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Dakota Jackson Joins SCAD
January 29,
2013 by in UnCategorized
By Home Furnishings Business in on January 30, 2013
Iconic American furniture designer
Dakota Jackson has joined
Savannah College of Art & Design as honorary chair of furniture design.
Jackson will mentor students from the universitys undergraduate and graduate furniture design programs during his two-year appointment, continuing SCADs mission to prepare talented students for creative careers.
Viewing the historical, cultural, market and technological landscape of design from different vantage points, in addition to developing essential skill sets, is critical to making informed career decisions, Jackson said. Partnering with SCAD, given our shared educational interests, is the perfect forum.
Jackson will continue his professional design work in New York while helping SCADs School of Building Arts administration advance the strategic vision and leadership of the furniture design program. In addition to mentoring students in the classroom as they master technical skills and develop a unique design aesthetic, Jackson will enhance the programs emphasis on the business of design.
Dakota Jackson is the ultimate name in furniture design, said Paula Wallace, SCAD president and co-founder. SCAD students are fortunate to learn from an artist of Dakotas caliber, and his impact on our university community will surely resonate for decades to come.
Jackson has produced groundbreaking furniture over four decades, with work ranging from early prototypes to one-of-a-kind pieces produced for international clientele to large-scale productions. His firm has grown to include factories in New York and international locations.
Jacksons view is that manufacturing now takes place around the world. With flagship showrooms in New York and Los Angeles, a network of affiliated national showrooms and an international distribution network, Jacksons designs touch on every aspect of living, working and recreation.
Jacksons missionto make quality custom furniture widely available to designers, architects and their clientshas earned him commissions, including an early design for Yoko Ono and John Lennon, for Madison Avenue boutiques, piano manufacturer Steinway and Sons, luxury hotels worldwide, cruise ships, and public and university libraries including San Francisco Public Library and Harvard University Law Library. Jacksons commission for Temple Jeremiah of Winnetka, Ill., earned him and his collaborator, architect H. Gary Frank, an American Institute of Architects Religious Art and Architecture Design Award.
Beyond his goals of designing and manufacturing fine furniture, Jackson also fosters a corporate culture that is committed to the community at large. Employing people who bring skills from all over the world, his factories in Queens, New York, are fertile fields for aspiring designers and craftsmen. SCAD graduate Caleb Zipperer (B.F.A., industrial design, 2001) was one of these young designers, working with Jackson for nearly five years before accepting a position with Williams-Sonoma, where he has worked for the company's home furnishing retailers Pottery Barn, Pottery Barn Kids, Pottery Barn Teen and West Elm. Through seminars, speeches, internships and apprenticeships, Jackson strives to support design education and an emerging generation of designers.
Dakota Jacksons unique personal and professional ethos resounds with the SCAD mission, as well as the philosophy of the SCAD furniture design program and School of Building Arts, said Christian Sottile, AIA, SCAD School of Building Arts dean. Dakota will share the intensity and rigor that has defined his career with SCAD, while serving as a model and mentor for the next generation of design talent.
SCAD is planning a retrospective exhibition of Jacksons work to be exhibited at the SCAD Museum of Art during his tenure as honorary chair of furniture design.