Monday, September 20, 2010

blog assignment 7: selected posts

[nice detail and references] from Chris Mather:

Cultural Sensitivity/Insensitivity: Blog 7

The first picture is of a Japanese sushi mat (makisu) which is used in Japanese culture to roll up sushi. I discovered this in the two dollar shop on Cuba Street. I believe this to be very culturally sensitive, with how it is made and presented. With the components of the makisu made out of traditional materials such as the bamboo. The packaging is very simplistic with simple pictures of bamboo storks, with only the colours red and green used, relating back to the Japanese culture though what these colours represent.  With red representing energy, as in Japanese culture it is believed the sun is red.  With the green representing growth, vegetation and nature. These colour meanings therefore relate back to the culture and the task the makisu carries out.
This second picture is of a Maori tattoo, proudly known as a Ta Moko in Maori culture. This photo was taken in a tattoo shop on Cuba street. This Te Moko in Maori culture is a sacred treasure (taonga) with the purpose and application carrying significant meaning and procedures. These include tribal affiliations and their placing within these social structures. But in this case the designs are just for show and have no particular meaning to the individual with the story behind the patterns false and unjust. With the tattoos being applied using a modern day European tattooing needle instead of the Traditional Maori way of using a bone chisel. Also modern day inks are made primarily from metal salts, plastics and vegetable dyes. With authentic Maori ink is made from burned wood or an organism that is half vegetation, half caterpillar. This pattern blatantly shows a lack of cultural knowledge behind these tattoos. I believe that they are very culturally insensitive towards Maori culture. With the designs marked for pure design, instead of as a sacred treasure of tribal affiliations.
Weather something is culturally sensitive or insensitive is up for debate as it is an individual opinion. For instance what one man finds culturally insensitive another may not, such as Robbie Williams getting a Maori tattoo on his arm. This was very offensive to many Maori and New Zealander’s but he didn’t believe he was being culturally insensitive when he got the tattoo. 


[thoughtful and concise] from Luke Verboeket:

Cultural Sensitivity/Insensitivity: Blog 7

As I was walking around Cuba Street trying to find examples of cultural sensitivity/insensitivity I wondered how do we decide if something is culturally insensitive or just bad taste?
I found this drawing of a Maori tiki mask that had been warped to be more of a demon looking thing, but is still likened to the traditional Maori precedent. Personally, I think this could be considered culturally insensitive because it is basically mocking the original drawings that the Maori had done. Which, perhaps raises another question; is this is true cultural insensitivity or just artistic license?
Finding something that was culturally sensitive was much harder for me, as it seems that cultural insensitivity is a mainstream idea now that if not done in the extremes, we accept. I found this Buddha statue in a shop window, which unlike the drawing, was similar to what we would consider an authentic one to look like. I think this is being culturally sensitive because it still has the integrity of the original.


Wednesday, September 15, 2010

blog assignment 6: selected posts


from Ben Hartley
Technology+Progress
Founded by Walter Gropius (1883-1969), the Bauhaus school of design and its renown teaching methods were an essential stage for the progress of modern design education.  Due to the Bauhaus being so influential, many philosophies and methods in todays schools of design show similarities to those of the Bauhaus design school.  For example, our Victoria University has a course structure and teaching methods that closely resemble the Bauhaus.
In the Bachelor of Design Innovation, every student does the first year foundation course, with broad subjects to choose from so that in second year students can specialise and chose from the three majors.  This idea comes from the Bauhaus which started its education with a preliminary course focusing on introducing students to Bauhaus theory.Thanks to Johannes Ittens ‘education through play’ philosophy the Bauhaus had a very experimental approach to learning design which can now be seen in many of the design subjects at Vic; 101 Rapid Visualisation and 141 Experimenting with Materials both encourage students to investigate and learn design through natural exploration of techniques.  Another teaching method at Vic that relates back to the Bauhaus is the aim of finding out how design boundaries can be pushed through the use of new technologies.  Courses like 104 Digital Creation and 142 Creative Coding use the latest technologies to teach students design philosophies that are relevant to modern industry.  This was a key focus of the Bauhaus school.

