- Make conversation (victore, d:center, etsy, social media)
- Ask “what if?” questions (byrom)
- Oppose yourself: do something opposite your norm (electroland)
- Apply a new method (type fluid and arkiypo, dearmond)
- Clarify your vision (bjork)
- Make yourself understood. Speak clearly, use simple language (bjork, ideo)
- Funny is good (bjork)
- Master gd basics (mm paris)
- Cultivate respect (mm paris)
- Apply graphics to unusual places (scarves, furniture) (mm paris, mike perry, joshua davis)
- Observe and listen (active listener) (ideo, froehlich, poggio)
- Build empathy (ideo, froehlich)
- Immerse yourself (froehlich, poggio)
- Question everything (project masilueke)
- Customize your process (project masilueke)
Tag Archives: chapter
sample chapter 101
INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
We live in a compartmentalized mind frame. Home is different from office, fun is separated from work, science lives apart from art. We’ve been trained to specialize in one thing and call that our profession, pushing our other interests down to lesser importance. Many of us, however, have several seemingly unrelated passions simmering within us, waiting to be manifested with the right method.
Interdisciplinary thinking turns compartmentalization on its head by encouraging the coming together of disparate interests. In her map painting series, designer Paula Scher, partner in the eminent studio, Pentagram, combined her passion for lettering, maps and painting to create a series cross-disciplinary works. Similarly, designer Andrew Byrom merged his love of typography and furniture to create typographic furniture, while the ceramicist Stephanie Dearmond cast letterforms in porcelain to make new and unexpected form. These are but a few examples of what can happen when we choose to combine our interests instead of segregating them.
Passions are fluid. They change shape and intensity. Introduce yourself to a new subject matter. Prod into a new discipline in order to give yourself a new perspective. A great way to do this is to talk to experts in other fields, as conversations fuel passions and can spark new ways of thinking. This is precisely why designer James Victore holds The Dinner Series, an annual week-long workshop where each day culminates in a lavish dinner party, meant to stimulate creative conversation. (Get Victore quote here).
Add additional examples of conversations: Etsy Street Teams and D:Center Baltimore’s monthly design conversations.
Conversations can lead to striking collaborations between experts from different fields. Longtime collaborators Michael Amzalag and Mathias Augustyniak of MM/Paris and photographers Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin have produced hybrid photo/text works. (Show alphabet here). Likewise, designer Stephen Farrell has worked closely with writer Steve Tomasula to publish novels that bestow equal value on the design and the text. (Need example of designer working with a non-artistic collaborator).
Add a paragraph on working with community — larger, social issues
How does this work get done? In this chapter, we give you some leads. We attempt here to break down the method of interdsiciplinary design into useful tools—charts and diagrams, tips on inter-personal relations, and guidelines for testing the work as you go along.
=====================
That Can’t Be Done. Can It?
Most of us have pulled the cord to flip venetian blinds open or closed hundreds of times, without giving it a second thought. To designer Andrew Byrom, this commonplace instance provided a burst of inspiration, as he envisioned letterforms made of blinds, switching from bold to regular to light with the pull of the cord. This notion has led him to build a series of letters out of venetian blinds, and further, to draw a striking flat font based on the idea of the window blind. (show images)
Byrom thinks in an unrestricted way, seeing the magical in the mundane by asking, “what if?” His thoughts flow from paper to screen, to metal work, kite construction and neon signage. In doing so, he constantly subverts existing parameters and pushes his way into other disciplines to nourish his creative needs. Byrom’s thinking is effective only because it is backed up by his eagerness to learn, to renounce the comfort of his mastery to for the thorny work of the beginner, failing again and again until a new skill has been learned.
Fluid thinking allows us to see old things in a new way. Find inspiration and possibilities by combining existing knowledge in unexpected ways. Apply an old process to a new material, or inversely, a new process to a well-known material. And when you move from thinking to making, expect obstacles and find ways to overcome them. Experts will insist that it cannot be done, but if you trust your idea and show both your passion and persistence, they may eventually move over to your side and share skills with you. When the level of investment is high and when it is shared among participants, interdisciplinary work comes alive.
Add here: Joshua Davis, Banksy, Wayne White (need a woman, too)
=====================
Design and ________
Once your interdisciplinary geenie has been unleashed, seek out partners with whom you can create new work, free of artificially imposed restrictions of academia. Partnerships come in all shapes and sizes: project-based or long term; intimate or distant. Beware, when disciplines come together, the unknown, that fearsome sphere, grows ever larger. As does the need for careful listening on both ends. Success hinges on shared passion, common goals and a high tolerance for risk. The following examples show the unlimited potential of graphic design as it branches off and connects with other disciplines.
