Category Archives: Brain vitamins

Oh IXD, Oh Sandy

Back in Fall 2012, I taught this class on the Design of Systems to the first year Interaction Design MFA graduate students at the School of Visual Arts.

I was channeling, but not explicit enough about, the work of Durrell Bishop, and my work about his work – unpacking his brilliantly simple and complex notion that digital products should now embody the systems of our using them, since they no longer have to take the shape of the sum of the mechanical parts they contain. Shh, and think about that for a minute.

Annnyway, we did have guest lectures from Barry Richards of Rockwell Group, the designers of the Imagination Playground, that UNICEF just launched in Haiti; Chelsea Mauldin, my erstwhile Design Trust collaborator and now Director of the Public Policy Lab; Nick Abadzis, comic book artist extraordinaire; and Noel Wilson, intrepid industrial designer with Engineers Without Borders spin-off, Catapult Design out of San Francisco. We also got ourselves properly paranoid reading Andrew Blum’s Tubes, and tiptoeing through Trevor Paglen’s incredible photography of undocumented military and industrial installations, right before Creative Time launched his Last Pictures exhibit. We even had a field trip to IKEA. It was not a boring syllabus.

Then Superstorm Sandy became not only the disruptive force that diverted us from showing up in Week 6, and from starting then completing the deep and wide class blog, but also became the focus of the final projects. Those are summarized by the students here and were critiqued by Ian Spalter of Foursquare, Scott Peterman from Parsons and Tony Moulton from Occupy Sandy.

“That was more the philosophy than the design of systems” said one student in the last class, not unhappily. Anything to make makers think and thinkers make, I say.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Academia, Bigger Picture, Brain vitamins, Collaborative creativity, Education, geography, Interaction design, Interdisciplinary, Outside inspiration, Patterns+systems, Storytelling, Technology, Turnstone, Turnstone at work, Words+pictures

Graphic Novelists/Novel Graphics

Images for AIGA NY courtesy of (top) Nick Abadzis and (below) G.B.Tran

Images for AIGA NY courtesy of (top) Nick Abadzis and (below) G.B.Tran

Get your Hallowe’en costume sorted early and get excited for this:
Super-honored to announce that on Tuesday Oct 30, Turnstone will be moderating a very special conversation between two titans of graphical storytelling: Eisner Award-winning Nick Abadzis (Hugo Tate, Laika) and G.B.Tran (author of Vietnamerica, one of Time Magazine’s all-time Top 10 Graphic Memoirs).

The event is organized by AIGA New York and co-hosted by MoCA, the Museum of Chinese in America, to tie in with their current exhibits, Alt.Comics/Marvels and Monsters. Alt.comics showcases an incredible, poignant, funny, beautiful array of comics by Asian American comic book artists and graphic novelists. Marvels and Monsters looks at depictions of Asians in (ahem, stereotypes perpetuated by) American comics since the 1940s.

Abadzis and Tran come together to share with a wide audience of MoCA members, comic book fans, and AIGA members their inspiration, approaches to historical and personal research and pen-to-pixel working methods. It’s my privilege to introduce them. It should be a special night.

MoCA is at 215 Centre Street, New York, NY 10013 – between Howard and Grand Streets, a block north of Canal St. The event runs 630-830pm and tickets are available here. Come thru!

[Postscript: This event was cancelled due to the inauspicious arrival of Superstorm Sandy on October 29, and due to scheduling conflicts, it was not possible to reschedule later in the year, while the exhibit was still up]

Leave a Comment

Filed under Brain vitamins, Collaborative creativity, Drawing + illustration, Events, Exhibits, Material culture, Outside inspiration, Storytelling, Turnstone rates, Words+pictures

