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DCAD-NextFab Partnership Will Enrich College Curricula, City Arts District

Updated February 13, 2018
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DCAD President’s Leadership Council members Lou Rosenberg and Joe Charma, DCAD administrative coordinator Kristen Blanchard, NextFab founder Evan Malone and DCAD chief financial officer D. Eric Saul tour Wilmington’s NextFab makerspace with NextFab member sales representative Anna Solomon.
A recently launched collaboration between the Delaware College of Art and Design and NextFab makerspaces aims to enhance DCAD’s programs of study, increase NextFab’s footprint on the city’s Creative District and further the redevelopment of Wilmington’s downtown.

DCAD (dcad.edu), the Mid-Atlantic Region’s only two-year professional art and design college, offers the associate of fine arts degree in animation, fine arts, graphic design, illustration and photography and has served as an anchor institution in the revitalization of Wilmington since its founding in 1997. NextFab (nextfab.com), which has three locations in the Mid-Atlantic, provides access to tools, technology, training, events, consulting and capital for creatives of any skill level.

DCAD administrative coordinator Kristen Blanchard, DCAD President’s Leadership Council member Joe Charma, DCAD President John C. Hawkins and DCAD President’s Leadership Council member Lou Rosenberg learn about the NextFab woodshop from NextFab member sales representative Anna Solomon.

The first phase of the partnership, already underway, provides NextFab memberships to all DCAD faculty to help them develop ways of integrating the latest in traditional and digital technology and artistic innovation into DCAD’s curricula while furthering their own development as artists. Subsequent phases will include field trips to NextFab for students to use the state‐of‐the‐art equipment, software and instruction for class assignments and provision of NextFab memberships to all degree-program students for use in completing coursework and for creating extracurricular art and design projects.

DCAD President John Hawkins noted that today’s creatives are highly multi-disciplinary – experts in one or two mediums yet familiar with and possessing a facility with many others. The NextFab collaboration increases DCAD’s ability to further student development in this direction while also giving students the chance to work in an environment characteristic of a contemporary art and design practice; gain exposure to new and evolving mediums and technologies, and connect with a wider network of professional artists and designers.

According to NextFab sales and marketing director Eric Kaplan, the makerspace is eager to play this role.

“Our Wilmington location has been open over six months now, and we’ve been steadily reaching more local creatives,” Kaplan said. “We are incredibly excited to have an official partnership with DCAD that will benefit both students and faculty, and we’re hopeful we can continue to explore ways of integrating technology and innovation into DCAD’s creative curriculum in the future.”

From left, NextFab sales and marketing director Eric Kaplan; DCAD President John C. Hawkins; Wilmington Renaissance Corp./Creative District Wilmington managing director Carrie W. Gray; Wilmington Mayor Mike Purzycki; Wilmington City Council President Hanifa Shabazz; DCAD development director Renee T. Garnick; and NextFab founder Evan Malone.

Mayor Michael Purzycki and managing director Carrie W. Gray of the Wilmington Renaissance Corp./Creative District Wilmington recently joined DCAD and NextFab representatives to officially celebrate the launch of the partnership. The event held at NextFab’s Wilmington headquarters including tours of the site and souvenir picture frames designed and crafted by NextFab and filled with artwork created by DCAD students.

“We have the richness of the arts with the richness of technology and the creativity of what is demonstrated right here,” Purzycki said. “I can’t imagine anything better for our city.”

Gray agreed.

“WRC helped drive the founding of DCAD, and we led the recruitment of NextFab to Wilmington,” she said. “So now to have a partnership between these organizations is helping to realize the vision for a robust creative community and economy in Wilmington.”

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