from Simeon Wilson
Technology+Progress
There are many similarities between Victoria university’s first year design program, and the program of the Bauhaus.  The first I will cover is freedom of expression, having no right or wrong style of expression. The second being the learning through experimenting and working with with materials and forms.
The Bauhous manifesto states “Avoidance of all rigidity; priority of creativity; freedom of individuality, but strict study discipline.” - Walter Gropius, 1919. This principle is upheld in most of Victoria’s design papers. Victoria does not teach what style is right or wrong, but how to express the properties and qualities of a material or object. 
When Johannes Itten ran the Vorkurs, a six month preliminary course, he encouraged innovation, and experimentation with common materials. Victoria often requires the innovative use of common materials such as paper or wire, and also has an entire paper dedicated to “Experimenting with Materials”


Monday, August 16, 2010

Blog assignment 5: selected posts

from Calia Anderson:

Authenticity in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

Is authenticity a viable option in the age of mechanical reproduction?  According to Walter Benjamin’s declaration in “Illuminations” that (to paraphrase) “asking for the “Authentic” print makes no sense given that from a photographic negative one can make any number of prints”, I have a number of arguments I would like to put forth. 
First of all, through work in a darkroom, any number of authentic (or original) prints are easily manageable given the direct manipulation of the photographer or developer on the developing process.  Moreover, in the age of digital media and programs such as Photoshop, it is even more possible to have any number of varied “authentic” pieces each with the same starting point. There may therefore be no one authentic print, put any number of them.  This would be adverse to what Benjamin is claiming in that he believes each print would be mechanically reproduced to be exactly the same.    However, that being said, the negative without manipulation would rightly then be put forth as the “original” as it is the picture PRE manipulation during the development process. 
Secondly, I would argue that any photograph is not just a snapshot in time that any camera can capture.  In this sense a photograph is not simply a mechanical reproduction.  The camera still requires a person behind it.  And that person has an eye and a feeling and an ability and desire to capture a particular thing at a particular time.  Even if that person is negligent of all of their own particular wants and needs they still must decide camera angle, lighting, aperture, what to focus on and what to leave out etc.  Therefore, the negative of that image has still been manipulated into being.  There is no such thing as a camera taking a picture.  However, the camera (and the film) is the medium; and as Marshal McLuhan would argue, “the medium is the message”.  It is the nature of the medium that allows us to partake in the particular format of information it is purveying and that directly relates to how we access or acknowledge that information.  Moreover, what we learn or encounter during the use of that medium is also due to that medium.  This might also affect one’s sense of authentic as each person comes from a different place and so interprets the exact same information differently.
I would therefore conclude that the photograph still maintains a sense of the authentic in that not every photographer given the same moment in time, the same place and the same desires would choose to capture a subject in the exact same way.  There may be differences in lighting, angle, focus, depth of field etc that make each photographer’s vision unique.  Furthermore, once that film has been edited it becomes even more so “authentic” as that filmmaker or photographer has manipulated the information to portray a certain piece of information at exclusion of others.  The photographers “eye” is every bit as important as the sculptor’s hand and the Painter’s vision in creating the authentic.  Though many prints of the same negative are possible, and therefore possibly less “authentic”, there still remains the possibility to create several (ad infinitum) different versions of the same original, each authentic in their own right.
Ansel Adams is one photographer who spends a great deal of time in the post-production phase of his photography.  Not only is his eye important for the actual picture taking, but manipulating the image into what he has in his mind is equally important.  His images may be mass-produced and replicated around the world, but I would argue that they maintain their sense of the “authentic” by being authentically his vision, his creation and his eye.  Visions from him, to us.
Ansel Adams:  Leaf, Glacier Bay National Monument


from Amelia Smith:

