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ED AN 20
M
54. The new public sphere and the design field
Rodolfo Capeto
104 Graphic design education and the
challenge of social transformation
Victor Margolin
58. The little shark who wanted to become
a designer: a fable on design education
Halim Choueiry
108. The grand cohesion: using VisComm
design to hold it all together
JP Odoch Pido
62. What role will technology play in the
future of design education?
Katia Colucci
112. Communities of practice
Sharon Helmer Poggenpohl
76. Input for updating the Icograda Design
Education Manifesto
Hugh Dubberly
30. French Guy Schockaert and Julie Lay
36. Russian Alexandra Sankova
and Anna Kulachek
42. Spanish Santiago Pujol
and Daylin Valladolid Pérez
82. An education manifesto for Icograda
Steven Heller and Lita Talarico
86. Icograda Design Education Manifesto
Jamer Hunt
90. The change we seek: an African perspective
Jacques Lange
96. Design Education Manifesto —
The view from Afrika
Saki Mafundikwa
124. The future of design education —
Graphic design and critical practices:
informing curricula
Teal Triggs
128. Revisiting the Icograda Design
Education Manifesto
Kirti Trivedi
132. Respectful design: a proposed
journey of design education
Elizabeth (Dori) Tunstall
155. Participant list
156. Image gallery
136. Design for tomorrow?
Fedja Vukic
140. Design education manifesto
Wang Min
MANIFESTO 2000
BOOK
48. This book is an arrow
120. Critical reflections on a manifesto
David Sless
JINAN MANIFESTO 2011 WORKSHOP
MANIFESTO 2011
24. English Audrey G. Bennett
and Andrew Rarig
ESSAYS
18. Simplified Chinese Wang Min
and Song Hao
72. Relevance in a complex world —
Icograda Design Education Manifesto
Meredith Davis
ESSAYS
12. Arabic Halim Choueiry and Nelly Baz
116. Positioning communication design
Maria Rogal
TABLE OF CONTENTS
68. Where the borders are
Liz Danzico
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
8. Icograda Design Education
Manifesto 2011
146. Contributors biographies
98. Design education of the future
Dave Malouf
50. Reflections on a manifesto
for design education 2011
Gui Bonsiepe
7. Change
Audrey G. Bennett
144. Contributors map
CONTRIBUTORS BIOGRAPHIES
5. An essential chronology of the
Design Education Manifesto 2011
Omar Vulpinari
CONTRIBUTORS MAP
INTRODUCTIONS
4. Our commitment to design
education and research
Russell Kennedy
158. Icograda Design Education
Manifesto Seoul 2000
Our commitment to design education
and research
Russell Kennedy
Icograda President 2009-2011
At the first meeting of the 2009-2011 term
in Beijing, China, the newly elected Icograda
Executive Board unanimously agreed to
revisit the Icograda Design Education
Manifesto to mark the document's 10-year
anniversary. The original manifesto is a
key legacy of Oullim, the 2000 Icograda
Millennium Congress in Seoul, Korea.
The workshops established innovative
objectives for the manifesto, incorporating
both Eastern and Western reflections on
design education. The Jinan workshop
While crafting the Icograda Design Education
Manifesto update, it became very clear that
the design profession and education have
changed dramatically since Oullim.
Rapid advances in technology facilitated
the evolution of graphic design into
communication design. Interdisciplinary
collaboration has gained momentum over
the last decade, as has the interface between
design and other areas of study, including
information technology, science, business
and engineering. Postgraduate enrolment
and research expectations for academics
have increased and specialisations in design
management, design thinking and design
entrepreneurship emerged.
The new Icograda Design Education
Manifesto, and its supporting essays,
recognise the changing landscape and
cultural sensibilities of design education.
It addresses trends and identifies goals
that can be used to shape a bright future for
design and those who carry a commitment
to design education.
On behalf of the Icograda Executive Board,
I would like to thank Omar Vulpinari for his
outstanding project leadership, his co-chair
Audrey G. Bennett, Past Presidents Don
Chang and Guy Schockaert and Professor
Pan Lusheng, President of Shandong
University of Art and Design for hosting
the Icograda Design Education Manifesto
10-year anniversary celebrations in
Jinan. Professor Ahn Sang-Soo shared
his wisdom throughout this process. Our
essay contributors, who have served as a
steering committee for the project, offered
diverse expertise and the teams who
translated the Manifesto into the six official
languages of the United Nations made this
vision accessible to a broad audience. The
group was supported by Project Manager,
We regard the Icograda Design Education
Manifesto as a vital document that defines
Icograda’s position on design and our
commitment to education. It is a cornerstone
project of the Icograda Education Network
(IEN), which also produces Iridescent:
Icograda Journal of Design Research.
Icograda believes that through this
document we have created the framework
for a solid foundation for design education,
which will benefit current educators and
students and influence their future progress
and practice.
An essential chronology of
the Design Education Manifesto 2011
Omar Vulpinari
Icograda Vice President 2009-2011
Project leader and Co-chair
Icograda Design Education Manifesto 2011
24-27 October 2000, Seoul,
Oullim Millenium Congress
The first Icograda Design Education
Manifesto is presented. The project is led
by Icograda Vice President Ahn Sang-Soo
with Co-chair Sharon Helmer Poggenpohl
and developed in collaboration with an
international group of designers.
The participants represent a geographically,
politically, economically, culturally and
socially diverse cross section of the design
education community, including individuals
from Brazil, China, Germany, India, South
Korea, the Netherlands, South Africa and
the United States.
26 October 2009, Beijing,
Xin: Icograda World Design Congress
Icograda President Russell Kennedy
proposes to the newly elected Icograda
Board of Directors that, ten years later, the
Icograda Design Education Manifesto
be updated to mark its anniversary.
The board unanimously agrees with his
recommendation. Prof. Ahn Sang-Soo supports
the aspiration of an update to the original
document. Vice President Omar Vulpinari
accepts President Russell Kennedy’s invitation
to lead the development of the new edition.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
The anniversary of the original manifesto
was marked in November 2010 with a
four-day event in Jinan, China, hosted by
Shandong University of Art and Design. In
addition to the Manifesto co-chairs, Icograda
was represented by Vice President Xiao
Yong and Past President Guy Schockaert
(1997-1999). Leading design educators,
students and industry representatives
came from around the world to participate
in workshops, exhibitions and a two-day
conference, exploring the theme, “Future
of Design Education,” from the perspective
of educators and industry leaders.
Diala Lada and Managing Director, Brenda
Sanderson at the Icograda Secretariat.
We are grateful for the sponsorship provided
by Fabrica, Favini and Grafiche Tintoretto,
whose support have made the production
of this book possible.
INTRODUCTIONS
This highly significant publication is
the result of an extensive two-year
process of review, research, consultation
and production. Icograda Vice President
Omar Vulpinari and Associate Professor
Audrey G. Bennett (Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute in New York) co-chaired the
second iteration of the Icograda Design
Education Manifesto. The project was
coordinated by the Icograda Secretariat
under Omar’s project leadership. Professor
Ahn Sang-Soo (Hongik University, Seoul), who
chaired the inaugural manifesto, followed the
process and supported our aspirations.
outcomes were distilled into an essay,
which was subsequently distributed to
international leaders and thinkers in the
field of design education.
15 December 2009
The Icograda Board edits a shared outline
that identifies the communication design
community’s major educational concerns
and desired advancements. The draft sets
the general guidelines for the development
process of defining, first the official draft
and ultimately the final 2011 Manifesto.
4
The document starts from the understanding
that the world was once Atlantic centred and
5
influenced predominantly by Western
thinking, while more and more we see a
shift in focus as designers around the world
begin to adopt Eastern ideologies. Staying
true to the original manifesto, the board
acknowledges that East and West have
different perspectives on design education,
and while these viewpoints may not entirely
coincide, design education can advance
through both approaches.
1-4 November 2010, Jinan, Shandong
University of Art and Design, Icograda Design
Education Manifesto 10-year Anniversary
Celebration
In the native city of Confucius, a workshop
Audrey G. Bennett
Co-chair Icograda Design Education
Manifesto 2011
If asked to summarise the experience
of co-chairing the 2011 Icograda Design
Education Manifesto update in one word,
I would choose the word change. What kind
of change? Design change. The disciplinary
and social upheaval of the past decade
warranted an updating of the 2000 manifesto,
and the new manifesto promises transformation.
The word change also illuminates the precise
aim of a manifesto — to engender agency
in the reader. For instance, design changes
the way we communicate, the way we
read and the way we live.
Design changes _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.
16 December 2010
After 60 edits, Bennett and Vulpinari, acting
as Co-chairs, establish the official draft
version of the 2011 Manifesto.
18 January 2011
To open the process to multiple disciplinary
and cultural perspectives, 23 international
design education experts are asked to
review the draft Manifesto and are invited to
contribute to the project by writing essays
on the future of design education. The
information and insights of these essays
serve to expand, integrate and develop the
draft into the final Manifesto.
2 June 2011
After careful consideration of the concerns
and foresights expressed by the essay
writers, the Co-chairs complete the final
2011 Manifesto. It is approved in full by the
Icograda Board of Directors.
13 June 2011
Six teams of design mentors and students
are invited to produce unique layouts of the
Manifesto in their own languages (the six
official UN languages) for the opening section
of the Manifesto’s printed publication. This
initiative reflects the educational nature of
the document.
24-26 October 2011, Taipei, IDA Congress
The Icograda Design Education Manifesto 2011
is presented in 6 languages accompanied
by 22 expert essays in a printed publication.
6
As we looked back, we assessed changes
that have impacted the way that we learn,
teach and practise communication design.
On a global scale, we discovered changes
resulting from technological development
and innovation, economic prosperity in
some regions and recession in others,
environmental challenges and social
networking. Moving forward, the future
of communication design — its pedagogy
and practice — depends on our ability to
transform in order to overcome obstacles.
As a discipline we must invent new strategies
and find resources that reflect inclusivity,
ethics and sustainability, and to nurture
growth and cross-cultural harmony. With
the insight gained from analysing past
occurrences and future expectations,
we made substantial changes to the 2000
Icograda Design Education Manifesto.
We wrestled with the keywords intent
on finding the precise terms to instill
understanding and motivate appropriate
action in the reader. With contributors from
around the world, a transnational problem
emerged that we solved with a face-to-face
workshop in Jinan, China; a Skype conference
call; and tech-mediated, collaborative
writing sessions. Thus, on a personal level,
we experienced cultural, geographical
and technical changes. Our collaboration
epitomises the marriage of technology and
creative production that has occurred over
the past decade and will become even
more prevalent, and perhaps more refined,
in the future as new communication
technologies emerge and connect one
to many for creative action.
I am honoured to have been a part of the
writing of a text that elevates the designer
to an agent of change — culturally, socially,
politically, economically and environmentally.
With confidence and zeal we can now claim
a position alongside politicians, engineers,
scientists, entrepreneurs and economists
who make crucial, potentially life-altering,
decisions. The Icograda Design Education
Manifesto 2011 update and accompanying
essays represent the unified message of a
collective that aims to instill new values and
methods, and to motivate responsible action
in the classroom and beyond. Yet, what the
manifesto aspires to change and what it will
enable over the next decade remains to be
seen. What politics of inclusion will emerge
as designers embrace collaboration with
users and other disciplinary stakeholders?
Will we continue to maintain professional
autonomy? How will designers fare in a
research arena that includes quantitative
methods? How will existing practitioners
attain training in research approaches
and ethical standards? How will the
communication design process change to
accommodate emerging intersensory and
multimodal contexts, environmental values
and accountability?
What form will our future outcomes take?
How will they function?
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
10 February 2010
Ahn Sang-Soo representing the East and
Audrey G. Bennett representing the West,
accept to present perspectives and lead
discussions at the 10-year anniversary
celebration in Jinan, China.
Change
INTRODUCTIONS
Considering the changes in design education
since 2000, several themes emerge as
significant areas for exploration:
• technology: graphic design and multimedia
merging to become communication design
results in new platforms that continue
to change how we create and consume
information
• inter-disciplinarity: new forms of
collaboration and the overlapping of
disciplines within design
• cross-disciplinarity: design collaborating
with other areas of study including science,
medicine, engineering and information
technology
• design research: communication design
seeming to struggle the most to define itself
in this field
• entrepreneurship: design as a stimulus
for innovation and invention (commercial,
cultural, social and environmental)
• design management/design thinking:
design education combining with business
management offers an environment for
design thinking to mature and be understood
facilitated by Ahn Sang-Soo, Audrey G. Bennett
and Omar Vulpinari sets the foundation of the
new Manifesto. The participants are design
professionals, educators, researchers and
students from around the world interested
in exploring the future of communication
design education.
7
2. possesses the intellectual sensibility and skill, nurtured through
professional experience and educational training, to create designs or images
for reproduction by any means of visual communication.
Icograda Design Education Manifesto 2011
Communication design 01
Communication design is an intellectual, creative, strategic, managerial, and
technical activity. It essentially involves the production of visual solutions to
communication problems.
Communication design has become more and more a profession that
integrates the idioms and approaches of other disciplines into a multidimensional and hybrid visual competence.
Today the boundaries between design disciplines are more fluid, thanks
to the sharing of advanced digital tools and knowledge. As the multiplayer
working process assumes a higher complexity, communication designers
need to redefine their role and purpose for an expanded media context
dominated by a many to many conversation mode.
4. creates meaning for a community of diverse clients and users, not only
interpreting their interests but offering conservative and innovative solutions
as culturally, ethically and professionally appropriate.
5. identifies and frames problems, and solves them collaboratively exploring
possibilities through critical thinking, creativity, experimentation and evaluation.
6. conceptualises, articulates, and transmits identity, messages, ideas
and values into new, updated or mashup products, systems, services and
experiences.
9. advocates bottom-up (through DIY 02 and DIWO 03 facilitation and technology
appropriation) or top-down (through policy) for the betterment of humanity
and the environment.
10. adapts to technological change with ease and embraces the challenge
of learning and mastering new ways to visualise and communicate concepts
across different media and new smart-materials.
11. is a ‘designer’ with a disciplinary focus and brings that expertise to
interdisciplinary collaborations with anthropologists, software programmers,
scientists, engineers, architects and other experts.
The future of design education
Design education is evolving from one to many instruction into many to many.
As a result, it should:
The designer as professional and global citizen
A communication designer:
1. practises identity design; editorial and book design; typography;
information design; advertising; illustration; photography; calligraphy;
signage and pictogram systems; packaging; animation design; broadcast
graphics and film titles; product, web and game interface design; interaction,
environmental and exhibition graphics; data visualisation; and any other
activity of online and offline shaping of visual form.
8. applies ethics to avoid harm and takes into account the consequences of
design action on humanity (individuals and communities) and the environment.
ICOGRADA DESIGN
DESIGN EDUCATION
EDUCATION MANIFESTO
MANIFESTO 2011
2011
ICOGRADA
7. uses an inclusive approach that emphasises difference; respects human,
environmental, and cultural diversity; and, strives to achieve common ground.
MANIFESTO 2011
Change: opportunities and challenges
New opportunities and challenges confront the designer. Social, cultural,
technological, environmental, and economical changes over the last decade
have profoundly affected communication design education and practice.
As a result, the variety and complexity of design issues have increased.
Emerging technologies (e.g. augmented reality, the smartphone, and
social media) have broadened the way that designers communicate to
include intersensory expressions—visual, aural, somatosensory, gustatory
and/or olfactory components. Multi-platform content delivery is now the norm.
Direct, open, and instantaneous dialogue with individual end users
(coupled with economic recession in many countries) has created opportunities
for authorship and invention. Copyright, patent, and creative commons are
now all a part of the communication designer’s intellectual property lexicon.
Designers can virtually serve and interact with the world. Rapid
advancements in communication and information technologies have
globalised the professional context of design and bridged cultural divides
with social networks in spite of perennial language barriers.
There is a dire need for a more advanced ecological balance between
human beings and their natural environments. This environmental challenge
has brought about the need for more sustainable design materials, methods,
and outcomes.
3. contributes to shaping life and the visual landscape of commerce and
culture towards a peaceful balance.
1. instill a compassionate and critical mentality and nurture a self-reflective
attitude and ability to adapt and evolve through innovative learning tools and
methods for communication and collaboration.
8
2. include the following dimensions: image, text, context, space, movement,
time, sound and interaction.
9
3. relay models for cross-cultural and transdisciplinary communication
and for global-market collaboration with industry, users, other design
disciplines and stakeholders.
4. integrate theory, history, criticism, research, and management to increase
the production of design knowledge in order to enhance innovation and
efficacy in respect of environmental and human factors.
5. teach quantitative and qualitative research methods (e.g. ethnography)
to frame and solve problems.
6. inspire professional practice with findings that contribute new knowledge
to interdisciplinary discourse.
MANIFESTO 2011
8. foster in students of all levels, including pre-college, intellectual curiosity
and a commitment to life-long learning. Through outreach programs, design
education should diversify the profession and create opportunities for underrepresented voices to be heard. It should also provide new continued learning
programs for professionals that are ever more in need of skill updating and
research methods training.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
7. prepare students for technological, environmental, cultural, social and
economical change. To this end, it should evolve from teacher-generated
projects to more participatory problem definition, enabling students to
democratically address their own concerns and ways of learning with
student-initiated projects.
9. imbue in students a sense of personal responsibility for the environmental
and social impact of their practice.
Then, the role of a design educator shifts from that of knowledge provider
to that of a mediator who inspires and facilitates orientation for a more
substantial practice.
In the following pages the Icograda
Design Education Manifesto 2011
is presented in the six official UN
languages of Arabic, Chinese, English,
French, Russian and Spanish.
The power to think the future near and far should be an integral part of design
education and practice through research. A new conception of design aims to
rebalance nature, humanity, and technology, and to harmonise east and west,
north and south, as well as past, present and future into a dynamic equilibrium.
Each language version has been
translated and designed by a
different teacher-student team
in alignment with the educational
nature of the Manifesto.
In legacy with the first edition of the Manifesto presented in Seoul in 2000,
we continue in respect of the essence of Oullim—the great harmony.
01. The term ‘graphic design’ has evolved into a
plural state of being with many names—graphic
communication, visual communication, visual
design, communication design. The term
identified as most appropriate by the Icograda
General Assembly 2007 in La Habana
is ‘communication design’.
02. Design-it-yourself
03. Design-it-with-others
Arabic Halim Choueiry and Nelly Baz
Simplified Chinese Wang Min
and Song Hao
English Audrey G. Bennett
and Andrew Rarig
French Guy Schockaert and Julie Lay
Russian Alexandra Sankova
and Anna Kulachek
Spanish Santiago Pujol and Daylin
Valladolid Pérez
10
11
التصميم التواصلي
1
ايكوغرادا 2011
التصميم التواصلــي هو نشــــاط فكـــري ،إبداعـــي ،استراتيجـــي،
إداري وتقنـي ،يقوم علــى إيجاد حلول بصرية لعقبــات التواصــل.
ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011
اليوم ،أصبحت الحدود بين اأختصاصات التصميمية لينة ،بحيث أن
العلوم واأدوات الرقمية المتطورة تجمع بينها .وأن منهج العمل
المتعدد ااختصاصات يفرض درجة أعلى من التعقيد ،يجد المصممون
التواصليون أنفسهم بحاجة إلى إعادة تعريف دورهم وهدفهم أمام
بخبر ي َُنقل من مجموعة
وسائل ااعام التي تتبع صيغة محادثة تتميز ٍ
متح ّدثين الى مجموعة َ
مخاطبين.
ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
تح ّول التصميم التواصلي الى مهنة تجمع بين مصطلحات ااختصاصات
اأخرى ونهوجها فتو ّحدها بجدارة بصرية متعددة اأبعاد والمقاربات.
ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011
designed by nelly baz and halim choueiry
-1تطور فن «التصميم الجرافيكي» ليجمع بين تسميات عدّة – التواصل الجرافيكي ،التواصل
المرئي ،التصميم المرئي ،والتصميم التواصلي.وحدد المصطلح اأنسب من قبل الجمعية العامة في
Icogradaعام 2007في هافانا ليكون «التصميم التواصلي».
13
HALIM CHOUEIRY AND NELLY BAZ - BEIRUT
ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011
ايكوغرادا 2011
كوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011
التغيير
الفرص والتحديات
ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا
المصمم التواصلي
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
وتحديات جديدة .فالتغيرات ااجتماعية،
يواجه المصمم فرص ًا
ٍ
وقد أتاحت التكنولوجيات الناشئة )مثل الحقيقة المدمجة ،الهاتف الذكي ،ووسائل اإعام
الثقافية ،التكنولوجية ،البيئية وااقتصادية التي شهدها العقد
ااجتماعية) للمصممين أساليب عديدة للتواصل ،شاملة التعابير الحسية المتكاملة – البصرية ،السمعية،
الماضي أحدثت تأثير ًا في تعليم التصميم التواصلي وممارسته،
الحسية الجسدية ،الذوقية و /أو الشمية .فأصبحت القاعدة تنص على توصيل المحتوى من منصة
اأمر الذي أدى الـــــى تنـــــــــوع وتعقد المســــــائل التصميمية.
ذات برامج عديدة .وقد اتاح الحوار المفتوح المباشر والسريع مع اأفراد المستخدمين )باأضافة الى
الركود ااقتصادي في الباد) ب ُفرص التأليف وااختراع .فأصبحت حقوق التأليف وبراءات
ااختراع جزء من معجم المصمم التواصلي وملكيته الفكرية.
وقد اتاح الحوار المفتوح المباشر والسريع مع اأفراد
يستطيع المصممون أن يخدموا ويتفاعلوا مع العالم عملي ًا .فقد سيطر التقدم السريع لاتصاات
المستخدمين )باأضافة الى الركود ااقتصادي في الباد)
وتكنولوجيا المعلومات على سياق التصميم المهني وسد الفجوات الثقافية ضمن الشبكات ااجتماعية
ب ُفرص التأليف وااختراع .فأصبحت حقوق التأليف وبراءات
رغم الحواجز اللغوية .من الضروري ايجاد توازن بيئي متطور بين البشر وبيئتهم الطبيعية بحيث أن
ااختراع جزء من معجم المصمم التواصلــــي وملكيته الفكـــــرية.
هذا التحدي البيئي يتطلب تصميم ًا ذا مواد واساليب ونتائج أكثر استدامة.
يمتلك الحس الفكري والمهارة التي ط ّورتها التجربة المهنية والتدريب التعليمي ،وذلك لوضع تصاميم أو صور
تستخدمها وسائل التواصل المرئي.
يساهم في تنظيم الحياة والمشهد البصري التجاري والثقافي لتحقيق توازن سلمي.
يجد معنى لمجتمع متنوع بمستخدميه ،وذلك بتفهم اهتماماتهم وتقديم حلول مبتكرة ،محافظة ومائمة
ثقافيا وأخاقيا ومهنيا.
يحدد المسائل ،يصيغها ،ويجد لها حلو ًا مشتركة متبع ًا تفكير ًا نقدي ًا ابتكاري ًا قائم ًا على التجربة والتقييم.
يصور ،يعبر ،وينقل الشعار والرسائل ،واأفكار والقيم متبع ًا منتجات وأنظمة وخدمات وتجارب جديدة مط ّورة.
يستخدم مقاربة شاملة تب ّين ااختافات ،تحترم التنوع اإنساني والبيئي والثقافي ويسعى جاهد ًا لوضعها
ضمن مفهوم مشترك.
يحترم أخاقيات المهنة لتجنب ااضرار ،يتن ّبه الى نتائج التصميم المؤ ّثرة على البشرية )اأفراد والمجتمعات( ،والبيئة.
يسعى الى تحسين أحوال البشرية والبيئة حسب استراتيجيات معالجة المعلومات )من خال «2»DIY
و « 3»DIWOالتسهيات والتكنولوجيا أو من خال السياسة(.
يواكب التطور التكنولوجي ويغتنم فرص التعلّم واتقان طرق جديدة لتصوير المفاهيم ونقلها عبر وسائل
اإعام المختلفة واادوات الجديدة الذكية.
هو «مصمم» ذو تو ّجه اختصاصي وخبرته تدفعه إلى التعاون المتعدد التخصصات مع علماء اأنثروبولوجيا،
المبرمجين ،العلماء ،المهندسين ،المعماريين وغيرهم من الخبراء.
-2صممه بنفسك
-3صممه مع اآخرين
15
HALIM CHOUEIRY AND NELLY BAZ - BEIRUT
يتقن تصميم الشعــــارات؛ التحرير وتصميم الكتب؛ الطباعـــــــة؛ تصميم المعلومات؛ الدعاية؛ الرسوم
اإيضاحية؛ التصوير الفوتوغرافي؛ الفن الخطي؛ الرسم التخطيطي وتصميم الافتات؛ التعبئة والتغليف؛
تصميم الرسوم المتحركة؛ بث الرسومات وعناوين اأفام؛ تصميم المنتج أو واجهة شبكة اإنترنت أو
واجهة لعبة؛ رسومات تفاعلية أو بيئية أو رسومات معرض؛ تصور البيانات؛ ونشاطات أخرى تتضمن تأليف
صورة مرئية مباشرة أو مستقلة.
دمج النظرية والتاريخ والنقد والبحوث واإدارة لزيادة المعرفة في
التصميم وذلك لتعزيز الحداثة والفعالية في ما يتعلق بالعوامل
البيئية والبشرية.
تعليم طرق البحث الكمي والنوعي )على سبيل المثال ااثنوغرافيا(
لتحديد المشاكل وحلها.
تحفيز المزاولة المهنية من خال النتائج التي تساهم في ادراك جديد
لتواصل اأختصاصات فيما بينها.
تحضير الطاب أمام التغيرات التكنولوجية والبيئية والثقافية وااجتماعية
وااقتصادية .تحقيقا لهذه الغاية ،يجب استبدال طريقة التعليم
حسب المشاريع الجاهزة بأسلوب تعليمي مشترك يدعو الى تحديد
المسائل ،مما يتيح للطاب معالجة اهتماماتهم الخاصة ديمقراطيا
وايجاد طرق تعلم جديدة من خال مشاريع يحضرها الطاب نفسهم.
تعزيز الفضول الفكري واالتزام بمبدأ التعلم الطويل اأمد عند
الطاب في جميع المراحل ابتداء ًا من المرحلة ما قبل الجامعية .وعلى
اسس تعليم التصميم أن تن ّوع آفاق المهنة وخلق فرص لأفراد غير
المم ّثلين ،وذلك من خال برامج التوعية والتثقيف .كما انه يجب توفير
برامج تعليم دائمة جديدة للمحترفين الذين يجدون أنفسهم بحاجة
إلى تحديث مهاراتهم والتدرب على أساليب البحث.
ايكوغرادا 2011
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
تعاقب النماذج لتوضيح التواصل بين الثقافات والتخصصات وللتعاون
مع السوق العالمية والصناعة والمستخدمين ،وتخصصات التصميم
اأخرى وأصحاب المصلحة.
ايكوغرادا 2011
ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011
شمل اأبعاد التالية :الصورة والنص والسياق ،والمجال ،والحركة،
والوقت ،والصوت والتفاعل.
ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011ايكوغرادا 2011
ترسيخ عقلية نقدية وشغوفة واتبـــاع سلوك ذاتي تأملي قادر
علـــى التكيف والتطــــور حسب أدوات التعلم المبتكـــرة أنظمة
التواصل والتعـــاون.
ترسيخ الشعور بالمسؤولية الشخصية لدى الطاب ،خصوص ًا اتجاه
اآثار البيئية وااجتماعية لمهنتهم.
أذن ،يتبدّل دور استاذ التصميم بين تزويد المعرفة و الهام
وتسهيل التوجه نحو مزاولة أكثر جوهرية.
و يجب أن تكون القدرة على التفكير في المستقبل القريب
والبعيد جزءا ا يتجزأ من تعليم التصميم ومزاولته حسب
البحوث .فالمفهوم الجديد للتصميم يهدف إلى إعادة توازن
الطبيعة ،واإنسانية ،والتكنولوجيا ،وانسجام الشرق والغرب،
الشمال والجنوب ،والتوافق بين الماضي والحاضر والمستقبل؛
ّ
كل ذلك في توازن ديناميكي متكامل.
وفاء لوصية الطبعة اأولى من البيان الذي ق ّدم في سيول عام ،2000
ً
نستمر احترام ًا لجوهر - Oullimاانسجام الكبير.
