow
Nahal Mohtashemi
2017 Fellow
Nahal Mohtashemi was born in California and raised in Tehran, Iran. She is currently a Master of Architecture student at USC and a designer based in LA with a background of studying and working in the Middle East. She has also worked as an architectural intern in Shanghai, China. Nahal is interested in exploring simple geometries as a basis for generative form finding. She begins a design by first understanding simple geo
Nahal works across a variety of disciplines. Her projects range in scale from urbanism to furniture design while constantly reconsidering the shared commonalities between the two.
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Joseph Chang
2017 Fellow
Joseph Chang
2017 Fellow
Joseph Chang enjoys designing with his hands. He grew up in the Bay Area, CA, where much of his time was spent building in his high school’s fabrication shop and father’s garage. During his two years in the architecture program at the Illinois Institute of Technology, he found a passion for wood working and furniture design. In 2013, he transferred to the USC School of Architecture in pursuit of sharpening his design skills. Joseph is currently a fourth year student and is interested in investigating furniture design within tiny homes.
For his MADWORKSHOP fellowship, he will be prototyping a backpacking stretcher for emergency situations. The apparatus can be operated by a single person to carry heavy loads such as an injured person or loose items over rough terrain.
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Heeje Yang
2017 Fellow
Heeje Yang
2017 Fellow
Heeje Yang is currently a student at University of Southern California pursuing his BARCH. He joined Madworkshop after attending USC’s 4th year Advanced Topic Studio regarding to the problem with homelessness in Los Angeles directed by Sofia Borges and Scott Mitchell in USC School of Arhcitecture. He has work experiences in multiple designer firms such as Michael Maltzan Architecture.
As a fellow, he will be woking on Chair Six to be more easily operable through a study of origami folding and kinetic motion. He will also be preparing his 5th year thesis with an emphasis in kinetic motion through folding and unfolding algorithms. With a significant interest in design and fabrication, he will also explore the intelligence of interactive design through multiple moving objects from a pencil to a building.
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Jayson Champlain
2017 Fellow
Jayson Champlain
2017 Fellow
Since Jayson Champlain was a kid, born and raised in Torrance, CA, he has had a strong passion for architecture and design. Starting with his legendary lego structures and early wood shop classes, Jayson always had a drive to create and work with his hands, so his mother jokingly told him, “You should become an architect.” From that moment forward, the only career path Jayson has ever pursued was architecture. After obtaining an AA in Architectural Drafting from Saddleback College, Jayson was accepted into the USC School of Architecture, and was able to advance his architectural knowledge and craftsmen skills. Now in his forth year in the B. Arch program, Jayson has further developed his architectural abilities, and is interested in focusing his future career on designing socially conscious architecture utilizing innovative technology and representational techniques.
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Belinda Pak
2017 Fellow
Belinda Pak
2017 Fellow
Belinda Pak is a fourth year student at the University of Southern California pursuing a Bachelor Architecture. Originally from Boulder, Colorado, she is now based in Los Angeles. After being part of the MADWORKSHOP’s Homelessness Studio, she was inspired to continue her efforts towards improving the lives of those less fortunate. As a fellow, she is designing and prototyping a wristband with built-in features that can aid a victim in an emergency, such as a beacon and internal storage for contacts and medical information.
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Jeremy Carman
2017 Fellow
Jeremy Carman
2017 Fellow
Jeremy Carman was born and raised in rural northern California in a small town called Shingle Springs. He grew up riding horses, racing motocross, raising animals and participating in fine arts. After three years of hand drafting and learning computer programs in high school, Jeremy gravitated towards the art of sculpting space and visual communication. He then pursued architecture at Cuesta College in San Luis Obipso. Once he earned an AS in architectural technology, Jeremy began setting his sights on the USC School of Architecture BArch program. Today he is finishing his fourth year and is exploring future solutions for people in need with design partner and co-fellow Jayson Champlain. As Jeremy continually grows as a craftsman and designer, his focus center’s on architecture’s ability to encourage learning in both users and observers.
