
Muriel Cooper inspired DMI to create a coveted award to honor extraordinary people who “challenge our understanding and experience of interactive digital communication.”
The 2008 recipient of the prestigious Muriel Cooper Prize for ground-breaking achievements in advancing design, technology and communications in the digital environment will be honored at REMIX, the 33rd Annual Design Management Institute (DMI) Conference in Ogunquit, Maine. Join us to discover which pioneer is next in line and what affects their thought-provoking work has engendered.
Named for designer, educator and researcher, Muriel Cooper – one of the most influential modern designers of the 20th century – DMI created the award to celebrate mid-career professionals and add momentum to their explorations. Past recipients of the Muriel Cooper Prize are all renowned innovators who have expanded the possibilities of design and technology in powerful ways:
Masamichi Udagawa (2006),
John Maeda (2001),
Dan Boyarksi (1999) and
Lauralee Alben (1997).
Muriel Cooper was co-founder and director of MIT's Visible Language Workshop. Cooper and her colleagues in the Visible Language Workshop prototyped whole new ways to structure complex systems of knowledge in three dimensions. An inspiring mentor and innovator in the visual arts, Cooper died in 1994 at the age of 68.
The Muriel Cooper Prize is awarded based on six criteria:
• Demonstrates original thinking and future promise.
• Challenges current understanding and experience of design and interactive digital communication.
• Work has improved or influenced the design profession, business, society or the environment.
• Recognized by their peers and through published work.
• Demonstrates a generous, generative, and enabling nature in their work.
• Inspires, communicates and speaks effectively as champions of the creative community.
As Muriel Cooper Fellows, Prize winners receive a financial award, a featured article in the Design Management Journal and the opportunity to deliver a major lecture at a DMI conference.
Learn more:
Muriel Cooper Prize
Introduction session,
Designing Transformations, by
Lauralee Alben