17
HALIM CHOUEIRY AND NELLY BAZ - BEIRUT
يتطور تعليم التصميم من مجموعة تعليمات واحدة إلى
العديد منها ،نتيجة لذلك ،يفرض التعليم:
[注一]
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
年国际平面设计联合会设计教育宣言
2011
传达设计
机遇与挑战
传达设计是一种需要兼备智力创意战略管理能力和技术
的活动其本质就是实施用于解决问题的视觉方案传 达设
计已经渐渐变为一个集成了其他行业的方法与理念并将
之转化为一种多维度的混合型的视觉竞争力的行业今
天由于先进数码工具和知识的普及设计行业的边界正
在变得越来越模糊多成员合作的工作流程呈现更高的
复杂性传达设计师需要重新界定他们的角色和目的以
适应被多对多的对话模式所主宰的扩张了的媒介语境
改变
设计师迎来新的机遇新的挑战在过去十年中社会文化
技术环境经济方面的变化深远地影响了传达设计教
育与实践使设计相关的问题变得更为多样而且复杂
新兴技术 例如增强现实智能手机社交媒体 扩展了设计
视觉
师传达的方式其中包含了多感官的表达方式
的听觉的身体知觉的味觉的嗅觉的成分多平台的内容
交付是现在的标准与个体终端用户进行直接的开放的
即时的对话 在许多国家这也与经济萧条同时发生 为
创作与发明提供了机会版权专利权创作共用
Creative
现在已经是设计师知识产权词典中的一部
Commons
分了设计师可以通过虚拟的手段为这个世界服务与之
互动尽管语言的障碍一直都存在但是信息传达与相关
技术的快速发展令设计专业的语境全球化并通过社会
网络连接了文化之间的鸿沟人类与自然环境之间取得
一种更先进的生态平衡的需求已经极为迫切这就要求
人们在设计材料方法结果方面都必须更具可持续性
WANG MIN AND SONG HAO - BEIJING
19
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
作为专业人士和全球公民的设计师
一个传达设计师
一从事视觉形象设计编辑与书籍设计文字设计信息设计
广告插画设计摄影书法导示与图形标志系统包装动画设
计视频动态图形与电影片头设计产品网络与游戏界面设
计互动设计环境与展览平面设计数据视觉化与其他线上
和线下的视觉形态塑造活动二智慧敏感具有专业技能与
经验接受过良好的教育培训能够以各种视觉传 达手段创
作设计与图像 以供复制三参与对生活的塑造对商业与文
化的视觉景观建设使人们的生活与视觉景观达到更为和
谐的平衡四为一个包含众多种类的客户与用户群体创造
价值在表达他们自身兴趣的同时也提供兼具保 护性和创
新性的解决方案并确保 在文化道德和专业上都是恰当的
五认识并定义问题通过批判性思维创意实验和评估来
协作探求可能性提出解决方案六概念化阐述转化身
份 个
/ 性信息与价值为新的与时代同步的或是聚合的
产品系统服务与经验七使用一种兼容并包的方式强调
差异尊重人环境和文化方面的多样性同时努力达到共
通八遵从设计伦理避免造成危害将设计行为的结果纳
入考虑的范畴包括人文 个体与群体 与环境方面的影
[注二]和
[注三]的 运
响 九 主 张 从 下 而 上 通 过 DIY
DIWO
行方式和采用技术 或从上而下 通过政策 的方式注重
人文关怀改善自然环境十轻松适应技术转变自信面对
因学习掌握新的视觉表达方式所带来的挑战通过不同
的媒介和新的智能材料传达概念十一是一个倾向于某
一学科将这一专业知识应用于联合人类学家软件开发
者科学家工程师建筑师和其他领域专家的多学科协作
WANG MIN AND SONG HAO - BEIJING
21
图形传达
成员
Icograda
自己动手设计
[注二]
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
平面设计 这个术语已经演变为多元的状态
视觉传达 视觉设计 传达设计
年哈瓦那
2007
大会认为最合适的一个描述语是 传达设计
[注一]
设计教育的未来
与他人合作的设计
[注三]
设计教育从一对多的指导发展为多对多的指导这样就
导致了一注入一种为他人考虑的批判研究性的思维方
式培养自省的态度以及通过新型学习工具与手段进行
沟通写作而适应并发展的能力二包括下面几个维度
图像文字语境空间运动时间声音互动三教授行业用
户和其他设计领域及利害关系人之间的全球市场协
作跨文化和跨学科传达的模式四结合理论历史批评
研究与管理来增加设计知识的生产以加强环境与人
两方面因素的创新能力和实现能力五教授数量与质量
分析的方法 例如民族志学 来定义并解决问题六通过
研究发现在跨学科的论述方面贡献新知启迪专业实践
七让学生为了技术环境文化社会以及经济的变化做好
准备以此为目的则应从教师为中心的教学项目转变为
参与型的问题定义方式使学生通过自发项目来民主地
表达他们自身的看法选择他们的学习方式八在各个级
别的学生中包括预备进入大学的学生都注重培育他们
在智力上的好奇心终身学习的志向通过拓展项目设计
教育者应努力让这个专业多样化为缺乏话语的群体提
供言说的机会同时也应为亟需技能更新和研究方法培
训的业内人士提供持续学习的项目九在学生心中注入
一种个人责任感督促他们重视设计实践对环境和社会造
成的影响这样设计教育者的角色就从知识传 授者转变为
一个启发推动可持续性实践的中介者为近忧为长久计的
双重能力应该是设计教育与经过研究的实践的必要组成
部分设计的一个概念旨在平衡自然人文技术东西南北以
及过去现在将来的和谐共存达到一个具有内在活力的
设
平 衡 状 态 延 续 二 〇 〇 〇 年 在 首 尔 第 一 版 的 Icograda
即大和谐的基本精神
计 教 育 宣 言 我 们 继 续 秉 持 Oullim
WANG MIN AND SONG HAO - BEIJING
23
ICOGRADA
DESIGN
EDUCATION
MANIFESTO
MMXI
ICOGRADA
DESIGN
EDUCATION
MANIFESTO
B
Change: Opportunities & Challenges
A
Communication Design1
Communication design is an intellectual, creative,
strategic, managerial, and technical activity. It
essentially involves the production of visual solutions
to communication problems.
Communication design has become more and more a
profession that integrates the idioms and approaches
of other disciplines into a multi-dimensional and hybrid
visual competence.
Today the boundaries between design disciplines are
more fluid, thanks to the sharing of advanced digital
tools and knowledge. As the multiplayer working
process assumes a higher complexity, communication
designers need to redefine their role and purpose for
an expanded media context dominated by a many to
many conversation mode.
Emerging technologies (e.g. augmented reality, the
smartphone, and social media) have broadened the way
that designers communicate to include intersensory
expressions—visual, aural, somatosensory, gustatory
and/or olfactory components. Multi-platform content
delivery is now the norm.
Direct, open, and instantaneous dialogue with individual
end users (coupled with economic recession in many
countries) has created opportunities for authorship and
invention. Copyright, patent, and creative commons
are now all a part of the communication designer’s
intellectual property lexicon.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
AUDREY G. BENNETT AND ANDREW RARIG - TROY
New opportunities and challenges confront the
designer. Social, cultural, technological, environmental,
and economical changes over the last decade have
profoundly affected communication design education
and practice. As a result, the variety and complexity of
design issues have increased.
Designers can virtually serve and interact with the world.
Rapid advancements in communication and information
technologies have globalized the professional context of
design and bridged cultural divides with social networks
in spite of perennial language barriers.
There is a dire need for a more advanced ecological
balance between human beings and their natural
environments. This environmental challenge has brought
about the need for more sustainable design materials,
methods, and outcomes.
1. The term ‘graphic design’ has evolved into a plural state of being with
many names—graphic communication, visual communication, visual design,
communication design. The term identified as most appropriate by the Icograda
General Assembly 2007 in La Habana is ‘communication design.’
25
ICOGRADA
DESIGN
EDUCATION
MANIFESTO
c
The Designer as Professional & Global Citizen
a communication designer:
Practices identity design; editorial and book design; typography; information
design; advertising; illustration; photography; calligraphy; signage and
pictogram systems; packaging; animation design; broadcast graphics and film
titles; product, web and game interface design; interaction, environmental and
exhibition graphics; data visualization; and any other activity of online and
offline shaping of visual form.
6
Conceptualizes, articulates, and transmits identity, messages, ideas and values
into new, updated or mashup products, systems, services and experiences.
7
Uses an inclusive approach that emphasizes difference; respects human,
environmental, and cultural diversity; and, strives to achieve common ground.
2
Possesses the intellectual sensibility and skill, nurtured through professional
experience and educational training, to create designs or images for
reproduction by any means of visual communication.
8
Applies ethics to avoid harm and takes into account the consequences of
design action on humanity (individuals and communities) and the environment.
3
Contributes to shaping life and the visual landscape of commerce and culture
towards a peaceful balance.
9
Advocates bottom-up (through DIY2 and DIWO3 facilitation and technology
appropriation) or top-down (through policy) for the betterment of humanity
and the environment.
4
Creates meaning for a community of diverse clients and users, not only
interpreting their interests but offering conservative and innovative solutions
as culturally, ethically and professionally appropriate.
!0
Adapts to technological change with ease and embraces the challenge of
learning and mastering new ways to visualize and communicate concepts
across different media and new smart-materials.
5
Identifies and frames problems, and solves them collaboratively exploring
possibilities through critical thinking, creativity, experimentation and evaluation.
!1
Is a ‘designer’ with a disciplinary focus and brings that expertise to
interdisciplinary collaborations with anthropologists, software programmers,
scientists, engineers, architects and other experts.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
AUDREY G. BENNETT AND ANDREW RARIG - TROY
1
2. Design-it-yourself
3. Design-it-with-others
27
ICOGRADA
DESIGN
EDUCATION
MANIFESTO
D
The Future of Design Education
design education is evolving from one to many instruction into many
to many. as a result, it should:
Instill a compassionate and critical mentality and nurture a self-reflective attitude
and ability to adapt and evolve through innovative learning tools and methods for
communication and collaboration.
2
Include the following dimensions: image, text, context, space, movement, time,
sound and interaction.
3
Relay models for cross-cultural and transdisciplinary communication and for globalmarket collaboration with industry, users, other design disciplines and stakeholders.
4
Integrate theory, history, criticism, research, and management to increase the
production of design knowledge in order to enhance innovation and efficacy in
respect of environmental and human factors.
5
Teach quantitative and qualitative research methods (e.g. ethnography) to frame
and solve problems.
6
Inspire professional practice with findings that contribute new knowledge to
interdisciplinary discourse.
In legacy with the first edition of the Manifesto presented in Seoul in 2000...
7
Prepare students for technological, environmental, cultural, social and economical
change. To this end, it should evolve from teacher-generated projects to more
participatory problem definition, enabling students to democratically address their
own concerns and ways of learning with student-initiated projects.
8
Foster in students of all levels, including pre-college, intellectual curiosity and a
commitment to life-long learning. Through outreach programs, design education
should diversify the profession and create opportunities for under-represented voices
to be heard. It should also provide new continued learning programs for professionals
that are ever more in need of skill updating and research methods training.
9
Imbue in students a sense of personal responsibility for the environmental and social
impact of their practice.
Then, the role of a design educator shifts from that of knowledge provider to that of a
mediator who inspires and facilitates orientation for a more substantial practice.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
AUDREY G. BENNETT AND ANDREW RARIG - TROY
1
The power to think the future near and far should be an integral part of design
education and practice through research. A new conception of design aims to
rebalance nature, humanity, and technology, and to harmonize east and west,
north and south, as well as past, present and future into a dynamic equilibrium.
we continue in respect of the essence of Oullim—the great harmony.
29
75
6
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pictographiques
; l’emballage
outils
et despartie
méthodes
d’apprentissage
permettant
étudiants
Les technologies
émergentes
(par
exemple:
réalité
7
8
8
2
3
Le terme « design graphique » a évolué de manière plurielle.
Le communication design est une activité intellectuelle, créative,
Beaucoup d’appellations se sont fait jour – communication graphique,
stratégique et technique. Il vise à produire des solutions visuelles
communication visuelle, design visuel, design de communication.
destinées à résoudre des problèmes de communication.
Le terme le mieux approprié – selon l’Assemblée Générale Icograda
qui s’est tenue à La Havane en 2007 – est « communication design ».
Le communication design intègre le vocabulaire et les pratiques
d’autres disciplines. C’est un modèle de compétences visuelles
hybrides à dimensions multiples.
la
l’humanité,
technologie,
à harmoniser
l’est
et
l’ouest,
pratique
déontologie
et prend
enéconomique
considération
et tous les
autres
de
mise en forme de
interculturelle
et domaines
transdisciplinaire,
la
et
un
engagement
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frontières
entre
les la
disciplines
mise
enlacuriosité
forme
sont
aujourd’hui
Le
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et laintellectuelle
récession
présentée
àdes
Séoul
eneffets
2000,
les
design sur lestout
individus,
en
modes
ougrâce
connecté.
et
pour
la direct
collaboration
dans
un partage
marché
envers
un
au long de la
plus
perméables,
au
outils
numériques
ont redéini
les conditions
de paternité
créative
etduapprentissage
d’invention.
Les frontières entre les disciplines de mise en forme sont aujourd’hui
plus perméables, grâce au partage des outils numériques
le
nord
etavec
le sud,
de même
que
leque
passé,
présent
et ledeetfutur
les
l’environnement.
possède
laconnaissances.
sensibilité
intellectuelle
lesla
compétences
global
lesla
industries,
utilisateurs,
vie.communautés
Aude
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programmes
d’assistance,
et
des
Àlesetet
mesure
leur
contexte
médiatique
s’élargit
Le
copyright,
patente
gestion
desledroits
propriété
intellectuelle
nous
poursuivons
cedéfenseur
projet,
sedu
fait le
deaul’information
collégiale
(par la
– nourries
par l’expérience
professionnelle
d’autres
disciplines
de création
la
formation
design devrait
diversiier
et inclut
d’autres
intervenants,
leset designers
de communication
communication
design.
font
maintenant
partie
du vocabulaire
au
d’un
équilibre.
facilitation
technologique)
la
formation
– pour
créer
desleur
mises rôle
en forme
et
les
commanditaires.
la professionetetl’appropriation
créer des ouvertures
ain
sontsein
attraits
àmême
redéinir
et leurs objectifs.
dans
de ou
« permettre
Oullim
», groupes
magistrale
la diffusion
de règles).
oulades
images
reproductibles
par
n’importe
intégrer
théorie,
l’histoire,
la critique,
lale respect
de
à(par
des
minoritaires
Les
créateurs
graphiques
peuvent
virtuellement
servir
et
interagir
et des connaissances. À mesure que leur contexte médiatique s’élargit
2
Icograda
9
4 Manifeste
10
3
sur l’éducation
54
119
et inclut d’autres intervenants, les designers de communication
sont attraits à redéinir leur rôle et leurs objectifs.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
GUY SCHOCKAERT AND JULIE LAY - BRUXELLES
des
des services
des
expériences.
le graphismeintelligente
des médias de diffusion
nouveaux.
leurssystèmes,
propres
et méthodes
la téléphonie
et leset médias sociaux)
ont préoccupations
élargi
la etmanière
du
design.
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approche
inclusive
soulignant
leles
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création
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suivantes
: image,
texte,
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aupratiques
départ
de projets
générés
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intègre
leétendant
vocabulaire
etpratique
les
dont
les
designers
leur
à des
valeurs
la
; respecte
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de produits,
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jeux
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d’autres
disciplines.
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un; auditives,
modèle dephysiologiques,
compétences
visuelles
intersensorielles
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visuelles,
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design vise
à repositionner
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et culturelle
; et s’efforce
le
graphisme
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d’environnement
son
et interaction.
soutenir
auprèsest
des devenue
étudiants
de tous
niveaux
–
hybrides
à La
dimensions
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olfactives.
fourniture
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de
la
première
édition
du
Manifeste,
de
dégagerdans
des valeurs
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; la la
visualisation
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le pré-universitaire
2011
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auencollectif.
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technologiques,
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et économiques
ont
Icograda Manifeste sur l’éducation du design
de
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une activité
intellectuelle,
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à est
de
nouvelles
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nouveaux
2011
Le terme « design graphique » a évolué de manière plurielle.
Icograda Manifeste sur l’éducation du design
designer
comme
Dès
le rôlede
du la
formateur
enprofessionnel
design
de celui et
d’uncitoyen
fournisseur
Le lors,
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formation
en design
changement
: défis
et évolue
perspectives
s’adaptedeau
changement
embrasse
quel
moyen
communication
visuelle. en matière
et de
la entier.
gestion
en Les
vue d’augmenter
s’exprimer.
Elletechnologique
devrait aussi et
proposer
avec recherche
le monde
progrès
de
communication
et
la grande
harmonie.
les
et de maîtrise
contribue
à modeler ladevie
etl’information
le paysage
la production
connaissances
etvisuel
souteniront
desdéis
programmes
de formation
continuée
de
technologies
de
globalisé
le d’apprentissage
contexte
professionnel
des
moyens de
visualisation;
duréseaux
commerceetet
de la culture
plus
l’eficacité
dans
ledépassé
respect
pournouveaux
lesculturelles
professionnels
toujours
à la
et lesl’innovation
sociaux
ontvers
les divisions
en
dépit
communique
à travers
médias
d’harmonie.
facteurs humains
et environnementaux.
recherche d’une
mise à différents
jour de leurs
de lades
barrière
persistante
des langues.
crée de la signiication
des clients
et
enseigner
les méthodes pour
de recherche
quantitative
et
les nouveaux
intelligents.
compétences
ou matériels
de techniques
de recherche.
du design
6
2011
se
montre
un concepteur
méthodique
et étend son
des
utilisateurs
de toutes
origines,
et qualitative
(comme
en ethnographie,
soutenir
chez
les étudiants
le sens
la
Il existe
un besoin
criant
pour un meilleur
équilibre
entre
lesdehumains
expertise
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interprétant
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par environnement
exemple)
manière
à encadrer
responsabilité
personnelle
quantcollaborant
à l’impact
et leur
naturel.
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ontdisciplines,
imposé
avec
des anthropologues,
des
développeurs
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en leur
offrant des
solutionsla
répondant
résoudre
les problèmes.
environnemental
de leur
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design
nécessité de matériaux,
deet social
méthodes
au communication
de logiciels, des scientiiques, des ingénieurs,
une
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etdurables.
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élargir
pratique
professionnelle
aux découvertes
et deàlarésultats
qui contribuent à étendre le discours
des architectes et d’autres experts.
interdisciplinaire.
31
et la complexité des questions liées à son exercice se sont multipliées.
Le designer comme professionnel et citoyen
Un communication designer :
1
5
identiie et circonscrit les problèmes, et les résout en
pratique la création d’identités ; la mise en forme
de textes et de livres ; la typographie,
la création de systèmes d’information ;
collaboration grâce à la rélexion critique, la
créativité, l’expérimentation et l’évaluation.
la publicité; l’illustration ; la photographie ;
6
conceptualise, exprime et transmet des identités,
la calligraphie ; la signalisation et les systèmes
des messages, des idées et des valeurs via des
pictographiques ; l’emballage ; l’animation ;
produits nouveaux, actualisés ou composites,
le graphisme des médias de diffusion et
des systèmes, des services et des expériences.
7
le titrage de cinéma ; la création d’interfaces
utilise une approche inclusive soulignant
de produits, de sites web et de jeux ;
la différence ; respecte la diversité humaine,
le graphisme d’interaction, d’environnement
environnementale et culturelle ; et s’efforce
et d’exposition ; la visualisation de données ;
de dégager des valeurs communes.
Le dialogue direct avec l’utilisateur individuel et la récession économique
et tous les autres domaines de mise en forme
pratique la déontologie et prend en considération
ont redéini les conditions de paternité créative et d’invention.
en modes direct ou connecté.
Le copyright, la patente et la gestion des droits de propriété intellectuelle
font maintenant partie du vocabulaire du communication design.
2
possède la sensibilité intellectuelle et les compétences
– nourries par l’expérience professionnelle et
la formation – pour créer des mises en forme
Les créateurs graphiques peuvent virtuellement servir et interagir
avec le monde entier. Les progrès en matière de communication et
de technologies de l’information ont globalisé le contexte professionnel
et les réseaux sociaux ont dépassé les divisions culturelles en dépit
de la barrière persistante des langues.
8
9
3
contribue à modeler la vie et le paysage visuel
et leur environnement naturel. Les déis écologiques ont imposé
au communication design la nécessité de matériaux, de méthodes
et de résultats durables.
facilitation et l’appropriation technologique)
ou magistrale (par la diffusion de règles).
10
s’adapte au changement technologique et embrasse
les déis d’apprentissage et de maîtrise
du commerce et de la culture vers plus
des nouveaux moyens de visualisation;
d’harmonie.
communique à travers différents médias
4
crée de la signiication pour des clients et
Il existe un besoin criant pour un meilleur équilibre entre les humains
les communautés et l’environnement.
se fait le défenseur de l’information collégiale (par la
ou des images reproductibles par n’importe
quel moyen de communication visuelle.
les effets du design sur les individus,
des utilisateurs de toutes origines,
non seulement en interprétant leurs intérêts
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
GUY SCHOCKAERT AND JULIE LAY - BRUXELLES
Les technologies émergentes (par exemple: la réalité augmentée,
la téléphonie intelligente et les médias sociaux) ont élargi la manière
dont les designers communiquent, étendant leur pratique à des valeurs
intersensorielles – visuelles, auditives, physiologiques, gustatives et/ou
olfactives. La fourniture de contenus multiples est devenue la règle.
2011
technologiques, environnementaux et économiques ont profondément
affecté la formation et la pratique du communication design. La variété
Icograda Manifeste sur l’éducation du design
déis. Ces dix dernières années, les bouleversements sociaux, culturels,
2011
La profession est confrontée à de nouvelles ouvertures et à de nouveaux
Icograda Manifeste sur l’éducation du design
Le changement : défis et perspectives
et les nouveaux matériels intelligents.
11
se montre un concepteur méthodique et étend son
expertise à d’autres disciplines, collaborant
mais en leur offrant des solutions répondant
avec des anthropologues, des développeurs
à une culture et une éthique.
de logiciels, des scientiiques, des ingénieurs,
des architectes et d’autres experts.
33
1
7
social et économique. À cette in, elle devrait
instiller une mentalité critique et nourrir une
attitude d’autorélexion, de même qu’une
évoluer de l’enseignement magistral à une
capacité à s’adapter et à évoluer via des
déinition de problèmes plus participative,
outils et des méthodes d’apprentissage
permettant aux étudiants d’aborder
nouveaux.
leurs propres préoccupations et méthodes
d’apprentissage au départ de projets générés
inclure les dimensions suivantes : image, texte,
3
relayer des modèles pour la communication
8
soutenir auprès des étudiants de tous niveaux –
la curiosité intellectuelle et un engagement
et pour la collaboration dans un marché
envers un apprentissage tout au long de la
global avec les industries, les utilisateurs,
vie. Au travers de programmes d’assistance,
d’autres disciplines de création
la formation au design devrait diversiier
et les commanditaires.
la profession et créer des ouvertures ain
4
de permettre à des groupes minoritaires
recherche et la gestion en vue d’augmenter
de s’exprimer. Elle devrait aussi proposer
la production de connaissances et soutenir
des programmes de formation continuée
l’innovation et l’eficacité dans le respect
pour les professionnels toujours à la
des facteurs humains et environnementaux.
recherche d’une mise à jour de leurs
et qualitative (comme en ethnographie,
par exemple) de manière à encadrer et
résoudre les problèmes.
élargir la pratique professionnelle aux découvertes
qui contribuent à étendre le discours
et faciliter l’évolution vers une conception plus complète du métier.
La capacité de penser, par la recherche, le métier à court et à long terme
devrait faire partie intégrante de la formation et de la pratique
du design.
Une nouvelle conception du design vise à repositionner
Héritiers de la première édition du Manifeste,
la nature, l’humanité, la technologie, à harmoniser l’est et l’ouest,
présentée à Séoul en 2000,
le nord et le sud, de même que le passé, le présent et le futur
nous poursuivons ce projet,
au sein d’un même équilibre.
dans le respect de « Oullim »,
la grande harmonie.
compétences ou de techniques de recherche.
enseigner les méthodes de recherche quantitative
6
y compris dans le pré-universitaire –
interculturelle et transdisciplinaire,
intégrer la théorie, l’histoire, la critique, la
5
de connaissances à celui d’un médiateur capable d’inspirer
par eux-mêmes.
contexte, espace, mouvement, temps,
son et interaction.
Dès lors, le rôle du formateur en design évolue de celui d’un fournisseur
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
GUY SCHOCKAERT AND JULIE LAY - BRUXELLES
2
technologique, environnemental, culturel,
2011
En conséquence, elle devrait :
préparer les étudiants au changement
Icograda Manifeste sur l’éducation du design
l’individuel au collectif, et du collectif au collectif.
2011
La formation en matière de design évolue de
Icograda Manifeste sur l’éducation du design
Le futur de la formation en design
9
soutenir chez les étudiants le sens de la
responsabilité personnelle quant à l’impact
Palatino
environnemental et social de leur pratique.
Hermann Zapf
Today
Deutschland 1918
Volker Küster
Deutschland 1941
interdisciplinaire.
35
МАНИФЕСТ ОБРАЗОВАТЕЛЬНОЙ
ПРОГРАММЫ ДЛЯ ДИЗАЙНЕРОВ
ОРГАНИЗАЦИИ ICOGRADA
Международного
совета ассоциаций
графического
дизайна 2011 год
2011
02
п е р е м е н ы : п р о б л е м ы
и п е р с п е к т и в ы
01
Возникающие технологии (среди них такие, как виртуальная
реальность, смартфоны, социальные сети) расширили возможности дизайнеров и позволили сочетать несколько чувств —
одновременно используются визуальные, акустические, соматосенсорные, вкусовые и/или обонятельные компоненты. Многоплатформный контент ныне является нормой.
к о м м у н и к а т и в н ы й
д и з а й н
КОММУНИКАТИВНЫЙ ДИЗАЙН 1 — это деятельность, включающая интеллектуальный, творческий, стратегический, управленческий и технический аспекты. Его цель — предложить
визуальное решение проблем в области коммуникации.
Со временем коммуникативный дизайн все больше становится
такой профессией, которая способна объединить всевозможные стили и подходы других дисциплин и спаять из разнообразных элементов многомерные визуальные данные.
Границы между отраслями дизайна ныне стали более подвижными благодаря использованию продвинутых цифровых технологий и знаний. В силу того, что рабочий процесс, вовлекающий множество участников, предполагает большую сложность,
медиа–дизайнерам необходимо переосмыслить свою роль
и цели работы так, чтобы ориентироваться на расширенный
медиа– контекст, управляемый в режиме дискуссии, в основе
которой— коммуникация, подобная конференц–связи.
1
Термин «графический дизайн»
эволюционировал в неоднородную структуру, которая включает в себя множество названий: графическая коммуникация,
визуальная коммуникация,
визуальный дизайн, коммуникативный дизайн.
Коммуникативный дизайн —
термин, принятый Генеральной ассамблеей Icograda
в Гаване в 2007 году в качестве наиболее подходящего.
Прямой, открытый, мгновенный диалог с конечным пользователем (в сочетании с экономической рецессией во многих
странах) вызвал рост возможностей для авторских изобретений. Авторское, патентное право и законы, связанные с творческой деятельностью, теперь являются частью лексикона,
ассоциирующегося с интеллектуальной собственностью коммуникативных дизайнеров.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
ALEXANDRA SANKOVA AND ANNA KULACHEK - MOSCOW
Дизайнер постоянно встречается как с новыми перспективами,
так и с проблемами. Социальные, культурные, технологические,
экономические преобразования, экологические перемены
в течение последнего десятилетия глубоко затронули и процессы обучения, и практическую деятельность в сфере коммуникативного дизайна. В результате этого возросли количество
и сложность разрабатываемых тем.
Дизайнеры могут дистанционно работать и взаимодействовать
со всем миром. Быстрые усовершенствования в коммуникациях
и информационных технологиях объединили профессиональную среду дизайнеров и с помощью социальных сетей преодолели культурные различия, несмотря на языковые барьеры.
В то же время существует крайняя нужда в большей разработанности вопроса экологического баланса между людьми
и окружающей их природной средой. Проблемы,связанные
с экологией, требуют повышенного внимания к тому, чтобы
материалы, методы и результаты деятельности не наносили
ущерба окружающей среде.
37
МАНИФЕСТ/ ICOGRADA
03
МАНИФЕСТ/ ICOGRADA
2011
Design-it-yourself
«Сделай дизайн сам»
1
дизайнер–профессионал
и г р а ж д а н и н м и р а
КОММУНИКАТИВНЫЙ ДИЗАЙНЕР:
РАСПОЗНАЕТ И ОЧЕРЧИВАЕТ круг проблем; решает их на основе совмещения критического мышления, креативности, экспериментирования и оценок.
6
КОНЦЕПТУАЛИЗИРУЕТ, ясно излагает и передает суть идентичности, ее основной посыл, идеи и ценности в новые, усовершенствованные или мэшап –продукты, системы, услуги или опыт.
7
ПОЛЬЗУЕТСЯ широким подходом, который выделяет отличия, уважает человека в целом, окружающую среду, культурное разнообразие и движется к тому, чтобы выработать
общую платформу.
БЛИВАЕТС/ ЯВЛЯЕТСЯ «ДИЗАЙНЕРОМ»
1
2
РАБОТАЕТ над корпоративным стилем; издательским и книжным
дизайном; типографикой; информационным дизайном; рекламой;
иллюстрациями; фотографией; каллиграфией; идентификационныыми комплектами и логотипами компаний; дизайном упаковки; анимационным дизайном; разрабатывает графику в телепередачах и титры к фильмам; дизайн интерфейса различной продукции, интернет–сайтов и компьютерных игр; проектирование взаимодействия, графику в сфере экологии и выставок; визуализацию
данных, а также совершает любые другие действия в области создания визуальных моделей в режиме он- и офлайн.
