Aleksa Milojevic is a New York-based architectural and urban designer, filmmaker, and media producer originally from Vienna. His work encompasses architecture, planning, and audio-visual production, addressing urban conditions, spatial symbolism, and socio-cultural participation. He studied at TU Vienna, the University of Applied Arts Vienna under Kazuyo Sejima, and AHO in Oslo, before earning a master’s degree from Tongji University in Shanghai. He completed his postgraduate master’s studies at Yale University, where he studied under Peter Eisenman and Frank Gehry, amongst others, and engaged in media production and publishing. Through his academic and independent creative work, he has collaborated with filmmakers and theorists such as Özgür Anil, Fatima Naqvi, and Sahraa Karimi. Widely published and awarded, his design and audio-visual work has been featured in solo and group exhibitions and screenings at institutions including the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, the Yale School of Architecture, and the Yale Center for Collaborative Arts and Media.
Joseph Reich is a Texas-born spatial researcher and designer whose work examines the built environment as an interface through which urban life is organized and experienced. He studied Environmental Design at Texas A&M University, architecture at Yale School of Architecture, and was the Bass Fellow in Architecture in the Architecture and Urban Studies program at University of Cambridge. Working across architecture, urbanism, exhibition design, and publishing, Reich approaches these disciplines as interconnected forms of spatial practice. He has served as an events producer and editor for Paprika! and as Creative Director of the Pembroke May Ball 2025, leading the development of the event’s visual identity, spatial environment, and installations for an audience of more than 1,300 attendees.
Operating at the intersection of built environments, research, and exhibition- making, Matthew W. Wilde is a Scottish designer dedicated to cultivating new forms of social and ecological commons. Following his undergraduate studies at the University of Dundee, he graduated from the Yale School of Architecture. His practice explores how strategies of architectural reuse and densification can bolster urban resilience and foster shared spaces, particularly within communities in social and ecological transition. Wilde’s creative work has garnered international recognition, and his projects have been showcased at prominent venues including the 2023 Venice Biennale (Surfacing – The Civilised Agroecological Forests of Amazonia), the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao (Motion: Autos, Art, Architecture), and the NOMAD exhibition at Autostadt Wolfsburg.