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My weird sideline career as a design commentator continues: I've just been asked to join Michael Bierut, William Drenttel, Jessica Helfand and Rick Poynor as one of the 'site participants' at Design Observer, a design blog which gets 50,000 hits a week, most of them from professional designers. This means I'll be posting some of the stuff I might have put here over there instead. Or rather, I'll be sifting ideas and deciding whether they go to Index magazine, AIGA Voice (currently leading with a story about Roy Kuhlman's covers for the excellent Grove Press), Tokyo's Metropolis, Design Observer, Click Opera or any of the other mags I occasionally contribute to.

I don't think I'll necessarily be spreading myself too thin -- I'm a great believer that the more ideas you shuttlecock about in public space, the more ideas you get. When I started Click Opera, it seemed like a daunting task to do a 'daily essay' -- I'd been used to coming up with one a month. But it's been surprisingly easy and a lot of fun, mainly thanks to the brilliant quality of the responses you've been giving me. Even the anonymous detractors have been challenging in a valuable way -- one made me read a charming essay by Lorca! With enemies like that, who needs friends? (This attitude will probably help me weather criticism in the comments section of Design Observer; professional designers can be somewhat brittle and nettlesome.)



If there is some disgruntlement at my somewhat polemical pronouncements over on Design Observer, I have a flank wide open to attack from design professionals: I have no training as a designer, and my practical design work experience is limited to a few record sleeves and a couple of websites. But I've always felt very close to the design world, and followed it with interest. As a teenager I really thought I was destined to be a graphic designer, and my greatest joy was to sit huddled by the radiator in the 6th form art room reading copies of Design Magazine (the British Design Council's rather elegant magazine, now defunct). I was all set to study graphics at Central St Martin's... then bottled out at the last moment, and went off to Aberdeen to do literature instead.

To the teenage me, design seemed futuristic, progressivist, rational, exciting, trendy. It seemed to be 'the acceptable face of capitalism', to represent capitalism as a restless, perfectionist, streamlined beast always trying to come up with better products. Design was glamour -- why else would I sit with tracing paper, copying magazine ad layouts, except to capture the evanescent, reified glamour of commodity fetishism? -- but it was also a way to reconcile the aesthetic and the practical, the ideal and the real. God was in the details, and utopia was right there in the latest product launch. Like a Melanesian Cargo Culter, my interest was not in products per se, but products as manifestations of divine energy, magical fragments from another world, laden with the aura of otherness.



Design (at least the racing-car-chic cutting-edge design featured in design magazines) was also an acceptable way to express Bourdieu-esque social snobbery. For design criticism, and the world of competitions and prizes and bursaries and subsdiy, was a concrete manifestation of confident and assertive taste judgements, instances of 'scrutiny' and 'distinction' at work. Whereas sociology (my other love) would never dare proclaim an American farmhouse-style kitchen range 'worse' than a sleek, futuristic, buffed steel one, Design magazine was perfectly clear on the matter. Farmhouse-style kitchens were bad design, and that was it.

Of course, I'm talking about the late 70s here, before postmodernism really hit big. We still seemed to be in the era Adolph Loos had heralded in with his 1908 essay 'Ornament und Verbrechen', which declared ornamentation a crime and claimed that only primitive people and criminals resorted to it. Imagine the sociologist-relativists' horror at that sort of statement! And yet in design, back then, it seemed like you really could get arrested for using drop shadow or messing with Helvetica, and be sent, if not to prison, at least to some sort of design borstal or purgatory.



To this day (most clearly in essays like Metaphysical Masochism of the Capitalist Creative and Design Zen) I'm fascinated by design as a liminal nexus in culture, a problematical place full of telling contradictions. How can creative aesthetics be reconciled with a big machine that's only interested in production and profitability? How does the capitalist system, described by sociologist Max Weber as a form of 'worldy asceticism' and obsessed with exchange value rather than use value, deal with design's fetishistic attention to quality, its interest in texture, its concern with sensual pleasure? Are designers the last artisans in an age of increasing 'division of labour'? Are there conflicts between the ever-lowering threshold to creativity (thanks to digital developments like desktop publishing, amateurs can now design) and designers' need to be seen as professionals, consultants, experts? And how do we justify taste judgements in a world ruled, in academia, by relativism and, in capitalism, by market research?

Each one of these questions, to me, is as intoxicating as a big mango margarita with a slice of melon on the side, salt around the rim, and a cherry in the middle. And they're all there in design. Who needs payment when you get to sip on this stuff?