8
ПРИМЕНЯЕТ этические принципы, позволяющие избежать
вреда, и принимает в расчет последствия влияния действий
дизайнера на человечество (как отдельных личностей, так
и сообществ) и окружающую среду.
9
ОБЛАДАЕТ умственными способностями и навыками, воспитанными в процессе обучения и профессионального опыта, которые
необходимы для создания оформления или изображения в целях
воспроизведения визуальной коммуникации любыми методами.
ПРОПАГАНДИРУЕТ организацию работы снизу вверх (при помощи организации групповой работы и апроприации технологий DIY1 и DIWO2) или сверху вниз (через политику) для улучшения человечества и окружающей среды.
10
ЛЕГКО ПРИСПОСАБЛИВАЕТСЯ к технологическим изменениям и принимает вызов изучения и освоения новых путей визуализации и коммуникативных концептов в различных массмедиа и с помощью так называемых «умных материалов».
11
ЯВЛЯЕТСЯ «ДИЗАЙНЕРОМ», то есть концентрируется
на определенной области знания и привносит свою компетентную оценку в интердисциплинарное сотрудничество с антропологами, разработчиками программного обеспечения, учеными,
инженерами, архитекторами и другими экспертами.
3
СПОСОБСТВУЕТ формированию естественной видимой перспективы культуры и коммерции в направлении их мирного равновесия.
4
СОЗДАЕТ средства для формирования сообщества различных клиентов и пользователей, не только представляя их
интересы, но и предлагая традиционные и инновационные
решения, приемлемые как в культурном, так и в профессиональном и этическом планах.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
ALEXANDRA SANKOVA AND ANNA KULACHEK - MOSCOW
ЕТСЯ/ ПРИМЕНЯЕТ/ ПРОПАГАНДИРУЕТ/ ЛЕГКО ПРИСПОСА-
2
Design-it-with-others
«Сделай вместе с другими»
5
РАБОТАЕТ/ ОБЛАДАЕТ/ СПОСОБСТВУЕТ/ СОЗДАЕТ/ РАСПОЗНАЕТ И ОЧЕРЧИВАЕТ/ КОНЦЕПТУАЛИЗИРУЕТ/ ПОЛЬЗУ-
2011
39
МАНИФЕСТ/ ICOGRADA
04
МАНИФЕСТ/ ICOGRADA
2011
б у д у щ е е о б у ч е н и я
в о б л а с т и д и з а й н а
ПОЛОЖИТЕЛЬНО ВЛИЯТЬ на профессиональную деятельность посредством открытий, приносящих новые знания в интердисциплинарный дискурс.
7
ГОТОВИТЬ студентов для технологического, экологического,
культурного, социального и экономического обмена. С этой
целью необходимо развиваться от проектов, разработанных
преподавателями, к совместному определению задач, давая
студентам возможность демократически формулировать их собственные проблемы и пути обучения с помощью проектов, инициированных ими самими.
8
ПООЩРЯТЬ в студентах всех уровней, включая довузовскую подготовку, мыслительную любознательность и готовность обучаться на протяжении всей жизни. Через социальноориентированные программы обучение дизайну дифференцирует профессию и создаст для всех возможность быть услышанным. Такое образование должно также обеспечивать новые программы повышения квалификации для профессионалов, которые сейчас более всего нуждаются в совершенствовании своих навыков и обучении новым приемам исследования.
9
ВНУШАТЬ студентам чувство профессиональной ответственности за влияние на окружающую среду и социум их практической деятельности.
ALEXANDRA SANKOVA AND ANNA KULACHEK - MOSCOW
Обучение в области дизайна развивается в направлении
от преподавания по принципу «один – многим» к принципу
«многие – многим». В результате оно должно:
ПРИВИВАТЬ/ ВКЛЮЧАТЬ/ ОБЕСПЕЧИВАТЬ/ ОБЪЕДИНЯТЬ/
ОБУЧАТЬ/ ПОЛОЖИТЕЛЬНО ВЛИЯТЬ/ ГОТОВИТЬ/
ПООЩРЯТЬ/ ВНУШАТЬ
ПРИВИВАТЬ образ мыслей, способный и к сочувствию, и к критическим оценкам, и воспитывать саморефлексивное отношение и умение адаптироваться и совершенствоваться посредством инновационных инструментов работы и методов коммуникации и сотрудничества.
2
ВКЛЮЧАТЬ в себя следующие аспекты: изображение, текст,
контекст, пространство, движение, время, звук и взаимодействие.
3
ОБЕСПЕЧИВАТЬ наличие моделей для кросс – культурного
и трансдисциплинарного общения и сотрудничества на мировом рынке с индустрией, пользователями, другими отраслями
дизайна и акционерами.
4
ОБЪЕДИНЯТЬ теорию, историю, критику, исследования
и управление, чтобы увеличить продуктивность знаний в области
дизайна в целях интенсификации инноваций и эффективности
по отношению к окружающей среде и человеческим факторам.
5
ОБУЧАТЬ качественным и количественным методам исследования (например, этнографии), чтобы определять границы проблем и решать их.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
6
БУДУЩЕЕ ОБУЧЕНИЯ В ОБЛАСТИ ДИЗАЙНА
1
2011
Таким образом, меняется сама функция преподавателя дизайна: от передатчика знаний он переходит к роли посредника,
который вдохновляет и помогает двигаться в направлении
более определенной практики.
Способность прогнозировать ближайшее и отдаленное будущее
с помощью исследований должна быть неотделимой частью обучения и практики дизайна. Новая концепция дизайна имеет своей целью перенастроить баланс природы, человечества и технологий, привести к согласию восток, запад, север, юг; а также прошлое, настоящее и будущее к динамичному равновесию.
УВАЖАЯ НАСЛЕДИЕ ПЕРВОГО ИЗДАНИЯ МАНИФЕСТА, ПРЕДСТАВЛЕННОГО В СЕУЛЕ В 2000 ГОДУ, МЫ ПРОДОЛЖАЕМ ДВИГАТЬСЯ В НАПРАВЛЕНИИ СУЩНОСТИ OULLIM — НАПРАВЛЕНИИ ВЕЛИКОЙ ГАРМОНИИ.
41
Cambio:
Oportunidades
y Desafíos
Diseño de
Comunicación1
E
Para la Enseñanza
del Diseño
Hoy, los límites entre las disciplinas de diseño son más
permeables, gracias al uso
compartido de herramientas
digitales y conocimientos
avanzados. A medida que
e l p ro c e s o de tr a bajo e n
equipo adquiere una complejidad mayor, los diseñadores de comunicación
necesitan redefinir su papel y sus propósitos hacia
un contexto de medios de
comunicación más amplio,
dominado por un modo de
intercambio “de muchos hacia muchos”.
uevas
oportunidades y desafíos
retan al diseñador.
Los cambios sociales,
culturales, tecnológicos,
ambientales y económicos de la última década
han inluido profundamente la enseñanza y la práctica del diseño de comunicación. Por consiguiente,
la variedad y la complejidad
de los problemas de diseño
han aumentado.
Las novísimas tecnologías (por
ejemplo, la realidad aumentada, el smartphone y las redes
sociales) han ampliado el modo en que los diseñadores se
maniiestan, que ahora incluye
expresiones intersensoriales:
elementos visuales, auditivos,
somatosensoriales, olfativos
y/o gustativos. La norma vigente es entregar contenido multiplataforma.
El diálogo directo, abierto e instantáneo con
usuarios inales individuales (unido a
la recesión eco-
nómica en muchos países), ha creado
oportunidades para el desarrollo de la
creación. Derecho de autor, patentes y
plazas creativas forman parte del vocabulario actual sobre propiedad intelectual del diseñador de comunicación.
Los diseñadores puden
servir prácticamente al
mundo entero e interactuar con él. Los rápidos
progresos en las tecnologías de la información
y la comunicación han
globalizado el contexto
profesional del diseño y
han tendido puentes sobre segmentos culturales a través de redes sociales, a pesar de las eternas barreras del idioma.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
SANTIAGO PUJOL AND DAYLIN VALLADOLID PÉREZ - LA HABANA
El diseño de comunicación
se ha convertido en una profesión que incorpora cada
vez más las expresiones y
los enfoques de otras disciplinas en un resultado visual
híbrido y pluridimensional.
N
MANIFIESTO
DE ICOGRADA
2011
l diseño de comunicación es una actividad
intelectual, creativa, estratégica, técnica y de dirección.
Esta actividad involucra esencialmente la producción de
soluciones visuales para problemas de comunicación.
Se necesita con urgencia un equilibrio ecológico más avanzado entre
los seres humanos y sus
ambientes naturales. Este desafío ambiental ha
incrementado la necesidad de materiales, métodos y resultados de diseño más sostenibles.
43
El Diseñador como Profesional y Ciudadano Global
Un Diseñador de Comunicación:
Realiza diseño de identidad; diseño editorial y de libros; diseño de
tipografía; diseño de información; publicidad; ilustración; fotografía;
caligrafía; sistemas de señalización y de pictogramas; envases y embalajes; diseño de animación; gráica para televisión y títulos de películas; diseño de interfaz de productos, de la web y de juegos; gráica
de exposiciones, de interacción y ambiental; visualización de datos; y
cualquier otra actividad que cree formas visuales online y ofline.
1
3
Contribuye
a conformar
la vida y el paisaje visual del comercio y la cultura
en un equilibrio
estable.
6
8
Aplica principios éticos
para evitar daños y tiene en cuenta las consecuencias de la acción del
diseño sobre la humanidad (individuos y comunidades) y el medio ambiente.
9
Defiende el enfoque
“de abajo hacia arriba”
(facilitando DUM2 y DCO3
y la apropiación de tecnologías), o “de arriba hacia
abajo” (a través de políticas) para el mejoramiento
de la humanidad y del medio ambiente.
4
Crea signiicados para una comunidad de clientes y
usuarios diversos, no sólo interpretando
sus intereses sino ofreciendo también
soluciones conservadoras e innovadoras
que sean cultural, ética y profesionalmente apropiadas.
Usa un enfoque inclusivo que enfatiza la diferencia, respeta la diversidad humana, ambiental y
cultural, y lucha por conseguir puntos en común.
Identifica y
define problemas y los soluciona, a la vez que
analiza las posibilidades en equipo, a través del pensamiento
crítico, la creatividad,
y la experimentación, así como de
la evaluación.
5
Conceptualiza, articula y transmite identidad, mensajes,
ideas y valores a productos, sistemas, experiencias y
servicios nuevos, actualizados o fusionados.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
SANTIAGO PUJOL AND DAYLIN VALLADOLID PÉREZ - LA HABANA
2
Posee la sensibilidad intelectual y la
destreza, alimentadas por la experiencia profesional y el entrenamiento docente, para crear imágenes o diseños que
serán reproducidos por
cualquier
medio de
comunicación visual.
7
10
Se adapta al cambio
tecnológico con facilidad y acepta el desafío de
aprender y dominar las nuevas maneras de visualizar y
comunicar conceptos mediante diferentes medios
de comunicación y nuevos
materiales atractivos.
11
Es un Diseñador que posee un enfoque
disciplinario y aplica esa habilidad al trabajar en equipos interdisciplinarios con antropólogos, programadores de software, cientíicos,
ingenieros, arquitectos y otros expertos.
45
El futuro de la
Enseñanza del
Diseño
L
a enseñanza del diseño está evolucionando de una instrucción del tipo “de uno hacia
muchos” hacia una instrucción “de muchos hacia muchos”. Por consiguiente, debe:
4
Inculcar una mentalidad sensible y crítica, y alimentar una actitud
autorrelexiva, más la habilidad de adaptarse y evolucionar con el apoyo de
herramientas y métodos
de aprendizaje innovadores para la comunicación y la colaboración.
Integrar teoría, historia, crítica, investigación y administración
para incrementar la produción de conocimientos
de diseño con el objetivo de enriquecer la innovación y la eicacia con
respecto a factores ambientales y humanos.
2
5
Incluir las siguientes
dimensiones: imagen, texto, contexto, espacio, movimiento, tiempo,
sonido e interacción.
3
Producir modelos para
la comunicación transcultural e interdisciplinaria y para la colaboración
del mercado global con
la industria, los usuarios,
otras disciplinas de diseño y los interesados.
Enseñar métodos de
investigación cuantitativos y cualitativos
(por ejemplo etnografía)
para deinir y solucionar problemas.
6
Motivar la práctica
profesional con resultados que aporten nuevos conocimientos al discurso interdisciplinario.
Preparar a los estudiantes para el cambio tecnológico, ambiental, cultural, social y económico. Con ese in, debe evolucionar de proyectos generados por el
profesor hacia una definición
más participativa de los problemas, que permita a los estudiantes abordar democráticamente
sus propios intereses y modos de
aprendizaje con proyectos iniciados por los propios estudiantes.
8
Promover la curiosidad intelectual y un compromiso con
el aprendizaje a lo largo de la vida
en estudiantes de todos los niveles, incluso los de pre-universitario. A través de programas de
ayuda social, la enseñanza del diseño debe diversiicar la profesión
y crear oportunidades para que
las minorías sean escuchadas.
También debe suministrar nuevos
programas de aprendizaje permanente a los profesionales que están
cada vez más necesitados de actualizar sus habilidades y de entrenarse en métodos de investigación.
9
Entonces, el papel del formador de
diseñadores cambia de proveedor
de conocimientos a mediador que
motiva y facilita la orientación para
una práctica más sólida.
El poder pensar en el futuro cercano y lejano debe ser parte esencial
de la enseñanza y la práctica del
diseño mediante la investigación.
Una nueva concepción del diseño
apunta a devolver el equilibrio a la
naturaleza, la humanidad y la tecnología, al tiempo que armoniza
norte y sur, este y oeste, así como
pasado, presente y futuro en un
equilibrio dinámico.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
SANTIAGO PUJOL AND DAYLIN VALLADOLID PÉREZ - LA HABANA
1
7
En concordancia con la primera
edición del Maniiesto, presentado en Seúl en el año 2000, mantenemos la esencia de Oullim: La
Gran Armonía.
Imbuir en los estudiantes un sentido de responsabilidad personal hacia
el impacto ambiental y social de su práctica.
47
BEIJING - MIN WANG
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO
THIS BOOK
IS AN ARROW
When opened, this publication becomes an arrow
indicating future directions in design education.
The following essays have been
written by international design
education experts.
48
While in Taipei, during the
presentation of the Icograda
Design Education Manifesto 2011,
align the compass on each essay’s
opening spread with the North
of the city. The book will point
towards the author and region
that originated the essay.
49
FLORIANOPÓLIS 27˚50'S 48˚25'W
TAIPE
I 2
W
3'52"
2. Challenges
How has contemporary design evolved since the manifesto for visual
communication was created in Seoul ten years ago? We have entered
a period of political, socio-economical, technological, financial and
environmental change that has inevitably affected the design profession
and necessitated a reassessment of design education programmes.
While one may perceive the profession as a victim of these transformations,
design has an active role to play in addressing social and global change.
3. Proliferation of design
Design — the word at least — is enjoying a bewildering proliferation.
Hardly a month passes without the development of a new type of
design. Beyond the traditional core disciplines: industrial design, visual
communication design, exhibition design, packaging design and textile
design, an increasing variety of design fields have sprung up since the
1990s as a result of the development of digital technologies. These new
fields include navigation design, event design, generative design, scenario
design, invention design, experience design, user experience design,
genetic design, humanitarian design, interaction design, interface design,
emotional design, service design and social design to name a few.
Whereas the earlier manifesto concentrated on defining what design
is, today this question might be inverted: what is not design? Apparently
design is everywhere, but if everything is design, as some would like to have
it, the concept loses its meaning — it becomes an empty statement and
might be read as a pretension that has provoked acerbic comments about
designers. Not everything is design.
4. Necessity and limitations of validating design proposals
In light of the exaggerated use of the word ‘design’ one might ask, is there
a common trait among these different manifestations of design activity?
And if so, what is this trait? Some claim that there is a type of a ‘design
thinking’ that, through a holistic approach, connects these activities
under the general term ‘design.’ However, this new thinking is sometimes
considered a fashionable phrase for good old creativity; its justification
has been questioned, and rightly so. It should come as no surprise that
the opening up of the domain has attracted specialists from other areas
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Gui Bo
nsiepe
121˚3
REF
L
E
C
T
I
O
N
S
O
N
A
M
A
N
I
F
E
FO
S
T
R
O
D
E
S
I
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U
C
A
T
I
O
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2
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1
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5˚02'
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Divers
ity
Intelle
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y
Lightn
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Othern
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Public
domai
n
Theor
y
Visibil
ity
1. Approach
Manifestos generally offer a diagnosis of a situation and announce a set of
solutions. They have a declamatory character that appeals to urgent action.
Instead of following this established pattern, we have formulated a series
of questions that may begin a discussion between those interested in
design and design education: professionals, academics, students, writers
and the public at large. These reflections do not list a set of competencies
that a designer should have in order to fulfil his or her role successfully,
but rather prepare the ground for formulating these competencies.
51
FLORIANOPÓLIS - GUI BONSIEPE
52
8. Academic qualifications
Design achieved academic standing and respectability rather late in its
development. Design theory is a facet of academic programmes not only
as an instrumental tool for practise, but also as a space for reflection and
critique. In the development of the discipline, the standards and criteria
of excellence from other fields like the sciences were imposed on design.
As we reassess graphic design education, we may ask how to develop
intrinsic standards for a master’s or doctoral degree in design? How do
we understand and evaluate the development of a design as a series of
cognitive activities that do not necessarily result in a written document?
9. Public domain
Economists included design as one of the branches in the ‘creative
industries.’ It forms part of a sector of prevailingly market-driven activities.
While we should not accept the market as a regulator of all social relations
— there are domains beyond the market — the design professions are not
in a particularly strong position to question powerful, complex structures.
Design might, however, participate in an attempt to reduce the imbalances
between public and private interests. Taking into account conflicting
interests, the possibilities of harmonising the domains is dim. Designers,
thus, face a contradictory task: to develop design proposals that are
socially desirable, technologically feasible, environmentally commendable,
economically viable and culturally defensible while accounting for the
implicit, and sometimes controversial, politics involved. Concerning the
political dimension of design activities and design education, the following
question might be raised: does the design contribute to self-determination
in practise and teaching? Finding a consensus will be difficult. This
assessment permits us to draw a cautious conclusion: we must practise
care when formulating universal declarations for design and design
education, and perhaps even abstain from that attempt as we can easily
get lost in generalisations. A more promising approach might be to accept
and respect different design cultures and to foster diversity rather than
striving for universal validity.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
5. Innovation
Perhaps the most common factor in the rich variety of design activities
is innovation. While universally praised, innovation should not be an aim
in itself. Designers should take innovation into account, but the fact that
something is new (and newness can be trivial, incremental or radical)
has a limited value in broader contexts. The criteria for evaluating design
innovations must be clearer and stronger.
6. Aesthetics and emotions
In public opinion, ‘design’ is strongly associated with aesthetic and
emotional qualities — being pleasing, exciting, boring, cool, hot, nice,
beautiful or wowing. Some would even argue that designers create
experiences and emotions. Although no one would deny the importance
of emotions, they depend on a structure of material and immaterial factors.
Designers can design products and messages that provoke emotional
reactions, but cannot design them directly. In the same way that architects
design houses rather than inhabitant experiences or civil engineers
calculate structures not structural experiences, designers provide the
impetus for emotion, not the feelings themselves.
7. Business
After decades of neglect, design was finally integrated into business
administration courses as managers discovered the importance of
graphic communication in competitive local and international markets.
Design is an immensely valuable asset in the field and can set a business
apart from its competition.
REFLECTIONS ON A MANIFESTO FOR DESIGN EDUCATION 2011
of knowledge and expertise, particularly from the sciences and business
administration. Scientists lament the discursive weakness of designers
and the sloppiness of the design discourse. They demand a stronger
preparation in sciences and scientific methods from design courses —
a demand that was voiced several decades ago, though it has not yet
been implemented in all programmes. Scientists main request is that
designers not content themselves with assessments, but validate their
claims by providing empirical proof. Although this is a valid appeal it
has its limitations. It presupposes that design attributes can be tested
either through simulation (as in, for instance, architectural design)
or implementation in reality (as in the case of a milk package with a
smaller ecological footprint, for example). Scientists formulate assertions
and provide evidence. Designers, on the other hand, work in a domain
where assessments are based on standards and they do not always have
access to propositional knowledge. The difficulties of providing empirical
evidence should not, however, be an excuse for failing to provide verifiable
arguments if designers claim that a proposal is innovative, sustainable
and user-friendly.
As there are competing interpretations of scientific method and the
concept of a fundamental method has been abandoned, educators might
pose the question, which scientific discourses are relevant for design?
And what should scientists learn about design in order to improve
collaboration between scientists and designers? What can be done to avoid
the frequent and deeply ingrained misunderstanding that design is art?
The question is not only which scientific disciplines should be included in
design programmes, but also how to teach them. Problem-oriented and
discipline-oriented teaching in current graphic design programmes favour
anecdotal evidence, but comparative research is also necessary.
The influence of social networks may reveal the potential for improving
design education by altering the traditional power dynamic of teacher
and student to produce a more collaborative relationship.
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One of the perennial subjects in design discourse and debate is the
assessment of the boundaries and the definition of the field. One might
argue that, in contrast to many professions where self-reflexivity is not
at issue, in design it is a permanent tendency. This trait is even more acute
for the speakers of my own language, Portuguese, which does not have its
own noun to describe design, and has instead turned to the English form
(compare with the very similar Spanish where dibujo (drawing) and diseño
(design) are clearly distinct). This slight discomfort with the term’s very
meaning, and hence with the discipline’s parameters, has not only given
rise to protracted controversies about “what design is” but about how its
practitioners should be educated.
Discussions about ‘essentials’ regarding the activity can be a bit naïve.
The discourse and debate are part of a ‘political construction’, where a field
carves out its space by way of its differences. Design is defined against
areas such as art, advertising, engineering and architecture. Of course,
those are not the only elements in the field of design. The professional
practice, its methods and artifacts, circuit of trade fairs and exhibitions,
and promotion agencies all interact to give the area its ever-shifting social
presence. Significantly, educational institutions play a crucial role in this
construction. Not only do they provide a constant flow of new human
resources, but they interpret the changes occurring in the profession and
(conservatively in some cases, boldly in others) reassess the field and
readjust their focus.
From my perspective — that of someone who uses a foreign-language
term to designate his own profession — design is an integrated field:
a continuous, flowing space where the most diverse professional paths
can exist. Visual design, graphic design or communication design — the
more convenient term recently endorsed by Icograda — is a fundamental
part of this disciplinary self-reflexivity. As it deals with communication,
it may prompt a dialogue that is a critical component of the public
image of the field.
One must admit that the many challenges and constraints posed
to design educators in the beginning of the 2000s remain. The ethical
considerations like social division, environmental change and democracy
that must be taken into account in the practise of communication design
have only become more poignant in recent years.
Of course, we all agree that the designer must be critical regarding
these issues, must be compassionate and responsible. However, one
should take care not to turn these adjectives into ‘feel-good mantras’
(as seems to be the case for the word ‘sustainable’ and its use in describing
products, services and systems where such label is unwarranted).
A profoundly critical attitude is desirable and, while optimism is
ingrained in design, we should perhaps take note of philosopher of design
Tomás Maldonado’s proposal of a ‘constructive pessimism’01 as one
possible outlook in the current context, a sort of redefined optimism.
Significant changes are reshaping the public sphere. New nations
55
accompanied by an attention to technological breakthroughs that may
empower others. He or she will not necessarily forsake our currently
fragmented communication process, but will weave the disparate threads
into a coherent ensemble where some calm can be found amid the noise
and bustle — some space for reflection and critical assessment. An
awareness of the collective nature of current design processes will lead
to nonhierarchical teams able to harness the group intelligence of users
and to improve design solutions while, at the same time, reinforcing an
innovative vision.
In this new world, a special place should still be reserved for traditional
attributes and skills that have long been the hallmark of quality design.
A sense of proportion, lively order, loving attention to detail, and impeccable
production and manufacturing may be the factors that distinguish leading
work in design. Most importantly, the act of designing should continue to
be understood as an act of thought.
As the design field, facing new conditions, reassesses itself, and its
boundaries shift once more, it is our role, as design educators, to ensure
that ethics, quality and thoughtfulness remain significant factors in the
mindset of new designers.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
THE NEW PUBLIC SPHERE AND THE DESIGN FIELD
01. Maldonado, Tomas. 1972. Design, nature,
and revolution; toward a critical ecology.
New York: Harper & Row.
RIO DE JANEIRO - RODOLFO CAPETO
are emerging as global players. A ‘Brownian movement’ of micropolitical
actions and interests, supported by the scattered communication
processes of Internet social networks and mobile phones, is replacing the
grand certainties. At this point in time, one can detect a somewhat uneasy
contradiction between this unstructured patchwork of individual agents
and the omnipresent shadow of megacorporations (which profit from them)
and states. Historically, these contradictions have been resolved either
by a new paradigm or a new accommodation (like tectonic plates that
somehow negotiate a tense coexistence).
Universities and higher education institutions might face a period of
deep change in the future. As we move into an age where jobs will probably
become scarcer, but careers may flourish in fluid ways, universities will
perhaps become ‘accreditation agencies’ of a sort. Education and training
will need to be provided in many different places and situations, in different
countries and environments. Educational institutions will have to transform
as education processes change. Future organisations may have a virtual
nature, with quasi-independent branches acting as mobile teams that
respond to a central nucleus. The flow of strategic information between
several branches will be required.02
How do we foresee and try to shape the future of communication
design practice and education in such a context?
Since the so-called DTP revolution of the 1990s, the ‘everyone is a
designer’ motto has come to characterise the communication design field,
posing challenges for professionals in their dealings with prospective
clients and the general public’s perception of the area. Designers had to
look for a cogent discourse and attitude to reassert the prevalence of the
professionally trained creator in a world with plenty of ‘professional looking’
templates and themes. This challenge is reappearing in a different guise as
phenomena like ‘crowd-designing’ emerge. Some of the perceived dangers
to the design profession could, however, be understood as opportunities.
The communication designer should be a critical participant in this
new public sphere. It may be the designer’s role to facilitate the public
dialogue — if only by giving it a compelling shape — that will surface from
a fragmentary network of relationships and their contradictions. Designers
should embrace social and cultural diversity, while resisting the temptation
to indiscriminatingly generalise. The designer must be willing to focus
actions, so that they do not crumble into ineffective micromovements.
Communication design must be strategic design. The strategy should
be a critical and ethical approach to social issues, and affirm reason
and transparency as means of achieving a new paradigm, rather than
an accommodation.
To this effect, the communication designer — a generalist — will
need to have a broad understanding of diverse cultural heritages,
02. Takahashi, Tadao. 2011. BSB100 –
Planejamento geral. (unpublished).
56
57
BEIRUT 33˚54'N 35˚31'E
iry
Halim Choue
A little shark, Lark, had just graduated from the Ocean High School.
Like other little sharks, his destiny was about to take shape. It was time
for him to choose a path that would lead to his future.
All of his friends and relatives wanted to become doctors, lawyers
or engineers and swim proudly across the seas. Lark, too, was sure about
what he wanted to do, but he was absent from orientation day and missed
the session about the possible path young sharks like him could choose.
Lark was confident of his choice, or at least he faked it — sharks are
supposed to be bold, after all.
He decided to visit Eau, the wise Octopus, because Eau would be
honest with him. His family did not like him meeting Eau, “We’re enemies,
octopuses and sharks,” they told him. But Lark admired Eau and aspired
to be like him, so he glided through the water one morning, hoping that Eau
would tell him he had made the right decision.
Bespectacled and multi-tentacle tasking, Eau was bent over the paper
he was drafting on design education for Ocean Education Manifesto's
10-year anniversary celebration, while at the same time conversing with
Melqart, the hermit crab. The manifesto was grand. It advocated that
design education be a learning-centred environment, enabling all students
to develop their potential in and beyond academic programmes.
Eau was not happy with what the young sea creatures were grasping
at the Oceana University. The programmes were not compelling enough
to arm students well or to allow for a smooth plunge into creative waters.
“I don’t think we can ever arm anybody well enough anyway,” he muttered.
“Due to technology, globalisation and other fluctuating factors, education
is not coping with the rapid transformations in our lives,” he ranted away
to Melqart.
Melqart knew how passionate Eau was about education. He had
heard of Eau’s encounters with institutional bureaucracy, funding and
aqua-being resources. He had also perused Eau’s discourses on educators’
attempts to make education progressive. “With time, our role as educators
has changed. We teach less and less and monitor more and more,” said
Eau. Melqart nodded. “You’re right,” he responded. “Information is readily
available and easily accessible — learning is taking place on many levels.
Isn’t this a good thing?” Melqart wanted to know.
“I was at a conference in the Mediterranean Sea once,” said Eau,
“and a fish said that we can’t control where the students go to get their
information because all the oceans are connected and there is the www,
wide wet web, for instance… but what we can teach them is how to make
the right choices. This stuck with me and, with time, has proven right.”
