"Design Redefined," is the fifth in an annual succession of Stanford student design exhibitions that approach design as an art form. If the previous design exhibitions emphasized surprise, this year's design exhibition emphasizes diversity. Dissimilar responses to the same assignment reveal an audacious concern with inquiry; elective works are both individual and courageous. At every level, students practice a kind of constructive disobedience. When describing his students' innovative artworks, Professor Matt Kahn remarked, "If you don't take risks, you don't get gifts." Examples of artworks include suspended, crocheted structures that are luminescent and suggest floating sea creatures, by Min Ji Kim and a self-illuminated bicycle whose inner glow and imagery speak to both pleasure and safety, by Jin Tsubota. "Design Redefined" includes works on every level of design study, from elemental courses through elective works by graduate students in both the MFA Program in Design and from the Joint Program in Design. The Joint Program in Design is jointly offered by the Departments of Art & Art History and Mechanical Engineering. Another source for works of great individuality comes from the Advanced Creative Studies class, comprised of mature students creating diverse elective projects.