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 12:38 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
It's interesting that you mention 'websites' as part of your hands-on design experience, since your own looks so terrible and out of date in terms of current web technology and design innovation.

It looks like a website from 1998, with broken links all over it too. Who designed that?

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 12:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Me! In 1995! So thanks for saying it looks like a website from 1998!

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 02:04 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Been a while huh? The essays you link to in this post could easily benefit from a typographic overhaul. Or perhaps there is an element of nostalgia in seeing those pages in the exact manner you wrote them in 1999 or 2000 or whenever? Like the web equivalent of opening up an old journal.

Actually there's often an air of authenticity to web pages with interesting editorial content but absolutely shit design. But since you seem so concerned with aesthetics, maybe it is time for a redesign?

-shane

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 03:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Oh, I'm happy for them to keep the look of the time they were created, really. Soon they'll have a trendily retro-nostalgic thing going for them.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 03:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
I also have to say that, while I don't claim my website is well-designed, and while I may have let a few links go broken, I will say that it works, and even has some quite acceptable illustration and photography on it, in the form of pages like Double Density (http://www.imomus.com/doubledensity.html) and War As Fiction (http://www.imomus.com/thought220303.html). In some ways it's more legible than Design Observer's own website (which has rather small type, and lacks lush illustration, and has a confusing way of labelling comments posts, for instance), and more navigable than many super-professional over-designed Flash-heavy sites, which can't be searched, bookmarked, googled, linked to, and require users to re-learn navigation skills each time they visit.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 11:29 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
"...while I don't claim my website is well-designed, and while I may have let a few links go broken, I will say that it works..."

Form follows function?

Coinneach

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 03:52 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
...No, they won't won't. They'll just stop working, very gradually, whilst your deprecated mark-up becomes less and less supported.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 04:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
You really think basic HTML markup tags are going to go unsupported sometime soon on the internet? I guess it depends on your definition of 'gradually'. I'll tell you one thing, Flash-generated pages will date quicker.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 05:18 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Flash generated stuff does date really fast, unless there are one of two situations in effect: One is (and this applies to my working situation) where there is someone on staff or whatever who can constantly update and churn out .swf files to overwrite the old shit. This is generally a pain in the ass way of working, but hey, if you can get paid to do it, whatever. The second is doing all that crazy backend shit to make flash interact with databases and all sorts of wackiness which I never took the time to understand. I haven't heard of anyone who can make this happen who is also a designer at the same time.

I would agree that Click Opera is more readable than Design Observer, and yeah, there is that glaring error of not being able to tell immediately if the responses are from the name listed above the post or below. Maybe your first article for them can be a rip on their web design, heh.

But you know the only possible defense for the typography in Design Zen for instance is that you're just waiting for a shitty web design chic movement to come in style :P

-shane

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-27 11:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tump.livejournal.com
If you are the same anon. from upstream, you are missing his point. Flash will age because it lacks simplicity, not due to the amount of effort required to maintain it.

As the web ages, more and more of it will be outside of any maintenance cycle. Old web pages in these outer regions will still live, old flash will be dead.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-28 05:15 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I'm not the same anon, but I think I still disagree, as Flash sites do not in any way lack simplicity by nature. It's only because flash enables all sorts of design freedom that generally if it's going to be used, it's going to be for something complex: Something that is more of a designed object (inherently static / open to the effects of aging) than a dynamic webpage.

If you've been paying attention to flash sites over the years, I'm sure you've seen the work of Hi-Res (http://www.hi-res.net). And if you think about the kind of sites designers like that are creating, no, they are never going to be maintained, and yes, they are going to age fast, because they are highly thought out objects of design (and experience) which stood for one idea, brand, or product at one moment in time. So if you're going to design complex flash sites, the more important question becomes whether design should aspire to be timeless or not. And personally I am an occasional flash designer who believes the idea of a timeless design is passed its time.

-shane

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-28 08:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Ha ha ha, I like that! 'Timelessness has gone out of fashion.'

(no subject)

Date: 2004-12-01 05:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tump.livejournal.com
More likely, timelessness is before its time; doesn't it seem logical that the older web culture becomes, the larger the importance of timeless design should loom?

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-29 02:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sparkligbeatnic.livejournal.com
Flash-generated pages will date quicker.

Not least because a lot of Flash content doesn't get indexed by search engines.

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