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
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Prelude
Sharks are antisocial predators, always swimming alone, feared by all
aquatic beings. Aggressive when needed, these lonely drifters are extremely
quick to react. Their existence is characterised by a continuous search and
conflict. This is the story of a shark that wanted to be a designer.
59
BEIRUT - HALIM CHOUEIRY
nodded in agreement. This sounded like all of his students. “Am I glad
I’m retired!” he thought to himself. “And then, when you least expect it,”
continued Eau, looking at Lark “a squirt comes along and surprises you with
a creative urge that makes you stop and wonder, ‘how did that happen?’”
“I can’t tell you if you will be a good designer,” Eau was now addressing
Lark. “I will assess you after you graduate, after you start using what
you have acquired along the learning path. I will tell you if you are a good
designer after you have tested your skills and knowledge.”
But Lark wanted assurance. He knew design was an art and a service.
He had the deep sense of consideration, responsibility and ecological
intelligence he knew was required of a passionate designer. He wanted
to be the designer of the new ocean-world order, a wayfinder who would
show the ocean how to live, work and interact. He wanted design to be the
empowering and transformative force in this new order. Yes, he was an
ambitious little shark.
Eau knew this, so he explained it to Lark. “Things are simple, but we
have acquired the tendency to make them complicated. We forget the
simple pleasures of life and look for ephemeral things that bring us nothing
in terms of growth and learning. We have our big dreams, going about
destroying everything that the ocean provides us and then saying, ‘we have
to be sustainable.’ Our grandparents were much more sustainable because
they followed the ocean’s laws. Life is all around us and is the best teacher.
Life makes us understand who we are and who we want to be. The best
education can do is show you the path. Life! Observe it, learn from it. Now
go be who you are destined to be,” said Eau.
As Lark was swimming back home he felt ready to tread the path
he had chosen. Eau knew what the ocean needed — a new language
of communication. All his life, like Louis I. Kahn, he was unimpressed by
education. Learning, yes, but education was something that was always
on trial because no system could ever capture the real meaning of learning.
He went back to his paper and continued writing: “We need to have the
courage to drop what we already have, to stop patching it here and there.
We need to have the courage to design something for the next 50 years —
have the courage to challenge the status quo. Look, even this manifesto
is being reviewed after only 10 years from its original conception.”
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
THE LITTLE SHARK WHO WANTED TO BECOME A DESIGNER: A FABLE ON DESIGN EDUCATION
Melqart smiled. He drifted back to the time when he was a young
teacher quoting Louis I. Kahn all the time. “What was it again? Ah yes!
‘I revere learning because it is a fundamental inspiration. It isn’t just
something which has to do with duty; it is born into us. The will to learn,
the desire to learn is one of the greatest inspirations’.” Had he stopped
learning? “But it seems these days educators forget this simple truth and
focus on stereotypes and replicas of the same model,” Eau continued,
jolting Melqart out of his reverie. Melqart winced.
Lark reached Coral. The reef was Eau’s favourite place, and Lark’s too.
It contained a huge library and food for every cartilaginous soul — the reef
was indeed a storage bank of resources. When Lark appeared from behind
the reef, Eau looked up joyfully. “I want to be a designer,” said Lark shyly to
Eau with a sparkle in his eyes that his bashfulness could not hide. “Why?”
Eau was tempted to ask. Instead he said, “Let me tell you a story. A few
weeks ago, a close crustacean friend was telling me that his one-year old
shrimp has discovered how to make her own bubbles. She was screaming
with delight, revelling in her new-found ability and experimenting with it.
Do you make bubbles?” he asked Lark.
Lark was stunned. When was the last time he had made bubbles?
“The lesson behind this story,” said Eau, “is that the early years are the best
years for education, simply because the youth have the freedom
to experiment without any, or with limited, adult interference. It could be
with a piece of seaweed in their mouths or simply breaking a shell, they
experiment unconsciously with everything around them and the sensations
produced. The moment you step into school these responses are
conditioned. Teachers force things onto you; learning has been structured
for you. You stop experiencing through experimentation, and start learning
to count on others.”
Melqart looked embarrassed and Lark was getting growing anxious,
but Eau was not done. “When these students come to university, we ask
them to experiment so they can unleash their creativity. How can we expect
this of them after they have been in stagnant waters for almost 15 years?
It is difficult to break 13 to 15 years of conditioned behaviour. We will
always have to teach, of course, but we can’t design learning by taking away
the pleasure of making mistakes.”
“Everybody digests information at their own pace, there is no
one-size-fits-all for education. Every aquatic being is unique and requires
a tailored approach. The ones that succeed or excel are the ones who do
not follow the rules, the ones who are aware of their conditioning and work
their learning around it,” smiled Eau as he saw Lark’s eyes twinkle again.
Lark was breaking all the rules. He was not going to become a doctor
or an engineer. He was going to follow his heart. He had the will and the
desire to learn and was passionate about design. He had looked inside
himself and understood who he was.
“Judging from the ill-researched projects that get handed, it seems
like kids are in a hurry and feel they are wasting time,” said Eau. Melqart
Moral
Design needs to move down to the level of high schools. Design
methodology and processes should be at the core of high school education
systems in order to allow creative minds to bloom and to produce
researchers, analytical minds and sustainable thinkers. Life is design and
that is something we cannot ignore no matter how hard we try… the water
returns to the source and the environment always prevails.
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61
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The future of education
How will new technologies and access to the web transform education
and learning? Technology is changing our way of living and our thought
and action processes at large. The education sector will not be spared
from these transformations.
In the short-term, we can expect that the teaching and learning
process will change significantly due to the technological innovations
in daily education activities. Learning platforms, software tools developed
to support the different stages of education, personal devices like PC
tablets and e-book readers and displaying devices like interactive web
boards will have an impact on how educators plan programmes and how
students receive information.
The introduction of these tools produces a very different learning
model from the one we are used to and may shift all teaching and learning
interaction to a digital or virtual level. It is a scenario that is already feasible
and is being tested in schools around the world. In this environment
teachers plan lessons and define learning materials according to the
functionalities offered by the platform. Lessons are delivered through
interactive boards and display devices in the classroom. Students take
notes on a copy of the learning materials downloaded to their personal
device from a platform that assures access management, authentication
and copyright protection of the textbooks and materials. This delivery
phase is enriched when the board is connected to the Internet as users
can access complementary information. Students can also develop texts
and exercises directly on their personal devices and upload them to the
platform where teachers can access them for proof and verification.
At home, students can connect to the platform to download learning
material, study on their devices and collaborate with other students using
community tools like e-mail, chats and forums.
Everything is developed at a digital level — there is no need for paper
and in the next few years we may expect devices to become thinner and
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
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Internet culture, social networks and the pervasive presence of technology
in our daily lives are bringing about a deep social change that has a
significant impact on lifestyle and culture.
If the mission of design education is to help students to develop their
potential in and beyond academic programmes, to be capable of facing
transformations in business and in society, the technological dimension
is a key factor to take into account in the guidelines for design education.
With this in mind, we must distinguish two different but connected
aspects of the technological impact on graphic design education: first,
the role of technology in the transformation of educational models and
processes and second, the influence of technology on the expertise
of future graphic designers.
This essay aims to provide a snapshot of these two complementary
aspects.
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devices are only available in black and white, have a low page refresh time
and lack the features of devices with traditional LCD screens. The first full
colour devices will be on the market by the end of 2011, but have yet to
achieve the quality of printed magazines.
Researchers are working to reduce these issues and vendors
announced new functions, like video support, web browsing and vibrant
colour. E-ink is mainly used for e-book reader screens, but projected plans
for the next three to five years indicate a wide range of applications, like
colour changing device casings that will enable us, for example, to alter the
colour of our phones for every occasion. E-ink billboards may replace LED
versions that have high levels of energy consumption and poor colour when
in direct sunlight and will operate by reflecting ambient light with
low-power consumption.
The e-sheet may also become a possibility in the next 10 to 20 years.
With magazine-quality colour these thin devices would roll-up like paper
and charge through sunlight and ambient room lighting.
3D visual technologies
Research in display technologies is progressing rapidly and is moving
beyond the 3D screens that will soon be available on notebooks, netbooks
and mobile phones.
Roll-up OLED screens and holographic 3D displays will soon be available.
The first type consists of a flexible display that can be rolled up or wrapped
around a cylinder, such as a pencil. Holographic displays are devices capable
of 360 degree 3D images, providing a three-dimensional view of objects.
The end effect will be the ability to create of 3D avatars in space.
These devices have a digital-video input port for connection to
computers and other devices, and are equipped with gesture sensors to
allow users to move and interact with the hologram.
Looking ahead, we may have futuristic 3D screens like the one in
prototype at the Senseable City Lab at the MIT: a physical screen made of
thousands of flying nano-machines communicating with one another
and with the network that move in real-time to create a screen. When
a user needs a screen he can have it at the snap of his fingers — the
nano-machines immediately move to the centre of the room and display a
real three dimensional object. The existing prototype is made of thousands
on nano-machines, but a HD image might require some 100 million nanomachines, each displaying a pixel and together require huge bandwidth.
Virtual reality and augmented reality
Virtual and Augmented reality utilise technology for the creation of artificial
reality through the production of entirely new objects and environments or
the modification of existing reality.
Virtual reality technologies allow for the creation of objects and
environments so accurate that they may be perceived as real, while
Augmented reality technologies begin with existing reality and layer
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
E-ink technology
E-ink technology provides readers with the same user experience
of reading from paper. E-ink screens are not backlit like the common LCD
and, as a result, are easier on the eye. They require very little battery power,
are thin and light and displays are visible in sunlight. At the moment e-ink
WHAT ROLE WILL TECHNOLOGY PLAY IN THE FUTURE OF DESIGN EDUCATION?
Relevant technologies for future communication designers
Technological innovation is a pervasive element in many fields, including
communication design, and deeply affects the skills that the designers are
required to have.
The education of the designer must expand its boundaries to include
this technological dimension. In this short essay, we cannot analyse all the
relevant technologies, but we can provide a glance at those most effective
in the design sector.
TORINO - KATIA COLUCCI
faster, to have higher definition images and videos, to support 3D features
and holographic capabilities that simulate tangible objects.
The introduction of these innovations in educational processes, aided
by decreasing costs, will change the face of our schools and universities
and transform traditional learning models.
The revolution begun by these technological advances, however, goes
beyond making learning activities virtual. The traditional way of acquiring
knowledge, based for the most part on textbooks provided by publishing
houses, will be affected.
In this new scenario, teachers and students can easily select and
organise relevant information from texts, as well as add other content
sourced and downloaded from the Internet to the basic material. The
educational path can be tailored to match individual teacher and
student needs.
Websites that offer searchable content about a diverse array of
subjects are accelerating this phenomenon. Youtube and Wikipedia are
the most popular, but companies, universities and even private citizens
use the web to publicise and organise their content. Students can access
this content by simply clicking a link or touching a word on their tablet. In
the future, systems that allow for the visualisation of content and provide
links between the various media platforms will make these searches
more facile.
These possibilities illuminate a model where there are no boundaries
between the traditional disciplines, which have been culturally coded
and where we define our knowledge in real time within the limits
of a physical book.
Of course, the use of the web as a teaching tool involves a risk
concerning the source of the material and whether the content is
trustworthy. Educators will, in the future, have to transition from simply
profferring knowledge to students, to helping students produce criteria
for selecting reliable information on their own.
65
Conclusion
Technology will change educational models and content in communication
design, but an even more pressing concern is that technological
innovations progress rapidly, making our personal knowledge obsolete
more quickly than in the past. According to some experts the current
half-life of ‘personal knowledge’ is five years. In other words, in five years,
half of our personal knowledge will be outdated. This means that to be
competitive in future professional environments, we need to renew our
knowledge by investing in continuous education.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Crowdsourcing
In addition to the opportunities for new technologies in the design sector,
we must consider the influence technology bears on enterprise organisation.
One of the most interesting uses of technology in this field is
crowdsourcing; a phenomenon that engages the Internet community and
its know-how on a specific topic, like a t-shirt design, a packaging idea or
a math problem solution. The project is open to all interested volunteers,
regardless of their location, so long as they have Internet access.
The company occasionally makes crowdsourcing more appealing by
offering a reward for the best solution, which may simply be the visibility
achieved by the winner.
This new philosophy for professional collaboration addresses
a need for creativity in business, and is a trend that the design community
must consider.
WHAT ROLE WILL TECHNOLOGY PLAY IN THE FUTURE OF DESIGN EDUCATION?
Product concept evolution
The traditional concept of production is rapidly changing. Among the
factors driving this evolution are innovative materials and embedded
software. These smart materials have a special relevance for the design
sector. While the materials may differ from one another, they share the
property of being able to change their characteristics in relation to their
surroundings or to other direct influences. For example, Thermochromic
ink changes its colour as the temperature changes and Photochromic
ink changes colour in reaction to variations in the lighting. There are
also materials that emit light when stimulated electronically, like the
Electroluminescent and Fluorescent material, while others like Polymer
gels can change shape and volume in response to small changes in their
environment like temperature or electric field.
The list of the existing smart materials is, of course, much longer than
the few that I have mentioned and they offer exciting options for the design
of new products, as well as enable new design paradigms.
In addition to innovative materials, there is another trend contributing
to new product concepts: software acting as an integral part of objects.
This trend is transforming products into services, requiring a reassessment
of the entire value chain, including design aspects.
TORINO - KATIA COLUCCI
complementary artificial elements onto it to heighten awareness
of our own reality.
The progress of technology (including display technologies), the high
computational power of computers, and the ability of particular interfaces
to transmit sensations of taste, smell and touch, herald a new era for
Virtual and Augmented Reality.
We now have immersive systems that allow users to experience the
same sensations from simulated environments that they would from physical
ones. The high cost of these systems makes them inaccessible to many; their
use is limited to high spending sectors, like flight simulators for pilots.
The technology is available though and we can expect, in the future,
an improvement of image quality, interactivity and the variety of sensations
that such systems can transmit.
References
Knowledgeworks Foundation 2020 Forecast:
Creating the Future of Learning,
http://www.futureofed.org/
Howe, Jeff. 2006. The Rise of Crowdsourcing. Wired
Magazine, June.
2011. The top ten e-paper devices coming in
the next 20 years. Journal of the Society for
Information Display February 2011
http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-top-ten-e-paperdevices-coming-in-the-next-20-years
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Fly-fire project. MIT SENSEable City Lab.
http://senseable.mit.edu/flyfire/
Saracco, Roberto. 2010. Uno sguardo sulle
evoluzioni tecnologiche di questa decade.
Notiziario Tecnico Telecom Italia, April.
Mizell, David. 2000. Fundamentals of wearable
computers and augmented reality. Hillsdale,
N.J: L. Erlbaum Associates Inc. 447-450.
Piersantelli, Giuseppe. 2010. Colpo d’occhio sulla
realtà aumentata. Notiziario Tecnico Telecom
Italia, August.
Schwartz, Mel M. 2009. Smart materials.
CRC Press.
67
NEW YORK 40˚34"N 74˚00'W
n
Collaboratio
ing
rc
u
Crowdso
ut borders
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Design wit
DIY
DIWO
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Social netwo
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RE
BORDERS A
Collaboration is interactive
Traditional frameworks for production are evolving into interactive activities
where the consumer participates in creation. While traditionally a passive
role, consumers are more frequently introducing their own stories, values
and content into the production process. One-to-one works have become
many-to-many works, and the do-it-yourself (DIY) culture is giving way to
a do-it-with-others (DIWO) movement.
Collaboration is responsive
With the emergence of tools that allow consumers to take part in product
creation, consumers have taken on a new role. No longer passive, they have
become co-creators — moved from nouns to verbs. Consumers actively
create alongside designers, often through improvisation. Improvising – the
act of creating in the moment and in response to an environment, results
in the invention of new patterns, practices, structures and behaviours.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
The comfortably crisp borders between creator and consumer have
dissolved. As a result of technological, social and cultural advancements in
product design, the borders that once separated producer and consumer
are no longer recognisable, permanent or possible.
Relying on these traditional boundaries can be a disadvantage for
contemporary designers. We carry our social networks in our pockets. We
crowd-source our private financial decisions with strangers online. We read
a single book across devices on a number of screens. It is critical, then, that
designers do not see borders, but design beautiful seams.
By not seeing borders, designers expand their possibilities at a time
when websites are spilling off desktops onto streets and computing
in public is becoming a behavioural norm. With the blurring of borders
between disciplines, and across devices, time zones and communication
spaces comes a new mode of collaboration. The changes necessitate
a new form of collaborative enterprise — not just with team members,
but with the target audience.
As we experience this shift, our collaborative activities must evolve
in at least five critical ways:
Collaboration is sensemaking
To create patterns is natural not only as designers, but as humans.
We make sense of chaotic environments by giving shapes and concepts
meaning and form that we can categorise — poster, website, building,
typography, interactive, stone and so on. Creating categories gives our
experience boundaries.
Collaboration is continuous
Collaboration is both discipline-respectful and discipline-agnostic.
It is a historically rich creative process that has influenced artistic
mediums from music to dance to theatre. As a method it is evolving
69
NEW YORK - LIZ DANZICO
from a bounded behaviour that is a useful tool in specific cases to a
life-long process that calls on various disciplines to work spontaneously,
harmoniously and holistically.
«Design: productivity»
Collaboration is personal
People should be fiercely passionate about good ideas so that their
collaborative efforts are a natural extension of themselves. Confidence can
bridge a gap between desire and outcome if our integrity of thought and
authenticity of creation remain intact. We have the ability to both do good
work and to make it personal. Confidence is good’s natural extension.
70
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
WHERE THE BORDERS ARE
Finally, as we consider these shifting borders, we must consider the
areas where those border lines meet — the ‘beautiful seams,’ a term coined
by Mark Weiser, chief technologist of, at the time, Xerox Palo Alto Research
Centre. Weiser intended for users to explore systems and to find moments
of beauty within them. If our role as designers is to create platforms and
frameworks, we must be conscious of developing recognisable seams for
others, so that they can play, discover and configure in those spaces.
As borders continue to shift, designers and users overlap, time zones
matter less and boundaries blur, it is at these ‘beautiful seams’ that
designers have the most opportunity to create, to present possibilities,
to demonstrate beauty, to teach and to learn.
Gao Bei
Jinan Manifesto Workshop
Participant
RALEIGH 35˚49'8"N 78˚38'41"W
Meredith Davis
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
RELEVANCE IN
—
A COMPLEX WORLD
ICOGRADA DESIGN
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EDUCATION MANIF
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Civic discourse
Complexity
Maker economy
Resilience
Sensemaking
Services
Settings
Social networks
Systems
My greatest concern for the future of graphic design education is the
ever-widening gap between what is taught in college and university
programmes and the global context in which it is practiced. This is
not to say that there are no design programmes that demonstrate
foresight by addressing the shifting landscape of design practice, only
that the vast majority of design curricula promote a 20th century vision
of the field that is increasingly irrelevant for contemporary issues and
scholarship demands.
While this essay is too short to address the breadth and depth of
these defining concepts, one theme seems pervasive: complexity. The
position of design within expanding technological, cultural, social, physical
and economic systems defies simplification. Complexity is an essential
characteristic of our present context and it has serious implications for
what and how we teach.
Complex systems are inherently unstable and constantly
transforming — the relationships of their constituent parts and their
interactions with other systems are always in flux. The principles that
undergird current design education are inadequate tools for coping with
this constant change. Thus, the challenge for design educators is to
develop curricula that are both agile and expandable.
Traditionally, graphic designers thought of systems as something
that they made — sets of visual elements deployed according to rules
for their combination. More recently, technology recast systems as the
interacting functions of discrete tools and their operations. Marketing and
human factors disciplines expanded this to include the preferences and
behaviours of ‘users’ who interact with and through technology. Today’s
environment, however, challenges us to think about the context of design
in a more involved, intricate manner. Users are entire ecologies of people —
not simply consumers seeking goods or deploying functions.
Their settings reach beyond physical surroundings or economic imperatives
and they require services that extend further than a series of procedural
actions or one-time encounters. The interactions between these
components are multi-dimensional and dynamic, and the rate of change in
their relationships is accelerating. We design in environments of complex,
interdependent relations where every action has many consequences.
Despite this shift, however, most undergraduate programmes focus
on the design of de-contextualised objects and a process with the goal
of fixed, ‘almost perfect’ results. Mastery of an abstract visual language
precedes investigations of context, as if formal logic can be imposed on
any problem and the intent of design is to simplify rather than manage
complexity. In cases where methods must be applied to existing settings,
problem statements are often defined by the faculty rather than by the
students, and are rid of complexity and contradiction.
The challenge for contemporary design programmes is to set aside
longstanding assumptions about how design should be taught and
to transform both the content and structure of education to meet the
73
01. 2010. Knowledgeworks Foundation 2020
Forecast: Creating the Future of Learning,
http://www.futureofed.org/ [9 December 2010]
02. Ibid
03. 2010. Knowledgeworks Foundation 2020
Forecast: Creating the Future of Learning,
http://www.futureofed.org/ [9 December 2010]
04. Ibid
74
New civic discourse:
Rearticulating identity and community in a global society
This trend considers ‘educitizens’ an increasingly dispersed group of learners
who engage in public discourse about the criteria for education. The audience
for non-professional design education is growing as there is a greater demand
for interpretation of information, technology in learning and innovation in all
fields. Equally pressing are the expectations of professional design students
who see opportunities for design practice in a global economy. Once educated
to work for clients in the top 10% of the economic market, design students
now find opportunities in areas where innovation can shape the quality of life.
How schools respond to student demand for meaningful work will shape the
social character of design education, as well as its curricular logic.
The maker economy:
Personal fabrication and open source principles democratise
production and design
This trend calls for bottom-up networking and the downscaling of design and
production to the local level. The forecast claims that “schools, community
centres, and businesses will become important hubs of design knowledge,
rapid prototyping, and problem-solving skills.”03 The question for college-level
design educators, therefore, is how pedagogy moves from discrete artifacts
designed through expert-driven processes to participatory tools and adaptive/
adaptable systems through which others construct their own experiences.
This shift in control from designing for people to designing with people and by
people requires new methods. Further, it challenges us to consider what role
college and university design programmes will play in shaping the nature and
services of these collaborations.
Pattern recognition:
An extremely visible world requires new sensemaking
This trend addresses the public’s need to discern patterns in overwhelming
amounts of information. GPS in mobile devices, sensors embedded in the
environment and the “digital trails” of social networking provide a “‘picture’
of our lives as citizens, workers, and learners.”04 The work for design education
is to determine what kinds of visual representation are useful for diverse
populations and how to deliver such content when interfaces call for a
broader range of sensory input and data manipulation than visuals can
provide. The principles of form are no longer solely for representational
purposes, they are information reconfigured as behaviour.
These trends did not emerge overnight, their arcs are long and there will
be no returning to more familiar ground. As graphic design yields territory to
other fields, it becomes clear that now is the time to reinvent the discipline and
to argue for the new value that design can bring to living, working and learning
in a complex world. The history of design shows that such moments are rare —
it is important to seize this opportunity.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Platforms for resilience:
Creating flexibility and resilience among system failures
This trend acknowledges the instability and uncertainty of today’s world
and warns that methods that resist change will not succeed. The authors
of the forecast call for lightweight, modular educational infrastructures
that can support the wellbeing of learners and learning agents.02 In recent
decades, design schools have added content to full programmes of study
in a curriculum-by-accrual attempt to respond to new practices and
technologies. Unwilling to sacrifice previously valued concepts, skills and
curricular structures, the organisational logic of these curricula became
less apparent and infrastructures failed under the burden of having too
much to teach in too little time. The fixed expertise of faculty members in
a constantly changing field where new knowledge and skills are required
and the growing diversity of learning expectations for college students
illuminate hindrances in older curricula. There are structural barriers to the
interdisciplinary work that is demanded by complex problems. Thus, design
educators must develop flexible curricular structures that can respond
quickly to changing times.
RELEVANCE IN A COMPLEX WORLD — ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO
Amplified organisation:
Extended human capacity to remake the organisation
This trend addresses the emergence of social networks and technologies
for cooperation. Citizens live, work and collaborate across media and social
platforms, they self-organise and open their activities to public critique
and continual reconfiguration. The trend calls into question, not only how
design teaching and learning are managed, but also how programmes
communicate the place of design in the decision-making structures of
organisations. In the last decade of the 20th century, strategists argued for
design at the highest levels of business — a top-down decision-making
process. Today, it is clear that good ideas also rise from within the ranks
and that structures must act upon challenges to established conventions.
The past offers few examples of this kind of work and typical design
education assumes an expert-driven environment. Our task as design
educators, therefore, is to transform our processes and what we perceive
as the relationships among clients, user audiences and designers.
RALEIGH - MEREDITH DAVIS
demands of contemporary communication.
The Knowledgeworks Foundation and Institute for the Future have
forecasted important factors of change for education in the 21st century 01.
These trends have significant implications for design’s role in shaping
education and for professional design’s pedagogical practices. The
forecast includes:
75
SAN FRANCISCO 37˚46'N 122˚25'W
Hugh Dubberly
Framing the manifesto
The manifesto acknowledges change without quite defining it and lists the
attributes of an emerging practice and education without quite prescribing
them. The manifesto does not explicitly define its goals or audience.
It does not decry indulgences or urge reform. It does not sound an alarm
or assert a theory.
Instead, the manifesto asks that we consider our responsibility for
harmony and balance, and to each other. It invokes oullim, a Korean word
denoting resonance and connoting mutual duty. It might have invoked
similar ideas with the Chinese word, ren.
In a thoughtful commentary on the manifesto and its development,
Sharon Poggenpohl and Ahn Sang-soo acknowledge that “the search
was for common ground” and “consensus” and that the manifesto is
“somewhat quiet.”
Yet, Poggenpohl and Ahn note, “A manifesto is a form of communication
predicated on three beliefs: that a change has occurred . . . that human
agency can change circumstances into something more desirable; and the
timing is advantageous…”02
Thus, in relation to the Icograda manifesto, we must ask:
• What has changed?
• What could be better?
• Why act now?
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Networks
Platforms
Problem-framing
Research
Services
Systems
Transdiciplinarity
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INPUT FOR UPDATIN
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THE ICOGRADA DES
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EDUCATION MANIF
121˚33'52"W
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Change
Code
Computation
Data-visualisation
Invention
Media
Meta-Designer
In 2000, the International Council of Graphic Design Associations (Icograda)
published their first “Design Education Manifesto,” noting the “many
changes” in design practice, defining the “visual communication designer”
and illuminating “a future of design education.”01 The Icograda manifesto
marked a turning point – an international design body addressing
change at the millennium. Publishing the manifesto was a significant
accomplishment. A decade later, Icograda is updating their manifesto
and this essay responds to their request for input.
Framing the context
The manifesto begins by acknowledging changes in design. “The term
‘graphic design’ has been technologically undermined… Boundaries
between disciplines are becoming more fluid… The variety and complexity
of design issues has expanded.01” We might better understand these
changes by understanding their context and causes.
So, what is causing the large shifts in design practice?
Computers? Software tools? The Internet?
Yes, but they reflect a much larger shift in technology, economic
01. Icograda. 2000. The ICOGRADA Design
Education Manifesto. ICOGRADA Congress
in Seoul. http://www.icograda.org/uploads/
resources/IcogradaEducationManifesto.pdf
02. Poggenpohl, Sharon, and Ahn, Song-Soo. 2002.
Between Word and Deed. Design Issues, 18(2):
Spring. Cambridge: MIT Press.
77
http://www.dubberly.com/articles/what-isconversation.html
05. Misner, Tim. 2009. Building Support for
Use-Based Design into Hardware Products.
Interactions, XVI(5): September-October, 2009.
New York: ACM. http://www.dubberly.com/
articles/use-based-design.html
06. Kowalski, Jeff. 2011. Autodesk CTO, personal
conversations, January 2011.conversation.html
78
More common will be situations created by participants, during use,
enabling multiple views. Today’s users will become designers; designers
will become meta-designers, creating conditions in which others
can design.
In this world, a media-based focus is less relevant. All design becomes
trans-disciplinary. A concern for the form of objects will give way to a
concern for the experience of services. An interest in products and things
will give way to an interest in networks of interaction and communities
of systems.
Icograda has adjusted their stance and terminology from graphic
design to communication design. The new position, however, still focuses
on individual products. A further shift to focus on platforms — to design
of systems in which communications can take place — might be more
consistent with the technological, economic and cultural shifts we face.
We might even go beyond communication (which implies Shannon’s
somewhat mechanical model of delivering messages) and focus on
conversation (interactions that centre on understanding, agreement and
action). We might frame design as conversation — with a goal of designing
for conversation04.
Threats and opportunities
The very foundation of graphic design is under assault. Printing is dying
and in another 10 years, commercial offset lithography will have all
but disappeared, save possibly for a handful of luxury artisans. Massproduction lithography will be replaced by mass-customisation ink-jet
and other digital printing techniques — or by electronic communications.
Printed newspapers, magazines and books may vanish as well.
