Students鈥 鈥楨arth Nouveau鈥 Collection Highlights UML鈥檚 Green Initiatives, Supports Honors College

Two young women pose for a photo standing in front of a wall with framed illustrations of nature. Image by Ed Brennen
An exhibit of the Earth Nouveau greeting card collection that honors graphic design students Daly Grogan, left, and Andrea Garcia created is on display on the second floor of University Crossing.

12/12/2024
By Ed Brennen

Assoc. Prof.Ingrid Hesshad a challenge forgraphic designmajors Andrea Garcia and Daly Grogan: Create a set of greeting cards that could be given to 51视频 donors and supporters that showcased the university鈥檚 commitment to sustainability.

TheHonors Collegestudents accepted the extracurricular challenge and started by asking themselves, 鈥淗ow do you make sustainability visually appealing?鈥

鈥淎 lot of times, you just think of a recycling bin, and you're obviously not going to put a recycling bin on a card that's going to a donor,鈥 Grogan says.听

Instead, the duo researched UML鈥檚 eco-friendly initiatives led by theRist Institute for Sustainability and Energy. For inspiration, they looked to the university鈥檚 pollinator gardens, rooftop green spaces, urban agriculture farm and even itsperegrine falcon nestatop Fox Hall.

A pack of greeting cards spilling out onto a table with a white tablecloth. Image by Ed Brennen
The nine-card Earth Nouveau set features images inspired by UML's sustainability initiatives, including its rooftop gardens and urban greenhouse.
The result is 鈥淓arth Nouveau,鈥 a set of nine intricately designed cards that are now available for a $27 donation to the Honors College. Proceeds benefit theHonors Fellowshipprogram.

Garcia, a senior who lives in Nashua, New Hampshire, says the project made her realize the impact graphic designers can make with their work.

鈥淭he fact that we were able to share information about what鈥檚 happening on campus in a way that's beautiful and easy to digest shows how much influence we as graphic designers can have,鈥 she says.听

Honors College DeanJenifer Whitten-Woodringrecently hosted a reception for an exhibit of the students鈥 work at University Crossing, where framed, enlarged prints are on display on the second floor.听

Each card features a unique design, showcasing themes like pollinators (a bee, beetle and butterfly) and birds (a falcon, heron and hummingbird). The students, who are both minoring inart history, found inspiration in the Art Nouveau movement, which emerged in Europe in the late 1800s. Known for its focus on nature, intricate designs and earth tones, the style was a perfect fit for the project, they say.

Using Adobe Illustrator, Garcia focused on the main images, while Grogan created the delicate borders.

鈥淲orking as a team was new for both of us, but we were already friends, so it was a very smooth process,鈥 Grogan says.

Four people stand in a semicircle and talk on the landing of a building. Image by Ed Brennen
Senior graphic design majors Daly Grogan, middle left, and Andrea Garcia, middle right, chat with Art & Design faculty Regina Milan, left, and Ingrid Hess during the reception for their exhibit.
Once their designs were complete, the students worked with a printing company to produce around 300 sets of cards. The printing was paid for by orders they received from the, the Chancellor鈥檚 Office, the Rist Institute and the Honors College.

鈥淣either of us had worked with a printer on a project of this scale, so that was a learning experience for us,鈥 Grogan says.

Garcia, Grogan and Hess assembled the bundles of cards and envelopes themselves, cutting paper, using a tool called a 鈥渂one folder鈥 to fold the cards, and banding them together.

鈥淟ittle things that you don鈥檛 learn until you do it,鈥 Garcia says of the production process.

Hess, a member of theArt & Designfaculty, has collaborated with the Rist Institute and Honors College on a number of projects over the years, and she came up with the greeting card idea to showcase their work. She had both Garcia and Grogan in several classes and pitched the project to them in the summer of 2023.

鈥淚 was aware of how talented they were, both as graphic designers and as illustrators,鈥 Hess says. 鈥淚 knew they were the right fit.鈥

Garcia and Grogan earned an honors credit for their work and also used it as a project in their Aesthetics of Graphic Design course with Hess that fall.

Three people chat with each other while standing in the lobby of a building. Image by Ed Brennen
Andrea Garcia, middle, and Daly Grogan, right, chat with Chancellor Julie Chen about their Earth Nouveau project at University Crossing.
Grogan has worked with Hess on several sustainability-related projects, including her Senior Studio capstone, which is an educational program for children called 鈥淣ext Wave鈥 about the environmental impacts of global warming on the coast of Maine.

鈥淚ngrid is a huge advocate for sustainability, and my interest and knowledge about it has grown greatly just from knowing her,鈥 Grogan says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great that 51视频, and specifically Ingrid, are speaking up and making sure people are knowledgeable about the issue.鈥

For her Senior Studio, Garcia is designing a summer camp for teenagers to learn about the intersection of science and art, an area that has become of personal interest to her. She is taking part in a science illustration study abroad trip to Portugal this spring.

鈥淚t would be cool if I could do something in that space,鈥 says Garcia, who earned an associate degree from Brigham Young University-Idaho before moving to New England during the pandemic.

鈥淥ne thing that I appreciated going from a really big university to a smaller space is that it opened up opportunities,鈥 Garcia says. 鈥淭he professors here really care, and the classes are so personal. I don't think I would have been able to do anything like this at a bigger school.鈥