I Want This At Home by Reto ChenPosted on May 4, 2022 I am exploring how images can be manipulated easily and form representations of representations that are believable but far from reality. Arts WorkshopPortfolioadvertising architecture design visual culture
Redefining Black Beauty: Hair-Care Packaging by Tatyana TandanpoliePosted on February 7, 2021February 5, 2021 How does the language used on hair care products define what is considered beautiful and, thus, imply how Black women should see their beauty? Interdisciplinary SeminarResearch21st century A Seat at Our Table advertising beauty blackness commodity gender marketing race
The Power of the Suit by Nikol Uribe GuizaPosted on November 30, 2020 In a controversial ad campaign, intertwining discourses of gender and capitalism play out on the models' bodies. CriticismFirst-Year Writing Seminar21st century advertising capitalism gender masculinity visual culture
Suffering for Sale by Madison LynnPosted on April 29, 2020March 30, 2023 On the immorality of heroin-chic fashion advertisements in the 1990s CriticismInterdisciplinary Seminar20th century advertising fashion history of fashion photography representation visual culture
Fashion, Fantasy, and Melancholia by Caroline ReaganPosted on May 3, 2019July 20, 2021 Examining the Image of the Fashion Model CriticismFirst-Year Research Seminaradvertising fantasy fashion gender mental health models visual culture
Naked Demo by Jonathan SonnenbergPosted on December 11, 2018April 6, 2021 An image can be considered a reflection of its viewer. What does this say about advertisements presented as images, as reflections of the people they are designed to reach? PoetryPortfolioadvertising consumerism environment marketing photography poetry
Fashioning Feminism by Tia Elisabeth GlistaPosted on April 28, 2017November 24, 2020 Can fashion really be a tool for advancing women’s political, economic, and social equality? CriticismFirst-Year Writing Seminaradvertising consumerism fashion feminism gender patriarchy
Bombshells and Booby Traps by Jun Lei LeePosted on September 2, 2016October 22, 2020 On the weaponization of female sexuality in Cold War advertising. First-Year Research SeminarResearchadvertising cold war fashion female bodies female sexuality propaganda sexuality