New forms of communications will emerge. Networked tablets provide
an environment for re-inventing the relationship between text, image,
motion and sound. Games, movies and social networks will spawn new
hybrids. E-books will become applications. Data-visualisation will become
a profession and employ thousands of designers.
We are also finding new ways to apply information technology to
design. We are learning that “hardware products want to be web-sites,”
and data-driven design is emerging as a new discipline05. Computationbased design (the application of algorithms to exploring solution spaces),
long a subject of research, is entering practice and promises to become
a discipline in its own right. Scan-edit-print, long a framework in
two-dimensional design is becoming a framework in three-dimensional
design, and not just for mechanical objects, but also for living things06.
Given these opportunities, we must ask: What skills are required
to take advantage of them?
Framing design’s relation to code
Juxtaposing the threat to traditional graphic design with the opportunities
of ‘emerging media’ might suggest an easy transition. Many traditional
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
03. Dubberly, Hugh. 2008. Design in The Age of
Biology: Shifting From a Mechanical-Object Ethos
to an Organic-Systems Ethos. Interactions, XV(5):
September-October. New Yokr: ACM.
http://www.dubberly.com/articles/design-in-theage-of-biology.html
04. Dubberly, Hugh and Pangaro, Paul. 2009.
What is conversation? How can we design for
effective conversation? Interactions, XVI(4):
July-August. New York: ACM.
INPUT FOR UPDATING THE ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO
Framing design
Design grew out of craft. A craftsman planned-for-making-things
and made them. The craft tradition was cut short by the industrial
revolution. Mass production separated planning-for-making-things from
making them. Planning-for-making-things became design, and design
took on some of the assumptions of mass production: notions of objectivity
(framing situations in terms of problems and solutions), an expert or
‘professional’ stance and a concern with ‘getting things right’ (because in
the world of mass production fixing a design mistake can be quite costly).
These assumptions may no longer apply; they may even be dangerous.
Problem-framing becomes more valuable than problem-solving.
Software is never ‘right’ and never finished. In software development,
delays are often more costly than mistakes. With network-based
applications, change becomes continuous. We enter perpetual beta.
(For designers who acknowledge that improvement comes from iteration
and that ending conditions are arbitrary, perpetual beta may be more
comfortable than mass production.)
In the new world of information and biology, design must change.
Situations where designers design things will become less common.
SAN FRANCISCO - HUGH DUBBERLY
structure and culture. The industrial revolution is ending and a new
revolution in information is taking its place. In addition to this comes
another revolution in biology, also largely about information —
“understanding how organisms encode it, store, reproduce, transmit,
and express it.”03
The shift is not only about what is produced (from things to services)
and how it is produced (from long-lead editions to continuous adaptation,
from proprietary to open source, from transaction to relationship), it is
also a shift in worldview (from mechanism to organism) and in framing
metaphors (from clock-work to ecosystem, from turn-the-crank-linearcausality to feedback-enabled-dynamic-equilibrium). It is a shift in
organising structures (from individual nodes to webs of links, from
top-down to bottom-up, from serial to parallel) and a shift in human
values (from coherence to responsiveness, from seeking simplicity
to embracing complexity).
Thus, we must also ask: How will we transform design in an age
of information and biology?
79
08. Maturana, Humberto. 1997. Metadesign.
Instituto de Terapia Cognitiva, Santiago, 1997.
http://www.inteco.cl/articulos/metadesign.htm
80
learning. It must also turn tacit knowledge into explicit knowledge — “distill
rules from experience, codify new methods, test and improve them, and pass
them on to others07.”
“The focus on design research at a few top schools is a positive
development.” A few design journals publish articles that build lasting
knowledge, but they are not widely read. A few design blogs are widely read,
but they do not building lasting knowledge. Research must inform practice
and practice must inform research — they must co-evolve. This evolution
requires invention, for example, fusing the studio and case-study methods07.
Research must be more than observation or even abstraction —
it must also invent theory. The gaps in design knowledge are huge. We lack
theories of conversation, interaction, platforms, products and product
management and service. Filling these gaps is an important task for design
practice and education — both must develop mechanisms to build and
share knowledge.
Summary
The manifesto grew out of the recognition of a change, misalignment and
the need to put things in order, yet it was circumspect, almost vague. I urge
Icograda towards greater clarity. Clarity invites response that can lead to
iteration and improvement, which is a goal we share.
In the interest of clarity, I propose this summary:
The design practice that grew out of the industrial revolution is no
longer sustainable (economically or ecologically). A new practice — one that
responds to the information revolution — is emergent. We can see its outline,
but much remains to be invented. For this, we must take responsibility. In
addition, we must invent a mechanism (an organic system) through which the
discipline of design can learn and evolve.
At the same time, design education still largely reflects design’s origins
in craftwork. Simply put, design education is out of date. What is worse is
that change is accelerating, and design education is stuck. It has little
means to move forward. We must also take responsibility for re-inventing
design education and integrating it into an organic system so that the field
may transform.
And what if we ignore the situation? What if we remain vague? What if
we remain stuck?
Design schools will become increasingly irrelevant, and more
importantly, a continuity of history, values concerning quality and perhaps
a sense of humanness may be lost. The world will fall further under the
influence of those satisfied with making things work without making
them delight.
This need not be so. Our relationship to our technology is not inevitable.
We design it. We are responsible for it08.
I look forward to the conversation that will ensue as Icograda update
their manifesto and continue the process of re-inventing design.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
07. Wujec, Tom. (ed.). 2011. Imagine, Design, Create:
How Designers, Engineers And Architects Are
Changing Our World. New York: Melcher Media.
www.dubberly.com/articles/use-based-design.html
INPUT FOR UPDATING THE ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO
Framing design education
Our notions of design are still rooted in the industrial revolution
understanding of design as planning-for-making-things. And our strategies
for design education are even older — they remain rooted in the craft era,
in the master-apprentice relationship played out in the design studio. In
this tradition, students learn by emulating teachers. Almost all of their
learning is tacit and response to change is slow.
In the craft world, where change is slow, the master-apprentice
system works well. In the post-industrial world, where change is fast,
the master-apprentice system tends to fall behind. Often, the apprentice
knows more about new trends and new tools than the master. A postindustrial design education system can no longer rely solely on tacit
SAN FRANCISCO - HUGH DUBBERLY
design skills do translate directly, but are they sufficient? Designers will
also need to understand computers, networks and software — as they
previously had to understand printing, binding and other manufacturing
technologies.
Yet that industrial age framing no longer fits. A designer’s relation
to a printer is very different than a designer’s relation to a programmer.
In both cases, a designer may develop a specification, but both the
specifications and proceeding steps are very different. Printing is all about
reproduction and requires little invention from the printer; programming
has almost nothing to do with reproduction and requires a lot of invention
by the programmer. Consulting your printer during design is a good idea;
consulting your programmer during design is a necessity.
Practice has not settled the nature of the relationship between
designer and coder, and it is the subject of intense debate among
programmers. Alan Cooper has suggested it should be like the relationship
between architect and builder, but most buildings are designed by
builders, not architects. (And most software is created by programmers,
not designers.) Yet, when the architect is also an excellent engineer, such
as Robert Maillart or Toni Kotnik, the results can be amazing.
We have also seen amazing results from designers who can code, such
as David Small, Lisa Strausfeld, John Maeda, Ben Fry, Casey Reas and many
others. In fact, the best young designers are teaching themselves to code,
and the best young engineers are teaching themselves to design. Is this a
race? Or will they converge? Can we create schools for hybridity?
End-user programming tools have long promised to shield designers
and others from coding, but so far, the best they offer is an easier way
to begin. Learning mark-up and scripting languages remains a necessity.
The best way to convey how you want software to behave is to demonstrate
the behaviour.
81
NEW YORK 40˚34"N 74˚00'W
r and
Steven Helle
W
121˚33'52"
Authorship
This is key to a new relationship between designer and receiver (client,
audience and end-user). It is an umbrella under which the designer
operates as both a service and content provider.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Lita Talarico
ION
AN EDUCAT
MANIFESTO
DA
FOR ICOGRA
2'01"N
TAIPEI 25˚0
Authorship
n
Collaboratio
Citizenship
ing
Design think
rship
u
e
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Entrepre
roperty
p
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Intellectua
Preface
Graphic design (or communication design) is in flux. The transition
from print to digital platforms has triggered a re-evaluation of
educational practices and procedures, as well as a reassessment
of the philosophical concepts that have long defined and framed
design activity.
It is no longer practical to think of graphic design in graphic arts
terms. Graphic design in the traditional sense, as a typographicbased practice, whereby messages are communicated through
the manipulation of letter and image in 2-dimensional space, is an
antiquated notion. It will become more archaic every year.
Design has always been a function of business, but in the 21st
century it must be more integrated into business than ever before —
with designers taking the lead as idea generators. A good idea, however,
is nothing without viable execution and efficient delivery to the public.
Design education must not be timid about engaging with business
theory and practice at the undergraduate and graduate stages.
Design entrepreneurship is a natural outgrowth of the typical design
practice. For those who start studios, the entrepreneurial business
models are essential. Even beyond building a viable design studio, office
or firm, turning ideas into products is the prescribed direction for any
design practitioner. Teaching designers to take the entrepreneurial leap
is important for keeping the designer at the top of the creative pyramid.
Integrating design theories and practices fluently in design
languages and technologies is essential to building a foundation for
design. Once the foundation is firmly established, the designer can
develop entrepreneurially, as well as experimentally.
Yet, even in this model, education should not forsake its primary
motivations for engaging with design — the desire to create objects of
desire, influence, inspiration and, yes, manipulation.
Education must be a process of re-evaluation in order to foster an
understanding that design is not just about ‘making objects,’ but rather
building on ideas. Outcomes of design vary from the physical to the
virtual, from the commercial to the social and political.
Design is concept-driven and platform expansive. Ideas can be
manufactured and executed using various current media and mediums
that may develop in the future. Designers must be able to shift and
adjust to these new demands and opportunities.
As a means of equipping students with the requisite knowledge
and skills, it is important to emphasise the following new keys to
design pedagogy:
83
Multidisciplinary design
This is no longer a 2-Dimensional world. Space, time, sound and motion are
components of communication design. The most essential learning component
is the integration of the existing and future media and platforms.
84
• Learning to use various platforms for communications.
• Mastering technologies in order to engage in holistic practice.
Afterword
Communication design is at risk. Business schools are introducing
‘design thinking’ and collaborating with design schools to integrate design
into the curriculum as an integral part of any business venture. Design
education, therefore, needs to be fluent in business practices. By engaging
in a primary creative role with business schools (which will lead to more
authorship, entrepreneurship and meaningful contribution) on commercial,
cultural and social platforms, design will strengthen its foundation.
In educating the future designer, multiple goals must be examined.
Commercial imperatives must be balanced with social and cultural
ones. Designers must become advocates of issues and concerns. Future
designers can specialise in particular areas, but they must leave school
with fluency in both realms of communication, which means being business
savvy and humanitarian. A designer must be a conscientious citizen.
Design education must not lose sight of why young people want to
become designers and not business people — they want to make things
2D, 3D, virtual, in motion, to make boxes, banners and campaigns. Making
must be emphasised as a consequential act.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Entrepreneurship
Although linked to ‘authorship,’ design entrepreneurship takes ‘content
creation’ to the next level. This is a creative and business pursuit that
demands a high level of sophistication and maturity. Speaking the language
of entrepreneurism places the designer in a more commanding role.
• Mastering the skills and strategies for creating, developing and
producing viable commercial and social products and campaigns.
• Being fluent in the processes of intellectual property, marketing
and promotion.
• The business of design involves cultural and global reach; identifying
and fulfilling a need in both mass or niche markets. It must be practical
and yet within the reach of the designer to realise it.
• Viability, practicality and functionality. Understanding outcomes and
learning how to predict them is essential.
AN EDUCATION MANIFESTO FOR ICOGRADA
Collaboration
In the current media and industry environment the individual creator
remains supreme, but effective results require sharing knowledge
and skills — working together towards a common goal. The more this can
be emphasised in early education, the better the balance between selfless
pursuit and ego will be.
• Designers should be integrated at the onset of all projects, whether
in authorship or service design.
• The tools for developing meaningful partnerships with clients,
end-users and other designers must be taught in terms of business
and ethics.
• Understanding the rights (and wrongs) of collaboration is essential
and fundamental learning.
NEW YORK- STEVEN HELLER AND LITA TALARICO
Design authorship emphasises:
• Creating original concepts in response to the growing need for content
in media and industry.
• Developing a personal voice or a narrative, and determining how best
to communicate to an audience through media and industry.
• Benefitting society and culture through narrative and focussing
on the consequences of design production.
• Retaining typography as the lingua franca and foundation of
communication design.
• Maintaining immersion in design history and criticism as an integral
part of design authorship and encouraging writing as another means
of communication.
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Ecosystems
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ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Jamer Hunt
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Evolve or fade away. That is the challenge for the field of communication
design in the 21st century. The profession is facing competing internal and
external pressures that threaten to limit its future potential and reduce
its relevance. In the context of open, collaborative networks of ideas and
outcomes, emergent communication ecosystems will require entirely new
and adaptable ways of designing. In this networked, global environment,
design educators will need to redouble their efforts in teaching future
designers to be both solidly specialised and flexibly generalised. The
success of this nearly impossible balancing act will foretell the health
and vitality of the profession’s future.
The tension between form-giving and contextual attunement is
exerting an internal, divisive pressure on academic design programmes.
Its impact is seen in the struggles between faculty members clinging to
a proud (mostly Swiss) heritage of appropriate form-making, while others
demand more attention to the user, the audience or our imperiled world.
These two factions may both be right (as I believe), although there may
not be a graceful — or ideologically pure — way to reconcile the two
positions as of yet. Both camps view this standoff as a zero-sum game
where giving in at all means losing something precious. This conflict is not
unique to communication design. Since the rise of user-centred design
several decades ago it has also challenged product design, architecture
and interaction design. Delivering innovative educational curricula to future
designers requires walking a tightrope between essential courses, such
as typography and colour theory, on the one hand, and essential courses,
such as sustainability and cross-cultural hermeneutics, on the other.
The risk, of course, is that programmes become diluted and divided,
successful in neither dimension while straining to teach both.
Another danger is that programmes retreat into narrow specialisation,
sticking their collective heads in the sand and refusing to acknowledge
the changes in and challenges to the profession. One obvious, albeit
impractical, solution is to increase the overall time it takes to educate
a communication designer, whether it means five-year undergraduate
programmes (as in architecture) or an increased emphasis on graduate
education. To be both sensitive to the weight, emphasis and intensity
of the mark on the page, and critically aware of the context for which it is
being designed, is the nearly impossible challenge that communication
designers face.
As if that is not enough of a problem, the design profession is also
suffering from an external pressure — the democratisation of design
tools and design knowledge. The proliferation of simple, accessible tools
for design means that a set of practices that used to be cloistered within
a rarefied professional caste is now easily adoptable by almost anyone.
Software applications, design templates and open-source typography
programmes are combining to create a vast pool of empowered,
non-specialist designers who, for better or worse, are grabbing the mantle
of design and proudly appropriating it. In this case, however, there is
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NEW YORK - JAMER HUNT
Anxieties concerning intellectual property will be challenged by
this emergent openness; processes will demand transparency and
a willingness to collaborate in the building of new ideas, products
and services. Ultimately, designers will be creating responsive ‘organisms’
that must be able to thrive in diverse, open knowledge ecosystems.
Strategic thinking will have to merge with sophisticated form-giving to
create protean outcomes that respond to volatile conditions.
In the end, design is always a political act. It can weave together
or disrupt our system of experience, meaning and communication. It
carries with it the cultural values of its practitioners and the institutional
stakeholders who underwrite it. Every designer is, thus, a citizen designer.
She or he must be aware of the stakes in every project and critical of
efforts that do not lead to sustainable change. Balance between form and
context, personal and social, the disruptive and the sustainable, is both an
impossible and an urgent priority.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
nowhere for designers to run and hide. This trend will only increase, and
there is nothing to be gained by ignoring it. Instead, the path forward is
surprisingly clear and uncluttered. Communication designers must
become more capable of articulating the specificity of their practice
and better able to make an argument for the strategic value that they
add to industry.
This means that design educators must equip students to be reflective
practitioners and strategic, critical thinkers. Until designers can make a
forceful and compelling argument about the centrality of their skills in
crafting successful communication, industry will continue to see them
as visual stylists.
These tensions play out in a practice where rules for effective
communication are constantly in flux. The building of networks and
systems at a global scale in the late 20th century created conditions
of intractable complexity that designers are only now confronting.
As a result, the next generation will need to shift from isolation and
individuality to connection and collaboration. Collaboration must become
a key skill, as well as a robust research topic, as design practitioners
find themselves working more commonly in group settings. Large-scale
challenges will make the notion that practitioners (whether designers,
engineers, social workers or politicians) can work in isolation from
one another obsolete. Industries will require flexible and adaptable
communication designers who can work effectively in multi-person teams.
To prosper in these conditions, designers will need to cultivate the ability
to learn on demand, work in worlds that they are barely familiar with
and effectively communicate their roles, responsibilities and capacities
to stakeholders. Design educators must, therefore, not only find ways
incorporate more teamwork, but also teach students how to work with
professionals who do not share a disciplinary language and method.
An increased focus on collaboration as a mode of practice and as a
research field is required. It is not simply a case of putting designers
in group settings — designers must become leaders in developing the
dynamics of social interaction and advocate collaboration, whether in
partnership, small groups, large groups or crowdsourcing.
Complex systems with global information networks necessitate a
different approach to processes as well. In most instances, the objective
will no longer be to model visual solutions, but instead to frame the
existing, multifaceted context for project stakeholders. To do this, designers
will produce fewer static compositions and will instead be called on to craft
dynamic, fluid and adaptive solutions. As the primary medium is no longer
simply print (or even the web), outcomes will need to translate across
different media, channels, platforms and formats. The nature of design
products will shift from immutable artifacts to options, recipes, rule sets,
algorithms and unexplored possibilities that are capable of move across
dynamic platforms. These networks are also increasingly open and open
source, and a new ethic of participation is driving innovation.
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01. After this mention, all references to the
Icograda Design Education Manifesto 2000 will
be referred to as 2000 Manifesto.
02. The Icograda Millennium Congress took place
from 24 - 27 October 2000 in Seoul, South Korea.
It was an extraordinary congress to celebrate the
turn of the millennium and did not include an
Icograda General Assembly.
03. The World Design Convergence: Icograda
Congress 2001 opened on 9 September 2001 in
Sandton, South Africa. The final version of the
Manifesto was presented to the Icograda General
Assembly 19, which formed part of this Congress.
04. The wording of the Manifesto explicitly
underplayed the importance of differences:
“Whose approach is grounded in a symbiotic
conduct that respects the diversity of
environmental and cultural contexts without
overemphasising difference, but by recognizing
common ground.” Icograda Design Education
Manifesto 2000. (Stress added by the author).
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
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Reflection on the Icograda Design Education Manifesto 2000
The 2000 Icograda Design Education Manifesto01 was first presented
11 years ago and reflected the ethos of the time and the ideals that the
authors and their supporters envisioned for the development of graphic
design education. The 2000 Manifesto was framed by the theme of the
Icograda Millennium Congress02 — Oullim (translated as ‘the great
harmony’) — as well as the context of the world at that time and the role
that designers played in it. It was an ideal, humanistic statement that
provided guiding principles for planning the future of graphic design
education.
It is my opinion that the framing of the 2000 Manifesto according to
the ideals of Oullim was — and still is — its core strength and weakness.
Two of the Manifesto’s original architects, Sharon Helmer Poggenpohl and
Ahn Sang-Soo (2002:46-47), stated that, “A manifesto is a particular form
of communication predicated on three beliefs: that a change has occurred
or some new insight has altered understanding of a situation; that a human
agency can change circumstances into something more desirable; and that
the timing is advantageous for both the manifesto and the change it seeks.”
Ironically, just one year after the presentation of the manifesto at the
Icograda Millennium Congress, the world changed profoundly. On the same
day that the Sappi World Design Convergence 2001 Congress opened03 the
most dramatic terrorist attacks in the West since World War II occurred,
resulting in extensive global change, including alterations in the design
profession. The tragic events of 9/11 ominously highlighted why the ethos
of Oullim was relevant and visionary. Yet, it also highlighted why it might
have come too late for designers to effect change at the time of its launch.
In retrospect, I believe that there are three main shortcomings in
the 2000 Manifesto:
• the exclusive focus on the visual dimension of the profession
• the lack of inclusion of the economical and business dimensions
• the intentional inclusion of the statement that difference should
not be overemphasised04 — this being the focal point of my essay.
A focus on cross-cultural differences and understanding — the role of
geopolitical and economical contexts in design history — on theory and
practice, on educating designers and clients, could have made a (minor)
difference (maybe) decades ago, but came too late.
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Durban, South Africa. At that event, JP Odoch Pido05 presented a paper
entitled Design and the African Cultural Identity 06 which subsequently
became a key reference for contemporary design education in Africa.
Pido’s presentation was eloquently summarised by the event’s chairperson,
Linda Mvusi07:
I picked up six senses that he [Pido] identified: A sense of belonging and
inclusion; a sense of lustre, adornment, wealth and their meaning 08;
… the sense of correctness – posture and composure…
The sense of cause and context, which means that everything has a
cause and a motivator which is its basis. The sense of naming, in that
names carry the intentions, the identity of an opinion on life… How you
name and the power of the name, and also the sense of transition.
The designs/rituals for life and life changes, that it is not just the
product, it’s also the process. The function of beauty is to defeat
ugliness, so beauty can never be there in its own right. In itself it has
a primary function. The function of goodness is to defeat evil, the
function of a coup is to defeat chaos and anarchy 09.
For me, and many likeminded thinkers, Pido and Mvusi’s statements
are the essence of what design education should focus on in Africa (and
further a field). Their claims link directly to the ethos of the classical
African ethical and humanist philosophy called Ubuntu — a philosophical
stance that mirrors the ethos of Oullim. Ubuntu focuses on allegiances
and relations to one another. The Liberian peace activist, Leymah Gbowee,
defines it as:
“I am what I am because of who we all are,” while Nobel Laureate, Desmond
Tutu, describes it as:
…the essence of being human. Ubuntu speaks particularly about the
fact that you can’t exist as a human being in isolation. It speaks about
our interconnectedness. You can’t be human all by yourself, and when
you have this quality–Ubuntu–you are known for your generosity.
We think of ourselves far too frequently as just individuals, separated
from one another, whereas you are connected and what you do
affects the whole world. When you do well, it spreads out; it is
for the whole of humanity 10.
Pido’s hypothesis, in relation to the philosophy of Ubuntu, has
influenced many educators on the continent who have based their design
education strategies in it. Ubuntu has re-emerged in recent years as an
anchor for rediscovering African identity in a rapidly transforming world.
05. Pido is a highly regarded design educator and
prolific researcher and author. Originally from
Uganda, Pido has lived and worked in Kenya for
over 40 years.
06. Pido, JPO. 2001. Design and the African cultural
identity. SABS Design Institute, Pretoria, South
Africa. www.sabs.co.za/index.php?page=daci
07. Linda Mvusi is an architect and respected
design industry leader in South Africa. She is
the daughter of Selby Mvusi, a leading African
artist and influentual design educator who
spearheaded design education in Ghana and
Kenya in the 1960s.
08. Referring to the various languages — visual
and verbal that designers use.
09. All stresses added by the author.
10. Source: http://www.tutufoundationuk.org/
ubuntu.html
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
THE CHANGE WE SEEK: AN AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE
An African perspective on design education beyond 2011
When I was asked contribute to the update of the Icograda Design Education
Manifesto, I started a process of extensive reading and consultation,
followed by much introspection and contemplation. I soon realised that a
substantial body of work has accumulated on the subject in recent years,
mainly from the United States and Europe. Unfortunately, my exploration
confirmed that little of the discourse originated from Africa or applied to
the continent’s unique circumstances. My personal context as a practising
designer, educator, advocate and editor of design magazines, born and
based in Africa, informed my view that design education and practice
on the continent is an anomaly. What applies to the rest of the world has
different implications in Africa. With the exception of South Africa and
much smaller centres of significance based in Kenya and Ghana, the
continent does not have the professional or educational infrastructure to
match other regions, even though it has ideals similar to those defined in
the 2000 Manifesto.
Due to the complexity of the topic and the length limitations of
this essay, I will briefly focus on select issues pertaining to the African
perspective because, as previously stated, I do not agree with the
homogenised/monocultural position that the 2000 Manifesto took.
Difference matters in design practice and education in developing
economies and should be a major focus of design education in the future,
not only in Africa, but around the world.
In 2001 I participated in the Design for Development conference in
PRETORIA - JACQUES LANGE
Designers should never over or underestimate the power of design
and its role in society. To date, designers have made minuscule
contributionto solving large problems, but they have contributed greatly
to the proliferation of large problems, and that is the dilemma that the
profession faces. The thought that ‘design can change the world’ and
achieve the ideals of Oullim has, unfortunately (to date), proven unrealistic
because practice issues have maintained precedence over philosophical
and sociological focuses in design curricula. Despite efforts, designers have
only contributed small solutions to the ever-increasing ocean of world issues.
Eleven years later, globalisation and cultural homogenisation have
expanded exponentially. The global warming agenda has become critical
and devastating natural disasters, military conflict, civic unrest and the
global economic recession impacted designers as global citizens.
The design profession, too, has developed and expanded dramatically —
new technologies emerged, leapfrogging escalated in the developing
world and the role of design in business and organisational management
spawned new design sub-disciplines and meta-disciplinary collaboration.
Furthermore, the relationships between designers, clients and end users
have changed, expanding the designer’s scope of work, opportunity
and responsibility.
Here enters the 2011 Icograda Design Education Manifesto.
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accredited academic design journal in Africa,
Image & Text, Journal for Design, published by
the University of Pretoria.
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Guy Schockaert
Jinan Manifesto Workshop
Participant
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
11. Marian Sauthoff is Dean of the Faculty
of Art, Design and Architecture at the University
of Johannesburg and founder of the only
THE CHANGE WE SEEK: AN AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE
Conclusion
Teaching the cause, context and result of globalisation must be fostered as
the essence of design education, and regional design history, ethnography,
sociology, economics, philosophy and politics must be critical focal areas
in future design education.
In this regard, I do not mean to entertain regionalism, but rather
embrace cultural universalism and uniqueness, access to technology and
distribution systems, as well as pose fundamental questions concerning
what defines the aspirations and ethics of design education and practice —
the context in which design operates.
PRETORIA - JACQUES LANGE
Pido’s hypothesis was refined by South African academic, Marian Sauthoff 11,
who argues that:
• design must mean something in its own culture
• the purpose of the design should be very clear
• there should be a rich dialogue between the user and the product
• sustainability is a major factor that cannot be ignored
• the product should, by itself, enhance the user experience and should
consider the context in which it is to be used
• designers should think strategically and continuously, reviewing their
processes and solutions
These common factors match international thinking and should
undergird design education in the future, as they relate to what was
highlighted by the 2011 Icograda Design Education Manifesto project. For
me, the word ‘context’ is the most critical when we talk about the future
design education.
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Not much has changed on the continent since the 2000 manifesto.
Design education is plagued by the same major challenges. I will delineate
the key issues facing design in Afrika here.
1. There simply are not enough design schools, and the few that exist do
not have curricula relevant to the students’ situation and environment.
There is also a lack of qualified design educators as most teacher training
facilities are unaware of the existence of design education.
2. A reassessment of what design means is necessary. Most students
consider design a Western phenomenon and find it difficult to look inward,
and at home, for inspiration. As a result, there is a tendency to reiterate
trends occurring in the Western capitals.
3. Design’s role in the development of a country is still misunderstood
by many on the continent.
5. Last, but not least, in an increasingly digital classroom, many confuse
technology with design. We must not confuse mastering an application like
Photoshop™ or Corel DRAW™ with being a designer.
As someone who returned to Afrika to found a design school, I have learned
a lot about design education on the continent and reached the conclusion
that a multi-disciplinary approach is required if the continent is to leap
into the 21st century. In other words, graphic design should not be taught
in isolation. Curricula should include disciplines like industrial or furniture
design — applied design. We still insist on ‘hand skills’ in an almost
exclusively digital work environment, and that insistence would resonate
with students more soundly if they actually made things by hand.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
4. Parents are unaware of the importance of design as a profession,
and often resistant to children choosing a career in design. Afrika must
follow the example of countries to the North, who introduce design
processes and innovative thinking as ESSENTIAL life skills in primary
school. Design should occupy a role like reading, writing, math and science.
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Humanity
Language
Science
Systems
Technology
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Dave Malouf
DESIGN
EDUCATION
OF THE FUTURE
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Business
Collaboration
Complexity
Craft
Diplomacy
Complexity has defined human cultural development since World War II,
culturally, politically, economically and socially. Our lives have become more
complex and that complexity has afforded us new insights into our very
existence and the widespread changes of the past 20 to 50 years.
While some of this complexity can be directly linked to advancements
in personal computing and its networks, some transformations are more
subtle. The space between the tangible effects of technology and the
immaterial concepts of the humanities and social sciences is a space
of interrogation for researchers searching for answers to increasingly
complicated questions about humanity.
