A Design Manifesto for the 21st Century
The 20th century model of designer as singular auteur operating in isolation from society must change. In this age of converging global crises – rising global temperatures, mass displacement, and extreme income inequality – designers must do more than give form to objects of desire and consumption. Designers must work collaboratively within communities, between disciplines and across social spectrums to define global problems and implement local solutions.
Design is a western concept whose mass-market output is currently controlled by a very small percentage of the global population. Using a value system that attempts to dictate taste and control the market from a position of Eurocentric bias and economic exclusivity, those in the dominant position of the Minority World produce products that bypass the majority of people on Earth or contribute negatively to their well-being through waste and exploitation.
Beyond attempts at cultural sampling for luxury consumers following trends, how can the other 90% of the globe – the Majority World – participate in shaping the future? How do we find new ways to incorporate alternative narratives and possibilities for how we imagine, use, and make design?
Designers of the 21st century must build bridges between the Majority and Minority world. The system of design and designers must find new voices, new modes of operating, and new tools for fabricating. If the future of design is to be pluralistic and inclusive of all cultural perspectives, then the designer of the 21st century must act as a conduit through which ideas flow. This begins by acknowledging that everyone is capable of design. And that everyone should have access to the potential for social and economic transformation that design unlocks.
Design education, professional practice, and technology have the potential to drive economic transformation from the ground up by sharing knowledge, creating opportunities, fostering jobs and laying the foundation for the long-lasting infrastructure that can make a real difference as populations shift from rural to urban, traditional to modern. Yet, modernity is not a one-size-fits-all condition and designers of the 21st century must define alternative forms of progress derived from within rather than imposed upon communities.
Indeed, how we translate and adopt traditional and indigenous ways of knowing into design practices and principles for the future may well be our salvation. If working with artisanal communities gets us closer to the act of making, how can we as designers create more room for innovation? If the future of craft is technology, then the future of technology must support craft. When does the age-old wisdom of making from the so-called developing world meet the knowledge of data from the so-called developed world to truly improve people’s lives by design?
Our goal is to integrate hand techniques into industrial manufacturing in order to shift the perception of craft towards necessity and extend craft traditions into the future through a more symbiotic relationship with diverse communities within the built environment and the objects that define us. By doing so, we believe design can serve as a tool for realizing all the world’s futures and not just a privileged few.
About
Stephen Burks Man Made is an internationally recognized hands-on collaborative design studio deeply invested in the transformative power of craft techniques that challenge the limits of new technologies within industrial production.
We believe in a pluralistic vision of design that is inclusive of all cultural perspectives and backgrounds.
We bring the hand to industry through a community-driven, workshop-based practice.
Our projects include furniture, lighting, interiors, exhibitions, and product design.
We are Stephen Burks (Principal), Malika Leiper (Cultural Director), Vara Yang (Design Consultant), and Fridolin Jeger (Design Assistant).
Our solo exhibition Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place, formerly at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta (September 16, 2022 - March 5, 2023) was part acclaimed mid-career survey and part commissioned speculative project presenting the last decade of professional practice alongside new expressions of radical domesticity through handcrafted industrial design.
Most recently, Stephen Burks: Spirit Houses opened at Volume Gallery in Chicago and Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place (November 19. 2023 - April 16, 2024) opened at the Philadelphia Museum of Art where Stephen became the first African American to receive the Collab Design Excellence Award.
Follow us on Instagram @stephenburksmanmade and contact us at info@stephenburksmanmade.com.
Stephen Burks
Chicago native, Stephen Burks is an acclaimed industrial designer, product development consultant, and educator whose innovative approach to design synthesizes craft, community, and industry. Independently and through association with various non-profits, he has collaborated with artisans and craftspeople in over ten countries on six continents. His socially engaged practice seeks to broaden the limits of design consciousness by challenging who benefits from and participates in contemporary design.
Stephen and his studio, Stephen Burks Man Made, have been commissioned by many of the world’s leading design-driven brands to develop collections that engage hand production as a strategy for innovation to express a more pluralistic vision of design including BD Barcelona, Cappellini, Dedon, MASS Design Group, Missoni, & Roche Bobois.
