NESADSU Loses Long-time Faculty Member

All of Suffolk University is deeply saddened by the loss of Tamotsu (Tommy) Yamamoto, a world-renowned architectural illustrator, dedicated teacher, mentor, and friend.  He always said, “You have no choice” when drawing perspectives in his class.  Tommy was charming, witty, and always had an opinion.  He loved his students–they were his family. Tommy’s spirit and talent for drawing will always be remembered. He was an absolute gift to all who knew him.

Tommy died on December 2nd after a brief battle with cancer. A beloved instructor at NESADSU for more than 20 years, he maintained a private practice as a design consultant for architects, developers, and interior designers serving local and international clients since 1976.

Tommy was a charter member and President Emeritus of the American Society of Architectural Illustrators (ASAI). He received several “Awards of Excellence” and his work was exhibited in the United States, Europe, and Asia, including in Kyoto Museum of Fine Arts, the New York Avant-Garde Art Festival, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Fine Arts, and in a one-man show at the NESADSU gallery in 2001.

His work was published in many books as well as in ASAI’s annual publications. Most recently, six pages of his work can be found in The Art of Architectural Art III (Rockport Publishers). He was an honorary member of Japan Architectural Renderers Association (JARA), the Design Communication Association (DCA), and an Associate of AIA (American Institute of Architects). He was also listed in “Who’s Who in America” and “Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers.”

Tommy graduated from Kyoto City University of Fine Arts with Bachelor and Master of Fine Arts degrees. He was affiliated with the Center for Advanced Visual Studies at MIT and studied architecture at Boston Architectural College. In 1976, he graduated from the postgraduate program of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

 

 

 

2008 – Stormi Knight

2008 – Stormi Knight (Graphic Design) has returned to the Boston area and has taken a position as a web designer with Extension Engine at Harvard’s iLab in Allston. Though she’s only been there since early December, she already loves the job. Extension Engine, founded in 2000, provides “elegant and cost-effective solutions to complex technology and business challenges” (Extension Engine’s website). In product development and management, using their technical expertise, they provide companies here and abroad with long-term software solutions. Check them out at http://ilab.Harvard.edu/long-termresidents/extensionengine and contact Stormi at stormi.knight@gmail.com.

Suffolk’s Sophomore Job Shadowing Program

Are you a NESADSU alum willing to share your work experiences with a sophomore wondering whether the major program you followed would be a good fit for them? Do you have a day or a half-day, or even a couple of hours, to be “shadowed”? For sophomore students trying to learn more about their chosen professions, you could make the difference between “I think this is the right major for me” and “I know it is”.

For more information on the shadowing program, check out www.suffolk.edu/campuslife/39157.html, then contact Sara Chadwick at NESADSU (schadwick@suffolk.edu) and she’ll connect you with the Office of Career Services.

1995 – Matt Ohnemus

1995 – Matt Ohnemus (Graphic Design) sent us an email recently with a couple of updates. First, Matt is still working in New York as Art Director for the two local Fox stations in the city. He and his wife Phyllis live in Long Island City with their three-year-old son Jackson. Matt had recently had an email from classmate Matt Riva (Graphic Design 1994), passing along the news of the death of another NESADSU alum, David Watts (also Graphic Design 1995). Dave, below, who was a graphic designer for the Boston Fox affiliate, Fox-25, and who lived in Fairhaven, MA, died on July 10th of this year after a short illness. An avid music lover and gardener, he is survived by his wife Marilyn and two children, Danica and David, as well as a brother and sister and one grandchild. As Matt Ohnemus remembered, “I had very fond memories of going to school with Dave on Newbury Street. Dave, Jay [Shippole] and Carol Conquest were a great group of classmates and I learned a tremendous amount from Dave and the others who were starting new careers by going to NESAD.” You can get in touch with Matt at mattohnemus@me.com.

