Rebecca Murdock is an industrial designer living and working in NYC.
She specializes in the design and fabrication of public art installations. She has worked with a variety of artists, galleries and institutions. The pieces she has designed for her clients have been exhibited in institutions such as SFMOMA, David Zwirner Gallery, Untitled Art Miami, Armory Show NYC, Manchester International Festival, Montreal Contemporary Art Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts in Montreal, PHI Centre among others. In her work, she uses a hands-on approach combined with CAD modeling, engineering, augmented reality, rapid prototyping and low-fi techniques whilst collaborating with a wide range of fabricators and specialists.
She currently works for Urban Art Projects (UAP).
For inquiries, please contact murdock.rebecca@gmail.com.
Past and current exhibition locations
David Zwirner Gallery, NYC, USA
SFMOMA, SF, USA
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC, USA
Planet Word Museum, Washington DC, USA
Untitled Art, Miami, FL, USA
Manchester International Festival, MAN, UK
Museo MARCO Monterrey, MX
Phi Centre, Montréal, QC
MAC Montréal, QC
David Zwirner Gallery, NYC, USA
SFMOMA, SF, USA
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC, USA
Planet Word Museum, Washington DC, USA
Untitled Art, Miami, FL, USA
Manchester International Festival, MAN, UK
Museo MARCO Monterrey, MX
Phi Centre, Montréal, QC
MAC Montréal, QC
Press
The Creative Independent
Rebecca Murdock On Piecing Together the Complex Puzzle of Art
Art 21
Art in the 21st Century - Rafael Lozano Hemmer in “Borderlands”
It’s Nice That
Cloud Display at Manchester International Festival
Artnet
Recurrent Anaximander at Armory show NYC
Design Montreal
Ateliers de design
Architizer
Luminothérapie
The Creative Independent
Rebecca Murdock On Piecing Together the Complex Puzzle of Art
Art 21
Art in the 21st Century - Rafael Lozano Hemmer in “Borderlands”
It’s Nice That
Cloud Display at Manchester International Festival
Artnet
Recurrent Anaximander at Armory show NYC
Design Montreal
Ateliers de design
Architizer
Luminothérapie