February 25, 2008

Design And The Elastic Mind At The MOMA

If you’re a fan of emerging design technologies and concepts that you find on these pages and on peer sites like Core77 and Inhabitat, then you should get yourself down to MOMA between now and May 27 to see the best of them in real life. Design And The Elastic Mind explores 3D Printing, Interface Design, Visualization and Organic Design. What’s important about this exhibition is that it takes the ideas and concepts that excite an internet readership and offers it for the mainstream to consider. Could this exhibition be a critical moment in design history, we wonder?
The exhibition’s description:
In the past few decades, individuals have experienced dramatic changes in some of the most established dimensions of human life: time, space, matter, and individuality. Working across several time zones, traveling with relative ease between satellite maps and nanoscale images, gleefully drowning in information, acting fast in order to preserve some slow downtime, people cope daily with dozens of changes in scale. Minds adapt and acquire enough elasticity to be able to synthesize such abundance. One of design’s most fundamental tasks is to stand between revolutions and life, and to help people deal with change. Designers have coped with these displacements by contributing thoughtful concepts that can provide guidance and ease as science and technology evolve. Several of them—the Mosaic graphic user’s interface for the Internet, for instance—have truly changed the world. Design and the Elastic Mind is a survey of the latest developments in the field. It focuses on designers’ ability to grasp momentous changes in technology, science, and social mores, changes that will demand or reflect major adjustments in human behavior, and convert them into objects and systems that people understand and use.
The exhibition will highlight examples of successful translation of disruptive innovation, examples based on ongoing research, as well as reflections on the future responsibilities of design. Of particular interest will be the exploration of the relationship between design and science and the approach to scale. The exhibition will include objects, projects, and concepts offered by teams of designers, scientists, and engineers from all over the world, ranging from the nanoscale to the cosmological scale. The objects range from nanodevices to vehicles, from appliances to interfaces, and from pragmatic solutions for everyday use to provocative ideas meant to influence our future choices. The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue.
If you can’t get to the MOMA, the accompanying book is probably a worthwhile purchase for all folks interested in trends and the future.
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