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Riccardo Blumer
2017 Fellow
Riccardo Blumer
2017 Fellow
Graduating in 1982 with a degree in architecture from the Milan Polytechnic, Riccardo Blumer began his professional career at the architectural firm of Mario Botta. After five fruitful years with Botta, Blumer went on to found his current personal practice in Varese, Italy. His work spans from residential and industrial projects to industrial design and prolific partnerships with companies such as Alias, Artemide, Desalto, Poliform, Ycami, B&B and Flou. As a public and private interior designer, his projects include work on the Teatro alla Scala in Milan and several exhibition installations for the Triennale di Milano and the Musèe du Président Jacques Chirac. Recipient of the Design Preis Schweiz and the Compasso d’Oro, Blumer has also been added to the Museum of Modern Art’s (MoMA) permanent collection. Blumer now devotes his extensive background in architecture and industrial design to research and teaching. He is a professor in architectural and industrial design at the Academy of Architecture in Mendrisio- USI, the IUAV-RSM in S. Marino, NABA in Milan, and the ISAID in Vicenza. Blumer conducts research, lectures, and workshops in methodologies focused on creative design and cognitive training through physical exercises within the “esercizi fisici di architettura e di design”.
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Behnaz Farahi
2016 Fellow
Behnaz Farahi
2016 Fellow
Exploring the potential of interactive environments and their relationship to the human body, Behnaz Farahi is interested in the implementation of emerging technologies in contemporary art/architecture practice. Her goal is to enhance the relationship between human beings and the built environment by implementing design/motion principles inspired by natural systems. Application areas include architecture, fashion and interaction design. She also specializes in additive manufacturing and robotic technologies.
Her work has been exhibited internationally and has been featured in several magazines and online websites including WIRED, BBC, CNN,The Guardian, Motherboard, Dezeen, Frame Magazine, The Creators Project and many more. Behnaz Farahi has won several awards and is the recipient of the Madworkshop Grant and the Rock Hudson Fellowship.
Farahi has worked with leading firms such as Autodesk, Fuksas Studio, and 3DSystems / will-i-am. She has also collaborated with ProfessorBehrokh Khoshnevis on two NASA funded research projects developing a robotic fabrication technology to 3D print structures on the Moon and Mars.
Most recently, she is an Artist in Residence at Autodesk Pier 9. Currently she is an Annenberg Fellow and PhD candidate in Interdisciplinary Media Arts and Practice at the USC School of Cinematic Arts. She has a Bachelor’s and two Masters degrees in Architecture.
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Daqian Cao
2016 Fellow
Daqian Cao
2016 Fellow
Daqian Cao is a designer who recently graduated from University of Southern California with a Bachelors of Architecture. He is originally from China and is now based in Los Angeles. His Hyper Chair is a project from the furniture design class taught by Scott Mitchell and John Uniack at USC School of Architecture. The Hyper Chair project won a fellowship and was sponsored by the Foundation to be further developed in its design and fabrication.
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Sonia Lui
2016 Fellow
Sonia Lui
2016 Fellow
Sonia Lui is a student at ArtCenter College of Design, pursuing her Bachelor of Science in Product Design. She is originally from Hong Kong and based in Los Angeles. She began working with MADWORKSHOP when she won a fellowship for a class sponsored by the Foundation and realized her design, Sanke, a multi-leveled communal seating system that encourages human interaction. The permanent installation was unveiled at the plaza at The Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles in collaboration with the ArtCenter College of Design. Sonia is currently working simultaneously as a brand and product development consultant for Natural Link, a start-up lifestyle brand in Hong Kong; and as an R&D and Marketing intern at Herman Miller, also in Hong Kong.
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Joy Han
2016 Fellow
Joy Han
2016 Fellow
Joy Han recently graduated from the University of Southern California with a Bachelors of Architecture. Joy was born and raised in Texas and is currently based in Los Angeles. The CAD chair was a project that was designed during her fifth year at USC through the furniture design class taught by Scott Mitchell. The CAD chair was one of the two final projects chosen and sponsored by the MADWORKSHOP foundation to be further designed for commercial production.
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Diana Yan
2016 Fellow
Diana Yan
2016 Fellow
Diana is a designer, fabricator, and programmer from Los Angeles. She began working with MADWORKSHOP as an undergraduate student at the Arroyo Bridge Studio at the University of Southern California Architecture School, a project sponsored by the Foundation. She joined the MADWORKSHOP team full time after graduating with a Bachelors of Architecture where she performed several construction activities involving concrete, wood and glass detailing; designed and constructed a small folly; and worked on the SIX Chair. She also helped edit and design Joy Ride, which documents MADWORKSHOP Founder David C. Martin’s journey to Mexico’s ancient and colonial sites. She is currently pursuing her Masters of Design Studies in Technology at the Harvard Graduate School of Design with a focus on exploring the implementations and implications of interactive digital fabrication methods.