Innovation Studio: Exhibits On View
The Innovation Studio was designed to showcase the creative and innovative work of NC State’s students and faculty. We exhibit the work of academic courses, individual students, research groups, and more. Our goal is to represent a diverse array of projects from across the university.
Do you have work you'd like to share with a broader audience? Are your students doing work they could exhibit? Collaborate with us! Get in touch at library_innovationstudio@ncsu.edu.
The Arcade: A Showcase of Student-Made Video Games
The Arcade is a collection of video games made by NC State students, made playable on a custom-built computer kiosk, with new games added regularly.
On view since
The 20-Hour MetaSkill Challenge
The MetaSkill Challenge is a practical task with theoretical implications for how you approach all skill acquisition – metacognitive learning. The focus is on taking important higher-level skills – such as skill acquisition metacognition – and developing them through concrete everyday life.
On view since
AI Collaborations on Science Fiction
Students in “Science Fiction: Humans, Machines, and In-Betweens” (ENG 376, Maymester 2023) created stories and images in collaboration with AI.
On view since
Environmental Archaeology: Our Global Past, Present, and Future
Students from ANT 475 share projects on environmental change, their scope spanning the globe and from the ancient world to modern day.
On view since
View Environmental Archaeology: Our Global Past, Present, and Future
GC 420 Showcase: The Power of Visual Thinking
Students in GC 420 Visual Thinking used their graphic communication skills and a variety of media to explain core visual thinking concepts.
On view since
TDE 261 Digital Media Education Commercial Videos
Students in TDE 261 worked in teams, using their video production skills to create 30-second advertisements for narrowly defined audiences.
On view since
Imagining Feminist Technologies
A collection of speculative designs of technologies that center and support feminist values and ideas, made by students in WGS/STS 210 Women & Gender in Science & Technology in Fall 2022.
On view since
Looking Glass: Showcasing Student Work Via Holographic Displays
This exhibition showcases the student work of RJ Washington and Jeff Wilkinson using a holographic display, called The Looking Glass.
On view since
View Looking Glass: Showcasing Student Work Via Holographic Displays
Virtual Space to Enhance Mental Health
This exhibition features the work of students who participated in the (GD 400) Virtual Reality (VR) and Mental Health course at the NC State College of Design.
On view since
Esse Quam Videri
This experimental digital humanities project utilizes documentary filmmaking and poetry as tools to contribute one multimodal account that amplifies and celebrates the diversity of the state of North Carolina, and by extension the United States.
On view since
Master of Art + Design 2022 Thesis Projects
2022 Master of Art + Design thesis candidates display their final projects, including walkthrough videos created by each designer and behind the scenes images showing the process of creating each project.
On view since
Data Physicalization
This exhibit features work created in Jamie Harr's Data Science course "Data Physicalization". A data physicalization (or simply physicalization) is a physical artifact whose materiality encodes data.
On view since
Women’s Center 30th Anniversary - Herstory
This year, the NC State Women’s Center celebrates its 30th anniversary! At the heart of this rich and storied history is a group of tenacious students who sought to establish a space dedicated to advancing gender, equity, and social justice on campus.
On view since
Stories of Solidarity and Change: the Legacy of MLK Jr. at NC State
This digital exhibit is curated by the NC State University Libraries Special Collections Research Center in collaboration with the African American Cultural Center.
On view since
View Stories of Solidarity and Change: the Legacy of MLK Jr. at NC State
Out of the Archives: Digital Projects as Early Modern Research Objects
Organized for the Folger Institute Seminar by Paul Broyles, Margaret Simon, and Christopher Crosbie, this exhibit showcases local and regional Digital Humanities projects.
On view since
View Out of the Archives: Digital Projects as Early Modern Research Objects
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