• abler
  • adaptation + ability group
  • sara hendren
  • About These Sites
  • Home
  • Archive
  • Guides
  • About

the collection

By sarahendren

Feb 7, 2014

MOMA_screengrab

The Accessible Icon Project really is part of the permanent collection at MOMA! I’m still stunned. I’ll be heading down to New York to see it in an upcoming show called A Collection of Ideas. Get in touch if you happen to see it! And thanks to so many of you who supported our early work on this project.

← Previous
getting up
Next →
craft and code and point-of-view

It’s good you’re here.

Some bodies do some things, and others do others. Prosthetics, bodily capacity, expanded engineering and creative research, flexible adaptation, possible futures, interdependence, collaborative design, inclusive systems, productive uncertainty, and critical making—these things drive our work.

We hope—we do try—to cultivate humility in the face of complexity.

Please be in touch.

about these sites

This (soon to be) three-part website documents the work of Sara Hendren, tracks the research of the Adaptation + Ability Group at Olin College, and houses the ongoing Abler archive. Here you can find a map of all three sites, and more about how they're made below.

abler

a blog (est. 2009) about the art and engineering of prosthetics, adaptive design, transhumanism, cyborg futures, etc.

  • archive
  • guides
  • about abler

adaptation + ability group

a lab for creative research on technology + the body at Olin College.

  • about the lab
  • projects
  • courses
  • reports
  • publications + news

sara hendren

artist, design researcher, and professor based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

  • about sara hendren
  • contact
  • twitter
  • tinyletter
  • projects
  • talks + essays
  • reading notes

accessibility

These sites are designed with accessibility in mind. To learn more, see the latest audit and accessibility documentation, and let us know how we can improve. Reader preferences are powered by the Fluid Project's Infusion Framework.

open source

Check out this site's code and read about how it was built at the documentation site. Your contributions and experiments are welcome.

colophon

Designed and built by Casey Gollan and Sara Hendren.

Managed with Siteleaf, compiled with Jekyll, and hosted at Github Pages and imgix. Fonts by Commercial Type.