Mary Y. Yang
Mary Y. Yang is a designer and educator based in Boston, MA. She is the founder of Open Rehearsal, a design studio that collaborates with cultural and educational clients on research and projects spanning brand identities, exhibition graphics, book design, environmental graphics, and editorial design. Her work has been recognized by Communication Arts and featured in AIGA, PRINT Magazine, Society of Typographic Arts, Design360°, and Hyperallergic. She has been named as one of Graphic Design USA’s 2026 People to Watch.
       Yang is an Assistant Professor at Boston University, where she teaches in both the undergraduate and graduate Graphic Design programs. Her research and pedagogical approach examine how language can be used as a tool for multilingual exchange, co-building history, embodied learning, and cultivating spaces for collective knowledge. She is currently the 2025–2026 Artist-Writer-in-Residence at Johns Hopkins University’s University Writing Program.
In addition to her role as an educator, Yang is the co-founder of Radical Characters, an educational and curatorial platform that researches and explores graphic design, typography, and culture through Hanzi (Chinese characters).  
        Yang holds an MFA in Graphic Design from the Rhode Island School of Design and a BFA in Communication Design from Washington University in St. Louis, Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts. She has taught at the Rhode Island School of Design and lectured at the University of Washington. Previously, she has worked on the graphic and brand design team at Victoria’s Secret PINK (NYC), the University of Washington Press
(Seattle, WA) and Studio Blue (Chicago, IL).







    Victoria’s Secret PINK
    Seasonal graphics, patterns, and brand strategy for product sets and packaging.



    Victoria’s Secret PINK
    Limited Release series brand identity system

    Lead graphic designer for PINK’s Sport identity system. The mark, signaling PINK’s higher price point collection, combines the PINK logo with the heritage dot pattern overlaying a perforated, sport mesh print. 1, 2 and 3-color marks applied as 1 or 2 hits on apparel and product. Color blocking is an option for introducing a pop of color on non-black backgrounds.

    Designed under direction of Matt Sohl, Stefan Pearson, and Deena Suh.
    © 2026 Mary Y. Yang