Julia Smith is a creative director and photographer who is passionate about creating beautiful, inspiring work. With a strong background in print and digital design, she is a skilled practitioner of color theory, which explains the vivid, saturated tones that she uses in her work.
Julia graduated from the University of Virginia with a B.S. in Psychology and received a M.F.A in Photography. She was the recipient of the Virginia Association of School of Visual Arts Photography Scholarship.
She has been using color theory to create work for over a decade now, and her work has been exhibited nationally, including at the New York Women’s Project, the New York Society of Photography, the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. She has also taught workshops at Virginia Tech, the University of Pittsburgh, and the University of Richmond as well as working on several design projects which she is currently working on.
Julia Smith has been using color theory to create work for over a decade, and her work has been exhibited nationally, including at the New York Womens Project, the New York Society of Photography, the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. She has also taught workshops at Virginia Tech, the University of Pittsburgh, and the University of Richmond as well as working on several design projects which she is currently working on.
She received her bachelor’s degree in Fine Art from Virginia Tech, and also has a Master of Fine Arts in Industrial Design from the University of Richmond. She has taught art and design classes at the University of Virginia.
Also working on a number of other design projects, she has recently been working on a number of design projects that she is currently working on which are all related to her research into the science of perception and memory.
You can see some of her designs at the bottom of this page.
She has recently been working on the design of a wearable computer that can be worn with the help of a pair of goggles, and she is currently working on a number of ideas that she hopes to share with the wider design community.
This is a great interview with her about how her research into the science of perception and memory has led her to some interesting conclusions about how we perceive the world around us and how memory affects our ability to do so.
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