SANTA MONICA, Calif., June 24, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- The RAND Corporation is launching the RAND Art + Data Residency, its newest artist-in-residency program focused on merging the worlds of art and data to help us better understand public policy issues.
The RAND Art + Data Residency is curated by Debbie Millman, designer and host of the award-winning podcast 'Design Matters,' and by The Gordon Co, a future-focused strategy and branding agency founded by DeeDee Gordon. The residency will spotlight both established and emerging artists as they document the intricate process of creating artistically inspiring data visualizations rooted in rigorous research and analysis.
The inaugural artist is renowned information designer Giorgia Lupi, whose work appears in The New York Times and who is co-author of Dear Data, a collaborative, analog-based documentation of new, often radically different methods of data visualizations. Her first visualization is based on the RAND report How to Transform the U.S. Mental Health System. She brings the research to life through a thought-provoking design that will improve people's understanding of mental health challenges in the U.S.
"As a data visualization designer focused on reconnecting numbers to what they stand for – stories, people, ideas – I am excited to explore new ways to visualize RAND's groundbreaking work, using data itself as a creative material to tell visual stories that we can all connect to," Lupi said. "It's an honor to be RAND's first data artist in residence, and I look forward to creating new types of data narratives, ones rooted in a humanistic approach to data, that can communicate important information about the world we live in today."
Since 1948, RAND, a nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization, has leveraged rigorous analysis to transform research into fact-based, actionable solutions that help make communities worldwide safer, healthier and more prosperous. Lupi is among several artists RAND has partnered with over the years to inform and inspire discourse around public policy.
"As our culture has become more and more complicated, the ability to visualize information can provide people with a better way to understand it," Millman said. "We hope the RAND Art + Data Residency program will showcase how world-class artists can visualize non-partisan data in a telegraphic and compelling manner for all."
RAND's Art + Data Residency program is part of the new NextGen Initiative, a series of ongoing projects focused on introducing RAND's cutting-edge capabilities and extensive public policy research to younger generations.
"We hope this partnership with artists, whose vision and creativity can inspire people to think differently about policy, will help illustrate the relevance of policy issues to everyday life," RAND Vice President and Chief of Staff Jennifer Gould said.
The year-long residency will reveal a behind-the-scenes look at data visualization, an interdisciplinary field that fuses art with data to create visual narratives that help us understand information in new ways.
Each quarter, a different artist will release a series of monthly visualizations aimed at building awareness around pressing public policy issues including healthcare, education, international affairs, energy, and the environment.
The first RAND Art + Data visualization on mental health can be viewed at the Art + Data page on RAND's website. For high-resolution images or to schedule an interview with Gould, Millman or Lupi, please contact [email protected].
Media Contact
Cheryl Johnson, The Gordon Co, +1 (571) 643-4814, [email protected]
DeeDee Gordon, The Gordon Co, [email protected]
SOURCE RAND Corporation
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