Make/Shift
2025
Make/Shift is the 2025 California College of the Arts MFA Design Thesis Exhibition. Its identity draws from the duality of its name: to make and to shift. At once generative and transitional, it reflects how design students respond to changing worlds while shaping new ones.
The exhibition itself was a makeshift space, presenting the work of industrial, interaction, and graphic design students at a moment of transition, between study and practice, present and future. Like design itself, Make/Shift frames change not as an obstacle but as the very condition of making.
Brand Identity
Strategy & Research
Product Design
DURATION
3 Weeks
Ian Storm-Taylor deSIGNER
Ramyatara Mullapudi DESIGNER
Lisa Santaniello WRITER
As part of the graphics team, I helped develop a system that could hold the plurality of student projects across industrial, interaction, and graphic design. The result is an identity that is flexible, immediate, and alive to the constant negotiations between making and shifting.
A dynamic exhibition identity that is collaborative, and reflective of the conditions of design in our studio—embracing change not as disruption, but as a mode of practice.
Make/Shift signals transition: students moving from inquiry to resolution, from school to practice, from speculation to action. The identity needed to visualize that tension—between the temporary and the permanent, the iterative and the resolved.
Fragmented in form, layered in transition.
The identity builds from tearing, layering, and recomposition, visual gestures that embody both making and shifting. Risograph printing introduces grain, overprints, and imperfections, lending the system a tactile quality that embraces process.
The palette uses gradients of riso fluorescent pink and green against stark black-and-white, capturing the tension between bold immediacy and structured order. Typography juxtaposes serif and neo-grotesk letters with imperfect, cut-and-ripped letters—fractured and recombined to reflect the act of re-arranging parts into new wholes.
Celebrating flux.
By leaning into imperfection and transition, the system positioned the exhibition as both a culmination and a launch, celebrating design not as resolution, but as a practice always in motion.