The MIT NOMAS Lecture: Curry J. Hackett

Curry J. Hackett 
"Other Channels: Imaging Black Life, Land, and Knowledge"
The MIT NOMAS Lecture
Part of the Spring 2026 MIT Architecture Lecture Series. 

This talk asks how pedagogy, speculative fiction, and multimedia art can render what Katherine McKittrick calls a “Black sense of place.” Drawing on his transdisciplinary work and research, Curry J. Hackett reflects on how image-making, sound, archives, and AI might act as channels for narrating and re-presenting Black relationships to territory, history, and possibility.

Curry J. Hackett is a transdisciplinary designer, visual artist, and educator exploring Black relationships to land, media, and memory. A Farmville, Virginia native, his work works across scales and mediums to speculate on the aesthetics and ecologies of the American South. 

Hackett’s work has been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Bloomberg, and Metropolis, among others. He has exhibited at the University of Tennessee–Knoxville, the Architectural Association School of Architecture, and the “Making Home”—Smithsonian Design Triennial at the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum.Curry holds architecture degrees from Howard University and the Harvard Graduate School of Design, and currently serves as Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Media, Culture, and Communication at the NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development.

This lecture will be held in person in Long Lounge, 7-429 and will be streamed on YouTube.

Lectures are free and open to the public.