Gerard Minakawa

Gerard Minakawa was born in New York City to Argentinian and Bolivian-Japanese immigrants and studied industrial design at the Rhode Island School of Design. He worked for several studios on both coasts as a product designer, started a bamboo-laminate furniture company and eventually moved to Bolivia, where he spent 3 years nourishing a sustainable handicraft economy with indigenous artisans in partnership with Aid to Artisans, a U.S.-based nonprofit. In 2007 he founded Bamboo DNA (www.bamboondna.com), a design/build company specializing in the creation and installation of architectural spaces inspired by the world's most gigantic grass: Bamboo!.

Minakawa has taught at the Rhode Island School of Design and was named one of the Top 20 Innovative U.S. designers by I.D. Magazine. His works have been featured in numerous international books and publications including the Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Metropolis and the New York Times.

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Scheduled Presentations

  • What Makes Bamboo Unique
    Day: Saturday | Duration: 30 min. | Location: Fishbon Proscenium

    What makes bamboo so unique? Gerard Minakawa, the artist and founder of Bamboo DNA, will take you on a worldwide tour of the planet's most gigantic grass and reveal the thousand-fold ways by which it truly is a wonder of natural engineering. A short demonstration of the tools, bamboo species, and joinery techniques utilized by the artist will follow the slideshow.

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