Website Design for Academic and Consultant

Judy Pryor Ramirez

A digital platform that reflects Judy’s expertise in leadership, social justice, and community engagement.

Brief

This project aimed to create a professional yet warm online presence for Judy Pryor-Ramirez, showcasing her multifaceted career as an academic, consultant, and writer.

  • Role

    Custom squarespace website designer
  • Studio

    Joelle Riffle
  • Collaborators

  • Deliverables

    - Kickoff workshop - Three visual design concepts with opportunities for revision - Custom Squarespace website design and build - Content population and CMS guide with training
  • Client

    Judy Pryor-Ramirez is a Clinical Associate Professor at NYU Wagner, a social justice consultant, and a writer focused on the intersections of race, class, gender, and place. She has over 20 years of experience working across government, nonprofit, and academic spaces to empower teams and networks for systemic change.

Background
Since 2021, I’ve collaborated with the Leventhal Map & Education Center on all of their exhibitions, designing graphics that fit seamlessly into their curatorial process. Over time I’ve developed a strong understanding of their space, constraints, and audience. For Processing Place, I was responsible for the exhibition’s graphic identity—defining the look and feel, typography, color, patterns, and wall treatments.

Challenge
The exhibition presented a large collection of objects of varying sizes and formats, all of which needed to feel integrated within a single system. The curators wanted the show divided into clear sections, with recurring touchpoints that guided visitors between pre-digital and digital mapping practices.

The graphics had to work for visitors who read closely as well as those who skim. Housed in the historic, high-traffic Boston Public Library, the LMEC gallery requires every exhibition to be temporary and flexible. I turned those parameters into a system of adhesive grids and dimensional panels that delivers impact for visitors without sacrificing an immersive experience design.

Approach
I built the system around a grid, referencing both geospatial mapping and the pixel. That foundation connected directly to objects like the digitizing puck, once used to trace maps into GIS software. I filled squares with color to create headers, shadows, and emphasis, turning the grid into a flexible structure. For typography, I used a pixel-script font for titles and a monospaced computer face for object details, tying the graphics to the language of early computing.

I designed a highlighted annotation system to connect framed maps with their labels, making relationships clear at a glance. Adhesive wall labels with a grid background formed the base layer, while PVC-mounted reproductions added hierarchy and depth. To support different reading styles, I used solid-filled headers to mark each section, giving visitors a clear entry point whether they skimmed or read closely.

Outcome
The design broke down complex content into distinct, scannable sections while keeping a consistent thread through recurring graphic elements. Visitors could navigate at multiple levels, from quick overviews to detailed exploration. The curators confirmed the design matched their vision, and LMEC rehired me immediately for their next exhibition, Terrains of Independence—our sixth collaboration.

Reflection
The project achieved its core aim: turning dense content into graphics that felt approachable, structured, and engaging. The system proved effective within LMEC’s ongoing program, requiring no significant adjustments for future projects.

Key priorities included:Designing a minimalist, approachable, and textured site that balances warmth with authority.
Highlighting her key functions: writing, consulting, teaching, and speaking engagements.
Drawing inspiration from Judy’s personal aesthetic—blue denim and vivid glasses—paired with earthy tones and pops of color for a grounded, enduring look.
Integrating her research and work with external sources while ensuring easy navigation and accessibility.
The site embodies Judy’s voice and mission, providing a polished, enduring platform for her work in leadership and social justice.
See the full project
See more 
Web Design
 projects

Joelle Riffle