Paola Antonelli
Senior Curator, Design
and Architecture, MoMA
Gerald Bast, Rector, University of Applied Arts Vienna
Alison
J. Clarke
Symposium Convenor & Chair
Professor Design History & Theory, University Applied Arts
Vienna
Research Director, Victor J. Papanek Foundation
Anthony Dunne
Professor, Design
Interactions, Royal College of Art London
Guy Julier
Senior Fellow, Contemporary Design,
V&A, London
Jamer Hunt
Director, Graduate Program in Transdisciplinary Design at Parsons
The New
School for Design
Felicity D. Scott
Director, Critical, Curatorial and Conceptual
Practices in Architecture,
Graduate School of Architecture, Columbia University.
John Thackara
Leading thinker in socially responsible and sustainable design
Paola
Antonelli
Senior Curator, Design and Architecture, MoMA
Gerald Bast, Rector,
University of Applied Arts Vienna
Alison J. Clarke
Symposium Convenor
& Chair
Professor Design History & Theory, University Applied Arts Vienna
Research Director, Victor J.
Papanek Foundation
Anthony Dunne
Professor, Design Interactions, Royal College
of Art London
Guy Julier
Senior Fellow, Contemporary Design, V&A, London
Jamer Hunt
Director, Graduate Program in Transdisciplinary Design at Parsons
The New
School for Design
Felicity D. Scott
Director, Critical, Curatorial
and Conceptual Practices in Architecture,
Graduate School of Architecture, Columbia University.
John
Thackara
Leading thinker in socially responsible and sustainable design
Can
design ?un-design?? Has design the power to disrupt, and agitate?
The first Victor J. Papanek Foundation symposium
explores the power of design in generating alternative visions of society; from historical precedence to contemporary initiatives.
By 1971, Design For the Real World, Papanek?s best-selling polemic, offered a “Prescription for Rebellion”. It advocated a
new critical discourse of social ecology embracing a humanitarian vision: Design put to social use.
ANTI-DESIGN:
“A Prescription for Rebellion?” brings together leading figures and institutions in the field of design history and practice
exploring the legacy and future of radical design, and the relevance of alternative models of design practice and political
economy in the 21st century through lively debate and expert insight.
The symposium is a public and free event,
but registration is essential.
Registration: victorj.papanekfoundation@uni-ak.ac.at
University for Applied Arts Vienna
Collection and Archive
Victor J. Papanek Foundation
A-1010 Wien, Postgasse
6/3/6
T: +43 1 71133 3101
E: victorj.papanekfoundation@uni-ak.ac.at
www.uni-ak.ac.at/sammlung
Programme
Wednesday
| | 9 November 2011 |
19:00 | | Papanek
Foundation Inaugural Lecture A History of Violence - Design, Control, and Rebellion Paola Antonelli,
MoMA |
Thursday | | 10 November 2011 |
13:30 | | Registration/Refreshments |
14:00 | | Welcome Gerald Bast, Rector of the University of Applied Arts Vienna |
14:15 | | Introduction Alison J. Clarke, Symposium Convenor & Chair, Professor Design History & Theory, University Applied Arts Vienna,
Research Director, Victor J. Papanek Foundation |
14:30 | | Critical Design/Anti-Design Anthony Dunne, Professor, Design Interactions,
Royal College of Art London |
14:50 | | Uncanny Futures: Attraction and Repulsion in Critical Social Design Jamer Hunt, Director,
Graduate Program in Transdisciplinary Design at Parsons The New School for Design |
15:10 | | “Outlaw Territories” Felicity D. Scott, Director, Critical, Curatorial
and Conceptual Practices in Architecture, Graduate School of Architecture, Columbia University. |
15:30 | | After the doomsday machine? True cost design in a restorative economy John Thackara, Leading thinker in socially responsible and sustainable design |
16:30 | | Panel Discussion Chaired by Alison Clarke |
19:00 | | Papanek
Foundation Design Award and Opening of Exhibition |
Friday | | 11 November 2011 |
14:00 | | Panel Discussion, Legacy of Anti-Design Chair: Guy Julier, Senior
Fellow, Contemporary Design, V&A, London Anthony Dunne, Björn Franke , Jamer Hunt, Felicity D. Scott, John Thackara |
15:30 | | Coffee |
16:00-17:15 | | Anti-Design Film Screening Introduction (Alison Clarke & Björn Franke
& Felicity D. Scott) IDCA: 70 by Eli Noyes and Claudia Weill, Aspen Colorado, 1970, Colour, 22:03 min Biographics
by Victor Papanek and Al Gowan, 1966, Purdue University, Colour, 6:39 min Life (Supersurface), Director: Superstudio,
Italy 1972, Colour, Sound, 15. min. (from the series: Fundamental Acts: Life, Education, Ceremony, Love and Death,
1971-1973) Ceremony, Director: Superstudio, Italy 1973, Colour, Sound, 15 min. (from the series: Fundamental
Acts: Life, Education, Ceremony, Love and Death, 1971?1973) Desire Management, Director: Noam Toran, UK
2006, Colour, Sound, 11 min. Postponing the Inevitable, Director: Noam Toran and Onkar Kular, UK 2007, Colour,
Sound, 16 min. |
17:15-18:00 | | Closing Reception |
Biografies
Paola Antonelli
Senior Curator of Design and Architecture, MoMA, New York, USA
Victor
J. Papanek Foundation Inaugural Lecture 9 November 2011: A History of Violence - Design, Control, and Rebellion.
Paola Antonelli is Senior Curator of the Department of Architecture & Design of The Museum of Modern Art, where she
has worked since 1994. Through her exhibitions - among them Design and the Elastic Mind in 2008 - teachings and writing, Paola
strives to promote a deeper understanding of design's transformative and constructive influence on the world. She is very
proud of a recent acquisition into MoMA's Collection: the @ sign. She is working on several exhibition ideas - including the
upcoming Talk to Me - and on the book Design Bites, about basic foods taken as examples of outstanding design.
