Download the Whitewall Summer 2023 Impact Issue
Whitewall’s Summer 2023 Impact Issue is always one of my favorites to put together. We start on it not too far after the new year,… Read More »Download the Whitewall Summer 2023 Impact Issue
Whitewall’s Summer 2023 Impact Issue is always one of my favorites to put together. We start on it not too far after the new year,… Read More »Download the Whitewall Summer 2023 Impact Issue
For our annual Impact Issue we are continuing the conversation about sustainability, not just in relationship to the environment but to the community.
Lance Hosey is an architect, designer, and sustainability expert with nearly three decades of experience. Today at the global design and architecture firm Gensler, he’s… Read More »Lance Hosey Guides Gensler to Sustainable Goals
Ibrahim Mahama has used and reused jute sacks to cover buildings, public spaces, floors, walls, and passageways. Reused from installation to installation—from Venice to Kassel… Read More »Ibrahim Mahama is Building with the Ghosts and Traumas of Commodification
Every summer in London, the Serpentine Pavilion is unveiled in Kensington Gardens, reimagining the possibilities of architecture and public engagement. This year’s commission, by Counterspace,… Read More »Counterspace is Building Sacred Spaces to Gather, Reflect, and Connect
When we spoke with Adam Silverman earlier this spring, he was in the process of moving his pottery studio. He likes to work alone, and… Read More »Adam Silverman is Finding Common Ground, from the Earth to the Table
Upon entering Karyn Olivier’s “Everything That’s Alive Moves,” which opened at the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA), University of Pennsylvania in January before closing early… Read More »Karyn Olivier Questions Monuments, Memory, and Absence
When the artist Justin Brice Guariglia became a father, his moral compass inevitably shifted. Among other things, that meant placing the world’s current ecological crisis… Read More »Justin Brice Guariglia’s Response to the Moral Imperative of our Time
Imagine a future where man-made machines can no longer be used because of environmental reasons. Lately, it doesn’t feel too much like science fiction. What… Read More »Kajsa Melchior Employs Erosion as a Guide for Expressive Design Methods
Amy Sherald seeks out extraordinary people. Often that means approaching total strangers—very much outside the comfort zone of a self-described introvert—and asking them to participate… Read More »Amy Sherald Portrays Americanness at its Best