Dunne and Raby investigate the real physical and cultural effects of the digital domain, demonstrating that mobile phones, computers and other electronic objects such as televisions profoundly influence people's experience of their environment. Dunne and Raby's ideas have important implications for architecture and design In this, their first major book, they introduce their extraordinary new way of thinking about objects, space and behaviour to a broad audience. The book is divided into three 1. Manifesto, introducing the authors' ideas about electromagnetic space. 2. Conversations. Dunne and Raby talk to a variety of designers, architects and artists about the impact electronic technology has on their practice. 3. Placebo. The intriguing results of a project involving Dunne and Raby's working furniture prototypes, including a table with an integrated global positioning system and a chair that lets the sitter know when radiation is passing through his body.
Fantastic read that's giving me mild anxiety over the EM waves emitted by the objects around and the space it occupies.
But honestly, I love that they addressed the intersection between art and design while providing a channel to reframe the manner in which our relationship with electronic products could be perceived. I particularly loved the chapters on Design Noir, the value of design aside from pragmatic functions, critical and (un)popular design. Questioning design and its role in reinforcing capitalist ideals, as well as how affirmative design seems to be a step back rather than forward.
It wraps up beautifully with the Placebo objects and their respective interviews, seeing all that was theory distilled into 8 elegantly poignant objects.
This is how a full-fledged design project looks like. Professionally and beautifully executed from the theoretical background to conceptualisation, from prototyping to documentation. Dunne and Raby is a great loss for the UK.
That book is really interesting. At the beginning, It starts with some sort of information about electromagnetic, waves, electronic product, and so on. Frankly, I was not so sure where it would bring me at the end, how it would relate product design to electronics and magnetic fields. In section 4, I was really impressed in terms of thoughts about critical design, ideology in design and (un)popular design.
[Design] needs to establish intellectual stance of its own, or the design profession is destined to lose all intellectual credibility and the viewed simply as an agent of capitalism” (Dunne & Raby, 2001:59).
One of the strongest examples of the research artefacts. It belongs to the everyday life of people and are experienced in casual circumstances. The point of this experience is not meeting the needs of the user, but rather puzzling and perplexing them. The products of critical design create dilemmas and emphasize questions instead of resolving them. Simply great!
The main essay regarding design practise (critical design) was useful, although I think the terminology doesn't hold up to scrutiny.
Read for a faculty reading group. Useful for some descriptive reasoning and language, and for setting, redefining and clarifying some of our current language.
This book shows how technology can impact people's lives. Although it's a design book, I read it like fiction. And I wonder what you are going to think of the girl who screening herself from her boyfriend... Totally recommended!