The designer has always been a technologist (technological materials
and the methods of the engineer are the designer’s medium), but was
attracted to technology not as a tool for expression, but as an art for
engagement, like social conversation. This is why the designer has
always maintained a balancing act between the true artist and the
consummate engineer.
Applying design tools to business aims is the natural role of the
designer. We are drawn towards understanding the people we impact,
and are attracted to how modifications (addition or reduction) affect
society. Considering the intricacies of the environment in which we design,
accomplishing this is becoming an overwhelming task. We require not
only craft, but also vision and intuition and a new skill: diplomacy through
narrative and rhetoric.
The education of the contemporary designer requires reassessment
in light of the reality that design education is a life-long journey that cannot
be granted in a formal, four to seven year education (Bachelors to Masters).
There is growing evidence that combining formal and informal
educational backgrounds fosters a collaborative advantage and, in a
world where informal education has never been easier to acquire, we
must embrace diversity.
While the design thinking community might suggest that a designer’s
primary craft is to create low-fidelity prototypes for exploration and
high-fidelity graphics for design strategy and analysis, I firmly believe
that we must maintain a formal studio education, focused on conceiving,
exploring, validating, prototyping and manufacturing form structures.
The designer must be as responsible for the final execution of products,
services and systems as ever.
Teaching design for the last two years has confirmed my suspicions
about design education — there is not simply one type of designer. There
are strategic designers, design researchers, design makers, etc. They all
have a place in the new world and design education needs to support them
and to account for the uncertainty and unpredictability of the future.
Speaking of the unpredictable will bring us back to technology.
The predictable things we know about technology are that it is constantly
changing and it does not always warrant instant adoption. Technology as
a tool cannot be relied upon and our ability to predict future technology
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SAVANNAH - DAVE MALOUF
is severely hampered by the complexity and flux of our society and our
markets. It is, thus, more important to develop methods for understanding
technology and its uses than it is to learn how to use any specific tool.
This all centres on the following principles for design education:
4. Language
How we frame our world and our future is deeply rooted in language,
having a mastery of language is key to design success.
a. Rhetoric: By understanding how words provide analytical framings,
designers can both interpret the world we design for and create
new futures.
b. Narrative: The stories we create are tests for our designs, but also
provide a foundation of research for design.
c. Semiotics: The linguistic and visual artifacts of our world are the
stimuli from and through which linguistic and visual meaning is
derived and transferred.
1. Understanding people
The designer must understand several aspects of humanity.
a. Psychology: How people perceive, process and act upon the world
around them.
b. Economics: how people engender value and the processes they
create for trading value.
c. Anthropology: how people create meaning through structure,
language and human relationships.
d. Politics: how people manage and control the relationships in their
lives as they relate to perceived power, and how power constructs
are understood.
5. Making
Crafts are as important as ever at all levels of design — we are only as
good as our level of execution.
a. Model making: physical models of varying scale.
b. Visual design: colour, luminance, line, type, layout, composition
and negative space.
c. 3D design: adding volume, shape and texture to visual design.
d. Drawing and Sketching: using our hands and eyes to generate
concepts, better processes and communication.
e. Personal Management: time management, collaboration and
communication skills.
f. Code: everyone needs to understand how bytes convert to pixels
in order to augment interaction, communication and collection.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
3. (Applied) Art(s)
The designer needs to embrace expressiveness and divergent thinking as
a tool for idea conception.
a. Abductive Reasoning: This tool may be used as a means for exploring
possibilities and coming to reasonable decisions.
b. Visual Thinking: This is a supplementary tool for the designer, allowing
them to explore and communicate both more rapidly and with greater
confidence. It is a primary tool for externalising thought and allowing
for reflection and associative thinking.
c. History: Understanding the roots, paths and circles of design and
art history is vital for designers. They must ground their artistry in
critical analysis.
d. Aesthetics: The philosophy of beauty moves beyond the visual into
all manners of sensing. Having a theory and language for aesthetics
is integral to a designer’s success.
e. Criticism and critique (not the same thing): Understanding academic
DESIGN EDUCATION OF THE FUTURE
2. Understanding technology and science
The designer must understand relevant technology.
a. Computation & Network: Understanding the major changes of the
last 25 years and the degree to which technologies have become
intimate and quotidian.
b. Materiality: Understanding a variety of media, whether it is plastic,
wood and fabric or inks, papers and pixels.
c. Engineering: Basic knowledge of the practice of mechanical,
electronic/electrical and manufacturing engineering would make
designers much more effective.
d. Biological & Earth Sciences: We all require a better understanding
of our place on the planet and the other life we share it with.
criticism and being able to apply those principles in a critique is
a necessity for designers.
6. Systems thinking and service management
The notion that value is created through the collaboration of designers,
customers and stakeholders is rapidly transforming product design,
software design, architecture, visual communication and design research
(to name a few).
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These six areas of knowledge, and the key capabilities they consist
of, need to be part of a designer’s education. We must change what we
focus on, at which levels and within which contexts.
But that is just the ‘what’ of this puzzle. The other side of the issue is
‘how’? How do we learn this? What are the best environments for learning
and teaching (not always the same thing) and how can education, research
and industry remain attuned? As I stated at the beginning of this article,
education is a life-long journey. A combination of educational formats
is required for the designer. Education must suit the needs of different
personalities of practitioners with diverse social and cultural backgrounds.
One aspect of what will be taught, in particular, is priceless for
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conference environment, are a useful resource for students.
With so many free (and for pay) resources for reading on the Internet,
reading is crucial. Students have access to blogs, books and, one of the
often missed sources, discussion groups and knowledge sites like
quora.com, stackoverflow.com, and discussion groups and forums like
IxDA.org and Core77.com.
Internships & Apprenticeships are primarily for people still in or recently
graduated from a formal education programme, but we need to build ways for
life-long practitioners to gain these valuable learning experiences in
their career development.
iTunes University is a rich resource that more progressive educational
institutions have successfully employed. Free and for pay lectures,
presentations and tutorials are available on the iTunes store for anyone
to download and use in a host of environments.
Many local organisations — design and other professional associations —
offer periodic learning opportunities for designers at all levels.
The question really is, what other things can we create to allow for
a more open educational system? Our educational resources are limited by
economic realities and must conform to standard of career path
development, but ideally will promote an ethos of human unity over
profit and power.
Lastly, we need to develop a contemporary apprenticeship system in
all design disciplines. We require a more formal structure, where masterapprentice relationships provide long-term support based around schools
of design. This relationship structure will supplement institutional systems
with post-institutional learning. We need to recognise teaching as a form
of learning in itself and give senior practitioners opportunities to validate
their design processes and methods. This will expand discourse of design
education beyond the institution and bridge the gap between institutional
and industry-based education systems.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
DESIGN EDUCATION OF THE FUTURE
What is the studio?
An open space where an individual’s work is available for all to see.
The work ethic is one of cooperation and collaboration rather than
competition. Students with varying levels of experience work closely
with one another. Critiques (not evaluations) are given of the work, not
of the students doing the work. Projects are co-owned and co-created.
The culture is defined by a sense of fluid leadership and encouraged
interruption.
This may seem easy to produce, but I have found that the tendency
towards evaluation rather than criticism reduces the effectiveness of the
studio experience. Learning in the studio is not accomplished through
pedagogical demonstration, but is rather achieved through student
observation and enquiry.
This is often lost in the formal education design studio. Teachers
simply evaluate and demonstrate when they need to be part of the creation
process. Ongoing projects must involve teachers and students alike. How
we execute this in our current context, given the realities of economic
instability, remains to be seen — it is challenging in an industry where most
‘masters’ do not practise their craft, and have taken on the role of account
manager (at worst) or studio, human resource manager at best.
But, outside of the studio, there is still much potential for expanding
education.
Conferences where students can listen to presentations by design
leaders inspire thought and conversation, and add value to the practice.
Although these are usually physical, face-to-face events, a growing
(currently small) number of conferences occur online. Many conferences
also offer their content online in video. Many conferences include
workshops as part of their content mapping.
Workshops are also usually physical events, but many are conducted
online. There are two types of workshop. In Think/Work sessions people
gather to explore a topic in various ways, hopefully to leave with a new
model for thought and communication. Tutorials, on the other hand, are
class sessions where a teacher guides students through a series of
exercises with the goal of teaching a specific skill or group of skills.
Students may also avail themselves of Continuing Education Courses.
These replicate formal degree courses, but are unaffiliated with degree
granting programmes, though some overlap and can be used for credit.
Webinars, web-based lectures given by field leaders outside of a
SAVANNAH - DAVE MALOUF
designers and requires a specific structure — the studio. Applied criticism
and critique are best taught in the studio — a place where peers
collaborate, giving constant feedback, and where a ‘master’ or ‘mentor’
teaches through critique and criticism. The critiques can seem brutal and
young designers must learn to maintain the strength of their point of view
through this process. Those who emerge, do so with a confidence in their
creativity that has yet to see be taught as well in non-studio environments.
In summary, there are 4 main issues that design education must address:
1. We cannot relinquish the craft of making forms as part of the
designer’s role at the executive and at the strategic level.
2. Technology has accelerated cultural complexity forcing us to
examine relationships between use, consumption, social behaviour
and individual meaning.
3. With these changes, come complex environmental, political and
economic challenges that we cannot ignore.
4. We must rebuild the apprenticeship model from early pre-industrial
applied arts in order to supplement life-long design education.
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Graphic design is a far more complicated practice today than it was when
programmes in design education rose in popularity in the 1950s. Early
programmes emphasised the formal qualities of layout and typography
over the semantic problems of clear communication with an audience.
The current complexity of the field is augmented by the Internet, which is
for some a more frequent means of communication than print. In recent
years, design schools have sought to stay abreast of the proliferation of
new media by offering courses in web design, interaction design, and
design of moving images, but creating for the Internet has introduced
issues of narrative, as a result of navigating sets of links between web
sites and texts.
The greatest challenge facing design schools today in my estimation
is how to contribute to clarifying and sorting out communication needs.
Communication between people of different cultures, nationalities, and
language groups has intensified. People travel at a greater rate than ever
before and require orientation and guidance through signage, maps,
directions, place marking and instructions. Graphic design, thus, must be
taught within a global context — that is, in a context where it is presumed
that communication between and movement among different peoples and
cultures will continue and increase.
What does this mean for the graphic design curriculum of the
future? The graphic designer must become a cosmopolitan — someone
comfortable moving within different cultures, recognising social cues,
and facilitating action through graphic communication. Therefore, an
introduction to global culture — what characterises it, how it operates and
how one can function within it is crucial. Courses in global visual culture,
semantic or semiotic theory and communication theory, as well
as sociology and anthropology, would provide this foundation. In short,
the graphic designer must understand people and their cultural milieus.
Graphic designers must also understand the range of media that
people currently employ. They must be comfortable designing for print
as well as for the Internet, and courses in layout and visual organisation
must take both of mediums into account. While formal issues continue to
be critical, more emphasis should be placed on the effective presentation
of varied content. There is a greater need than ever for instruction in
information design and the development of explanations for operating
complex devices, filling out bureaucratic forms, applying for services and
orienting oneself in new environments. Much of this communication is now
transnational and multilingual — care must be given to how common forms,
for example, are designed to be understood by different cultural groups.
Graphic designers must articulate communication needs in new social
environments. As in the design of products, graphic designers must learn
to communicate valuable information in complex situations like disaster
relief, the movement of refugees and threats to national security. Political
and social agencies seek to communicate with large groups to explain
services, regulations and guidelines at an increasing rate.
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Audrey G. Bennett
Jinan Manifesto Workshop
Co-chair
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
GRAPHIC DESIGN EDUCATION AND THE CHALLENGE OF SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION
Graphic designers must be prepared to step in and facilitate such
communication.
At one time graphic design was used primarily for the promotion of
commerce, but today social communication is the central challenge for
graphic designers and this necessitates well-developed principles of
information design, social interaction and semantics.
Expertise in persuading consumers to purchase products is highly
developed, and now persuasive skills must be applied to promoting positive
social behaviour, such as ethnic and racial tolerance, energy conservation
and environmental citizenship. Encouraging behavioural change has, in
fact, become one of the greatest tasks of the graphic designer.
The cultivation of formal judgment — the use of typography,
organisation of information, creation of symbols and logotypes — must be
taught as means of social communication rather than simply as aesthetic
technique. This is not to denigrate the typographic sophistication of classic
Swiss design or the symbolic power of Polish posters, but rather
to emphasise that visual technique has a social purpose.
The cultivation of visual technique and clear symbols may also
facilitate the adaptation of languages with a limited number of speakers to
new electronic media. This entails a move from verbal to visual to digital —
transcribing speech into alphabets and adapting alphabets to digital forms.
Access to the Internet in one’s own language should be universal.
Meeting these new social challenges is essential for graphic designers
and must be a central part of graphic design education. For design schools,
whether they are part of independent art academies or programmes
within comprehensive universities, engagement with fields of knowledge
beyond design is mandatory. How this task can be reflected into new
curricula remains to be developed but, given the enormity of the task
ahead, communication between and among design schools is essential —
particularly schools that belong to different cultural milieus. The Icograda
Design Education Manifesto can serve as a guide to design schools as they
reform to meet the challenges of contemporary global culture.
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While it stands on its own as a profession, Visual Communication Design
has become a very inclusive field in which professionals and amateurs have
important roles to play.
Redefining ‘Graphic Design’ as ‘Visual Communication Design’ is
healthy. The new definition expands the boundaries to take account of both
the technological innovations and their democratic nature. To continue to
see the design profession as something separate from the lay pursuit of
design may not be in anyone’s best interest. Our profession as designers
and design educators is no longer in the realm of esoteric knowledge.
VisComm01 Design is highly accessible to a lay public from early childhood
to the end of life. Now more than ever before, anyone can design visually,
with varying outcomes and consequences, of course.
With the expansion of access and inclusion comes a responsibility
on the part of Icograda to recommend guidelines and agendas for the
instruction of a broad population in the principles of good, conscious and
well-critiqued design. There is necessity for more intimate interaction with
other disciplines, such as psychology, anthropology and art history in order
to provide a more comprehensive understanding of visual experience.
This also means that common ground must be identified and different
contexts explored in order to produce well-informed, self-conscious
design. The process of imparting VisComm skills has changed and curricula
are changing with it. A new set of goals for assessing competence can and
must be produced.
New technology negates the long-term problem of ‘designer
arrogance,’ where the designer perceives himself/herself as godlike, with
special talents, training, knowledge and knowhow. On the other hand, all
too often, the designer is the last professional to be called into a project
because non-professionals believe that they have all the necessary skills
to develop their visual products.
We are all born artists. Non-artists are unmade. While a designer is
made, not necessarily born, we must be cognisant of potential designers
who can be developed to their maximum potential, for they are everywhere.
Some will become full-time professionals and make their living from design
practice and teaching. Others will not, but they will at least, understand
what design is and how important it is in their lives.
More than ever, design education must prepare students for change.
Change occurs so rapidly that the conventional methods of preparing
children for adulthood are no longer quick enough to accommodate
the transformations that will take place as the child grows up. Design
education, perhaps more than any other field, can contribute to the
development of agility, resilience, proactive thinking and multiple skill sets
in both young and old, as they cannot hope that their lives and work in the
future will be as they are today.
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inform the transformations brought on by rapid change.
Achieving Oullim or the ‘Grand Harmony’ also includes recognising
difference as an enriching factor in design experiences. African social
systems, more often than not, enable people to break apart into their local,
social, religious, linguistic and ethnic environments while coming together
as a whole for the greater good. VisComm design education should be a
factor in facilitating faction and fusion.
VisComm Design, used as a problem-solving tool can enable humanity
to step wide-eyed and self aware into the future. Are we, as practising
professionals and design educators, ready to declare ourselves at least
partial saviours of future generations that need to become self-conscious
of the role of design and its tools in order to survive?
Icograda has an important role to play in publicly declaring the
design process a unifying principle in pursuit of Oullim. We may even
consider redefining ‘The Grand Harmony’ as ‘The Grand Glue,’ although
‘Grand Cohesion’ may sound a bit better.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
THE GRAND COHESION: USING VISCOMM DESIGN TO HOLD IT ALL TOGETHER
VisComm education begins in infancy as the baby begins to
make sense of its surroundings. The way adults arrange their homes,
neighbourhoods, cities and countryside gives the infant clues about the
proper order of the things it sees. In nursery school, the child learns from
visual experience and creates its own visual experience through play that
includes drawing and sculpting. In kindergarten and primary school, the
child is introduced to more visual experience through reading, writing and
calculating. While literacy and numeracy are emphasised, pictoracy is often
neglected. Making images to communicate visually is not high enough on
the agendas of most school systems.
As design educators, we are all familiar with the standard and
innovative curricula at secondary and tertiary institutions. We also see and
interact with the non-formally trained designers around us in the streets,
markets, cities, farms, deserts and forests of our countries.
Children with access to computers now have a wide range of visual
and design tools at their fingertips. Children without computer access
must rely on the range of technologies that were in place before. The gap
that results from this disparity needs to be addressed and narrowed, so
that more children in more places and circumstances can share knowledge
and facility with a full range of skill sets. Children with access to television,
video and film have an even wider range of visual experience before their eyes.
Design educators are being challenged to impart, nurture, develop
and respond to design competency in all children and adults, not only
the privileged. The design profession can interact with other professions
by offering to exchange special knowledge through interdisciplinary tools,
like journals, conferences, online courses and seminars, to mention a few.
We must emphasise the need to include design as a component,
no matter how small, of child rearing, early childhood education and
primary through secondary and tertiary education. Making teachers
conscious and aware of design as a component in most, if not all, of the
core subjects will enable them to pull it together in an innovative way.
Design professionals and educators may not yet fully understand how
important our discipline is in the future of humanity now that that everyone
can join in.
Icograda can promote the design process by producing
recommendations for including the design perspective in all curricula
in educational systems. VisComm Design as a separate subject, and
as a thread running through other courses, should be part of the curricula
in teacher training institutions and education programmes everywhere.
Future programmes should also recognise the value of the past,
whether or not past paradigms are applicable, to provide continuity
in the field. Likewise, those of us in countries where the original design
paradigms are perishing can redouble our efforts to learn them and pass
them on to our students. Particularly in Africa, the old is being swept
away in favour of new paradigms that may or may not actually work
in the environments where they are applied. The old paradigms should
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Common perspectives might include:
• a desire to humanise technology
• an investigation of semiotic application
• a commitment to design history
• a human-centred perspective on design
• a commitment to design research
• an investigation of ecological issues
• a commitment to support local culture
• a focus on interdisciplinary work
• a commitment to relate design and business practice
• a focus on dynamic information in digital form
• an investigation of design as a cultural statement
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
enpohl
Sharon Helmer Pogg
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For too long, design has emphasised the individual designer, their work
and their ideas. This creates a division between individual designers and,
to some extent, isolates them. The idea of communities of practice, though,
runs counter to this as individuals within the culture share a vision and
develop it, and forge a network of teachers, students and practitioners.
Such sharing is a powerful manner of advancing ideas.
Design is many things with many possible perspectives, and design
departments rarely have a unifying philosophy about the field’s importance,
areas of focus or methods for solving current problems. In essence, they
have not thought about their particular mission for or vision of design.
Without such a vision, each faculty member follows their own unique path
and there is often little correlation between the various perspectives.
Why is a vision necessary? New opportunities to do interface,
interaction, motion graphics, user studies and design research work, and
to collaborate across disciplines, demonstrate that the technologies, design
methods and creative possibilities have expanded and changed. It has been
clear for some time that no department could provide a comprehensive
education that covered all aspects of design, hence the need for a vision.
A smattering of this or that does not build design confidence — it dilutes
connections and attention. As the context of design is dynamic, the vision
also needs to take into consideration whether the programme prepares
students with the ideas and skills required now, or prepares them for future
professional demands. A vision for design education can be tailored to a
faculty, its student intake and the larger institution. Not all departments will
be the same, but the vision should provide a common perspective on design
within which they can advance their work and teaching.
Because design is so broad in its application, its many points of view
cause confusion among students who do not understand the depth of study
needed to move from beginner to competent practitioner to expert. Without
a focus, many students struggle to make sense of the divergent theories
in design education. A vision supplies a synergy that helps students
participate in a perspective on design and in a community of practice with
particular values, skills and knowledge.
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The list is in no particular order and could be more extensive, but what
is key is that faculty share an interest in how design develops — that they
do not replicate the past or work and teach in isolation. They must work
toward extending how design serves people or how design becomes a
more substantial discipline. Such an approach serves both teaching and
learning, and moves design forward within the larger community of practice
— Icograda itself and beyond.
«Intersect, Separate,
Integrate, Release»
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE
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Maria Rogal
01. Other production technologies, once costly and
prohibitive such as 3D rendering, fabrication and
digital printing, are now relatively affordable and
accessible.
02. In my experience working with indigenous
Maya people in southern Mexico I found that
even people one might consider marginalised
have access to and participate in networked
conversations. INDIGO design network is one
example of a virtual space to share Indigenous
design from all over the world.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
POSITIONING
COMMUNICATION
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TAIPEI 25˚02'01"N 121˚33'52"W
As an educator and practitioner who involves communication design
students in local and international projects with research and applied
components, I am particularly engaged with the manifesto’s aim to deepen
the intellectual foundation of the discipline through research and methods.
The manifesto calls attention to collaborative efforts and the implications
of what and how we design. This position challenges the common
misconception that designers are stylists. Whether in communication
or industrial design the term “design is most often understood by the
public as an artistic practice that produces dazzling lamps, furniture, and
automobile” (Margolin, 2002). This revised manifesto is an important step
in solidifying our purpose, role and potential in a fundamental way.
In this essay, I focus on three issues that are an integral part of
my teaching and research practice. These key issues have long been
underrepresented in design education and practice, and are increasingly
important in a design education that is pluralistic, ethical and sustainable:
1. Increasing cross-cultural and transdisciplinary communication
and collaboration
2. Preparing students for technological, environmental, cultural, social
and economical change
3. Teaching qualitative and quantitative research methods (including
ethnography) to solve problems
These intrinsically connected objectives are imperative today when
the social, cultural, economic and environmental context in which we
live – and design – is increasingly more complex and diverse. A major
factor influencing this complexity is the development of communication
technologies that foster new interactions and connections, and the
dissemination and reception of information01. Access to this technology
expands worldviews, leads to knowledge sharing and enables creativity 02.
Beyond the changes in our production and communication technologies,
there are multiple social networks for communication designers that
promote social responsibility and collective good, including Design21,
The Living Principles, Design Ignites Change/WorldStudio and OpenIDEO,
the non-profit side of the consultancy IDEO.
Although it is not yet clear what impact the networks and their
members will have on the public or on policy, the growing presence of
such communities illuminates an increasing interest in social design
and design’s role in solving complex problems that require collaboration.
For communication designers to successfully contribute in the global
context, we need to expand our toolkit. We must increase our capacity to
collaborate, to integrate research and methods that inform our processes,
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Focusing fieldwork on exploration and discovery leads to, in my
experience, empowerment of both the students and the people they come
into contact with. Advocating for design to move beyond the classroom (and
into the context it will operate in) signifies a shift from traditional studio
based education that separates the process and product from the
environment in which it will function.
Students need to be guided through this process. They need to
understand the value that context brings to the process and articulate this
value. In the Design for Development initiative, I collaborate with design
students and indigenous Maya in rural communities in Mexico on problems
identified by the community, not those we impose from the outside.
Students leave the classroom, enter a different social, cultural
and economic environment, learn human-centred research methods
and apply these to real-world design problems in collaboration with
client-partners. Solutions are designed and developed to directly benefit
people. The outcomes can be diverse — resulting in the design strategies
and products or the identification new problems. With the appropriate
concepts, tools and experiences, fieldwork — or working in context —
provides a place where students apply design thinking, research and
collaboration to identify or reframe problems. Some of this already
happens in industry, but there is very little preparation for it in curricula —
at least in the United States.
While my context is southern Mexico, similar activities should
occur locally, so that students and educators can develop relationships
with communities. The results have been remarkable both for students
and project partners. Global or local, working in different contexts —
especially those underserved by design — evinces the importance of
working responsibly to understand the real, rather than projected, needs
of a community through observation and participation in daily life. The
ability to partner with others and learn through experiences supports the
collaborative and multidisciplinary nature of design. Adequately conveying
what communication design is and educating citizens about design
thinking and its value(s), will be the task of design educators and students
as we make this change in our discipline.
References
Giroux, H.A. October 17, 2010. Lessons From Paulo
Freire. The Chronicle of Higher Education.
http://chronicle.com/article/Lessons-FromPaulo-Freire/124910/
Kolko, J. 2011. How Do You Transform Good
Research Into Great Innovations? Fast Company,
http://www.fastcodesign.com/1663002/howdo-you-transform-good-research-into-greatinnovations, January 9. [accessed 24 February 2011]
118
Margolin, V. & S. Margolin. 2002. A “Social Model”
of Design: Issues of Practice and Research.
Design Issues, 18(4): 24–30.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
POSITIONING COMMUNICATION DESIGN
to develop cultural competencies and to understand design in context
(and as systems). The challenge is that we must develop these capabilities
in addition to the conceptual, formal and technological requirements
of contemporary communication design.
By emphasising research and methods and engaging with clients
and the community, we will be better prepared to lead and participate
in projects from their inception. Today, communication designers arrive
at a project after major decisions have been made, and can often lack
a voice. Integrating research will grant our discipline more credibility
and add weight to our contributions. In terms of methods, rather than a
rigorous ‘one-way’ of working, we must introduce flexible, contextual and
collaborative processes, such as ethnography, participatory design and
co-design. These qualitative methods, if appropriately applied, can lead
to meaningful, innovative and sustainable solutions to problems (more
sustainable and ethical when identified by people within the communities).
Human-centred qualitative methods, such as conducting fieldwork in
a project environment, reveal how culture and human interaction can
shape design processes and outcomes. Teaching students research
methods — including how to engage with communities — is critical for the
development of informed, empathetic and culturally competent designers.
Practising and learning research skills can occur in and out of the
classroom. However, as we advocate research in education, and in the
discipline more broadly, we must also attend to the manner in which
findings are applied projects. Ethnographer Rob van Vegel notes that
research sometimes remains unanalysed and unapplied to problems —
even when the designer actively participates in the process — as a result
of the chasm between research and design (van Vegel, 2005).
How do we understand our research findings and apply them to
our work? Jon Kolko, of the Austin Design Centre, illuminates a concern:
“younger designers fail and waste precious time, becoming frustrated and
ultimately rejecting the ethnographic research methods” and suggests
synthesis as a way of moving from research to application (2011). Research,
fieldwork, design in context and collaboration must be part of education
in order to provide students with decision making capacities and an
understanding of the diversity of communication design. Students who are
educated — and not trained — are prepared for change. Brazilian educator,
Paulo Freire’s ‘critical pedagogy’ is an important educational movement
where students are involved in the teaching-learning process. As Henry
Giroux writes:
Critical pedagogy also insists that one of the fundamental tasks of
educators is to make sure that the future points the way to a more
socially just world, a world in which critique and possibility –in
conjunction with the values of reason, freedom, and equality –function
to alter the grounds upon which life is lived. That is hardly a prescription
for political indoctrination. It offers students new ways to think and
act independently. (2010)
Van Vegel, R. 2005. Where Two Sides of
Ethnography Collide. Design Issues, 21(3): 3–16.
Design 21: http://www.design21sdn.com
Social Design Site:
http://www.socialdesignsite.com/
Design Can Change:
http://www.designcanchange.org
Design Ignites Change:
http://designigniteschange.org/
OpenIDEO: http://www.openideo.org
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ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
I am uneasy about manifestos for many of the reasons suggested by Ahn
Sang-Soo and Sharon Poggenpohl (2002). I am also mindful of the violence
implicit in many political manifestoes, as astutely observed by Walter Benjamin:
There is no document of civilisation which is not at the same time
a document of barbarism. (Illuminations, 248)
Benjamin suggests that the grand words used to write a manifesto for
a new civilisation inevitably do violence to the existing civilisation, or to
those who question the manifesto’s legitimacy. The potential violence I see
in this document is twofold: first, to the well-established craft skills and
traditions of graphic design. The danger, here, is that the old crafts
will be displaced by new demands in the new curriculum. The transition
from graphic design to visual communication will place enormous demands
on students and teachers alike. The second potential danger is to the
cumulative body of research and practice that is ignored as the new order in
the manifesto replaces the old. The manifesto will remove the obligation to
scrutinise the earlier work that offers findings and insights that could save
needless reinvention in the manifesto’s ‘future’.
Some of us have been travelling this new route through pedagogy,
research and professional practice for nearly 50 years. Among the many
contributors are Jorge Frascara, Clive Richards, Karen Schriver, Peter
Simlinger, Paul Stiff, Rob Waller, Karel van der Waarde and Patricia Wright.
Institutions such as the International Institute of Information Design (IIID)
and journals including Visible Language, Information Design Journal, Design
Studies and Applied Ergonomics were at the forefront of encouraging
and participating in this effort, which made it possible in the mid-1960s for
me and my colleagues at the then Sunderland College of Art to set up a new
type of graphic design course, called Visual Communication, for many
of the reasons stated in the manifesto (Sless 1996). We developed many
aspects of this approach for pedagogy (Sless 1981), and subsequently for
professional design practice (Sless 1998). But there were many painful
lessons along the way.