When design meets architecture, motion and scale can find fresh new manifestations. Seeley and McNall are partners in Electroland, an interactive studio based in Los Angeles, California. A designer and architect by training, Seeley and McNall have fused their respective disciplines, using electronic tools to create urban site-specific experiences. In Drive By, 2007, Seeley and McNall have given motion an urban dimension, connecting it to traffic. An electronic display along Lankershim Boulevard in North Hollywood tracks the passing of cars by flashing phrases and abstract letterforms. Here, an unremarkable slice of metropolitan life — cars speeding along a thoroughfare — has been transformed into visual play; this has been achieved with a meging of architecture and graphic design.
The grand scale of architecture usually towers over the intimacy of books and screens. Electroland flipped this notion of scale in two projects, Author Wall (2009), and College Faces (year?). Visitors to the Guadalajara Book Fair enjoyed playing with authors’ names on a touch screen in Author Wall, and seeing their interaction simultaneously projected on a 30-meter wall. This type-driven environment enriched the event by making everyone, and not just the authors, feel like “makers”. The close-up experience of a touch-screen has been writ large, influencing the look and feel of the entire event. In College Faces (year??? has this been realized?), Electroland took the intimacy of the personal photograph and blew it up to architectural scale, projecting a yearbook of sorts on the facade of the Gateway Community College in New Haven, Connecticut. The faces of students, teachers and staff are cast in slow motion on the building’s glass curtain wall, generating a sense of togetherness on campus. To make the project more meaningful to its most frequent viewers, individual faces can be accessed on a website (which one??) or via smart phone.
Pairing up with someone with access to new technology can take your work to a new level, as demonstrated by two stunning 2011 typographic projects, Type Fluid by Skyrill Design and Arkitypo by Johnson Banks. Brothers Ali and Hussain Almossawi of Skyrill Design in Bahrain come from computer science and graphic design backgrounds, respectively. They have put their knowledge together to create Type Fluid (2011), a remarkable typeface built using RealFlow, a special effects program. The letterforms exist both as stills and as short animations in which they grow, pulsate and undulate in stunning ways that could not be achieved using the standard tools of graphic design. In London, the design studio Johnson Banks partnered with the 3-d manufacturing studio at Ravensbourne, a digital media school to print exquisite sculptural letterforms, an homage to 20th century typography executed with 21st Century technology.
==============
Single practicioners
Andrew Byrom
Wayne White
Joshua Davis
Need a woman here
Examples of Partnerships:
Electroland — design and architecture
Skyrill — design and computer science
MM/Paris — design and photography?
Johnson Banks —Arkitypo – design and rapid manufacturing
Stephen Farrell and Steve Tomasula — design and literature
School Projects:
Nancy’s Kala Raksha in India
Natacha Poggio’s lab
Mike Weikert’s CDP
Bezalel Academy of Arts and GM
Big Projects:
IDEO
Kala Raksha?
Chapter — Method — new bits of writing
This section follows the description of “in your head” thinking and focuses on collaborations between two people:
Once your interdisciplinary geenie has been unleashed, seek out partners with whom you can create new work, free of artificially imposed restrictions of academia. (Add more here: we present the work of collaborators: Electroland, Skyrill and MMParis, each doing different things to merge disciplines)
Seeley and McNall are partners in Electroland, an interactive studio based in Los Angeles, California. They specialize in immersive and responsive graphic environments, focusing on the overlap of graphic design, media and architecture, on the way people experience spaces visually, through typography, image and color. A designer and architect by training, Seeley and McNall have fused their respective disciplines with electronic tools, to create site-specific experiences. As a result, they have used motion and scale in fresh new ways.
Motion is usually the domain of the media designer, while architects work with material and space. In Drive By, 2007, Seeley and McNall have given motion an urban dimension, connecting it to traffic. An electronic display along Lankershim Boulevard in North Hollywood tracks the passing of cars by flashing phrases and abstract letterforms. Here, an unremarkable slice of metropolitan life — cars speeding along a thoroughfare — has been transformed into visual play with the merger of architecture and graphic design.
While architects tend to think large-scale, graphic designers usually work smaller. In Author Wall (2009), visitors to the Guadalajara Book Fair enjoyed playing with authors’ names on a touch screen, and seeing their interaction simultaneously projected on a 30-meter wall. This type-driven environment enriched the event by making everyone, and not just the authors, feel like “makers”. The close-up experience of a touch-screen has been writ large, influencing the look and feel of the entire event.
In College Faces (year??? has this been realized?), Electroland took the intimate beauty of the personal photograph and blew it up to architectural scale, projecting a yearbook of sorts on the facade of the Gateway Community College in New Haven, Connecticut. The faces of students, teachers and staff are cast in slow motion on the building’s glass curtain wall, generating a sense of togetherness on campus. To make the project more meaningful to its most frequent viewers, individual faces can be accessed on a website (which one??) or via smart phone.