He has had solo exhibitions and led curatorial projects at the Studio Museum in Harlem (Stephen Burks Man Made, 2011), the Museum of Art & Design (Stephen Burks, Are You a Hybrid, 2011), and the High Museum of Art (Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place, 2022).
He has been visiting faculty and a strategic consultant to academic institutions around the globe and taught architecture and design at Berea College, Columbia University GSAPP, ECAL, the University of Arkansas Fay Jones School of Architecture & Design, and the Harvard University Graduate School of Design.
Stephen received a Bachelor of Science in Design from the Institute of Design (The New Bauhaus) at the Illinois Institute of Technology and a Master of Architecture from Columbia University's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, & Preservation. He is the only African-American to win the Smithsonian Cooper Hewitt National Design Award in Product Design and the only industrial designer to be awarded the prestigious Loeb Fellowship at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.
Malika Leiper
Originally from Cambodia, Malika Leiper is interested in the culture of design across various disciplines with a particular focus on emergent contexts in Southeast Asia.
After completing her master’s in urban planning at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, she consulted with restaurants, non-profits, local governments, and museums on research and strategies to build creative cultural capacity, often through public programming and community engagement.
She approaches design as a collaborative process of translating knowledge and insights from different worlds into one common language through technical, moral and utopian applications.
Most recently, Malika has contributed to Disegno Journal #34 as a Het Nieuwe Instituut inaugural emerging writing fellow with her first published short story, When The Words Don't Exist.
Vara Yang
Vara Yang joined Stephen Burks Man Made as an industrial designer in New York in 2017.
Before working at Stephen Burks Man Made, she worked with several startups helping them bring their products and services to the market, including smart home devices, smartwatches, smart jewelry, and 3D printers.
Now an independent consultant based in Rotterdam, she continues to work with the studio on projects at various scales from furniture design to packaging to exhibitions.
Vara received her bachelor’s in design engineering from National Cheng Kung University in Taiwan and her master’s in Industrial Design from the Rhode Island School of Design.
news
A Casa Di Burks
Living Corriere Della Sera No. 4
Creative Survival Tactics: At Home with Malika Leiper & Stephen Burks by Olivia Fincato

If the house is no longer a safe haven keeping the chaos of the outside world at bay . . .

Then maybe it's best if we imagine the office, the street, and the city joyfully!

"With the renovation, we transformed a former bakery into a modernist gallery."


Thanks BD Barcelona, Bertjan Pot, Dedon, Dries van Noten, Established & Sons, Flos, Jonathan Muecke, Living Divani, Mattias Sellden, Mattiazzi, Isamu Noguchi, Paul Sepuya, Roche Bobois, Santa & Cole, USM, Vitra, Vitsoe, & Zanotta.
Photography Matthew Williams
By Stephen Burks for the Oak issue of Material Intelligence online, edited by Glenn Adamson.
June 2, 2022Yes, the mighty oak tree, the stuff of legends, is also the traditional
basket maker’s wood of choice in Appalachia, as elsewhere
in the eastern United States.
By Vasia Rigou for The Chicago Reader
September 19, 2023The Volume Gallery exhibition connects past, present, and future through reverent design.
Vandalorum Museum
May 15, 2024Stephen Burks was the first recipient of the newly established Bruno Mathsson Design Residency from May 15 to June 15, 2024.
Ancestors in the Making by Najha Zigbi-Johnson with introduction by Malika Leiper
September 1, 2024Stephen Burks and Malika Leiper seek meaning through form at the University of Arkansas
Glenn Adamson
January 11, 2024"In the absence of sufficient food, shelter, and bodily safety, people of African descent have often sustained themselves on spirit alone"
By Malika Leiper for Disegno #34 x Het Nieuwe Instituut Design Drafts #1
September 21, 2022How to begin writing about design if the word does not even exist?
Monica Obniski for High Museum of Art
September 16, 2022Through essays, photo-essays, and a conversation between Black designer Stephen Burks and the late cultural critic bell hooks, this book contextualizes Burks’s wide-ranging work while exploring design’s influence on politics, society, and culture.
Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place Book Review in Untapped Journal by Francesca Perry
February 13, 2023The book Shelter in Place considers the possibilities, and the precedents, of the designer’s inclusive approach to creating objects for the home.
Perez Projects Presents BD Barcelona: A New Perspective, 50 Years of Design
April 16, 2023Disegno Journal
February 15, 2021With the romanticism of a wiser woman looking back on a fleeting youth, Joan Didion once described New York City as the “shining and perishable dream itself”.
Najha Zigbi-Johnson for Volume Gallery
September 8, 2023Within this spiritual and cultural context, I engage and understand the most recent work of industrial designer Stephen Burks, who has created a collection of modern altars entitled Spirit Houses.
Berea College Student Craft
September 26, 2019Today, Student Craft is no longer just a factory of student labor, as it had been for nearly 100 years, but is transforming into an academic program producing open-ended products.
The New York Times by Lauren Messman
April 15, 2024You can always see where you would like to sit at the annual festival of furnishings and household objects.
By Diana Budds for New York Magazine
November 7, 2023Stephen Burks Wants to Finish a 20-Year-Old Conversation With Fran Lebowitz.
Living Corriere Della Sera No. 4
Creative Survival Tactics: At Home with Malika Leiper & Stephen Burks by Olivia Fincato
"We transformed a former bakery into a modernist gallery."
By Dennis Scully & Fred Nicolaus for Business of Home
January 23, 2023Stephen Burks wants to open the doors of the design industry.
Stephen Burks for Goodee
September 1, 2019"I found myself back in school in the midst of a year-long fellowship, where I met Malika."
Milan Furniture Fair
April 17, 2023New Kida dining chair to be presented during 2023 Milan furniture fair



A Design Manifesto for the 21st Century
The 20th century model of designer as singular auteur operating in isolation from society must change. In this age of converging global crises – rising global temperatures, mass displacement, and extreme income inequality – designers must do more than give form to objects of desire and consumption. Designers must work collaboratively within communities, between disciplines and across social spectrums to define global problems and implement local solutions.
Design is a western concept whose mass-market output is currently controlled by a very small percentage of the global population. Using a value system that attempts to dictate taste and control the market from a position of Eurocentric bias and economic exclusivity, those in the dominant position of the Minority World produce products that bypass the majority of people on Earth or contribute negatively to their well-being through waste and exploitation.
Beyond attempts at cultural sampling for luxury consumers following trends, how can the other 90% of the globe – the Majority World – participate in shaping the future? How do we find new ways to incorporate alternative narratives and possibilities for how we imagine, use, and make design?
Designers of the 21st century must build bridges between the Majority and Minority world. The system of design and designers must find new voices, new modes of operating, and new tools for fabricating. If the future of design is to be pluralistic and inclusive of all cultural perspectives, then the designer of the 21st century must act as a conduit through which ideas flow. This begins by acknowledging that everyone is capable of design. And that everyone should have access to the potential for social and economic transformation that design unlocks.
Design education, professional practice, and technology have the potential to drive economic transformation from the ground up by sharing knowledge, creating opportunities, fostering jobs and laying the foundation for the long-lasting infrastructure that can make a real difference as populations shift from rural to urban, traditional to modern. Yet, modernity is not a one-size-fits-all condition and designers of the 21st century must define alternative forms of progress derived from within rather than imposed upon communities.
Indeed, how we translate and adopt traditional and indigenous ways of knowing into design practices and principles for the future may well be our salvation. If working with artisanal communities gets us closer to the act of making, how can we as designers create more room for innovation? If the future of craft is technology, then the future of technology must support craft. When does the age-old wisdom of making from the so-called developing world meet the knowledge of data from the so-called developed world to truly improve people’s lives by design?
Our goal is to integrate hand techniques into industrial manufacturing in order to shift the perception of craft towards necessity and extend craft traditions into the future through a more symbiotic relationship with diverse communities within the built environment and the objects that define us. By doing so, we believe design can serve as a tool for realizing all the world’s futures and not just a privileged few.
About
Stephen Burks Man Made is an internationally recognized hands-on collaborative design studio deeply invested in the transformative power of craft techniques that challenge the limits of new technologies within industrial production.