Assignment Five: Modern Vision

Walter Benjamin argues: “To an ever greater degree the work of art reproduced becomes the work of art designed for reproducibility. From a photographic negative, for example, one can make any number of prints to ask for ‘the authentic’ print makes not sense.”
I disagree with Benjamin’s statement, I think the ‘authentic’ still has great significance even in an age of digital design and manufacture. Leonardo’s Mona Lisa is a perfect example of authentic importance. There are millions of Mona Lisa replicas and merchandise so why would seeing the original be any different? Walter Benjamin says in The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction “Even the most perfect reproduction of a work of art is lacking in one element: its presence in time and space, its unique existence at the place where it happens to be.” He means because of the aura that surrounds the original artwork that makes its authenticity so important to the viewers. Looking at the authentic print makes you one of the privileged and knowing this adds to the aura of that moment. Even an original photograph, before it had been Photoshopped and reproduced for the mass, has some significance even if only for the artist himself.
I think there is still a role for the ‘authentic’ in this age and I have found a way of scaling the importance of authenticity in today’s society. From Marketing, Real People, Real Choices by Solomon Charbonneau, Hughes Chitty and Marshell Stuart, I found a graph used for marketing purposes, which society has been divided into five groups and these groups are a great example of how we value authenticity differently.
Firstly there are the Innovators (2.5%) who are the ‘Trend Setters’, the discoverers and they value the authentic and originals. Then the Early Adopters (13.5%) who are quick on the up take, and value the authentic. The Early Majority (34%) are the Sheep, they follow the mass needing fit in with society. They are less worried about authenticity and more worried about appearance. The Late Majority (34%) are another large group, they catch on later after all the fuss has calmed down. They invest to fit in like the ‘Sheep’ and are not hung up on authenticity rather interested in function. Last are the Laggards (16%) who are behind the eight ball, they would have been the last people on Telecom’s 025 network. They only buy into a product when it has become a necessary part of life, such as a mobile phone. They are the least worried about authenticity, just function and purpose.
This system of loosely grouping society shows that authenticity is not lost in this digital design and manufacture age, it has just become more specific to certain areas. It has just changed its place on peoples list of priorities.

from Henry Roberts:

Modern Vision

In the modern day and age if asked to give someone an authentic print of a photograph any one person would think along the same lines as Walter Benjamin when he says “from a photographic negative…one can make any number of prints; to ask for the authentic print makes no sense” from his 1936 book The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction”. In reality this question is double barreled, you can answer this figuratively or literally.
If one wanted to answer this literally there would be no real authentic as any number of copies can be made and the original lost or never created at all, this applies to all things that are made unless they are one off designs, and even then they can be copied exactly without the knowledge of the creator at all. 
However, if one wanted to answer this figuratively the answer is simple and is something which I agree with also. To ask someone for the ‘authentic’ would be to ask for the photo, piece of art or design which the person who took or made it considered to be the true version made by their own hands. Without diluting it with foreign influences or people. To add to my last statement what better way to show ‘authenticity’ in this day and age than showing the physical embodiment of this statement. The Adidas Original shoes, there have been many replicas made but these are the only one true authentic.
 

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Blog assignment 4: selected posts

from Hannah Wilkinson:
Blog Assignment 4: Design and Craft



tumblr_l6q5tvFpeK1qbtas8o1_500.jpg
The main difference of craft and design is the matter of hands on. Craft is very hands on and requires patients and precision, where is design can be done using machines and computers as William Morris points out, machines are evil, and now days craft is becoming a thing of the past. As John Ruskin theory suggests, craft represents the simple life. The simple life is having time and being away from the fast past life, growing your own foods and creating your own things. Craft is more from the heart then having to have things sold in bulk. A personal example of craft vs design is me and my mum, I am doing a degree in design and prefer using computers to create things, where as my mum, creates things at home for the home and has a more hands on approach. It is very hard to see contemporary craft, as things now days can be manipulated to look like craft. My example is a chair made from salvaged trees by Hudson furniture, the designer has really thought about the human body and what is comfortable, what I like about these chairs is that it shows craft and the way you can see the wood grain and how it has been smoothed and molded by person for a person. This to me is contemporary craft, because it is both. http://www.homedosh.com/furniture-from-salvaged-trees-by-hudson-furniture/



