About
shoot me an email!
If I asked you to imagine an anthropologist on the job, you'd probably picture an Indiana Jones or Jane Goodall type studying cool artifacts or our great ape cousins in some exotic locale, dressed head-to-toe in shades of beige and khaki. This is how I imagined myself when I started my anthropology degree, booking a plane ticket somewhere far away and traveling to the cultures I wanted to research. I learned two things: the first, that I look terrible in khakis, and the second, that a ticket to a football or basketball game works just as well as a plane ticket.
Somewhere along the path of my degree, as I became more involved in Student Yosef Club and growing our student section, I started finding ways to weave my love of sports into my anthropological research. I could be an anthropologist in the stands with my friends or on my phone scrolling through online message boards and group chats (for ethnographic purposes, of course). I learned to recognize patterns of culture and how cultures form by being in the field* and applying my favorite subject to my most important community group.
Anthropological thinking has sort of infected other aspects of my life, particularly the way I approach graphic design as a form of visual culture. It's not enough to make something that looks nice, or to be able to tell when designs look off in some way. I want to be able to create art that calls to that sense of community that people within a culture share, and I want to understand exactly why other designs are rejected by that community. Anybody can criticize a poor graphic design job on a t-shirt or a social graphic, but I think that working to create branding or apparel that resonates with the cultural values of my clients' target audiences is a much more helpful approach.
I taught myself how to code just so I could share with you some of my favorite research and graphic design projects that I've created!