Communication
Introducing the term communication to graphic design discourse proved
daunting. First, ‘communication’ — what it is, how its effect is measured,
or how one might value its contribution to public and private life — is
philosophically, empirically and ethically problematic (see Sless 1991,
Sless & Shrensky 1995, Shrensky 1998). Second, moving from a definition of
design as the craft of making things to one of actively engaging in the social,
economic and political life of a society involved formulating the critical
criteria by which designs could be judged. The craft criteria, such as fine
typography and aesthetics, were no longer an adequate basis for judging
the quality and value of a work. New criteria, such as communication
effectiveness, social responsibility and ideology had to be created, debated
and accepted before they could inform pedagogy and practice.
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• the missing skill in prototyping is writing. Research clearly shows
that successful communication is a mixture of graphics and words
(Schriver 1997); most graphic design students do not gain professional
writing and editing skills as a normal part of their training
• the missing skill in implementing is creating customised output
systems: design students are still trained to develop single designs
for mass production, whereas organisations are increasingly calling
for rules for implementing systems where every individual receives
a customised item
• specific forms and protocols of testing, retesting and refining, with
the participation of the community, are crucial to the success of a
communicative design; graphic design courses give little weight to
these stages
•the amount of effort involved in carrying out all these stages to a
successful outcome is 50% of the effort, of which prototyping is
seldom more than 10%; the remaining 50%, not shown on the above
diagram, is the political management of all interested participants.
Thus, the transition from graphic design to visual communication
involves a radical, painful and expensive change to the curriculum. Less
than 10% of the content of the so-called new is currently being taught.
Where is the remaining 90% going to come from?
The design of the Manifesto itself should alert Icograda to the long
journey it needs to undertake before it can claim to be skilled in Visual
Communication. Visual, yes; but communicative?
References
Ahn, S. and Poggenpohl, S. 2002. Between word
and deed: The Design Education Manifesto Design
Issues,18(2): 46-56.
Fisher, P and Sless, D. 1990. Improving information
management in the insurance industry.
Information Design Journal, 6(2):103-29.
The relevance of this to the future of graphic design/visual
communication education cannot be understated:
• much of what is taught currently in graphic design courses prepares
student to do about half of what needs to be done in prototyping and
about a third of what has to be done in implementing; the other tasks
in the process are superficially touched upon
122
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
CRITICAL REFLECTIONS ON A MANIFESTO
Design process
These new tasks led us to ask about the stages we should take a design
through, in order to arrive at an acceptable outcome. In the mid-1980s
my colleagues and I at the Communication Research Institute began
conducting research into possible processes, and in 1990 we published
the first of many case histories and papers describing this work and its
findings (Fisher & Sless 1990).
Our cumulative findings, and those of other design methods
researchers, suggest that there is at least one optimised process that can
lead to successful outcomes (illustrated below). It may not be the only
process, but having used it successfully for two hundred-plus projects
over 20 years, we are confident that it is broadly applicable as a mature
and proven process (Sless 2008).
MELBOURNE - DAIVD SLESS
Effectiveness and evidence
Once we moved from the design itself – its style and beauty – to its
performance in the social world it became necessary to ask how we were
to judge its effectiveness in achieving its social purpose. The primary
insight of those of us who asked this question, whether working on
documents, websites, wayfinding systems, forms, diagrams or advertising,
was that we could not rely on our professional judgement alone as a
measure of effectiveness. We had to collaborate with the potential endusers of our designs by testing and refining the designs until we had
gathered evidence that they effectively achieved their purpose.
Critically, we moved from a practice based on judgements made
exclusively in the studio and the clients’ offices to an evidence-based
practice founded on work conducted outside. The implications of this move,
for both teaching and practice, are profound. Many designers are reluctant
to make the shift from designer as heroic figure in the cultural landscape to
designer as evidence-based professional. New skills have to be learned and
practised, creativity needs to be augmented with the disciplines of evidence
and new tasks have to be undertaken to move a brief from start to finish.
Communication, 22(2): 31-47.
http://communication.org.au/publications/
principles---philosophy/The-boundary-ofcommunication/65,30.html [6 April 2011].
Sless, D. 1981. Learning and visual communication.
London: Croom Helm.
Benjamin, W. 1992. Illuminations (ed. Hannah
Arendt, trans. Harry Zohn).
Glasgow: Fontana.
Sless, D. 1991. Communication and certainty.
Australian Journal of Communication, 18(3): 19-31.
http://communication.org.au/publications/
principles---philosophy/Communication-andcertainty/38,30.html [6 April 2011].
Schriver, K. 1997. Dynamics in document design:
Creating text for readers. New York:John Wiley & Sons.
Sless, D. 1996. Early travels in information design.
Information Design Journal, 4(2): 172-73.
Shrensky, R. 1998. The ontology of communication.
Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Canberra.
http://communication.org.au/http
communication_ontology.pdf [7 April 2011]
Sless, D. 1998. Transitions in information design.
http://communication.org.au/publications/
principles---philosophy/Transitions-ininformation-design/88,30.html [8 Dec 2010]
Sless, D. and Shrensky, R. 1995. The boundary
of communication. Australian Journal of
Sless, David. 2008. Measuring Information design.
Information Design Journal, 16(3): 250–258
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01. Cahalan, Anthony. 2007. The Future of Design
Education, AGDA, 1 February.
http://education.agda.com.au/articles/view/story/
the-future-of-design-education [17 April 2011].
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Graphic design curricula must be flexible and responsive. As designers and
educators we must strengthen the relationships between design and the
sciences, between design and business organisations, and between design
and relevant communities. There is little doubt that the design paradigm
will continue to shift, as will the current economic, social, cultural,
environmental, technological and political contexts in which it operates.
We are witnessing a time when the graphic object is no longer the
sole outcome of design practice. Posters, billboards, publications and
navigational systems are still the domain of the graphic designer, but
increasingly designers are involved in generating services, information
visualisation and visual experiences. Designers are moving away from
tangible object-orientation and toward experiential or service-oriented
design solutions. As global contexts change, the need to form closer
working relationships with those outside of the discipline, in fields like
ethnography, psychology, human-factor research and policy making,
increases. This understanding of co-operation may be broadened to include
the participation of targeted communities that have local knowledge which
can inform and shape a project and solution.
We are also witnessing the methods and processes of design being
successfully adapted to other academic disciplines. For example, business
management courses have adopted design thinking as an integral part
of their postgraduate curricula. Specifically, new courses in ‘design for
social business’ focus on the strategic use of business models and design
processes in order to create goods and services with social goals. New
programmes are also integrating design, management and engineering
in order to meet the needs of public and private sector organisations. This
approach is most successful when design is considered as beneficial as
the disciplines it is partnered with. Design is a collaborative process.
Thus, the designer is a ‘connectivist’ with an inherent capacity to
establish and foster links between disciplines01. Design thinking and
critical practice should form the basis of how we approach contemporary
social and economic challenges. These skills inform how we identify
and act upon situations where design can improve the wellbeing of a
community, and provide solutions to economic, ecological and cultural
sustainability—locally and globally.
While the inclusion of graphic designers on interdisciplinary teams
might appear to blur discipline boundaries, subject disciplines continue
to flourish and provide a foundation for specialist knowledge. What is
emerging and needs consideration is the potential for ‘new’ knowledge
areas in the hybrid fields between disciplines and in new forms of media.
Designers can contribute to these subject developments and have a key
role to play as facilitators of knowledge exchange through information
visualisation and communication with relevant stakeholders.
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Audra Buck-Coleman
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Participant
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
THE FUTURE OF DESIGN EDUCATION — GRAPHIC DESIGN AND CRITICAL PRACTICES: INFORMING CURRICULA
We should certainly not dismiss craft and its ability to shape and
inform new directions within the profession and the education of designers.
Craft should embrace notions of the maker’s hand in production to provide
a unique, individualised experience. The physicality of creation illuminates
how direct knowledge is gained about materials and processes. Craft is
also associated with the production and maintenance of a quality output —
this applies to more traditional methods of creation, as well as digital and
technology-based techniques. We should not replace, but rather augment
specialist disciplines and work with teams that embrace a generalist
understanding of design and those that have craft specialisms. The synergy
between these two tiers of knowledge will provide the foundation for design.
But how do we move forward in developing new curricula? Design
writing and critical engagement should be an integral part of a designer’s
education. Emphasis must be placed on ‘how design is practised’ rather
than on adhering to a particular style. In other words, understanding
academic criticism and applying critical thinking skills to design challenges
is crucial for a designer. In addition to fostering understandings of narrative,
storytelling and critical self-reflexivity, design practice should promote
design writing to address the needs of multi-platform content delivery.
Designers will need to interpret vast patterns of information and
will be required to develop analytic tools for communicating the
complexities of data.
In the 1990s, design suffered from an image problem. The epithet
‘designer’ meant something flashy, hip, expensive and, ultimately, beyond
most people’s reach. We have moved on from that and established a
socially aware vision of what design can be. In education, courses are
orienting themselves toward socially conscious design and, in a political
climate where every academic discipline is being scrutinised for its
‘usability,’ this seems especially apt. Arguments about the politics of such
an approach aside (the British government’s insistence on ‘The Big Society’
is a source of much controversy) this is our current situation. The challenge
for design education is to adapt and to critique. This has always been its
core aim, but it is now more relevant than ever. Illuminating the need for
self-reflexive and critical skills in design education must be the central
plank of this project.
MUMBAI 18˚57'53"N 72˚49'33"E
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The 2000 Icograda Design Education Manifesto began by revealing how
developments in media technology and the information economy affected
the practice of design. Having lived and worked in what is now agreed to be
a ‘Knowledge and Creative Economy’ for over a decade, the full implications
of the changes have become clearer.
The variety and complexity of design issues has indeed expanded
from local and specific to global and universal. Collaborative work is, not
only accepted, but upheld as the ideal way to work on significant projects.
The boundaries between areas of design have faded considerably and are
less relevant, as most projects require cross-disciplinary, collaborative
teams. Design tools have converged with digital devices. The promotion
of consumer goods as a driver of economy is no longer as desirable. The
role of communication designers in the creation of desires to stimulate
consumption is now openly questioned as global sustainability is
threatened by the over-consumption of material goods and individual
acquisitive greed.
Most important of all, visual communication is emerging as
an integrative profession, as other branches of design become
more specialised and discipline bound. Product design, interior and
environmental design, exhibition design, textile and apparel design,
automotive design, interaction design, information design, animation
design and new media design are areas of design defining specialisations
that have boundaries that define their practice. Visual communication,
however, is expanding into an all-encompassing system, which allows
it to formulate integrated solutions that require products, interiors,
interactions, information design and new media solutions. For visual
communication designers, there is little value in narrowing specialisations.
Value is located in the opportunity to contribute — in a collaborative spirit —
to the enrichment of the human experience and to find communication
design solutions that make that experience available to all.
In identifying too closely with a specialisation or sub-identity one
diminishes potential creativity. To expand the domain of individual interest
and existence, by considering oneself a human being and global citizen
first, and a ‘film title designer’ or a ‘font designer’ second, brings an
expansion of values, concerns and responsibility. It also makes one a better
‘film title designer’ or a ‘font designer.’
Two key qualities in the knowledge economy are that knowledge
expands and enriches itself as a result of being shared freely and that
personal ownership of physical assets does not constitute wealth. The
attitudes and practices of the physical and material economy have made
the world unsustainable only 200 hundred years after their adoption as a
dominant economic model, and have created the crisis we face now —
they must be discarded. It is here that visual communication can play
an extremely important role, by proposing, designing and implementing
necessary and emergent global changes.
The competencies and specialisations upon which designers base
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ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
REVISITING THE ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO
their careers are no longer exclusively the domain of professionals.
Everyone has the means and media to take photographs, make videos,
express thoughts visually, do calligraphy and typography, illustrate,
design websites, create film titles and information diagrams, and be
engaged in activities of giving form — on and offline. This allows for a
wonderful diversity in approaches, idioms and expressions in visual
culture, as opposed to the reprocessed visual ideas of much professionally
designed output. The professional design community should embrace the
diversification and democratisation of the creative process. As more people
engage in creative activities, a greater understanding of creativity, and
an appreciation for excellence in the creative domains is fostered. In this
context, excellence could gain its own appeal, and be directly recognised
and appreciated by a global audience without needing marketing agents.
In light of the democratisation of design processes, originality and
creative excellence would not require extensive funding, nor would they go
unrecognised as a result of a lack organised promotion (which has often
made the mediocre and the unoriginal appear more valuable through
expensive campaigns).
In re-reading the 2000 Icograda Design Education Manifesto, one is
reminded of the detailed discussions and precision that led to selecting
the keywords, summarising succinctly the main principles, thoughts,
arguments and visions for the future. The manifesto captures visual
communication as an integrative profession and its need for a more
advanced balance between humans and the environment, collaborative
problem solving and the nurturing of attitudes of learning through selfreflection to meet the growing variety and complexity of problems. As the
manifesto illuminates, education must allow individuals to develop their
own potential, and strive to harmonise East and West, north and south, as
well as the past, present and future.
The Oullim manifesto does not really need to be expanded with
attempts to ‘complete’ the list of sub-identities and sub-practices.
It actually requires further editing, condensing and universalising to evince
its core thoughts that recognise the collaborative nature of the emerging
practice of communication design, and make design a central activity
devoted to improving quality of life. The tenets of the manifesto need to
be more like ‘sutras,’ to define a code and a credo, which will be universal,
eternal and applicable to all future possibilities without necessitating an
upgrade and rewrite every decade.
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Find out what it means to me.
R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Take care, TCB.
Original lyrics by Otis Redding, made famous by Aretha Franklin
On the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the Icograda Design Education
Manifesto, we have a wonderful opportunity to define alternative ways of
being for design education. In this essay, I propose respectful design in
design education. I address what I, and others, mean by respectful design,
how can it be manifested in design education curriculum and practices,
and how respectful design educational approaches can prepare students
for ethical ways of being.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Defining respectful design
Respect is an important concept in nearly all the cultural systems in
the world01. Respect, jen, permeates Confucian thought and practice02.
Respect for the elders and ancestors features in many Indigenous
traditions in Africa03 and Australia04. The importance of respect lies in its
relational emphasis on what Richard Sennett describes as the “intrinsic
worth that each individual has that entitles that person to be treated with
dignity and regard05.” The notion of ‘person’ is extended to include the
animals, minerals, fauna and flora that is part of the ‘nature’ in human
nature. Design, in the Herbert Simon sense, is the “…devising [of] courses
of action aimed at changing existing situations into preferred ones06.”
Thus, a definition of respectful design would be something akin to the
creation of preferred courses of action based on the intrinsic worth of all
human, animal, mineral, fauna and flora and the treatment of them with
dignity and regard.
Making respectful design manifest in design education
While other educational theorists have discussed the role of respect in
education07, this delineation of respectful design originated in the 2010
discussions of Swinburne University’s Faculty of Design. It was the result
01. Sennett, Richard. 2003.
Respect: the Formation of Character in an Age
of Inequality. New York: Norton.
02. Wawrytko, Sandra A. 1982. Confucius and Kant:
The Ethics of Respect. Philosophy East and West,
32(July): 237-257.
03. Leary, Joy, Brennan, Eileen, and Harold Briggs.
The African American Adolescent Respect Scale:
A Measure of a Prosocial Attitude. 2005. Research
on Social Work Practice 15: 462.
04. Sheehan, Norman and Polly Walker. 2001. The
Purga Project: Indigenous Knowledge Research.
Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 29(2):
11-17. [Ebsco host, 26 February 2011].
05. Sennett. 2003. 49.
06. Herbert, Simon. The Sciences of the Artificial.
1969. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
07. Scharlipp, Matthias, Naylor, Gordon and Georg
Lind. The Dawn of Education: Basic Principles
and Objectives of the KMDD in the Light of
Buddhist, Bahá’í and Democratic Life Standards
toward Full Human Development. Presented at
2007 symposium of the American Educational
Research Association (AERA) Conference:
The Quality of the Konstanz Method of Dilemma
Discussions (KMDD) for Teaching Moral and
Democratic Competencies. Chicago:
9-13 April 2007.
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unequal ability, adult dependency and degrading forms of compassion13.
respectful design education directly addresses these barriers and creates
paths towards mutual respect. The craft of making things well in design
provides what Sennett describes as the “…inner sense of self respect14.”
Respectful design education protects this inner sense of self-respect by
emphasising each student’s worth and dignity. In addition, by focusing on
how other creatures make things differently but well, respectful design
aids students in developing respect for others. The relationship between
staff and students is characterised by an interdependency that modifies
the master-apprentice model of studio education — it recognises the
collaborative nature of teaching and learning. Finally, respectful design
education brings self-critical reflection to the “Design can save the
world” hubris by acknowledging the autonomy of other ways of being
and processes of self-determination. With these skills and principles in
mind, respectful design prepares students and practitioners for designing
courses of action based on the intrinsic worth of all human, animal,
mineral, fauna and flora creatures.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
RESPECTFUL DESIGN: A PROPOSED JOURNEY OF DESIGN EDUCATION
Preparing design students for ethical ways of being
Richard Sennett outlines three barriers to establishing mutual respect:
MELBOURNE - ELIZABETH (DORI) TUNSTALL
of an attempt to synthesise the indigenous knowledge offered by Dr. Norm
Sheehan, the principles of sustainability proposed by Professor Frank
Fisher, and the feminist thought and race theory proffered by Dr. Deirdre
Barron and myself. The aculty identified and endorsed respectful design
as a strategic path and institutional mission. The dialogues at Swinburne
Design have global resonance and reflect the assertions of participants
in the 2010 IEN Design Manifesto meeting in Jinan, where the humanistic
aspects of design, collectivity and respect, as well as the maintenance of
harmonious relations, were emphasised.
Respectful design proposes a shift in design education to focus on
how students and staff exist ontologically, or ‘be,’ in the world rather than
solely how they see the world. Swinburne Design substantiated respectful
design by creating a foundation of principles of respect and sustainability
for its design programme. In 2012, the Faculty will evaluate every student’s
performance based on those principles. How respectful design is put into
practice in both teaching and learning is crucial. There are many ways to
approach this task:
• Introduce first year students to the ethics of research and
design practice. In Swinburne Design’s first-year unit, Methods of
Investigation, we introduce students to the Three Ethical Principles
of Research (e.g. respect for persons, beneficence, and justice) 08, the
Living Principles for Design09, and indigenous principles for research10
This enables us to establish ethical behaviour as the basis for all
aspects of design engagement.
• Teach drawing not as just a technical skill in seeing, but as a
philosophical skill in coming to understand one’s contextual
environment and place within it. At Swinburne Design, we have
begun dialogues between Indigenous Australian visual expressions
of knowledge and Bauhaus design principles to reframe the
studio experience.
• Approach materials as transformed animal, mineral and plant
creatures rather than as instruments of use. Cultivate awareness
of the origins and processes of the materials used in design and
emphasise local sourcing. Exercises in having students make their
own paper and dyes from local sources serve to connect students to
materials on a deeper level.
• Emphasise in all actions the relation between teaching and learning.
This is often a challenge in design faculties as large as mine (e.g. 2
200 students), yet as discussed in the work of Jennifer Gidley 11 and
bell hooks12, it is important to practice education as an act of love.
These are only suggestions on how to begin respectful design education.
Design institutions and programmes must tailor the practice to meet
their demands.
08. US National Institute of Health. U.S.
Government Printing Office. 1979. The Belmont
Report: Ethical Principles and Guidelines for the
Protection of Human Subjects of Research.
http://ohsr.od.nih.gov/guidelines/belmont.
html#goa [25 February 2011]
09. AIGA 2009. Living Principles for Design. [7
January 2010] http://www.livingprinciples.net/.
10. Sheehan and Walker. 2001.
11. Gidley, Jennifer. 2007. Educational Imperatives
of the Evolution of Consciousness. International
Journal of Children’s Spirituality, 12(2)August: 119.
12. Hooks, Bell. 1994. Teaching to Transgress:
Education as a Practice of Freedom.
London: Routledge.
13. Sennett. 2003.
14. Sennett. 2003.
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A new framework
If the emergence of the industrial paradigm and social change created
the conditions of mass design and communications, can the current
changes favorably influence the existing practice? Can lessons be drawn
from historical examples to establish a practice capable of responding
to social problems? The environmental crisis has clearly articulated the
need for a systematic, sustainable and collaborative approach to design.
Therefore, even if up to this point the design practice has followed a
deductive method of meeting commissioned demands, in the future, a new,
proactive approach will be necessary — an approach functioning within
a methodological framework and generating new values. If the classical
liberal market does not offer a practical model for the discipline, we must
adopt a new, inductive approach in order to design a sustainable natural
and social environment.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
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New framework, new theory, new methodology and sustainable
practice — towards a new education curriculum
At the moment of reading, the ‘tomorrow’ of the title may already be a
‘yesterday.’ Two fundamental influences, the passage of time and social
change, have determined the history and the contemporary position of
design practice. The impact of these forces has resulted in the uncertain
future of design and this uncertainty is as hotly debated as the issue of the
sustainability of the liberal economic model that fostered the emergence
of design theory and practice.
In light of growing environmental, economic and social problems,
the satisfaction of needs for material and symbolic community through
creativity and the use of design for mass production are, as foreseen by
Matko Mestrovich more than 30 years ago, gradually losing their purpose.
What does the future, or ‘tomorrow,’ hold for design?
New philosophy
According to Norbert Bolz’s precise and useful definition, “design today
comes closer to a cognitive theory on the material world than to designing
those objects.” Of course, those material objects will continue to be
designed, although questions of how, for whom and to meet what needs
remain uncertain. The main factor of our contemporary material world
though is not the production of objects, but the interaction between objects
and users. Design has always been a method and space for interaction,
despite being mistakenly considered merely an ‘aesthetic space’ until the
1960s (it is still viewed as such in less informed cultures). Its value as a
‘communication space’ is becoming increasingly vital.
However, a new philosophy of design cannot not be founded solely
on the acknowledgement of this communicative dimension as it has been
overused for commercial purposes, instead it should aim at the recognition
of the individual identities and self-realisation of users. This ‘New Deal’
practical philosophy of design should arise from the background of
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global capital, technology and labor exchange. Aside from the promise of
material abundance, which will be increasingly harder to maintain, this new
philosophy may grant designers greater individual freedom.
New theory
Historically, the relations between art and industry have encouraged the
establishment of design theory, but to ensure the sustainability of an
industrial product in a contemporary context it is no longer sufficient to
merely recognise its cultural value. Quality and cultural capital are standard
today. As the very sustainability of civilisation is in question, new cultural,
economical and political paradigms are emerging. How will these impact
the relation between products and users and the aims of mass production?
Perhaps the answer to this question is another series of questions — what
can still be mass-produced in our society? Has the globalisation of capital,
technology and work yielded a sufficient framework for the progress of
civilisation? What might happen if all nations reach Western European
standards of living? Is it be possible to produce enough energy and recycle
enough waste to meet the needs of an increasing population? The concept
of mass production for an anonymous user is a key issue in the question
of sustainability.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
New curriculum
Returning to the root issue, that the education both on and in design
requires reassessment, the new curriculum should promote comprehension
and awareness of the global context that designers must work in. Education
must be agile and able to adapt to future changes. Self-reflexivity and the
notion that working on a problem implies working on oneself should be
fostered, erasing boundaries between the project and the student.
New curricula should be both formative and transformative, allowing
students to learn, adapt to and adopt change and, in turn, create change.
DESIGN FOR TOMORROW?
New methodology
In order for an innovative and redefined practice to be implemented, a
new methodology with the aim of developing an objectively verifiable
system must be established. In the complex, interdisciplinary world of the
information revolution, it is insufficient to locate design solely in the sphere
of art. Historically, design methods drew on subjective imagination —
during the critical 1960s, this approach was supplemented with a
scientifically verifiable theory of design. How will our methodologies
evolve in light of widespread social and technological change?
education must change — we must focus on defining a new intrinsic
reasoning. The cognitive potential of design research should be integrated
into curricula in elementary education and the creative potential of design
method should be redefined in higher education to emphasise its value.
These transformations are only possible if mass production remains
sustainable. If it does not, education will have to function in a world of
micro-economies. The micro-economy may become the very basis of the
self-realisation for individuals.
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Sustainable practice
We must redefine educational models and initiate didactic forms that
encourage people to think with individuality and that teach them to express
their thoughts publicly and clearly. The new design education should, rather
than being a rigid and isolated discipline, become a framework for research
based on problem-solving methods and interdisciplinary collaboration
(ideally between creative science and cognitive art). Tomás Maldonado
and theoreticians from the Ulm School of Design elucidated this in the late
1960s, but change was not as crucial then as it is today.
New education
If democracy promotes individual freedom, then why must individuals
compete to maintain high sales volumes and profits? At what level of
economic growth would it become possible for people to think freely? What
general humanistic ideas can be taught in design programmes? Design
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Often when design graduates step out of the ivory tower and into the
real world, they experience a psychological fall, disappointment or
frustration. Almost every design major has ambitiously dreamed of
becoming a creative design master with a mission of making the world a
better and more colourful space. After a few years, their zest for the ideal
gradually subsides. Students and practitioners alike wrestle with
a series of questions that point up the challenges of contemporary design.
Why must there be a gap between the design ideal and its reality?
What kind of process is necessary to bring a fabulous idea to life? What
kind of relationship should designers maintain with their corporate clients?
For whom do we design, ourselves, our client and client’s customers or
society as a whole? What is the purpose of our design — is it for art’s sake,
for the designer’s creative desires or for the public? How do we prepare
students for the reality of the new design world, while maintaining their
individual creativity and social ideals? How can we prepare our students to
meet today’s challenges in global economy, ever changing technologies and
complex social and political conditions? These are the questions for design
education to consider.
The impact of new technology
In contrast to their predecessors, today’s design graduates face a complex,
fast changing profession. The technological revolution redefined, and
continues to alter, the definition of graphic design — we have quickly
adjusted and transformed ourselves to play the multi-faceted roles of
information architect, media communicator, visual artist and author.
As designers, we must catch up quickly to new technology that alters
methods of communication in our ever-changing world.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Wa
ng M
in
I. Preparing students to meet today’s design challenges
The inter-disciplinary approach
The inter-disciplinary and the multi-disciplinary nature of design in general,
and graphic design in particular, is another challenge that students face.
The interaction between graphic design, art and commerce demands that
graphic designers understand the aesthetics, psychology, communication,
and social and functional needs of a changing society, as well as the driving
forces behind these transformations.
Global visual communication beyond cultural and linguistic boundaries
In our multicultural world, designers must consider the conflicts and
amalgamations of different cultures and adopt a dialectical perspective.
On the one hand, diverse cultures appear to be competing and colliding
with each other, while on the other, the trend towards globalisation is
giving great impetus to the blending of diverse cultures. Instances of the
convergence of Eastern and Western culture are everywhere in visual
communication. This kind of cultural interaction poses challenges to,
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BEIJING - WANG MIN
but also colours designers’ works. Designers are expected to be cultural
translators and, as a result, must develop broader cultural knowledge.
II. When East meets West
DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Our world is becoming a smaller place and the gap between the East and
West is narrowing. Multinational companies have extended their capital
and technology across the world. Eating Sushi or practicing Kung fu is
becoming part of daily life in California, and Coca-Cola has a dominant
share in the Chinese soft drink market. However, the prevalence of
linguistic and cultural misunderstandings between Eastern and Western
societies, suggests that there is still much to be done before we achieve
mutual understanding.
Large companies promote globalisation in an attempt to spread their
monopoly over the global market. Our world though, is rife with diversity,
and many nations are striving to retain their own native cultures. Designers,
therefore, have an important role to play in balancing globalisation
and regional identity, unification and diversification. The potential for
understanding the interactions between native culture and the trend of
globalisation justifies the role of cultural communications. Before cultural
communications can be successful we must achieve mutual respect
between cultures — aggressively forcing a culture on people can only
put them off. We need a visual language to facilitate communication and
understanding among people with various backgrounds, and this visual
language can only be drawn from broad, in-depth cultural knowledge.
Globalisation embraces diverse societies around the world, and
marginal cultures find room to co-exist in this structure. The harmonious
co-existence of complementary, as well as contentious, cultures is the
foundation of a vital, thriving world. Globalisation should be interpreted
as mutual understanding, acceptance, co-existence, dialogue, willingness
to adjust and an effort to reach harmony. Without such a consensus,
globalisation could all too easily become the transmission of a single
culture. Designers must be able to interpret and communicate this
diversity. In contrast to painters who can select their own language of
expression, designers must use a language approved by the majority.
While the audience for a painting attunes itself to the painter’s world,
designers adjust their expression to appeal to targeted groups. Designers
cannot choose their audience, but must carefully select the language and
content to meet the audience’s needs. For instance, if your work targets
Europeans, you must choose a language they can easily understand.