from Matthew Graham:Craft and design are two similar concepts; related like the poles of a magnet. Design is affiliated with academic success, being expensive and exclusive, something which holds rules and rank. Craft on the other hand allows for self expression, creation out of enjoyment with a possible bonus that people love what you do too. With our consumer driven industries of today, finding true craft was difficult. Is jewelery designed to sell or crafted with passion? Are paintings even craft, or merely made for a client? Looking in our back yard however seems to yield more honest craftsmen.
Lynden Over is a craftsman of glass blowing. Although the craft of glass blowing isn’t modern (it originates from Roman times), the way he operates is a representation of how craft blossoms. He has no shop, no order lists. He has a gallery of his creations, each shaped by how his passion for the craft is released. With each piece unique, the basis of craft - being un-engineered - holds true. What makes Over truly a craftsman is that he creates something which is more than art, more than a crafted rock with a painted face. His craft engages people to see more than a vase or a bottle; people should see an emotion.
William Morris knew that craft was slowly being shunned away from mainstream markets, where the cheap mass-produced objects flourished. Unfortunately this remains true today, where the concept of craft is something which holds value in its price; crafted of the rich, engineered for the poor. Lynden Over perhaps struggles with how he must make his creations a craft for all, not just a corporate gift. The true test of a craftsman is allowing everyone to experience what your imagination conjures up.
Craft and design are two similar concepts; related like the poles of a magnet. Design is affiliated with academic success, being expensive and exclusive, something which holds rules and rank. Craft on the other hand allows for self expression, creation out of enjoyment with a possible bonus that people love what you do too. With our consumer driven industries of today, finding true craft was difficult. Is jewelery designed to sell or crafted with passion? Are paintings even craft, or merely made for a client? Looking in our back yard however seems to yield more honest craftsmen. 
Lynden Over is a craftsman of glass blowing. Although the craft of glass blowing isn’t modern (it originates from Roman times), the way he operates is a representation of how craft blossoms. He has no shop, no order lists. He has a gallery of his creations, each shaped by how his passion for the craft is released. With each piece unique, the basis of craft - being un-engineered - holds true. What makes Over truly a craftsman is that he creates something which is more than art, more than a crafted rock with a painted face. His craft engages people to see more than a vase or a bottle; people should see an emotion.
William Morris knew that craft was slowly being shunned away from mainstream markets, where the cheap mass-produced objects flourished. Unfortunately this remains true today, where the concept of craft is something which holds value in its price; crafted of the rich, engineered for the poor. Lynden Over perhaps struggles with how he must make his creations a craft for all, not just a corporate gift. The true test of a craftsman is allowing everyone to experience what your imagination conjures up.


from Dana Chan:
Craft vs Design


 


Today, before we create anything we are asked to ask ourselves the big question: is it sustainable? Craftedsystems based in the United States has reached the epitome of craft and sustainability and along the way is also empowering the community.
Craftedsystems products include vessels, rugs and vases; all are produced from sustainable felt by everyday people at the YWCA. Contemporary craft has become less of a hobby left to artisans but has is now something that anyone can perfect through practice and patience.
An increase of DIY websites such as instructables.com which publish articles teaching one the basics of crafting popular items. Not to say that by reading these articles you will be a pro glass blower, but instead, teaching us how to be more efficient with the resources we already have to produce these crafts. So I think that Craftedsystems fully embodies the contemporary expression of craft as they not only consider the sustainability side of their craft but also in producing these crafts they are giving everyday people the opportunity to learn skills which they can use to enable themselves economically.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Blog Assignment 3: selected posts

