Wax Museum ︎ Studio Three
IDES 207
Fall 2019 ︎
Interior Design
Fall 2019 ︎
Interior Design
Instructor
Heather Scott Peterson
Heather Scott Peterson




In the fall of 2019 Studio 3 designed an exhibition on the subject of the material history of wax at the Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City; the only portion of the Smithsonian which is not in Washington D.C. Students explored various types of wax, their origins, sources, and methods of manufacture, as well as uses and meanings within various cultures and eras; paying particular attention to physical qualities and techniques of making. The exhibition was divided into six concepts: Representation, Sacrifice, Resistance, Preservation, Inscription, and Attachment. Each student was assigned one of the six concepts, and asked to develop a curatorial position, as well as address issues of display, signage, wayfinding, and atmosphere.
Catalog Description
Through a series of design projects, students focus on specific components of interior architecture, such as color, light, furniture, materiality, and systems of inhabitation in relation to articulating space. Experimental exploration of materials and graphic representation inform programmatic hybridization in order to develop an awareness of social and cultural aspects of space.
Through a series of design projects, students focus on specific components of interior architecture, such as color, light, furniture, materiality, and systems of inhabitation in relation to articulating space. Experimental exploration of materials and graphic representation inform programmatic hybridization in order to develop an awareness of social and cultural aspects of space.