In the past designers sought cross-regional visual symbols, in hopes
that they would break the barriers of country and culture and transmit
messages to audiences with diverse backgrounds. Their attempts gave
rise to a set of globally approved traffic signs and impressive posters
intelligible to almost everyone. However, visual communication in modern
society is by no means as simple. It goes far beyond seeking a universal,
cross-cultural and cross-regional visual language. In order to transmit
complicated messages and to communicate efficiently, we must incorporate
geographically diverse visual elements and languages into our design.
The world is becoming a smaller, yet more complicated space. Cross-cultural
design requires a deep awareness of other cultures.
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CONTRIBUTORS MAP
HUGH DUBBERLY
SHARON HELMER POGGENPOHL
VICTOR MARGOLIN
SANTIAGO PUJOL
DAYLIN VALLADOLID PÉREZ
MARIA ROGAL
DAVE MALOUF
MEREDITH DAVIS
AUDREY G. BENNETT
ANDREW RARIG
LIZ DANZICO
JAMER HUNT
STEVEN HELLER
LITA TALARICO
GUI BONSIEPE
RODOLFO CAPETO
TEAL TRIGGS
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KATIA COLUCCI
OMAR VULPINARI
GUY SCHOCKAERT
JULIE LAY
JACQUES LANGE
FEDJA VUKIC
SAKI MAFUNDIKWA
JP ODOCH PIDO
HALIM CHOUEIRY
NELLY BAZ
ALEXANDRA SANKOVA
ANNA KULACHEK
KIRTI TRIVEDI
145
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
ELIZABETH (DORI) TUNSTALL
DAVID SLESS
RUSSEL KENNEDY
JINAN MANIFESTO 2011 WORKSHOP PARTICIPANTS:
AUDREY G. BENNETT
SHI ZENGQUAN
WANG MIN
OMAR VULPINARI
SONG JIANMIN
SONG HAO
AHN SANG-SOO
SONG WENLU
MARK BIDDLE
SUN DAGANG
AUDRA BUCK-COLEMAN
TANG FENG
CHEN XIAOLIN
ELIZABETH (DORI) TUNSTALL
DU PING
WANG LIANG
GAO BEI
WANG MIN
AMY GENDLER
WANG TIANJIAN
GUO RUI
WANG ZHIYONG
HOU LIPING
XIAO YONG
JIANG HUA
XIE HUI
KANG JIAN
XU KAIQIANG
KONG LINGWEI
YUE YU
LI KE
ZHANG HANG
LIN BIN
ZHANG XIAOJUAN
LOU ZHENGGUO
ZHANG XIN
MIAO HONGLEI
ZHOU NA
GUY SCHOCKAERT
Audrey G. Bennett
Audrey Grace Bennett is a tenured Associate Professor of Language,
Literature and Communication and a former College Art Association
Professional Development Fellow. Her monograph, ‘Engendering Interaction
with Images’ is forthcoming in 2011 by Intellect. She edited Design Studies:
Theory and Research in Graphic Design (The Princeton Architectural Press)
and is the founder of GLIDE. Her research interests are visual thinking and
analysis; intersensory interaction with images in art and communication;
arts and technology in STEM education, social robotics, and HIV/AIDS
awareness and prevention advocacy in Sub-Saharan Africa; cross-cultural
communication with images globally; computer-mediated collaborative
design; user-centered and participatory design.
Katia Colucci
After teaching at L'Aquila State University and the Guglielmo Reiss Romoli
School, in 2001, Katia joined the Innovation Centre of the Telecom Italia Group.
Her research included Industrial Accounting systems, economic evaluations
of new technologies and the study and definition of new business models of
the ICT markets, focussing her efforts on the transport and education sectors.
Katia is leader of the Future of Learning project at the Future Centre, and
dedicates her time to the Education ecosystem and its evolution enabled by
the emerging technology trajectories.
Gui Bonsiepe
Gui Bonsiepe studied information design at the the ulm school for design
(hfg ulm). He taught and conducted research at the hfg ulm until 1968.
Since 1968 he has provided design and consultancy services for multilateral
and bilateral organisations for technical cooperation and for government
institutions in Chile, Argentina, Brazil. His specialisation is on design issues
in peripheral countries. From 1987 to 1989 he was an interface designer in a
software house in California. From 1993-2003 he was a professor for interface
design at the Köln International School of Design. Since 2003 he has been
living and working in Argentina and Brazil.
Rodolfo Capeto
Rodolfo Capeto is a designer who graduated from ESDI (Escola Superior
de Desenho Industrial, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Since 1992 he has been teaching
at ESDI, and is currently the School’s director. His main areas of interest and
practice are typography, type design and information design. He is a Brazilian
pioneer in the use of digital processes in graphic design, who developed a
new proprietary vector font format. His major accomplishment is the design
of a new family of typefaces for the largest Portuguese language dictionary.
Liz Danzico
Liz Danzico is chair and co-founder of the MFA in Interaction Design Program
at the School of Visual Arts. She is a columnist for Interactions Magazine, on
the boards of Rosenfeld Media and Design Ignites Change. She’s been user
experience director at Happy Cog editor-in-chief for Boxes and Arrows,
editor-in-chief for A Brief Message, and an advisory board member of
the Information Architecture Institute, adjunct faculty at the New School
University and the Fashion Institute of Technology. In the past, Liz directed
experience strategy for AIGA.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Halim Chouiery
Design educator, practitioner and past Icograda Vice President, Halim
Choueiry is Chairperson of the Arts+Design Department at the American
University of Science and Technology in Beirut, Lebanon. He is undertaking
a PhD in Design at Brighton University, his research focussing on Cultural
Mapping and Cultural Navigation. Halim applies his research findings through
Cinnamon, his design studio specialising in identifying cultural patterns,
visual development of bilingual corporate identities, and the simultaneous
typographic representation of Latin-based languages and Arabic. Halim
has been awarded internationally and has extensive experience in judging
competitions and awards.
CONTRIBUTORS BIOGRAPHIES
Nelly Baz
Nelly Baz holds a Bachelor of Arts in Graphic Design from the American
University of Science and Technology (AUST). She has held jobs as an Account
Executive at Intermarkets, a Senior Communication Executive at Spirit
Advertising and as Communication Manager at White, Inc. Advertising before
becoming the Co-Founder and Communication Strategist at Commune, an
NGO that promotes creativity and innovation for aspirants in different creative
economies sectors. Nelly is a contributing writer and designer for Comma,
the monthly Pan Arab Design publication and was the 2011 recipient of The
Chairman's Achievement. She is planning to pursue a Masters Degree in
Strategic Design at Politecnico Di Milano, Italy.
Meredith Davis
Meredith Davis held the position of Department Head in Graphic Design and
Director of the Interdisciplinary PhD in Design program and holds graduate
degrees from Cranbrook Academy of Art and Pennsylvania State University.
Meredith is 2005 national AIGA medalist, a former AIGA board member, and
former president of the American Center for Design and the Graphic Design
Education Association. Meredith is an author and lecturer and serves on the
editorial board for Design Issues and is currently authoring a college text book
series on design for Thames and Hudson, Ltd.
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Anna Kulachek
Anna Kulachek was born in Ukraine 2 February 1987. She studied at the
Art School of Donetsk From 2002 to 2006. After graduating, Anna worked
at AslanovDesign studio. In 2007 she moved to Moscow to continue her
studies at VASHGD while also working at Design Depot and KAK magazine.
Anna graduated in 2010 and is currently Design Director of DEPOT.
Steven Heller
Steven Heller is author and editor of over 130 books on graphic design,
satiric art and popular culture. He is the co-founder and co-chair of the MFA
Designer as Author program at the School of Visual Arts, New York and several
other MFA programs. For over 40 years he has been an art director for various
underground and mainstream periodicals including the New York Times.
He is editor of AIGA VOICE: Online Journal of Design and contributes regularly
to Design Observer and the DAILY HELLER blog for Print Magazine.
Jacques Lange
Jacques Lange is a past president (2007-2009) of Icograda, and former
co-chair of the International Design Alliance. He is group editor of the
DESIGN>MAGAZINE stable of publications, advisory committee member
of the academic journal, Image & Text, and part-time lecturer in Information
Design and Visual Communication at the University of Pretoria. He is advisor
to various governmental, education and non-governmental institutions and
has actively engaged in the fields of design practice, profession management,
education, design promotion and policy advocacy.
CONTRIBUTORS BIOGRAPHIES
Jamer Hunt
Jamer Hunt is the Director of the experimental graduate program in
Transdisciplinary Design at Parsons the New School for Design. His practice,
Big + Tall Design, combines conceptual, collaborative, and communication
design, and he is co-founder of DesignPhiladelphia. With MoMA and SEED
Magazine he collaborated on and co-hosted MIND08: The Design and Elastic
Mind Symposium as well as the project Headspace: On Scent as Design
in 2010. He has served on several boards and has been published in various
books, journals, and magazines.
Russell Kennedy
Russell Kennedy is an adjunct Research Fellow at Swinburne University
of Technology in Melbourne, Australia and Icograda President (2009-2011).
Prior to joining Swinburne, he was a senior lecturer at Monash University
and the principal of Russell Kennedy Design. He is a Fellow of the Royal
Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufacture and Commerce and a
member of both AGDA and the DIA. He is a Regional Ambassador to INDEX:
'Design to Improve life' and an advisor to the City of Seoul for the Seoul Design
Olympiad. Since joining the Icograda Board in 2003, he has been active in the
development of the Icograda Education Network and the deployment and
promotion of worldwide educational exchange initiatives. Russell initiated
INDIGO, Icograda's international indigenous design network.
Julie Lay
Julie Reine Lay was born in Scharbeek, Belgium on February 1, 1985.
She graduated from ESA, “École Supérieure des Arts” in Graphic Design
and from the renowned “St. Luc institute” in plastic arts. She also studied
industrial design at ECAL, “École Cantonale d’Art de Lausanne” (Switzerland).
She works well in her graphic style, called “Playdesign".
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Hugh Dubberly
Hugh Dubberly is a partner in Dubberly Design Office (DDO), a San Francisco–
based consultancy that makes hardware, software, and services easier to
use. At Apple Computer, Dubberly managed cross-functional design teams,
the company’s corporate identity. At Netscape, he became vice president of
design and managed the design, engineering, and production of Netscape’s
web portal. Dubberly was founding chair of the Computer Graphics
Department at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. He has taught
at several universities and edits a column “On Modeling” for Association
of Computing Machinery’s journal, Interactions.
Saki Mafundikwa
Saki Mafundikwa is the founder and director of the Zimbabwe Institute of
Vigital Arts in Harare. He received a BA in Telecommunications and Fine Arts
from Indiana University and an MFA in Graphic Design from Yale University.
He returned home in 1998 to found ZIVA. He published Afrikan Alphabets:
the Story of Writing in Africa in 2004 and released the award-winning film
Shungu: The Resilience of a People in 2009.He is current Chairperson of
GRAZI: The Graphics Association of Zimbabwe.
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Santiago Pujol
After graduating in 1976 as Informational Designer from the Higher Institute
for Industrial Design in Havana, Santiago worked for a state-run design
agency and later at the National Office for Industrial Design, leading the
Design Promotion Department. After a practicum in Germany he started his
solo career. Besides winning some national design prizes, Santiago has
served as judge for design competitions and has lectured nationally and
abroad. His teaching record includes graphic design courses for industrial
design students, creativity workshops, and tutoring Diploma exercises to
Graphic Design students. At present his work is mainly aimed at scientific
enterprises, tourism agencies and music recording studios.
Victor Margolin
Victor Margolin is Professor Emeritus of Design History at the University
of Illinois, Chicago. He is a founding editor and now co-editor of the academic
design journal Design Issues. Professor Margolin has published widely and
lectured at conferences, universities, and art schools internationally.
Books which he has written, edited, or co-edited include Propaganda:
The Art of Persuasion, WW II, The Struggle for Utopia: Rodchenko, Lissitzky,
Moholy-Nagy, 1917-1936, Design Discourse, Discovering Design and The
Idea of Design, among others.
Andrew Rarig
Andrew Rarig is a designer located in Upstate New York's Capital Region.
He works as the principal graphic designer for Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute's Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center
(EMPAC). There, he creates dynamic identities and print collateral for the
center’s numerous events and performances. Andrew has his BS in Electronic
Media, Arts, and Communication as well as a certificate in Communication
Design from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
CONTRIBUTORS BIOGRAPHIES
JP Odoch Pido
Odoch Pido is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Design, University
of Nairobi and has served on numerous boards and committees, setting
curricula and judging Kenyan art and design projects and competitions.
His professional credits include exhibition designs, graphic design and
product development. Odoch’s publications focus on the analysis of culture
in relation to design, health and development, concentrating on issues in
design education and alternative communication techniques for controlling
HIV-AIDS, especially for orphans and vulnerable children in rural Kenya.
Sharon Helmer Poggenpohl
Sharon Helmer Poggenpohl has taught at the Hong Kong Polytechnic
University, the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology,
and the Rhode Island School of Design. The focus of her career has been
postgraduate design education and design research. She edits and publishes
the international scholarly journal Visible Language. She recently co-edited
with Keiichi Sato Design Integrations (Intellect Books, 2009). Currently, she
is working on a book tentatively titled Design Theory-to-go, while teaching
occasionally in Hong Kong in a new MDes in Design Education program.
Maria Rogal
Maria Rogal is an Associate Professor of Graphic Design at the University
of Florida, United States. Her work focusses on the relationship between
culture and design and how to leverage the potential of design, broadly
defined, to positively shape the human experience. She has worked in
Mexico on the Design for Development (D4D) initiative in which graphic
design students and faculty work with artisans, farmers, and organisers in
Maya communities to foster small business development and create cultural
programs. In 2008 she received the inaugural AIGA Design Research Grant.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Dave Malouf
David Malouf is currently a professor of Interaction Design in the Industrial
Design department of SCAD-Savannah. He co-chaired the Interaction Design
Association's (IxDA) first global conference, Interaction 08 on SCAD's campus.
David is one of the primary founders of IxDA and its first vice president.
Previously he was a senior interaction designer for Motorola Solutions where
he designed software, webware and hardware interactions and interfaces.
Malouf has expertise in interaction design, information architecture, user
interface design, project management and other client technologies.
Alexandra Sankova
Alexandra Sankova is a graphic designer and curator of various graphic
design competitions, projects and events. Alexandra established a non-profit
organisation called "New Graphics" which she represented at the Icograda
conference in Istanbul along with her report on "Modern Design Community
and Design Education in Russia". She released her book “23”: 23 interviews
with famous Russian designers in 2010. Alexandra is member of the Russian
Association of Poster Designers and a Peer Reviewer for 'Iridescent', Icograda
Journal of Design Research. She works as Senior Advisor for cultural affairs at
the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Moscow and is completing
her postgraduate research.
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David Sless
Professor David Sless is Director of the Communication Research Institute,
Visiting Professor of Information design in the Design Institute at Coventry
University, Vice President of the International Institute for Information
Design, and an adjunct professor at the Australian National University, and
the University of Technology in Sydney. David is an advocate of user-centered
and evidence-based information design. His main research has been in
information design methods and his pioneering work on medicine information.
David frequently speaks at international conferences, and is the author of
over 200 publications.
Kirti Trivedi
As founder of India’s first Master’s Degree Programme in Visual
Communication, Kirti Trivedi is Professor at the Industrial Design Centre, IIT,
Bombay, and Visiting Professor at the School of Art, Design & Media at NTU
in Singapore. He consults actively on product design, graphic design, book
design, exhibition and museum design, environmental graphics and signage
design; and has been published and awarded nationally and internationally.
His current research is in Universal, Language-independent Learning;
Creativity and Innovation in Early Childhood Learning; and Methodologies
and Philosophies of Asian Design.
Song Hao
In 2005, Song Hao was admitted into the China Central Academy of Fine
Arts, the School of Design, and into the Students' Union of the Design School
in the same year. By 2008, he worked at the JOYN:VISCOM Studio and later
graduated from CAFA in 2009. Following his graduation he decided to continue
his Masters degree with Professor Wang Min at No.11 studio in the School of
Design. He has been active with Icograda as an assistant at the management
office during Xin, Icograda World Design Congress 2009, having won the title
of excellent volunteer.
Lita Talarico
Lita Talarico is co-founder and co-chair of the School of Visual Arts MFA
Design Program in New York. She is a producer, editor, writer and educator in
architecture and graphic design. She co-founded the SVA Masters Workshop
in Venice and Rome. She coordinated several architect selection competitions
and conferences and was a Professional Advisor for the GSA’s U.S. Port of
Entry at Massena, NY Design Charrette. Talarico is the co-author of The Design
Entrepreneur:Turning Graphic Design into Goods that Sell; Design School
Confidential, among others.
Elizabeth (Dori) Tunstall
Dr. Dori Tunstall is an Associate Professor of Design Anthropology and
Associate Dean of Learning and Teaching at Swinburne University in
Melbourne, Australia. She leads Swinburne’s Masters of Design Program
in Design Anthropology. She is also co-lead, with Dr. Norm Sheehan, of the
research group on Indigenous Knowledge and Design Anthropology.
She is passionate about civically-engaged design that creates politically
informed and enfranchised people. She served as a director of AIGA’s
Design for Democracy and is currently organiser of the U.S. National
Design Policy Summit and Initiative.
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Teal Triggs
Teal Triggs is Professor of Graphic Design, co-Director of Information
Environments (IE) and Course Director for MA Design Writing Criticism, London
College of Communication, University of the Arts London. She is also Adjunct
Professor in the School of Media and Communication at RMIT, Australia.
As a graphic design historian, critic and educator she has authored and edited
a number of books in the field. Her research has focussed primarily on design
pedagogy, self-publishing, and feminism with recent work extending into a
number of community-based learning projects.
CONTRIBUTORS BIOGRAPHIES
Guy Schockaert
Rigour and emotion are the two words that epitomise Guy Schockaert’s
philosophy. Guy is a corporate and book designer who likes typography
and music from all over the planet. A much demanded lecturer, a passionate
teacher (IHECS, La Cambre, Saint-Luc), a tireless organizer, Guy has been
involved in professional associations internationally, taking design to new
levels of understanding and application. He served as President of Icograda
from 1997 to 1999. He was one of the founding fathers of “Design for the
World”, an association aiming at proposing “design” solutions for humanitarian
problems. Since 2006, Guy Schockaert is a member of Belgian’s Free Academy
(Libre Académie de Belgique).
Daylin Valladolid Pérez
Daylin graduated as Informational Designer with Gold Diploma from the
Higher Institute of Design. As a student, she carried out interesting projects
including a visual identity for the 490th Anniversary of the foundation of
Havana. Her work, a project of Visual Identity and Sign System for the National
Police Department, received an Honorable Mention at the National Design
Office 2010 Design Award. She has been working professionally with a team
to develop the animations for the didactic game “The Game of the Millennium”.
At present she carries out projects of Ambient Graphics for interiors and in the
design of printed matter for a Cuban transportation company.
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Jinan Manifesto 2011
Workshop
1-4 November 2010
Fedja Vukic
Dr. Fedja Vukic is a lecturer of design theory and history at the Graduate
School of Design, Faculty of Architecture, University of Zagreb, Croatia and
a communication consultant. He has published reviews, articles and scientific
papers on visual communications and design in Croatian and international
magazines and edited several books, including Modern Zagreb 1992, among
others. He is fellow of The Wolfsonian Fundation Research Centre, Miami
Beach 1995, has lectured widely in Europe and U.S.A. and participated in
a number of international symposiums on visual communications.
Participants
Ahn Sang-Soo
Professor at Hongik
University
South Korea
Omar Vulpinari
Director of Expanded
Media at Fabrica
Italy
Mark Biddle
Professor of Art at Weber
State University
United States
CONTRIBUTORS BIOGRAPHIES
Wang Min
Professor Wang Min is the Dean of School of Design at China Central Academy
of Fine Arts (CAFA). Min has been appointed by Ministry of Education as Chang
Jiang (Cheung Kong) Scholars Chair Professor in 2007 and is a member of AGI,
(Alliance Graphique Internationale). Min was the Design Director for Beijing
2008 Olympic Games Committee from 2006 to 2008, and has been also the
Director of Art Research Center for Olympic Games (ARCOG) since 2004.
Min served as Vice President of Icograda (2007-2009).
Co-chairs
Audrey G. Bennett
Associate Professor
of Graphics at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute
United States
Audra Buck-Coleman
Professor at
University of Maryland
United States
Chen Xiaolin
Professor at School of
Design, Sichuan University
China
Du Ping
Professor at School of Art
and Design, Shenzhen
Polytechnic
China
Gao Bei
Dean of Ceramic Glaze Art
Department, Zibo
Vocational Institute
China
Amy Gendler
Professor at Central
Academy of Fine Arts.
Director of AIGA China
United States/China
Guo Rui
Administrative staff at
International Affairs
Office, Shandong
University of Arts and
Design
China
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Hou Liping
Vice Dean of School of
Visual Communication
Design, Shandong University
of Arts and Design
China
Jiang Hua
Teacher at Central
Academy of Fine Arts
China
Kang Jian
Administrative staff
of International Affairs
Office, Shandong
University of Arts and
Design
China
Kong Lingwei
Student at No. 7 Design
Studio, Central Academy
of Fine Arts
China
Li Ke
Teacher at Wu Han Textile
University
China
Lin Bin
Associate Professor
at Art College, Shandong
Polytechnic University
China
Lou Zhengguo
Dean of College of Arts,
Ludong University
China
Miao Honglei
Associate Dean of
Department of Art and
Design, Qufu Normal
University
China
Guy Schockaert
Professor at Ihecs,
Instituts Saint-Luc ESA,
La Cambre
Belgium
Shi Zengquan
Dean of School of Visual
Communication Design,
Shandong University of
Arts and Design
China
Song Jianmin
Teacher at Ceramic Glaze
Art Department,
Zibo Vocational Institute
China
Xie Hui
Teacher at College of Art
and Design, Shenzhen
Polytechnic
China
Song Wenlu
Student at School
of Arts and Humanities,
Shandong University
of Arts and Design
China
Xu Kaiqiang
Dean of School of Fine
Arts and Design, Hubei
University of Technology
China
Sun Dagang
Vice Dean of School
of Visual Communication
Design, Shandong
University of Arts
and Design
China
Tang Feng
Student at Department
of Fine Arts, Hefei Normal
University
China
Elizabeth (Dori) Tunstall
Associate Professor of
Design Anthropology
and Associate Dean at
Swinburne University
United States/Australia
Wang Liang
Student at No. 7 Design
Studio, Central Academy
of Fine Arts
China
Wang Min
Dean of Central Academy
of Fine Arts
China
Yue Yu
Professor at School
of Arts, Northwestern
University
China
Zhang Hang
Vice Dean of College of Art
Design, Shenzhen
Polytechnic
China
Zhang Xiaojuan
Teacher at School of Visual
Communication Design,
Shandong University of
Arts and Design
China
Zhang Xin
Student at Central
Academy of Fine Arts
China
Zhou Na
Student at School of
Arts and Humanities,
Shandong University
of Arts and Design
China
ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
Omar Vulpinari
Omar Vulpinari is Vice President Icograda where he is Editorial Director of
Iridescent - Icograda Journal of Design Research and Co-chair of the Icograda
Design Education Manifesto 2011. Omar is also Director of Expanded Media
and Head of Visual Communication at Fabrica, the Benetton Group research
centre founded by Luciano Benetton and Oliviero Toscani, where his focus is
primarily on practice research in expanded media for social impact. Vulpinari
is also responsible for the centre’s transdisciplinary workshop programme
Environmental, Social, Relational. He has directed projects for UNICEF,
UNESCO, UNWHO and many other international organistions. He teaches
Communication Design for social advancement at the IUAV University of
Venice in San Marino.
Wang Tianjian
Director of Design
Management, Innovative
Design Center, Haier Group
China
Wang Zhiyong
Dean of College of Fine
Arts, South-Central
University for Nationalities
China
Xiao Yong
Professor at Central
Academy of Fine Arts
China
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ICOGRADA DESIGN EDUCATION MANIFESTO 2011
JINAN MANIFESTO 2011 WORKSHOP
More than ever, design education must prepare students for change.
To this end, it must move from being teaching-centered to a learning-centered
environment which enables students to experiment and to develop their own
potential in and beyond academic programs.
Thus the role of a design educator shifts from that of only knowledge
provider to that of a person who inspires and facilitates orientation for
a more substantial practice.
The power to think the future, “near or far,” should be an integral part
of visual communication design. A new concept in design promises to tune
nature, humanity, and technology, and to harmonize east and west, north
and south, as well as past, present, and future in a dynamic equilibrium.
This is the essence of Oullim, the great harmony.
Icograda Design Education Manifesto Seoul 2000
Graphic designer
The term ‘graphic design’ has been technologically undermined. A better
term is visual communication design. Visual communication design
has become more and more a profession that integrates idioms and
approaches of several disciplines in a multi-layered and in-depth visual
competence. Boundaries between disciplines are becoming more fluid.
Nevertheless designers need to recognize professional limitations.
Many changes have occurred
Developments in media technology and the information economy have
profoundly affected visual communication design practice and education.
New challenges confront the designer. The variety and complexity of
design issues has expanded. The resulting challenge is the need for a
more advanced ecological balance between human beings and their
socio-cultural and natural environment.
MANIFESTO 2000
Designer
A visual communication designer is a professional:
• who contributes to shaping the visual landscape of culture
• who focuses on the generation of meaning for a community of users,
not only interpreting their interest but offering conservative and
innovative solutions as appropriate
• who collaboratively solves problems and explores possibilities through
the systematic practice of criticism
• who is an expert that conceptualizes and articulates ideas into
tangible experiences
• whose approach is grounded in a symbiotic conduct that respects the
diversity of environmental and cultural contexts not by overemphasizing
differences, but by recognizing common ground
• who carries an individual responsibility for ethics to avoid harm and
takes into account the consequences of design action to humanity,
nature, technology, and cultural facts.
Future of design education
The new design program includes the following dimensions: image, text,
movement, time, sound, and interactivity. Design education should focus on
a critical mentality combined with tools to communicate. It should nurture
a self-reflective attitude and ability. The new program should foster
strategies and methods for communication and collaboration.
Theory and design history should be an integral part of design
education. Design research should increase the production of design
knowledge in order to enhance design performance through understanding
cognition & emotion, physical, and social & cultural human factors.
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Icograda Design Education
Manifesto 2011 (project)
Icograda Design Education
Manifesto 2011 (book)
Project leader
Omar Vulpinari
Copyright ©2011 Icograda
All rights reserved. No part of this
publication may be reproduced
or transmitted in any form
or by any means, electronic
or mechanical, including
photocopying, recording or any
information storage or retrieval
system, without permission in
writing from the copyright owner.
Icograda and the individual
author jointly retain all rights
and intellectual property of the
respective essay. Reproduction
of the essays or portions thereof
require the written consent
of the respective owners.
Co-chairs
Audrey G. Bennett,
Omar Vulpinari
Steering committee (essay writers)
Gui Bonsiepe, Rodolfo Capeto,
Katia Colucci, Halim Choueiry,
Liz Danzico, Meredith Davis,
Hugh Dubberly, Steven Heller
& Lita Talarico, Jamer Hunt,
Jacques Lange, Saki Mafundikwa,
Dave Malouf, Victor Margolin,
JP Odoch Pido, Sharon Helmer
Poggenpohl, Maria Rogal,
David Sless, Kirti Trivedi, Teal Triggs,
Elizabeth (Dori) Tunstall,
Fedja Vukic, Wang Min
Project management
Brenda Sanderson,
Diala Lada
Thanks to
The speakers of the IcogradaShandong University conference:
Ahn Sang-Soo, Audrey G. Bennett,
Audra Buck-Coleman,
Chen Xiaolin, Amy Gendler,
He Jie, Kong Sen, Pan Lusheng,
Guy Schockaert, Omar Vulpinari,
Wang Dawei, Wang Min,
Wang Tianjian, Xiao Yong
Special thanks to
Chang Don Ryun, Russell Kennedy,
Pan Lusheng, Ahn Sang-Soo,
Guy Schockaert
ISBN 978-0-9809179-0-1
Editing
Audrey G. Bennett,
Omar Vulpinari
Design
Fabrica, The Benetton
Communication Research Centre
(design Michela Povoleri,
creative direction Omar Vulpinari)
Translation and design of
Manifesto graphic interpretations
Arabic: Halim Choueiry
and Nelly Baz
Simplified Chinese: Wang Min
and Song Hao
English: Audrey G. Bennett
and Andrew Rarig
French: Guy Schockaert
and Julie Lay
Russian: Alexandra Sankova
and Anna Kulachek
Spanish: Santiago Pujol
and Daylin Valladolid Pérez
Printing
Grafiche Tintoretto, Italy,
September 2011
www.grafichetintoretto.it
Paper
Favini Shiro Echo is
an environmental paper.
It is FSC certified and
produced with “Energia Pura”:
electrical energy covered by
RECS - Renewable Energy
Certificate System for CO2
emission reduction.
www.favini.com
Project management
Brenda Sanderson,
Diala Lada
Jinan Manifesto 2011 workshop
photographer
Shi Longtan, Shandong
University of Arts and Design
Publicity Office
Copy-editing
Amanda Clarke
Design and production sponsor
F A B R I C A
Paper sponsor
Print sponsor
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