What if housing was designed around art?
At #CityLabMadrid, @dasha shared how @rayisaplace is using the arts to help residents feel at home, building connection within communities and across neighborhoods.
The David Geffen Galleries mark a new chapter for Los Angeles—confident, ambitious, and full of possibility.
I joined LACMA’s board in 2009, drawn there by Michael Govan’s singular, forward-looking vision. His ability to rethink what a museum can be, how it is experienced, and how it exists within a city has always inspired me. He is just getting started.
The building feels both restrained and radical. I love how the chrome curtains by textile designer Reiko Sudo softly filter the California light, and how the curation opens up a more fluid, intuitive way of experiencing art.
It felt special to have been there for the opening and I can’t wait to come back!
Introducing seven collectible lighting fixtures, each a one-of-a-kind work of art.
Commissioned by our friends at design-forward residential development RAY, these collaborative pieces pair hand-painted imagery from artist Dylan Rose Rheingold with foundational designs from In Common With’s lighting collection. Each dreamlike piece nods to folklore and the tender memory of adolescence—a small universe of color, emotion, and light.
Proceeds benefit the Ali Forney Center, New York City’s largest non-profit supporting LGBTQ+ youth experiencing homelessness. On view exclusively at @shopquarters .
As we’ve gotten to know our residents at Ray Philly, we’ve realized just how many different perspectives and creative talents live here. It got us thinking — how could we create a space for residents to share those perspectives through art? That question turned into our very first Resident Art Showcase at Studio 105. We ended up discovering so much creativity within our own walls — paintings, textiles, mixed media, all made by residents. Bringing everyone’s work together in one space was a powerful reminder of how much creativity lives within our community. 💫