April 3, 2014

Architect Neri Oxman Wins the Vilcek Prize for Design



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Thomas Jessell, winner of the Vilcek Prize for Biomedical Research, winner Neri Oxman, and Dr. Jan Vilcek.



When architect

Neri Oxman

received a call from Rick Kinsel, executive director of the

Vilcek Foundation

, to congratulate her on winning this year’s Vilcek Prize for Design, her initial reaction was that she was being pranked. As Kinsel puts it, “After I told her she had won, she reacted with disbelief, saying ‘Wait, what? Are you sure?’” Her husband, composer

Osvaldo Golijov

, had won the Vilcek Prize for Music in 2008 for his versatile and complex style. The idea that she would receive the same prize only a few years later must have seemed, well, implausible.



But a look at Oxman’s repertoire makes this distiction as a leader in her field more obvious. Currently a professor at the

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

, her work is extremely diverse. From a wrist splint for carpal tunnel syndrome made from

acrylic composites

to 3D-printed clothing designed in collaboration with Iris van Herpen, Oxman’s projects have graced the pages of

Interior Design

several times. At the time of Kinsel’s call, she was working on her latest chaise longue, Gemini, a uniquely shaped piece made of CNC-cut wood and 3D-printed composite

PolyJet

digital materials.



When asked how she could possibly design such a range of products, Oxman replied matter-of-factly with her philosophy of “material ecology.” “My goal is to transcend the design heritage we have cultivated. We view products as made up of several parts, but if you look at nature, there are no parts and assemblies, only wholes. There are single systems that perform multiple functions.” This biological approach to design informs all of her work.



The Vilcek Prize has been awarded for 9 years, with one winner in biomedical research and another in an artistic field. The honor always goes to immigrants, highlighting this group’s necessity and contributions to our country. The Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise also recognizes six emerging voices, three in biomedical engineering and three in the arts. This year’s design mentions went to Mansour Ourasanah of

Whirlpool

,

interactive media designer



Yasaman Hashemian, and Quilian Riano of

DSGN AGNC

. Dr. Jan Vilcek, president and cofounder of the foundation, noted, “All of our honorees share common features: their appetite for creativity and their determination for success.”




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Neri Oxman, winner of the Vilcek Prize for Design, addresses the crowd.






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Neri Oxman with Rick Kinsel of the Vilcek Foundation.




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