From Matthew Everitt:
Should construction be decorated or rather should decoration be constructed? This was a central issue during the design ‘reform’ of the 19th century. Designers began to think about the beauty and utility of an object, and how these factors should be taken into account. Owen Jones  argued in his writing of ‘The Grammar of Ornament’(1856) that “Construction should be decorated. Decoration should never be purposely constructed”, Jones was looking at the function of a design before the form and how the decoration of the design should not take away from the function but rather add to and strengthen the idea of its function. A.W.N Pugin had the same idea in his head when he created his principles of design. His principles circled around the idea that design should respect the characteristics of materials, not imitate them. These principles provided a standard for many 19th century designs. Why were Jones and Pugin creating these standards for design? Partly because of the industrialisation of their country. The Industrial Revolution saw the invention of mass-production, this gave the middle class the opportunity to obtain goods easily. And ‘one of a kind’ hand made, goods began to diminish.
The 18th century wallpaper pictured above does not adhere to A.W.N Pugin’s true principles of design but rather to his false principle. The design shows depth and a soft style of decoration. Whereas one of Owen Jones’s or Pugins’s designs would have showed a stronger, stylised pattern of nature rather than the soft bush scene seen here. Because it is a wall the decoration should also be strong to support the idea of a solid wall. I agree with Owen Jones argument , because if an object is designed with this aesthetic it has a stronger sense of its function. Observers of the design will either be able to understand it better or their idea of what is will be reinforced by its decoration rather than misconceived.
Photo sourced from:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/44124324682@N01/2172598073/S
Should construction be decorated or rather should decoration be constructed? This was a central issue during the design ‘reform’ of the 19thcentury. Designers began to think about the beauty and utility of an object, and how these factors should be taken into account. Owen Jones argued in his writing of ‘The Grammar of Ornament’(1856) that “Construction should be decorated. Decoration should never be purposely constructed”, Jones was looking at the function of a design before the form and how the decoration of the design should not take away from the function but rather add to and strengthen the idea of its function. A.W.N Pugin had the same idea in his head when he created his principles of design. His principles circled around the idea that design should respect the characteristics of materials, not imitate them. These principles provided a standard for many 19th century designs. Why were Jones and Pugin creating these standards for design? Partly because of the industrialisation of their country. The Industrial Revolution saw the invention of mass-production, this gave the middle class the opportunity to obtain goods easily. And ‘one of a kind’ hand made, goods began to diminish.

The 18th century wallpaper pictured above does not adhere to A.W.N Pugin’s true principles of design but rather to his false principle. The design shows depth and a soft style of decoration. Whereas one of Owen Jones’s or Pugins’s designs would have showed a stronger, stylised pattern of nature rather than the soft bush scene seen here. Because it is a wall the decoration should also be strong to support the idea of a solid wall. I agree with Owen Jones argument , because if an object is designed with this aesthetic it has a stronger sense of its function. Observers of the design will either be able to understand it better or their idea of what is will be reinforced by its decoration rather than misconceived.

from Oliver Bucher:


Beauty and Utility
“Construction should be decorated. Decoration should never be purposely constructed.” Owen Jones, The Grammar of Ornament (1856).
What Jones is saying is that ornamentation should adorn the form of a construction and remain subordinate to its function, not heaped on top without purpose or relevance.
In an age where design had virtually no rules or principles to adhere to, men like Owen Jones, Richard Redgrave and A.W.N Pugin, sought to bring order and consistency into the framework of design, still using nature’s forms ornamentally but in a restrained and abstracted fashion.
The work and principles these men promoted were more of a movement than simply a new style in design.
Personally I agree with the argument that decoration should never be purposely constructed, but do not believe this principle should be applied absolutely. The 32 principles in The Grammar of Ornament are not mathematical equations for calculating the perfect design. Designers must be allowed a certain amount of artistic freedom as long as the function of an object is not lost or hindered by its ornamentation.
Above is an example of decoration constructed. Decorating a pair of scissors to look like a bunny neither adds nor subtracts from their function. Bunnies and scissors have little in common; one would have to take a somewhat strangled route to connect one to the other. The designer of these scissors is simply adding this ornamentation to make them more fun and appealing for children. Upon seeing these scissors I thought instantly of the little girl in Charles Dickens’ Hard Times, who innocently explained why she had no problem with tables and chairs being decorated with flowers. In my opinion this is an example of why one should not apply Owen Jones’ principles absolutely. 
Bunny Scissors by Pylones USA: http://www.pylones-usa.com/pylones/product.php?product=369&category=13
And the Bunny Scissors Facebook Fanclub???: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Can-this-Rabbit-Scissors-get-more-Fans-than-Jonas-Brothers/292484563588?v=wall&viewas=0
Beauty and Utility
“Construction should be decorated. Decoration should never be purposely constructed.” Owen Jones, The Grammar of Ornament (1856).
What Jones is saying is that ornamentation should adorn the form of a construction and remain subordinate to its function, not heaped on top without purpose or relevance.
In an age where design had virtually no rules or principles to adhere to, men like Owen Jones, Richard Redgrave and A.W.N Pugin, sought to bring order and consistency into the framework of design, still using nature’s forms ornamentally but in a restrained and abstracted fashion.
The work and principles these men promoted were more of a movement than simply a new style in design.
Personally I agree with the argument that decoration should never be purposely constructed, but do not believe this principle should be applied absolutely. The 32 principles in The Grammar of Ornament are not mathematical equations for calculating the perfect design. Designers must be allowed a certain amount of artistic freedom as long as the function of an object is not lost or hindered by its ornamentation.
Above is an example of decoration constructed. Decorating a pair of scissors to look like a bunny neither adds nor subtracts from their function. Bunnies and scissors have little in common; one would have to take a somewhat strangled route to connect one to the other. The designer of these scissors is simply adding this ornamentation to make them more fun and appealing for children. Upon seeing these scissors I thought instantly of the little girl in Charles Dickens’ Hard Times, who innocently explained why she had no problem with tables and chairs being decorated with flowers. In my opinion this is an example of why one should not apply Owen Jones’ principles absolutely.