Chapter — Method_003
The only new section is UNDER the dashed rule, titled “That Can’t Be Done. Can It?”
INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
We live in a compartmentalized mind frame. Home is different from office, fun is separated from work, science lives apart from art. We’ve been trained to specialize in one thing and call that our profession, pushing our other interests down to lesser importance. Many of us, however, have several seemingly unrelated passions simmering within us, waiting to be manifested with the right method.
Interdisciplinary thinking turns compartmentalization on its head by encouraging the coming together of disparate interests. As designers, we are schooled to develop techniques and apply them to content in order to make form. What if techniques and content stem from radically different fields? In her map painting series, designer Paula Scher, partner in the eminent studio, Pentagram, combined her passion for lettering, maps and painting to create a series cross-disciplinary works. Similarly, designer Andrew Byrom merged his love of typography and furniture to create typographic furniture, while the ceramicist Stephanie Dearmond cast letterforms in porcelain to make new and unexpected form. These are but a few examples of what can happen when we choose to combine our interests instead of segregating them.
Passions are fluid. They change shape and intensity. Introduce yourself to a new subject matter. Prod into a new discipline in order to give yourself a new perspective. Conversations fuel passions and can lead to new ways of thinking. This is precisely why designer James Victore holds The Dinner Series, an annual week-long workshop where each day culminates in a lavish dinner party, meant to stimulate creative conversation. (Get Victore quote here).
Give another example of stimulating conversation here.
Conversations can lead to striking collaborations between experts from different fields. Longtime collaborators Michael Amzalag and Mathias Augustyniak of MM/Paris and photographers Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin have produced hybrid photo/text works. (Show alphabet here). Likewise, designer Stephen Farrell has worked closely with writer Steve Tomasula to publish novels that bestow equal value on the design and the text. (Need example of designer working with a no-artistic collaborator).
Add a paragraph on working with community — larger, social issues
How does this work get done? In this chapter, we give you some leads. We attempt here to break down the method of interdsiciplinary design into useful tools—charts and diagrams, tips on inter-personal relations, and tips for testing the work as you go along.
=====================
That Can’t Be Done. Can It?
Most of us have pulled the cord to flip venetian blinds open or closed hundreds of times, without giving it a second thought. But to designer Andrew Byrom, this commonplace instance led to a burst of inspiration, as he envisioned letterforms made of blinds, switching from bold to regular to light with the pull of the cord. This notion has led him to build a series of letters out of venetian blinds, and further, to draw a striking flat typeface based on the idea of the window blind. (show images)
Byrom thinks in an unrestricted way, seeing the magical in the mundane by asking “what if?” His thoughts move fluidly from paper to screen, to metal work, kite construction and neon signage. In doing so, he constantly subverts existing parameters and pushes his way into other disciplines to nourish his creative needs. Byrom’s thinking is effective only because it is backed up by his eagerness to learn, to renounce the comfort of his mastery to for the thorny work of the beginner, failing again and again until a new skill has been learned.
Fluid thinking allows us to see old things in a new way. Find inspiration and possibilities by combining existing knowledge in unexpected ways. Apply an old process to a new material, or inversely, a new process to a well-known material. And when you move from thinking to making, expect obstacles and find ways to overcome them. Experts will insist that it cannot be done, but if you trust your idea and show both your passion and persistence, they may eventually move over to your side and share skills with you. When the level of investment is high, interdisciplinary work comes alive.
Sample Chapter: Method — 002
INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
We live in a compartmentalized mind frame. Home is different from office, fun is separated from work, science lives apart from art. We’ve been trained to specialize in one thing and call that our profession, pushing our other interests down to lesser importance. Many of us, however, have several seemingly unrelated passions simmering within us, waiting to be manifested with the right method.
Interdisciplinary thinking turns compartmentalization on its head encouraging the coming together of disparate interests. In her map painting series, designer Paula Scher, partner in the eminent studio, Pentagram, combined her passion for lettering, maps and painting to create a series cross-disciplinary works. Similarly, designer Andrew Byrom merged his love of typography and furniture to create typographic furniture, while the ceramicist Stephanie Dearmond cast letterforms in porcelain to make new and unexpected form. These are but a few examples of what can happen when we choose to combine our interests instead of segregating them.
Passions are fluid. They change shape and intensity. Introduce yourself to a new subject matter. Prod into a new discipline in order to give yourself a new perspective. Conversations fuel passions and can lead to new ways of thinking. This is precisely why designer James Victore holds The Dinner Series, an annual week-long workshop where each day culminates in a lavish dinner party, meant to stimulate creative conversation. (Get Victore quote here). Give another example of stimulating conversation here.