We believe in a pluralistic vision of design that is inclusive of all cultural perspectives and backgrounds.
We bring the hand to industry through a community-driven, workshop-based practice.
Our projects include furniture, lighting, interiors, exhibitions, and product design.
We are Stephen Burks (Principal), Malika Leiper (Cultural Director), Vara Yang (Design Consultant), and Fridolin Jeger (Design Assistant).
Our solo exhibition Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place, formerly at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta (September 16, 2022 - March 5, 2023) was part acclaimed mid-career survey and part commissioned speculative project presenting the last decade of professional practice alongside new expressions of radical domesticity through handcrafted industrial design.
Most recently, Stephen Burks: Spirit Houses opened at Volume Gallery in Chicago and Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place (November 19. 2023 - April 16, 2024) opened at the Philadelphia Museum of Art where Stephen became the first African American to receive the Collab Design Excellence Award.
Follow us on Instagram @stephenburksmanmade and contact us at info@stephenburksmanmade.com.
Stephen Burks
Chicago native, Stephen Burks is an acclaimed industrial designer, product development consultant, and educator whose innovative approach to design synthesizes craft, community, and industry. Independently and through association with various non-profits, he has collaborated with artisans and craftspeople in over ten countries on six continents. His socially engaged practice seeks to broaden the limits of design consciousness by challenging who benefits from and participates in contemporary design.
Stephen and his studio, Stephen Burks Man Made, have been commissioned by many of the world’s leading design-driven brands to develop collections that engage hand production as a strategy for innovation to express a more pluralistic vision of design including BD Barcelona, Cappellini, Dedon, MASS Design Group, Missoni, & Roche Bobois.
He has had solo exhibitions and led curatorial projects at the Studio Museum in Harlem (Stephen Burks Man Made, 2011), the Museum of Art & Design (Stephen Burks, Are You a Hybrid, 2011), and the High Museum of Art (Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place, 2022).
He has been visiting faculty and a strategic consultant to academic institutions around the globe and taught architecture and design at Berea College, Columbia University GSAPP, ECAL, the University of Arkansas Fay Jones School of Architecture & Design, and the Harvard University Graduate School of Design.
Stephen received a Bachelor of Science in Design from the Institute of Design (The New Bauhaus) at the Illinois Institute of Technology and a Master of Architecture from Columbia University's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, & Preservation. He is the only African-American to win the Smithsonian Cooper Hewitt National Design Award in Product Design and the only industrial designer to be awarded the prestigious Loeb Fellowship at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.
Malika Leiper
Originally from Cambodia, Malika Leiper is interested in the culture of design across various disciplines with a particular focus on emergent contexts in Southeast Asia.
After completing her master’s in urban planning at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, she consulted with restaurants, non-profits, local governments, and museums on research and strategies to build creative cultural capacity, often through public programming and community engagement.
She approaches design as a collaborative process of translating knowledge and insights from different worlds into one common language through technical, moral and utopian applications.
Most recently, Malika has contributed to Disegno Journal #34 as a Het Nieuwe Instituut inaugural emerging writing fellow with her first published short story, When The Words Don't Exist.
Vara Yang
Vara Yang joined Stephen Burks Man Made as an industrial designer in New York in 2017.
Before working at Stephen Burks Man Made, she worked with several startups helping them bring their products and services to the market, including smart home devices, smartwatches, smart jewelry, and 3D printers.
Now an independent consultant based in Rotterdam, she continues to work with the studio on projects at various scales from furniture design to packaging to exhibitions.
Vara received her bachelor’s in design engineering from National Cheng Kung University in Taiwan and her master’s in Industrial Design from the Rhode Island School of Design.
