Blogless: Blog of Design Less Better.

Posts tagged Collaboration.

Zack Denfeld on PNCA

Update from Monday's post: BlogLESS talks with Zack Denfeld, who is helping to organize the PNCA Collaborative Design MFA.

BlogLESS: Talk to me about why the program was founded?
ZD: The reason for founding the MFA in Collaborative Design is summed up nicely by Peter Schoonmaker of Illahee, one of the mentors in the program. His Twitter bio says "Seeking non-trivial solutions to wicked problems." I think there is a pretty clear recognition in the world of design that the wicked problems facing the planet require an approach that works between and even transcends disciplines and takes into account the needs and desires of many more human and non-human actors than are currently consulted by designers.

These ideas and the need for this program have been percolating over the last five years at PNCA, and finally became a reality this year. I am very excited to be part of a program that allows students create work with native wetland species as their primary clients! What do the wetland plants want, and how do we make these designs viable and integrated? What other stakeholders need to be taken into account?

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AndreaFeb 17, 2011
 

MFA in Collaborative Design @ PNCA

Applications are open for this new interdisciplinary design program in Portland, OR.

My friend Zack is helping to launch a new graduate program at PNCA in Oregon this fall. The program is focused on a number of things that we here at BlogLESS love - collaborative research across disciplines, design that addresses new challenges, systems thinking, and plain old good design. If I were in the market for an MFA program, I'd be very much into this one. From the program's site:

Participants will encounter and co-create a series of expanded design practices and will develop skills to meaningfully address the emerging challenges of the 21st century. Working in transdisciplinary studio teams, students will respond to design briefs containing challenges such as resource depletion, emerging technologies, urban demographic change, and global climatic shifts. These environmental, social and technological challenges demand design practices that assemble and maintain networks of people, places and artifacts in order to develop non-trivial solutions. Students will graduate with a portfolio of projects that feature design as a process for considering and acting in a complex and highly interconnected world.

They have a ton more information on their site, as well as a tumblr which showcases work & inspiration. Applications are due at the beginning of April.

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AndreaFeb 14, 2011
 

How is the internet changing the way you think?

Brian Eno and other Long Now Foundation members weigh in.

The Long Now Blog recently linked to a collection of responses to the Annual Question posed by John Brockman's Edge, "How is the internet changing the way you think?"

There are over 160 responses from scientists and thinkers, including Long Now Board Members such as Stewart Brand and Brian Eno. Here's an excerpt from Eno's response, which is by far one of my favorites:

I notice that I now digest my knowledge as a patchwork drawn from a wider range of sources than I used to. I notice too that I am less inclined to look for joined-up finished narratives and more inclined to make my own collage from what I can find. I notice that I read books more cursorily — scanning them in the same way that I scan the Net — 'bookmarking' them.

I notice that I correspond with more people but at less depth. I notice that it is possible to have intimate relationships that exist only on the Net — that have little or no physical component. I notice that it is even possible to engage in complex social projects — such as making music — without ever meeting your collaborators. I am unconvinced of the value of these.

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AndreaJan 13, 2010