Arts Thread

Levon Kostandyan
Industrial design MID

Rhode Island School of Design

Graduates: 2025

Specialisms: Industrial Design / Design for Social Good / Design Research

My location: New York, United States

levon-kostandyan ArtsThread Profile
Rhode Island School of Design

Levon Kostandyan

levon-kostandyan ArtsThread Profile

First Name: Levon

Last Name: Kostandyan

University / College: Rhode Island School of Design

Course / Program: Industrial design MID

Graduates: 2025

Specialisms: Industrial Design / Design for Social Good / Design Research

My Location: New York, United States

Website: Click To See Website

About

Levon Kostandyan is an Armenian artist, designer, and educator based in Rhode Island, with strong ties to New York. Their work unfolds at the crossroads of material exploration, ecological awareness, and cultural storytelling. Drawing on Armenian heritage and contemporary design practices, Levon creates objects and systems that act as vessels of memory, inviting intimate encounters with identity, place, and interspecies relationships.Levon’s process is deeply research-driven and hands-on. They experiment with craft techniques, emerging technologies, and material innovation to uncover layers of meaning embedded in form and function. Through this blend, their work not only serves practical purposes but also fosters dialogue around belonging, hybridity, and the living relationships between humans, animals, and environments.Holding a master’s degree in Industrial Design from the Rhode Island School of Design and a bachelor’s degree in New Media from SUNY Purchase, Levon combines rigorous research with interdisciplinary methods. As an educator, they have taught at RISD and mentored students in design and fabrication, integrating digital and physical prototyping, open-source design, and material innovation to craft meaningful and impactful experiences.

designing between worlds

People with hybrid identities navigate cultural landscapes shaped by displacement, continuity, and adaptation, where design becomes a way to engage with heritage. It carries both the responsibility to honor cultural roots and the possibility to transform them. The challenge of Designing Between Worlds is not choosing one identity over another, but acknowledging that both shape us. Through design, we can create objects that hold space for both, not to resolve identity, but to honor its complexity. This project focuses on cultural materiality, exploring how materials embedded with cultural narratives can adapt to new contexts while remaining anchored in memory, symbolism, and tradition. By shaping works from the pomegranate, the project demonstrates how material and narrative can embody resilience, belonging, and transformation in a changing world.