In a Gilded Age Mansion, Artists Probe the Meaning of ‘Home’
Much of the current conversation around the design boom has been surprisingly limited in scope: the new generation of collectors realizing that the sofa beneath their masterwork painting matters. Or, as the art market experiences periods of volatility, design is seen as more accessible—a $20,000 chair versus a six-figure painting.
But what’s missing from this discourse is a deeper consideration of content. Besides price point, the distinction between high art and high design frequently comes down to functionality—or the idea of functionality, as many objects are far too exquisite to risk actual use. What draws people in is not only beauty or utility, but narrative: a richness of symbolism, story, and cultural meaning that design is uniquely equipped to carry.
Which brings us to “Making Home,” the seventh installment of the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum’s Triennial—a show that expands the idea of design far beyond objects and aesthetics. At most sprawling contemporary design exhibitions, there are plenty of melting chairs and purposefully ugly stunt couches. But here, there is no schtick; depth is the premise. Making Home comprises 25 newly commissioned projects that explore the idea of home—its memory, its construction, its rupture. “Making Home” presents a deeply narrative, cross-cultural vision of American life. The exhibition is on view through August 10.
Robert Earle Paige, Fahara: Chicago in View (2024). Photo: Nikola Bradonjic Photography. Courtesy of Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum.
“We were interested in engaging a topic that was as relatable as possible, that everyone could come to with a point of view,” said Alexandra Cunningham Cameron, the museum’s curator of contemporary design. “‘Home’ is a critical framework that everyone was responding to from a curatorial perspective—we never defined home. It’s defined through the perspectives of the designers and artists that are in the show.”
Cunningham Cameron co-curated the show with Christina L. De León, acting deputy director of curatorial and associate curator of Latino design at Cooper Hewitt; and Michelle Joan Wilkinson, curator of architecture and design at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. It marks the first time that Cooper Hewitt has partnered with another Smithsonian museum to organize its Triennial.
The exhibition unfolds across three floors organized by themes—Going Home, Seeking Home, and Building Home—tracing how personal, cultural, and political histories are embedded in domestic space. The institution is in the former Gilded Age mansion of Andrew Carnegie, a setting that adds a frisson of American dream mythology to the experience—and a gobsmacking architectural backdrop that both complements and challenges the works on view.
Joe Baker and Lenape Center, Welcome to Territory (2023). Photo: Elliot Goldstein © Smithsonian Institution.
“Our museum is in a former home—and a very particular one,” said Cunningham Cameron. “It’s a monument connected to American history, American exceptionalism, and American philanthropy. What does that mean? How does the house have a presence?”
The Triennial kicks off resoundingly, directly across from the museum’s grand entryway, where a series of turkey feather capes are suspended from the ceiling and seem to float spectrally. At many cultural institutions, land acknowledgments can feel like rote gestures. Joe Baker’s Welcome to Territory is something else entirely—a powerful, haunting reminder of the original inhabitants of this land. A New York–based artist and co-founder of the Lenape Center, Baker draws from his heritage to channel a history of erasure with grace. The capes’ emptiness suggests both absence and ongoing presence, a poignant reflection of displacement—yet the spiritual presence endures. Surrounding the installation is wallpaper patterned with stylized tulip trees, a species sacred to the tribe.
Another artist, Amie Siegel, delved into wall coverings. “She often looks at the connection between design and architecture and systems of value and power,” said Cunningham Cameron. Siegel’s installation Views / Vues interrogates the legacy of 19th-century French panoramic wallpapers—some conjuring distant lands and mythologies, others the antebellum South. A film includes scenes of a Black marching band joyously careening through a Southern mansion and the silent exterior of a plantation house, juxtaposed with the wallpaper’s romanticized vignettes. The work is projected onto a screen floating in what appears to be a grand ballroom; on the reverse is a collage of salvaged scenic wallpaper.
Still from Dream Homes (2024), a film by PIN–UP directed by Michael Bullock and Michael Cukr. Courtesy of PIN–UP.
