Brunno Douat is an architect, curator, and researcher based in Mexico City. Through design, archival research and sustained collaborations with communities in Brazil and the Ecuadorian Amazon, his work traces the silent yet cunning ways in which ancestral forms of life and identity both negotiate with and inscribe themselves within the planetary material flows of modernity—giving rise to spaces of negotiation, recognition and endurance.



Contact


+52 55 9334 0968
brunno@brunnodouat.com




Education


Yale School of Architecture
(2021—2023, New Haven)

Master of Environmental Design
To Open a Clearing: cultivating spaces of endurance in the Upper Amazon
Advisors: prof. Ana Maria Durán Calisto & prof. Keller Easterling

Universidade Federal do Paraná
(2012—2018, Curitiba)

Bachelor in Architecture, Urban Design and Planning
Advisor: prof. Letícia Nerone Gadens

Parsons — The New School of Design
(2014–2015, New York)

Visiting student at the M.Arch program

Harvard Extension School —
Graduate School of Design
(2015, Cambridge)

Designing the American City: Civic Aspirations and Urban Form




Work


2024-present
Eduardo Kohn
McGill University Department of Anthropology

Research Assistant


2023-2024
MoMA - The Museum of Modern Art
12-month curatorial training in the 
Architecture and Design Department

2022-2024
a83
Curatorial Assistant and Writer


2023
Yale Architecture Gallery
Exhibition Assistant

Yale School of Architecture
Teaching Fellow
Latin American Modernity: Architecture, Art, and Utopia, with prof. Luis Carranza

2022
Yale Tropical Resources Institute (TRI)
Research Fellow
Award: TRI Endowment Fellowship

Yale Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library

Research Fellow
Award: Walter McClintock Memorial Fellowship for Graduate Students

Yale School of Architecture
Teaching Fellow
Senior Research Colloquium, with prof. Marta Caldeira

Teaching Assistant
Method and Modernism: Contemporary Approaches to the History of Modern Architecture, with prof. Joan Ockman

2019–2021
Museu Paranaense (Curitiba)
Architect, and Exhibition Designer

2019–2021
BOMBUS (Curitiba) 
Architect and Designer, co-founder with Ingrid Schmaedecke

2017–2021
ATO1LAB (Curitiba) 
Architect and Designer 

2015 
Chibbernoonie (New York) 
Trainee

Exhibitions

[Curatorial Work]

Shortlisted Proposal (2026)
Luxembourg Pavilion at the 20th International Architecture Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia in 2027.
Curator with George Papam, Joëlle Martin and Mike Tully

Upcoming (2026)
Architects of Liberation: Modernism in Western Africa
The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
Researcher

Upcoming (2026)
Yale School of Architecture
Faculty Exhibition 

Yale Architecture Gallery
Curatorial Assistant

Upcoming (2026)
Dien-Dien: To Feel the Other and Weave a Territory
a83
Curator

2024
Crafting Modernity: Design in Latin America, 1940–1980
The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
Researcher

2023
Surfacing — The Civilised Agroecological Forests of Amazonia
Venice Architecture Biennale 2023
The Laboratory of the Future
Researcher

2022
SOS Brutalism
Yale Architecture Gallery
Curatorial Assistant






Brunno Douat is an architect, curator, and researche based in Mexico City. Through design, archival research and sustained collaborations with communities in Brazil and the Ecuadorian Amazon his work traces the silent yet cunning ways in which ancestral forms of life and identity both negotiate with and inscribe themselves within the planetary material flows of modernity—giving rise to spaces of negotiation, recognition and endurance.

CV

Projects

brunno@brunnodouat.com

Crafting Modernity
Design in Latin America, 1940–1980 


Mar 8–Nov 10, 2024
MoMA - The Museum of Modern Art 

Curators: Ana Elena Mallet and Amanda Forment

Collaborated as a researcher on exhibition multimedia components and the accompanying publication.

 From the catalogue:

“There is design in everything,” wrote Clara Porset, the innovative Cuban-Mexican designer. She believed that craft and industry could inspire each other, forging an alternative path for modern design. Not all of Porset’s colleagues agreed with her conviction. This exhibition presents these sometimes conflicting visions of modernity proposed by designers of home environments in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and Venezuela between 1940 and 1980. For some, design was an evolution of local and Indigenous craft traditions, leading to an approach that combined centuries-old artisanal techniques with machine-based methods. For others, design responded to market conditions and local tastes, and was based on available technologies and industrial processes. In this exhibition, objects including furniture, appliances, posters, textiles, and ceramics, as well as a selection of photographs and paintings, will explore these tensions.

The home became a site of experimentation for modern living during a period marked by dramatic political, economic, and social changes, which had broad repercussions for Latin American visual culture. For nearly half a century, the design of the domestic environment embodied ideas of national identity, models of production, and modern ways of living. The home also offered opportunities for a dialogue between art, architecture, and design. Highlights of the exhibition include Clara Porset’s Butaque chair; Lina Bo Bardi’s Bowl chair; Antonio Bonet, Juan Kurchan, and Jorge Ferrari Hardoy’s B.K.F. Chair; and Roberto Matta’s Malitte Lounge Furniture.

Images: The Museum of Modern Art

Spring 2024