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Our Contributors
Considering that NATALIE ASCENCIOSs work is viewed regularly by millions of people, its surprising to learn that her biggest paintings have never been seen by anybody. Housed in her New York studio are 16 panels, each 6 feet tall, that she hopes to unveil together in an exhibition . . . someday. Its something Ive been working on quite a while, a completely separate body of work, says Ascencios, who illustrated This Is the Side of the Road." A graduate of New School Universitys Eugene Lang College and Parsons School of Design, Ascencios, 30, has been a commercial illustrator since 1994. Name a mainstream magazine and her work has probably appeared in itclients have included the New Yorker, Entertainment Weekly and GQ.
When ALEX SOOJUNG-KIM PANG was a freshman at the University of Pennsylvania, he took a class called Invention and Discovery in the Arts and Sciences, taught by science historian Thomas Hughes. It was like having never heard of psychiatry and taking a seminar with Freud, Pang says. I knew immediately I had found my major. And his vocation. Pang, who remained at Penn to complete a PhD in the history and sociology of science, has taught at Stanford and UC-Davis, served as deputy editor for Encyclopaedia Britannica and developed digital archives for collections at Stanfords Green Library. He has written on topics from Victorian solar eclipse expeditions to Buckminster Fuller. One theme runs through his work. Im attracted to stories about invisible technologies, he says, craft work and skills that usually go undetected or ignored. A textbook example: the Apple mouse, developed by a group of graduates from Stanfords product design program. A research affiliate at the Institute for the Future, Pang, 37, lives in Menlo Park with his wife, Heather, and children, Elizabeth, almost 3, and Daniel, 2 months. |