I have a habit of breezing past film components in expansive shows, but I’m glad I lingered at Making Home. “We wanted to not just present objects and architecture and installations,” said Cunningham Cameron, “but also tell stories about design. Film became an important mechanism for doing that.” Among the most compelling examples is Dream Homes, a triad of heartfelt mini-documentaries produced by architecture platform PIN–UP and directed by Michael Bullock and Michael Cukr. The films profile nontraditional queer collective living spaces across the U.S., from a trans artist-run mansion in rural Massachusetts to the Arkansas retreat led by Stonewall icon Miss Major.
Installation of Hālau Kūkulu Hawaiʻi: A Home That Builds Multitudes by After Oceanic Built Environments Lab and Leong Leong Architecture in “Making Home—Smithsonian Design Triennial” at Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. Photo: Ann Sunwoo © Smithsonian Institution
Hālau Kūkulu Hawaiʻi: A Home That Builds Multitudes, by After Oceanic Built Environments Lab and Leong Leong Architecture, includes a film documenting the collaborative construction of a traditional Hawaiian hale in Waipiʻo Valley, using Indigenous lashing techniques passed down through generations. A full-scale prototype of the structure is on view in the exhibition, embodying a gesture toward cultural, ecological, and architectural restoration across the Hawaiian Islands.
Davóne Tines, Hugh Hayden, and Zack Winokur, Living Room: Orlean, Virginia (2023). Photo: Elliot Goldstein © Smithsonian Institution.
A celebrated bass-baritone with a genre-defying career, Davóne Tines spends most of the year touring. Living Room: Orlean, Virginia is a response to that rootlessness—a collaboration with artist Hugh Hayden and director Zack Winokur that channels the memory of Tines’s grandparents’ home in rural Virginia, set on a gently rocking plinth. Throughout the show’s run, it also doubles as a performance platform.
AIRIE, Ebb + Flow (2023). Photo: Elliot Goldstein © Smithsonian Institution.
Tucked into the museum’s glass-walled Conservatory, Ebb + Flow assembles field recordings and visual design rooted in South Florida’s endangered Everglades. “You have to sit and listen to the oral histories,” said Cunningham Cameron. “For decades they’ve been inviting artists, architects, and designers to spend time in this UNESCO World Heritage site, this extraordinary ecosystem.”
Organized by Artists in Residence in the Everglades (AIRIE), the installation includes a film and audio component. Visitors don headphones and sit on cushions printed with swamp-life illustrations—flamingos, alligators, and bald cypress trees with sprawling root systems—designed by Christina Pettersson, while listening to stories that evoke a landscape shaped by ecological precarity, memory, and Indigenous presence.
Curry J. Hackett, So That You All Won’t Forget: Speculations on a Black Home in Rural Virginia (2023). Photo: Elliot Goldstein. Courtesy of Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum.
Curry Jackson Hackett’s So That You All Won’t Forget: Speculations on a Black Home in Rural Virginia is a transportive, multisensory grotto lined with dried tobacco leaves. The crop has a complex history, and the scent is powerful—a sensory trigger for its unresolved legacy. Hackett’s family has grown and sold tobacco for generations on land they own in Prospect, Virginia—making the crop, in his words, “an unlikely celebration of an otherwise haunting crop.” Presented by his transdisciplinary studio Wayside, the installation blends memory, material, and projection: cast-iron skillets, embellished church fans, and flickering video channels form a constellation of “speculative objects.” He wielded artificial intelligence to imagine much of the space, with one exception—his mother’s painting, the only object left untouched.
Heather Dewey-Hagborg, Is a Biobank a Home? (2023). Photo: Elliot Goldstein. Courtesy of Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum.
The show continues upstairs with more experimental works, including a trauma-informed design by Designing Justice + Designing Spaces. Their Mobile Refuge Rooms installation—intended for those reentering society from incarceration—invites visitors to step inside and interact with customizable furnishings. Artist and biohacker Heather Dewey-Hagborg’s Is a Biobank a Home? is staged as a vast laboratory, lined with test tubes, and explores the afterlives of our DNA in institutional storage.
Room by room, Making Home unfolds into a wide-ranging reflection on how expansive the idea of design can be. “We hope that as you navigate,” said Cunningham Cameron, “it’s a space for exploring ideas or being provoked or having hard conversations—and that people get something out of it.” More