Eye to I: Design, Identity, & The Art of Collaboration

Collaborative Design | Workshop Design | Conditional Design | Installation Work | Art Exhibition | Typography

What it is:

This collaborative exhibition was the result of weeks of workshops, conversations, and design play led by the visual communication faculty at Loyola University. Alongside our artist-in-residence, we explored how constraints, unpredictability, and shared authorship could open up new ways of working.

What started as a series of process experiments turned into a full-scale installation: 21 rule-driven typographic compositions printed on massive sheets of vellum and suspended throughout the gallery. It was a celebration of making together, without knowing exactly where we’d end up.

What’s inside:

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Type Experiments

21 layered compositions built from rules, risks, and total guesswork. 

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Rules-Based Systems

Creative limitations set by one designer, blindly followed by another.

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Gallery Installation

Large-scale vellum prints suspended from the ceiling.

Design Approach:

The project started with a series of workshops led by the visual communication faculty and our artist-in-residence, focused on process, idea generation, and constraint-based creativity. From there, we developed a system: each designer wrote a list of rules on layout, content, type choices, or whatever they felt like, and passed them on to someone else.

Designers were grouped and handed a single InDesign file that moved from person to person. Each contributor followed the previous person’s rules without seeing what they had made, hiding their layers before passing the file along. The result was messy by design—full of overlaps, misalignments, and unexpected harmonies.

I helped facilitate the workshops, participated in the design process, created the promotional materials, and assisted with documentation and installation.

The workshops:

Poster designed by the student AIGA chapter.