Conversations can lead to striking collaborations between experts from disparate fields. Longtime collaborators ______ of MM/Paris and photographers Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin have produced hybrid photo/text works. (Show alphabet here). Likewise, designer Stephen Farrell has worked closely with writer Steve Tomasula to publish novels that bestow equal value on the design and the text. (Need example of designer working with a no-artistic collaborator).
How does this work get done? In this chapter, we give you some leads. We attempt here to break down the method of interdsiciplinary design into useful tools—charts and diagrams, tips on inter-personal relations, and rules for testing the work as you go along.
Introduction — notes
By Zvez:
- What is inerdisciplinarity? Various definitions, ending with our own.
- Brief two-tracked history of academia: segmentation and merger
- Why is this important for you? What will you gain with this book?
- Chapter breakdown
- A shot into the future of graphic design (how is interdisciplinarity changing/enriching the field)
- Conclusion
Although our target reader is the designer — student, recent grad, or seasoned practitioner — looking for a way into the interdisciplinary buzz, we hope the book appeals more broadly to any visionary thinker in search of new knowledge.
By Nancy:
In 2011 the boundaries that were once drawn between disciplines are dissolving and deteriorating. This past static perspective is getting turned on it’s head as we face new modes of communication, immigration, and environmental challenges… Within all this change new problems arise. Designers are well positioned as creative problem solvers to face these challenges but they cannot do it alone, collaborative teams of diverse thinkers are often brought together. The borders of the design field have become so far reaching, at what point do you call a project interdisciplinary? What is within and what is outside the borders of graphic design?
breakdown of Method in my own words
YOU- Give a fu*k.
Finding meaning. take time to know yourself, what keeps you up at night? find projects that you care about, break your routine- do something you’ve never done before… introduce yourself to new a new subject matter
-valacenti dinner series
-taking a class
-travelling
-interview with ?? how they find meaning
-tools for gathering ideas and combining disciplines, mind map, flow chart…
TEAM- surround yourself with brilliance
Find people that are smarter then you in one way or another. Make deadlines and hold each other accountable. Play nice and think big- when everyone gets in the same room be humble, open, and ready to make mistakes. Get excited- make big big plans even though you know realistically they are not possible, you can scale down later
SPACE- where you are matters
find a collaborative working environment that excites all participants, think about entertaining all senses beyond sight- taste, sound, touch…
-stanford
-ideo
PRACTICE- moving forward
practical guidelines for moving the project forward, how all voices are heard, decisions made. How can everyone feel like an equal? Giving everyone a role. How do you move forward with no clear leader? With no clear solution?
Sample Chapter: Method — 001
Chapter Outline
Intro: Methods of interdisciplinarity
How to find interdisciplinary work? Being ready. Being willing to let go of control. Step into the unknown equipped with the right tools. Have respect and trust for the others in your group.
Inside your mind:
Venn Diagram
Mind Map
Flow Chart
Notes (how to look up other knowledge, take notes, make charts)
Working with others:
How to make a welcoming atmosphere for conversations (Ryan’s dinners)
Structured talks
Listening
Role play
Testing in stages
Staying neutral
Observing
Good failure
===========
Chapter 1
METHOD
“Design is now too important to be left to designers”
(Tim Brown, Change by Design, p. 37″
Interdisciplinary work starts from within. In order to include other knowledge or other people in your process, you have to be willing to try new ways of making design. Here we will discuss mind maps, flow charts and venn diagrams as helpful means of seeing how disciplines can come together. We will then look at larger efforts in interdisciplinary work, where experts from different fields come together to produce new knowledge. How do diverse groups work well together? We will look at how making a welcoming atmosphere, choosing the right structure, listening well and role playing can help.
Venn Diagram — finding overlaps
A Venn diagram is useful when you think about the spaces where two disciplines come together to form a singular problem, need, or outcome. For example, in a freshmen design elective, students at MICA were asked to rethink hospital walls and come up with graphic patterns that would cheer up a doctor’s visit. A Venn diagram illustrated how two opposing kinds of imagery could come together to create these patterns.
(Follow up with completed images from this assignment)
Mind Map
Mind maps are great for thinking through an idea and finding associations with it. They can show us how ideas or words connect. In an assignment at OSU, Students paired up and picked a profession out of a hat. They had to mind map the strengths they held in their profession separately then list the strengths they held together. From there they had to define a collaboration between the two professions, highlighting their combined strengths.
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Random notes:
Example: At Hartford Art School’s Design Global Change, Natacha Poggio partners up with engineers, educators and aid professionals to construct meaningful, service-oriented projects for her students. What are some of her strategies?
Example: In an intense study abroad program, Nancy Froehlich led six OSU students and as many Indian crafters to produce a line of scarves. Nurturing trust and sharing control of the process were essential to this project.


