dymaxion map

Play The World Peace Game on 3/28/26

Join us on Saturday, March 28th at 10 AM us under the dome for Buckminster Fuller's World Peace Game, a data driven simulation played out upon Fuller's enormous Dymaxion Map.

This session takes place in two parts: 10:00 am – Noon and 1:00pm – 3:30 pm with a one hour lunch break from noon to 1:00. While a professor at SIU, Fuller conceived the World Peace Game to be played out on an enormous version of his, 1946 patented, Dymaxion Map.

Participants will stand on a 27ft by 12ft version of Fuller’s world map representing our global population distribution across the continents. They will be assigned natural and technological resources corresponding to the populations they represent and tasked with figuring out ways to work together across the planet to avert conflict.

The game is intended to model solutions to realize Fuller’s goal “to make the world work for 100% of humanity in the shortest possible time through spontaneous cooperation without ecological offense or the disadvantage of anyone.”

The game aims to shift mindsets from a fragmented, short-term, competitive approach to a holistic, long-term, collaborative one, equipping individuals with the knowledge and motivation to build a more just and sustainable world.

"A New Language" Exhibition Artist Talk

Join Benjamin Lowder in the Fuller Dome Gallery for an artist talk on 11/21/25 at 7:00 PM

Buckminster Fuller Benjamin Lowder Dymaxion Map Geodesic Dome Artwork

“A New Language” art exhibition by Benjamin Lowder in the Fuller Dome Gallery

“A New Language” launched on 10/24/25 with an evening of poetry, song, sacred story and visual art in the Fuller Dome with Rabbis Susan Talve and James Goodman. Accompanying the words and music was a visual art exhibition in the Fuller Dome Gallery by Benjamin Lowder featuring geometric assemblages built from reclaimed wood and vintage metal signage.

Lowder’s current series of work is titled, “Myth, Math & Magic.” This series is comprised of two- and three-dimensional totems constructed of reclaimed lumber and vintage metal signage. The advertising tropes of the vintage signs are deconstructed and reassembled into sacred geometric patterns that break the magic spell cast by the advertising’s original letterforms. These artifacts are recast to transmute feelings of nostalgia for an unsustainable past while drawing forward ancient wisdom to support an abundant future.