Alison J. Clarke
Symposium Convenor & Chair
Professor Design History & Theory,
University Applied Arts Vienna
Research Director, Victor J. Papanek Foundation
Alison is editor of "Design
Anthropology: Object Culture in the 21st Century“ (2010), bringing together key thinkers in the areas of social science and
contemporary design. She completed her PhD in anthropology at University College London with Prof. Daniel Miller, and has
an MA in History of Design from the Royal College of Art, London. Editor of Home Cultures: Journal of Architecture, Design
and Domestic Space and has organized numerous conferences and symposia around material culture including "Interior Insights:
Design, Ethnography and the Domestic“ (RCA); "The Death of Taste: Unpicking the Fashion Cycle“ (ICA London/MAK Wien); "Design
Anthropology“ (Angewandte, Wien). Alison recently contributed to a ground-breaking documentary series, The Genius of Design
(BBC 2010), exploring the social impact of design over the last two centuries.
Anthony
Dunne
Professor of Design Interactions, Royal College of Art, London
Title: Critical Design/Anti-Design
Anthony Dunne is professor and head of the Design Interactions department at the Royal College of Art in London. He studied
Industrial Design at the RCA before working at Sony Design in Tokyo. On returning to London he completed a PhD in Computer
Related Design at the RCA. He was a founding member of the CRD Research Studio where he worked as a Senior Research Fellow
leading EU and industry funded research projects. Anthony was awarded the Sir Misha Black Award for Innovation in Design Education
in 2009.
Guy Julier
Senior Fellow, Contemporary Design, V&A, London
Guy Julier is the University of Brighton Principal Research Fellow in Contemporary Design at the Victoria & Albert Museum,
London. Formerly Professor of Design at Leeds Metropolitan University, he has directed several design activist events and
was director of "Leeds Live It Share It“, an urban innovation company. His books include "The Culture of Design“ and he is
co-editor of "Design and Creativity: Policy, Management and Practice“.
Jamer Hunt
Director, Graduate Program in Transdisciplinary Design at Parsons The New School for Design, New York City, USA
Title:
Uncanny Futures: Attraction and Repulsion in Critical Social Design
Jamer Hunt collaboratively designs
open and flexible programs that respond to emergent cultural conditions. He is the director of the experimental graduate program
in Transdisciplinary Design at Parsons the New School for Design. His practice, Big + Tall Design, combines conceptual, collaborative,
and communication design, and he is co-founder of DesignPhiladelphia an initiative to foreground the city as a laboratory
for innovative design projects. With MoMA and SEED Magazine he collaborated on and co-hosted MIND08: The Design and Elastic
Mind Symposium as well as the project Headspace: On Scent as Design in 2010. He has consulted or worked at Smart Design, frogdesign,
WRT, Seventh Generation, and Virtual Beauty. His written work engages with the poetics and politics of the built environment
and has been published in various books, journals, and magazines, including I.D. magazine, which published his "Manifesto
for Postindustrial Design in 2005“.
Felicity D. Scott
Director, Critical,
Curatorial and Conceptual Practices in Architecture, Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia
University.
Title: “Outlaw Territories”
Felicity D. Scott is director of the program in Critical,
Curatorial and Conceptual Practices in Architecture (CCCP) at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation,
Columbia University. She is also a founding co-editor of Grey Room, a quarterly journal of architecture, art, media, and politics
published quarterly by MIT Press since fall 2000. In addition to publishing numerous articles in journals, magazines, and
edited anthologies, her book, "Architecture or Techno-Utopia: Politics After Modernism“, was published by MIT Press in 2007,
and another book, "Living Archive 7: Ant Farm“, appeared on ACTAR Editorial in May 2008. She recently completed the manuscript
for a book entitled on the Austrian émigré architect Bernard Rudofsky, entitled “Cartographies of Drift: Bernard Rudofsky’s
Encounters with Modernity.”
John Thackara
Leading thinker in socially responsible
and sustainable design
Title: After the doomsday machine? True cost design in a restorative economy
Described by Business Week as "one of the great voices on sustainability", John Thackara is a writer, speaker, and event
producer. He is the author of "In The Bubble: Designing In A Complex World“ (MIT Press) among thirteen books, and of a widely
read blog at Design Observer about design for a restorative economy. As founder and director of Doors of Perception (Doors),
John organizes festivals around the world, at a city-region scale, in which communities imagine sustainable futures and take
practical steps to realize them. John studied philosophy, trained as a journalist, worked as a London bus driver, and later
was a book publisher and magazine editor in London and Sydney. He was director of research at the Royal College of Art in
London, and then from 1993-2000 was director of the Netherlands Design Institute in Amsterdam. John produced seven doors conferences
in Amsterdam, and then three, so far, in India. In 2007, he was programme director of Designs of the time (Dott), the social
innovation biennial in England. In 2008 he was Commissioner at Cité du Design, the main French design biennial. He is an Associate
of The Young Foundation in London; sits on the advisory boards of the Pixelache Festival in Helsinki and the Pecha Kucha Foundation
in Tokyo; and is a member of the UK Parliament's Standing Commission on Design. John Thackara lives in France.
www.thackara.com
Universität für angewandte Kunst Wien
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