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The Disobedience of Design - Gui Bonsiepe

English · Paperback / Softback

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Provides for the first time in English a curated selection of the writings of the design thinker Gui Bonsiepe, representing his writings on the Ulm design school, on the relations of "core" and "periphery" and design as a tool for social and political change.

List of contents










Introduction by Lara Penin
Notes on the Making of the Book
Recognition and Acknowledgements by Gui Bonsiepe
Editorial Acknowledgements

Part 1: Thinking Designing
Introduction to Part 1 by Frederico Duarte
(a) Essays on ulm
1.1 The Cartography of Modernity
1.2 Science and Design
1.3 The Relevance of the Ulm School of Design today
1.4 The Invisible Aspects of the HfG Ulm
(b) Theory and Practice
1.5 The Discomfort of Design Theory
1.6 Arabesques of Rationality: Or the Splendor and Boredom of Design Methodology
1.7 The Uneasy Relationship of Design and Design Research
(c) Design, Politics, Ethics
1.8 Design, Nomadism and Politics: Interview with Alejandro Lazo Margain
1.9 Design and Democracy
1.10 Some Virtues of Design

Part II: Design in the "Periphery"
Introduction to Part II by Ethel Leon
(a) From Europe to South America
2.1 Peripheral Vision & Design Empowerment: Interview with James Fathers
2.2 Industrial Design in Chile 1971-1973: Interview with Hugo Palmarola
2.3 The Ulm Model in the Periphery
2.4 Industrialization Without Design
(b) Design in the "Periphery"
2.5 History of Design in Latin America
2.6 Aspects of Design in the Periphery
2.7 Between Favela Chic and Autonomy: Design in Latin America
(c) The Question of Difference
2.8 Between Marasmus and Hope
2.9 The Environment in the North-South Conflict
2.10 Identity and Counter-Identity of Design

Part III: Design, Visuality, Cognition
Introduction to Part III by Hugh Dubberly
(a) Design and Language
3.1 Through Language to Design
3.2 Design: from Material to Digital and Back
3.3 Design as Tool for Cognitive Metabolism: From Knowledge Production to Knowledge Presentation
(b) Design/ Visuality/ Theory
3.4 Visual/Verbal Rhetoric
3.5 The Interface Design of Computer Programs
3.6 Designing Information
3.7 Visuality | Discursivity, or Design: The Blind spot of Theory, Theory: the Blind spot of Design
(c) Design and Crisis
3.8 Design and Crisis
3.9 Convergences / Divergences - Hannes Meyer and the HfG Ulm
3.10 The Disobedience of Design

Part IV: Design and Development / Projects
Introduction to Part IV by Constantin Boym
(a) Design Policy/Design and Development
4.1 Development Through Design, a Report for UNIDO, 1973
4.2 Design and Development: The Debate with Victor Papanek
a. Gui Bonsiepe: Review of Design for the Real World by Victor Papanek
b. Victor Papanek: Reply to Bonsiepe's Review
4.3 Design and Development 40 Years Later: Interview with Gabriel Patrocínio and José Mauro Nunes
(b) Gui Bonsiepe: Selected Projects in Latin America
4.4 Inexpensive Record Player, Chile, 1972
4.5 Nutrition project: Spoon for Powdered Milk, Chile 1973
4.6 Agriculture project, Chopper, Chile, 1973
4.7 Consumer product: Air-conditioning, Argentina, 1980
4.8 Two projects for Local Industry in Brazil, 1984-86
4.9 Health Care Project: Needle for Blood Sampling, Brazil, 1986
(c) Case Study of Project Cybersyn, Chile
4.10 (a) Opsroom: Interface of a Cybernetic Management Room
4.10 (b) 'Socialism by Design' by Eden Medina

Afterword by Zoy Anastassakis & Marcos Martins
Appendices: Three Notes on the Closure of ulm (1968)
1. The Situation of the HfG
2. Communication & Power: A Marginal Note
3. Resolution of the Hochschule für Gestaltung, Ulm
Gui Bonsiepe: A Brief Biography
Contributors
Index


About the author










Gui Bonsiepe studied information design at the hfg ulm (Hochschule für Gestaltung Ulm), Germany from 1955-1959, where he taught as Assistant Professor from 1960-1968. Since 1968 he has been a designer and consultant for industrialization policy in Chile, Argentina, and Brazil. From 1993-2003 he was Professor of Interface Design at the University of Applied Sciences, Cologne, Germany. He lives and works in Brazil and Argentina.

Lara Penin is Associate Professor of Transdisciplinary Design at Parsons School of Design, USA. Author of An Introduction to Service Design: Designing the Invisible (Bloomsbury, 2018), her work is at the intersection of service and strategic design, participatory design and social justice. She is a graduate in Architecture and Urbanism from the University of São Paulo, Brazil, and has a PhD in Design from Milan Polytechnic University, Italy.


Summary

Provides for the first time in English a curated selection of the writings of the design thinker Gui Bonsiepe, representing his writings on the Ulm design school, on the relations of “core” and “periphery” and design as a tool for social and political change.

Foreword

Provides for the first time in English a curated selection of the writings of the design thinker Gui Bonsiepe, representing his writings on the Ulm design school, on the relations of “core” and “periphery” and design as a tool for social and political change.

Additional text

Wielding a powerful dissenting design imagination, Gui Bonsiepe is one of the most complex and accomplished design thinkers of our time. As this judiciously organized collection of his writings and projects demonstrates, beginning with his work in Ulm in the 1960s and then in Latin America after 1970, and continuing through to his pioneering development of ontological interface design in the 1990s through to his more recent critiques of "design thinking", The Disobedience of Design offers perspectives that challenge, radically, the limitations of contemporary European and American design practice and theory.

Product details

Authors Gui Bonsiepe, Bonsiepe Gui, Lara Penin
Assisted by Clive Dilnot (Editor), Lara Penin (Editor), Eduardo Staszowski (Editor)
Publisher Bloomsbury Academic
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.12.2021
 
EAN 9781350162440
ISBN 978-1-350-16244-0
No. of pages 480
Dimensions 155 mm x 230 mm x 15 mm
Series Radical Thinkers in Design
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Interior design, design
Non-fiction book

Latin America, DESIGN / History & Criticism, HISTORY / Latin America / South America, history of design, Art & design styles: from c 1960, Latin America – Mexico, Central America, South America, Individual designers, Individual designers or design groups

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