- 2023 Cozy Volume Gallery
- 2023 Lantern Volume Gallery
- 2023 Ancestors (Guardian) Friedman Benda
- 2023 Precioso Salvatori
- 2023 Spirit Houses Volume Gallery
- 2023 On New Cosmologies: Stephen Burks Approaches the Sacred Najha Zigbi-Johnson for Volume Gallery
- 2023 The Sacred and Profound By Vasia Rigou for The Chicago Reader
- 2022 Shelter in Place Prototypes High Museum of Art, Atlanta
- 2023 Kida Dining Chair Dedon
- 2023 A Casa Di Burks Living Corriere Della Sera No. 4 Creative Survival Tactics: At Home with Malika Leiper & Stephen Burks by Olivia Fincato
- 2023 BD Barcelona 50th Features Grasso Perez Projects Presents BD Barcelona: A New Perspective, 50 Years of Design
- 2023 Zenith Stephen Burks Man Made
- 2018 Grasso Ceramics BD Barcelona
- 2020 Kida Dedon
- 2019 Kida in Production Dedon
- 2023 Business of Home Podcast By Dennis Scully & Fred Nicolaus for Business of Home
- 2018 Grasso BD Barcelona
- 2008 Horizon Tod's
- 2017 The Others Dedon
- 2019 Islands Living Divani
- 2019 Home as Project Stephen Burks for Goodee
- 2021 Welcome to Contemporaries Disegno Journal
- 2012 Dala Dedon
- 2015 Anwar Parachilna
- 2022 When The Words Don't Exist By Malika Leiper for Disegno #34 x Het Nieuwe Instituut Design Drafts #1
- 2023 Curbed 21 Questions By Diana Budds for New York Magazine
- 2021 Anywhere Kitchen USM Modular Furniture
- 2022 The Making of the Community Basket By Stephen Burks for the Oak issue of Material Intelligence online, edited by Glenn Adamson.
- 2021 Friends & Neighbors Salvatori
- 2023 How Stephen Burks “Future-Proofs” Craft Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place Book Review in Untapped Journal by Francesca Perry
- 2019 The Crafting Diversity Initiative Berea College Student Craft
- 2020 Pixel Blanket Berea College Student Craft
- 2020 Community Basket Berea College Student Craft
- 2013 Variations Calligaris + P:S
- 2015 Ahnda Dedon
- 2014 The Traveler Roche Bobois
- 2023 Shelter In Place The High Museum of Art
- 2022 The Spruce Berea College Student Craft
- 2004 Missoni Mogu Fun Fun Missoni
- 2011 Are You A Hybrid? Museum of Arts & Design
- 2020 Making of Broom Thing Berea College Student Craft
- 2014 A Free Man The White Briefs
- 2015 Frame Calligaris
- 2018 Floats Bolon x BD Barcelona
- 2016 The Traveler Outdoor Roche Bobois
- 2023 Dedon Launches Kida Dining Chair Milan Furniture Fair
- 2017 Irregular Weaving A/D/O
- 2011 Roping Dedar Milano
- 2011 Stephen Burks: Man Made Studio Museum of Harlem
- 2013 Hidden Gem Harry Winston
- 2018 Trypta Luceplan
- 2020 Broom Thing Berea College Student Craft
- 2015 Senegalese Basket Workshop
- 2013 Variations Workshop Journal Calligaris & P:S
- 2021 Magniberg Magniberg & Caroline Tompkins
- 2023 Powerhouse Ceramics Design Fellowship Friedman Benda Gallery
- 2024 Clay Break University of Arkansas Art Ceramics Department
- 2018 BD x Bolon Workshop BD Barcelona & Bolon
- 2024 Kida Lounge Chair Dedon
- 2005 Missoni Profumi Estee Lauder
- 2007 CK IN2U Coty Prestige
- 2008 David Yurman Fragrance Clarins Groupe
- 2008 DKNY Toy Estée Lauder
- 2024 Spirit Houses at IIT Illinois Institute of Technology Architecture
- 2024 The New Transcendence Friedman Benda
- 2024 On The New Transcendence Glenn Adamson
- 2023 Altar Volume Gallery
- 2023 Transformer Volume Gallery
- 2022 Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place Book Monica Obniski for High Museum of Art
- 2024 Disegno 38 Ancestors in the Making by Najha Zigbi-Johnson with introduction by Malika Leiper
- 2024 Inaugural Bruno Mathsson Designer In Residence Vandalorum Museum
- 2024 Taking a Moment to Lounge at Milan Design Week The New York Times by Lauren Messman
- 2024 Shelter In Place T-Shirt The White Briefs