from Ashleigh Woodmass:
Throughout the industrialisation period 18th-19th century beauty and utility became known design politics in regard to true and false principles of design. During the design ‘reform’  designers questioned the relationship between decoration and construction working harmoniously together. Certain standards were set to ensure that designs were morally and socially acceptable. ‘Good’ design was perceived as the respect of the design construction yet still pleasing the eye through suitable decoration.  
Architect and designer Owen Jones played a huge influential part in the design reform through this industrialisation period in the 19th century. 1856 Jones wrote ‘The Grammar of Ornament’ arguing that “Construction should be decorated. Decoration should never be purposely constructed.” meaning that designs should firstly be recognised for the function or construction of the design and secondly the aesthetics of the design in which there should be no false representation of other designs such nature. This is evident through his work such as ‘Decoration for the Alhambra Court, South Kensington Museum 1863’ and ‘Wallpaper with formalised floral motif’ displaying flat, geometric, repetitive and abstracted patterns enough to recognise that there are aspects of nature such as flowers and leaves yet not represented in a false way staying true to the original aspects and construction of the designs. I neither agree or disagree with Jones in respect to his theory on what is good and acceptable design. It is hard to relate to the era in which design was so drastically changing nowadays change in design is more accepted and personal preferences are a huge part of that. The image above is great example of a rabbit decoration that has been purposely constructed into a ring which would be considered a false principle of design in Jones eyes.Image Reference: http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/lifestyle



Throughout the industrialisation period 18th-19th century beauty and utility became known design politics in regard to true and false principles of design. During the design ‘reform’  designers questioned the relationship between decoration and construction working harmoniously together. Certain standards were set to ensure that designs were morally and socially acceptable. ‘Good’ design was perceived as the respect of the design construction yet still pleasing the eye through suitable decoration.  
Architect and designer Owen Jones played a huge influential part in the design reform through this industrialisation period in the 19th century. 1856 Jones wrote ‘The Grammar of Ornament’ arguing that “Construction should be decorated. Decoration should never be purposely constructed.” meaning that designs should firstly be recognised for the function or construction of the design and secondly the aesthetics of the design in which there should be no false representation of other designs such nature. This is evident through his work such as ‘Decoration for the Alhambra Court, South Kensington Museum 1863’ and ‘Wallpaper with formalised floral motif’ displaying flat, geometric, repetitive and abstracted patterns enough to recognise that there are aspects of nature such as flowers and leaves yet not represented in a false way staying true to the original aspects and construction of the designs. 


