One might notice an accepted pigeonholing in the way we’ve been conditioned to perceive and engage with our world—we often tend to submit everything to the simplest possible factors, into biases and binaries of comprehension. Yet, historically, our existence and ensuing creations prove a delightful contrast. The current gamut is tethered in the way we are allowed to think, perpetuate, and create. What happens when we decide to step out of those clinically neat lines?
By scaling and exploring the pluralistic (read: inclusive) realms and approaches to creativity, we uncover an entire range of energies to harness, that may otherwise remain dormant. This exposure lets us demand that we think more intimately about the influence of growing creative cultures under contemporary systems, while questioning what this evolving creative gamut achieves.
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This week’s issue scales a gamut of works within the creative landscape: MoMA's 'Emerging Ecologies' examines over 150 projects tracing the rise of the environmental movement in the US, and its influence on the architectural practice; Flavio Manzoni, the Chief Design Officer at Ferrari, attributes the ‘limitless horizons’ of his architectural education to his cross-functional approach to creating; through intricate embroideries, artists Varunika Saraf and Nour Shantout reclaim and participate in the trailblazing contributions of feminists before them.
There is wealth that awaits in the creative gamut, where fluid, diverse, and inclusive dialogues become mainstream. In this decisive moment, we must introspect and ascertain how to build this pluralistic future.

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