Monthly Archive for December, 2011

Derrida of the Digital Age

Friedrich Kittler has been described by some as the Derrida of the Digital Age – the first philosopher to truly explore and understand our emergent relationship with digital technology. Friedrich Kittlers computer wars is a podcast on the Guardian website which explores this legacy.

Another writer on the ‘digital’ who might be worth looking into is Vilém Flusser, who wrote about networks, but also photography and the ‘technical image’.

Thanks to Gordon Hush for the initial link.

Trading Futures

“In the United States, student debt has outstripped credit card debt, nervously edging toward the one trillion dollar mark and tracked by escalating commentary, protest and defaults.” say Mute magazine. (More here.)

The article above is very worth reading and thinking about, and promise I’ll attempt one less-gloomy post before Christmas. Speaking of which, anyone got any pictures of QuizCom 2011 they’d care to send in?

Studio Surfing

Open Studio Club is a nice idea, a bit like couch-surfing for designers.

Present Ideas

This BBC Imagine programme - Books – The Last Chapter? – is available to view until Wed, 28 Dec (at 12:39 to be ultra precise about it). Highly recommended as an overview of a pertinent topic which is also covered here (Form of the Book Book) and here (The Unbound Book), and the subject of this book and this book which were recommended to me by Edwin. And also relates, if you’re really really interested, to the ramblings of an armchair enthusiast.

And as it’s nearly Christmas, if you’re looking for books to spend book tokens on, a quick reminder that the book of the week archive is here, for perusal.

He’s comin’ to town!

Inner child at the ready…

This Thursday the big man in red will be visiting Skypark.  Word is WTMS will play host to his grotto from morning to mid-afternoon so he can visit all the good boys and girls based in Skypark.  Plus, as if that wasn’t good enough, he’s going to be doing it all for a good cause.

I for one will be going down to sit on his knee and make sure he get’s my Christmas wish delivered face to face.

Last Minute

We are running a pop up shop in the Skypark Refectory this Thursday selling various things which have yet to be made, loosely based around a theme of 20.

There will also be a raffle for one of Edwin’s ’1 gram of black ink posters’ with all the proceeds going to a yet-to-be-confirmed charity.

Pretty vague, but come along and see our plight/final outcome.

Grafik Details

Rick Poyner brings us news that ‘another design voice falls silent’, with Grafik magazine closing again, and in the process highlighting the precarious nature of design publishing (at a particular scale) at present. His article does however also look at the more optimistic influx of a range of new design criticism courses, and while the outlets and platforms may be changing, the critical thinking is still very much in evidence.

Illustration by ok interrupt from Grafik no. 193, 2011

Design, Democracy and Fairness

Vis Com People Sarah Fishlock (image above) and James Bettney are part of the Design and Democracy Exhibition which is currently running at the Scottish Parliament, and well worth visiting if you can.

In other exhibition news, David Kerr, fellow vis com person, is exhibiting his Tesco University work (see below) in this exhibition at the RCA, inspired by this lecture from the University of Strategic Optimism.

The 2012 Typographic Games

I’m sorry but yes this is another Olympic poster competition… you know, just to add to the raft of other Olympic posters that already exist.

Nice Conqueror paper though and the chance to be in CR…

May as well enter no? Its not like the Olympics come around every 4 years!

2012 Conqueror Typographic Games from Arjowiggins Creative Papers on Vimeo.

Read more here on the Font Feed blog…

On your marks… (sorry)

Cover Looks (Strangely Familiar)

The latest print incarnation of the Serving Library is out.

Colour Deaf

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Vis Com person Lu Sisi collaborates on Colour Deaf, a forthcoming exhibition and residency at the Telfer Gallery. The gallery is run by other vis com person, Natalia Palombo.

Robinson in Ruins

A trailer for Patrick Kiellar’s new film Robinson in Ruins can be viewed online here. There is also an interesting discussion about the film and the ideas it puts forward to be found on the BFI website here. To watch one of Kiellar’s other new films check an earlier post.

Martin Boyce and the Design Research Unit, (unbeknown to him).

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“The machine is accepted as the essentially modern vehicle of form. Our designs will therefore be essentially designs for mass production, but at the same time we hope to rescue mass production from the ugliness and aesthetic emptiness which has so far characterized the greater part of its output”. —Design Research Unit, 1943

Another post-talk train ride, another blog write up. Again, seizing on the time allowed by this journey, I’m going to try to condense an interesting talk from Martin Boyce, and an interesting peruse around the Design Research Unit exhibition, currently at the Cooper Gallery in Dundee, into a succinct and coherent blog post.

The talk for me raised some pertinent issues which were hinted at in an earlier post covering an interview with Metahaven, where the politics of aesthetics raised their head, and the point was made about how the politics of a design piece can fade over time, (or at least not be directly replicated in a different place and time). Boyce’s work heavily references, and in some cases perhaps directly appropriates, design forms of various types. And he talked eloquently about about how by processing and representing these forms in a contemporary art context, their meaning is changed, “distorted by the process of recollection”.

While it might be possible to question this appropriation of accepted ‘well’ designed objects – is it primarily for their forms and aesthetic value? – he pre-empted this by talking of his lack of ‘academic’ insight into his work, and interest in “wild knowledge”. He talked about following his eye and instinct, and this reminded me of an idea of Brian Eno‘s, where he talked about the “intellect catching up with the instinct”. I think there’s probably a studio project in this, and the same could be said for his approach to his typographic pieces. It was interesting to hear how these pieces came into being and how they then went out into the world, with seemingly little reference to typographic history or conventions which we perhaps get a little fixated by.

The Design Research Unit exhibition which this talk ran alongside was a concise and functional display of some of the projects undertaken by that design organisation between 1942 and 1972. Again, the key thing it raised for me was that the politics of the time, while implicit in the work, often get overlooked by designers who seem fixated with this orderly way of working in terms of stewarding design and identity today. It’s difficult to put my finger on, but I’m fascinated by why the template laid down by this early move into corporate compliance is so resilient. Maybe it connects to ideas about why a particular way of looking at design, productivity and manufacturing, (and I guess by all this we mean the free market economy in its many facets), achieved such traction in the post-war years. Definitely a subject for further thinking, and a very good exhibition, well worth a visit.

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N.b. Apologies for the use of ‘Boyce’ during this post. ‘Martin’ seems overly familiar, while ‘Boyce’ sounds a bit pompous. Rock and a hard place.

In before Neil

This opens today and looks well good


(Here
also)