I neither agree or disagree with Jones in respect to his theory on what is good and acceptable design. It is hard to relate to the era in which design was so drastically changing nowadays change in design is more accepted and personal preferences are a huge part of that. The image above is great example of a rabbit decoration that has been purposely constructed into a ring which would be considered a false principle of design in Jones eyes.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Blog Assignment 2: selected posts

from Oliver Bucher:
picture HD
Pictured above: Casa Batlló. 1905 – 1906. Antoni Gaudi. Barcelona.
The Sensuous Impulse
The sensuous impulse in design signals a turning away from the 
restrictive style of classicism’s rigid geometry, looking instead to the
 free flowing forms and motifs found in nature for inspiration. This 
impulse exploded in France under the reign of Louis XV, from 1730 to 
1765, to what is known as the rococo period. Designs of this period 
reflect the extravagant lifestyles of the rich upper class who flaunted 
power through wealth rather than structure and order.
The rococo impulse was smothered by neoclassicism during the late 18th 
and early 19th centuries only to blossom internationally from around 
1800 to 1915 in the period now commonly termed Art Nouveau. A 
magnificent example of the sensuous impulse in design during this period
 can be seen in the work of Catalan Spanish architect Antoni Gaudi, who 
was heavily influenced by nature.
Despite a constant shifting back and forth between design styles 
throughout the 1900’s, the sensuous impulse has lived on, manifest in 
designs even up to this day. 
Recent advances in technology such as 3d printing have allowed us to 
create works of detail and intricacy which follow the sensuous impulse 
in ways never before possible. 
 
For more information on Antoni Gaudi’s Casa Batllo visit: 
http://www.casabatllo.es/
Pictured above: Casa Batlló. 1905 – 1906. Antoni Gaudi. Barcelona.
The Sensuous Impulse
The sensuous impulse in design signals a turning away from the restrictive style of classicism’s rigid geometry, looking instead to the free flowing forms and motifs found in nature for inspiration. This impulse exploded in France under the reign of Louis XV, from 1730 to 1765, to what is known as the rococo period. Designs of this period reflect the extravagant lifestyles of the rich upper class who flaunted power through wealth rather than structure and order.
The rococo impulse was smothered by neoclassicism during the late 18th and early 19th centuries only to blossom internationally from around 1800 to 1915 in the period now commonly termed Art Nouveau. A magnificent example of the sensuous impulse in design during this period can be seen in the work of Catalan Spanish architect Antoni Gaudi, who was heavily influenced by nature.
Despite a constant shifting back and forth between design styles throughout the 1900’s, the sensuous impulse has lived on, manifest in designs even up to this day.
Recent advances in technology such as 3d printing have allowed us to create works of detail and intricacy which follow the sensuous impulse in ways never before possible.

For more information on Antoni Gaudi’s Casa Batllo visit: http://www.casabatllo.es/

from Ashleigh Woodmass:
Sensuous impulse in design is much more than pure function quite 
possibly the complete opposite. From outrageous proportions to the 
seductive and decorative designs, the sensuous impulse was first 
dominant in the Rococo period form 1730-1765 and again during  the Art 
Nouveau period 1880-1910. Considered to be an expressive embrace of 
curves and nature, the desire for objects to become exuberant, emotional
 and organic took over during these periods. Sinuous S-curves were 
observed  in order to mould and inspire the look of the sensuous 
impulse. Sinuous S-curve relates to the way in which a natural curve can
 be predicted yet how every curve is unique much like the natural curves
 on a woman’s body. During these periods the sensuous impulse 
was not always seen as a step forward for designers often claimed to be 
‘dysfunctional, corrupting and expensive’.  
Materials such as gold, precious metals and ceramics were being used in a
 way unlike the standard set by previous designs by being cast into 
curvy, watery  and aesthetic designs.The sensuous impulse was not only 
evident historically, for instance, in designs by the first known 
designer Johann Paul Schor such as the ‘State Bed of Maria 
Mancini Colonna 1663’ and  ‘design for a 
frame’  but the sensuous impulse can be visible in design 
today throughout many organic designs - much like the image above of the
 interior of a restaurant.
Sensuous impulse in design is much more than pure function quite possibly the complete opposite. From outrageous proportions to the seductive and decorative designs, the sensuous impulse was first dominant in the Rococo period form 1730-1765 and again during  the Art Nouveau period 1880-1910.

Considered to be an expressive embrace of curves and nature, the desire for objects to become exuberant, emotional and organic took over during these periods. Sinuous S-curves were observed  in order to mould and inspire the look of the sensuous impulse. Sinuous S-curve relates to the way in which a natural curve can be predicted yet how every curve is unique much like the natural curves on a woman’s body.