2008 – Clara Wolverton

2008 – Clara Wolverton (Fine Arts), who earned a graduate degree from Goldsmiths in London, is now living in Cleveland after a short stint in East Africa. She’s been working for a jewelry company for the past two years (www.heathermoorejewelry.com) but has shifted her focus to art conservation and restoration, so may be returning to school once more (“…[conservation and restoration] involves a lot more schooling!”). Check out Clara’s website at www.clarawolverton.com and get in touch with her at clarawolverton@gmail.com.

Interior Designers Point the Way

On Thursday, November 1st, three Interior Design alumni from NESADSU presented a panel presentation to current students as part of Suffolk’s Career Fest 2012. Presented by the Interior Design program in conjunction with Career Services, and billed as the “inside scoop on … projects, firms and career paths”, Dora Elliott (Interior Design 2009), Rebecca Goldstein (Interior Design 2012) and Danielle Meeker (MA in Interior Design 2012) talked about their experiences and showed slides of their firms’ work.

Dora, who is now an interior designer with the residential firm of Wells & Fox, with offices in Boston and Chicago, began her career there with an internship, a fairly common path from NESADSU to a career. Rebecca, on the other hand, parlayed her Senior Studio project directly into her current position at Winter Street Architects in Salem (MA). One of her exit portfolio reviewers, a Senior Principal there, was impressed enough by her senior project to offer her a job.

Danielle Meeker, the only Masters degree graduate in the group, had a very different path to success. With an undergraduate liberal arts degree and teaching background, she started her career in a residential firm but quickly decided that was not where she wanted to be. Landing a job with Gensler in Boston (and with offices across the world), she started out doing research for the firm, then morphed into design. Now she does a bit of everything and loves it all.

A question-and-answer period after the presentations yielded questions on a number of topics, one of which concerned the salary levels that entering designers can look forward to. The consensus seemed to be that commercial design firms pay between $40,000 and $50,000 to starting workers, often with generous benefit packages attached. Residential firms pay a bit less, perhaps in the high $30’s to the low $40’s, and all agreed that the smaller the firm, the nearer they would be to the low end of the scale.

The three designers, all with fulfilling careers, provided an interesting, humorous, helpful and encouraging look at “the real world”. Other alums interested in taking part in similar panels should contact Sara Chadwick at schadwick@suffolk.edu to be connected to the appropriate Program Director.

 

2006 – Courtney Mitchell

2006 – After living and working in New York City since graduation, Courtney Mitchell (Graphic Design) has returned to the Boston area and is now working as the Senior Marketing Designer at Affinnova (www.affinnova.com), a high-growth software and services company, with clients such as Bayer, Kraft Foods, Citibank, P&G, Nestle and Walmart. Headquartered in Waltham, Affinnova also has global headquarters in Paris. You can get in touch with Courtney at coumitch@gmail.com.

 

2007 – Jake Grauds

2007 – Jake Grauds (Graphic Design) has left Anthem Worldwide in New York and has returned to the Boston area, where he quickly found a position at Rue La La in Boston’s Fort Point neighborhood. Rue La La is an on-line boutique/flash sale website and he is the Senior Designer on a new partnership with EBay. As Jake says, “It’s great to be home, and the work is challenging and fantastic.” Get back in touch with Jake at inhousejake@yahoo.com.

 

2006 – Kayla (Hicks) Schwartz

2006 – Kayla (Hicks) Schwartz (Graphic Design), “typography teacher extraordinaire” as Graphic Design Program Director Laura Golly calls her, gave birth to a daughter, named Betty, on November 12th. Weighing 8 lbs., 15 oz. and at 20” long, she’s also beautiful, as you can see. As Laura says, “Now if we can only get her to gurgle in picas and points….she’ll be on her way to becoming our youngest graphic design recruit.” Send congratulations to Kayla and her husband at kschwartz@suffolk.edu.

 

2001 – Laura Granlund

2001 – Laura Granlund (Fine Arts) has a new collection of fabric art creatures on display at FOE Store & Gallery in Northampton, MA from November 9th to December 9th. FOE is a “destination for subculture art and designer toys”, from “custom-painted monsters to tiny cute things” (FOE website) and this show represents the work of 14 fabric artists. For more on Laura’s work, check out www.intimidnation.com and contact Laura at lauragranlund@gmail.com.