Biodesign Challenge

Prof Eugene Young Discusses Future-Making Conceptualization with Product Design 2 Class

As in every Fall semester, the second group project in Prof Carvalho’s Product Design 2 class focuses on the relationship between design and climate change. Students are challenged to conceive and execute projects looking at improving the health of communities, peoples, and other living beings, while addressing issues of climate justice, within the broader global environmental crisis we face as a society.

To support the development stage of the group’s projects in their attempt to design for desirable futures, Assistant Professor Eugene Young came to the class and presented his creative work in design and illustration to inspire and guide the imagination of the students.

Prof Young’s long-standing career as a world-maker of Afrofuturistic alternative realities provided conceptual and technical food for thought for the class, in a moment they were dwelling on the creation of their original designs. His research and commercial work on sci-fi and fantastical narratives presented an avenue for innovation free of constraints that complemented the more pragmatic, solution-focused requirements of the assignment.

Thank you, Prof Young, for sharing your talent and thoughts with the class! 
 

Drawings of concepts of buildings made by Eugene Young

Eugene Randolph Young, M.F.A. is a graphic designer, illustrator, fine artist and educator. Since 2007, he has served as part-time faculty in City College of San Francisco’s Visual Media Design department. There, he developed new curricula for courses in Adobe Illustrator, storyboarding, visual development for animation, rapid visualization and the recently-launched Practices of Making maker studies course. At Dominican University of California, he taught courses in graphic design, digital painting and graphic novel. At the California College of the Arts, he teaches the first and longest-running open enrollment digital drawing and painting intensive.

He received his Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) degree in Illustration from the Academy of Art University, Bachelors of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) with distinction in Graphic Design from the California College of Arts and Crafts and an Associate in Arts (A.A.) degree in Graphic Design from City College of San Francisco.

His professional practice currently focuses on the independent production of original afrofuturism-inspired comics, science fiction and fantasy illustration.

Link to professional website
 

Drawings of robot concepts by Eugene Young

Biomimicry, Bionics and Design Innovation

2006-The Intersection of Design Engineering and Biology

School of Design, February 14th 2023.

This semester, students in Prof Fernando Carvalho’s DES.410 Product Design 2 class will be participating in the Biodesign Challenge (www.biodesignchallenge.org), an international competition promoting the integration of design, innovation, and biotechnology. This is the very first time San Francisco State will be a part of this prestigious event, taking place in late-June, in New York City.

In order to support the students’ learning process, and to equip the design teams with complementary knowledge stemming from the intersecting areas of design, biology, and engineering, the class hosted a guest lecture by the award-winning designer Henrique Monnerat. Mr Monnerat shared his approach to bionics and biomimicry, showing some of his projects developed during his Master’s research degree in Germany. His insights on how designers can give shape and purpose to scientific concepts via creating and executing inventive ideas were inspirational to our Industrial Design students, in their efforts to explore the emerging field of biodesign.

About the Guest Speaker

Henrique Monnerat

Henrique Monnerat is a Brazilian Product Designer and educator based in Monterey, California. He began his career as an industrial designer in 2007 when he joined the Institute for Design-Oriented Innovation ITD-Offenbach to perform R&D projects in biomimetic design (machinery and components inspired by nature). In this Institute, he was responsible for designing new concepts of pneumatic actuators for the German company Festo AG and new bionic-inspired damping systems for the German company Rittal AG. Also in Europe, Henrique Monnerat worked for two years as a junior product designer in the Dutch design company FLEX/Design, participating in more than 100 projects for large companies such as Tefal, TNT Post, Grolsch, Skil, Mitchum, Ambipur and Albert Heijn. Helped the office receive three major design awards, the Red Dot Award for packaging spices from Verstegen company, Goed Industrieel Ontwerp Award for designing Ingenio collapsible pots handles for Tefal company, and the portable brewer Grolsch Cheersch Beer Tap.

Back in Brazil, Henrique started to work as an independent designer, as a consultant for technology-oriented projects, and to teach design practice at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro. In 2012, he co-founded Designoteca.com, an initiative that provides training resources, methods, and curriculum planning tools for educators to plan and implement an effective Makerspace within their classroom settings.

Henrique Monnerat graduated in Industrial Design from the School of Arts and Design Offenbach am Main in Germany and has a German equivalent of a master's degree in Biomimicry from the same design school.