During these periods the sensuous impulse was not always seen as a step forward for designers often claimed to be ‘dysfunctional, corrupting and expensive’.  Materials such as gold, precious metals and ceramics were being used in a way unlike the standard set by previous designs by being cast into curvy, watery  and aesthetic designs.

The sensuous impulse was not only evident historically, for instance, in designs by the first known designer Johann Paul Schor such as the ‘State Bed of Maria Mancini Colonna 1663’ and  ‘design for a frame’  but the sensuous impulse can be visible in design today throughout many organic designs - much like the image above of the interior of a restaurant
.

from Olivia Hughes:
 ‘Sensuous impulse’ within design might be described as the 
humanizing element arising in modern times as a reaction against the 
rigidity, mechanization and mass production of the industrial revolution
 of the early 1900’s.
Historically developing from the Baroque, 1730-1765 Rococo and the more 
recent Art Nouveau period of the early 1900’s, art and design began to 
merge to become more expressive through the imitation of nature, 
incorporating the sensuous impulse or continuous curve to capture these 
organically flowing lines.  Objects began to be created and manufactured
 to evoke emotion and appeal to the senses rather than just existing to 
serve a function.
Today, the sensuous impulse has been integrated into many designs to add
 visual and tactile appeal. The organically flowing element of sensuous 
impulse conveys the idea of natural growth, the sinuous and the 
feminine, and also links to the flowing forms of music and movement.
Specifically today, we see sensuous impulse in architecture, for 
example, in the curved shape of the Gherkin building in London, and 
since the 1960’s the creative expression of aerodynamic curves of the 
Italian sports car such as Ferrari, and mould able furniture. These 
continuous curves are consistent with design principles that aim to 
remain honest to organic form, shaping of modern materials for aesthetic
 and sensory appeal, and personal expression in reaction to times of 
hardship and rigidity.

photo: 
http://www.carmagazine.co.uk/upload/21475/images/Ferrari458ItaliaPhoto6.jpg
‘Sensuous impulse’ within design might be described as the humanizing element arising in modern times as a reaction against the rigidity, mechanization and mass production of the industrial revolution of the early 1900’s.
Historically developing from the Baroque, 1730-1765 Rococo and the more recent Art Nouveau period of the early 1900’s, art and design began to merge to become more expressive through the imitation of nature, incorporating the sensuous impulse or continuous curve to capture these organically flowing lines.  Objects began to be created and manufactured to evoke emotion and appeal to the senses rather than just existing to serve a function.
Today, the sensuous impulse has been integrated into many designs to add visual and tactile appeal. The organically flowing element of sensuous impulse conveys the idea of natural growth, the sinuous and the feminine, and also links to the flowing forms of music and movement.
Specifically today, we see sensuous impulse in architecture, for example, in the curved shape of the Gherkin building in London, and since the 1960’s the creative expression of aerodynamic curves of the Italian sports car such as Ferrari, and mould able furniture. These continuous curves are consistent with design principles that aim to remain honest to organic form, shaping of modern materials for aesthetic and sensory appeal, and personal expression in reaction to times of hardship and rigidity.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Assignment 1: Posted by Caila Anderson


[The post below was selected as an excellent example of a response to blog assignment 1]

from Caila Anderson:

There have been a  number of clock designs throughout time beginning with the sundial, the hourglass, the water clock, and then then pendulum and quartz clocks.  The invention of the clock has changed the world by allowing us to measure our day in increments that were impossible with just the sundial.  Moreover, it has separated our movement through time from that of nature and has contributed to a number of other world altering innovations; global time zones, mass-production, the 9-5 work day, and eating at a particular time rather than eating when we are hungry, to name a few. Interestingly, for such an important innovation there appears to still be much contention on the actual civilization responsible for it’s original design.  However, that being said, Galileo is cited as the inventor of the pendulum clock, though as he never built one the credit for the first built model goes to a Christian Huygens, 1656.

References:

Bellis, Mary. . The Invention of Clocks. InventorsGuide. 
Images:  http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/images/object_images/535x535/10308827.jpg