Audacity, imagination, and critical thought underpin this vital compendium of future possibilities
Designs for Different Futures records the concrete ideas and abstract dreams of designers, artists, academics, and scientists exploring how design might reframe our futures, socially, ethically, and aesthetically. Encompassing nearly 100 contemporary examples—from wearable objects to urban infrastructure—this handbook interrogates attitudes toward technology, consumption, beauty, and social and environmental challenges. The projects examined include a typeface unreadable by text-scanning software, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, a dress incorporating the sound-wave patterns of birds in flight, a shelter for cricket farming, and a speculative prosthetics catalogue for the “post-human.” Commissioned essays and interviews from figures such as Francis Kéré, Bruno Latour, Neri Oxman, and Danielle Wood give voice to issues faced in futures near and far. With perspectives ranging from historical visions of the future to the use of biological materials in production processes, this is essential reading for anyone interested in how design might shape the world to come.
Published in association with the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Walker Art Center, and the Art Institute of Chicago
Exhibition Philadelphia Museum of Art (October 22, 2019–March 8, 2020)
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (September 12, 2020–April 11, 2021)
A wide variety of views on what changes will take place in the future. Some will be for more inclusion for people who have various disabilities to mobilize and to even find cloths to fit them. To what we eat, where we live, how we travel, how we even perceive ourselves.
It may seem very edgy at first glance but as they cover in the book, you can see the waves that are leading to these directions- if you are interested in movements of culture, society, human definition, nature, science etc... this book will be of interest- and the various writings it references.
This book is also the “catalogue” for an exhibit of the same name- it will be coming to the Art Institute of Chicago in 2020.