Services are Everywhere: Turnstone at AIGA National Design Conference

Turnstone joined Zipcar and Facebook to introduce “Services Are Everywhere” to the annual AIGA National Design Conference in Phoenix, AZ this Fall: The all-women panel kicked off four sessions on service design, moderated by innovation consultancy, Continuum. Click the clip here to watch this recently released, short’n'sweet film of the presenters’ perspectives, from Disney, Facebook, the Mayo Clinic, My Police, Sony, Turnstone, Zipcar and others.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Blogroll: Designed+Built, Brain vitamins, Cities+buildings, Collaborative creativity, Corporations, Design for good, Drawing + illustration, Events, Interdisciplinary, Just published, Material culture, Outside inspiration, Patterns+systems, Sustainability, Technology, Transit, Turnstone, Turnstone at work, Women, Yellow cabs

Happy New Year! The 2011 Round Up: Turnstone inspired

Happy 2012. In 2011, Turnstone got the most out of

Tweeting more than blog posting. Follow @TurnstoneTweets.
Postcards from Penguin, 100 classic book covers
Sol Le Witt at Mass MoCA
The drawings of Kelsey Dake
Fifteen minutes listening to Nobel prize-winner, Leymah Gbowee
Symeon Brown‘s take on the riots at the London Policy Conference.
The Power of Making at the Victoria & Albert Museum
Christina Stampfli joining Turnstone
Graphic Details, female graphic novelists and cartoonists, exhibiting in NYC, touring in 2012
Steve Jobs, and many more, RIP
Ryoji Ikeda’s The Transfinite at The Armory on the Park, NYC (above)

Leave a Comment

Filed under Brain vitamins, Cities+buildings, Collaborative creativity, Design for good, Drawing + illustration, Events, Interdisciplinary, London, Material culture, New York City, Policy, Storytelling, Think tanks, Turnstone rates, Women, Words+pictures

Spring fever

Turnstone has spent the spring surveying other designers’ work for spring inspiration.

We’re just back from Budapest, where we climbed down a 200ft hole by the Danube to inspect how the Metro 4 line is coming along under the river, connecting Buda and Pest. Good to compare public transit projects between NYC and Central Europe, and meet the students at MOME, the Moholy-Nagy University of Design.

In June, we’re co-judging Open Plans’ “Beyond the Countdown Clock” competition, which invites interdisciplinary geeks from all over to design the future of transit. They’re still inviting entrants to participate, so get on it!

In London, there is a glut of shows that are fit for our design inspiration purposes. What one thing we can take from each?

Thomas Heatherwick’s reflections at the Then|Now show at the Aram Gallery resonated. He decries that design school didn’t teach him enough about the transition from “I” to “Us”, how to shift practice from solo to studio.

The Wim Crouwel exhibit at the Design Museum is predictably delectable and rectilinear, and proves that pink and red do work together, if you also happen to be a master of Dutch mid-century typography. More when we’ve shuffled around the Dirt, Yohji Yamamoto and Susan Hiller shows this week. Under our own personal Shengen agreement, we’re crossing from one design discipline to another without a passport.

Turnstone has also visited The Hunterian, a museum of medical specimens at the Royal College of Surgeons, at last. Noone usually asks ‘what did you do that for?’ about going to see a museum collection, but posed that question several times over, there is now an answer. It definitely was more ghoulish than the London Dungeon or Tussaud’s Chamber of Horrors. I went on an empty stomach, and still lost my appetite. It’s beautifully displayed but you do have to overcome the waft of formaldehyde. But I went to look at the structures of things; to step out of my field of usual inquiry, and to conclude that disease looks disruptive. When that kind of ooh, that looks weird is scaled up, it might be a way to assess sprawl or other systems that mimic nature, or flatly deny it.

Back in New York, Turnstone just published a maiden wikipedia article for clients, Peter Gluck and Partners, on architect-led design-build. We also proudly handed over a copy of the essay on interaction designer, Durrell Bishop, to the curators of “Talk To Me“, a show about interfaces, which is due to open at the Museum of Modern Art in July. Bishop’s work does speak for itself – that’s mostly the point of it – but the 1999 written interpretation still holds up and predicts such crazy far-out futures as iphone apps and digital displays in shop windows. A true time capsule, that.

Reflecting on the contemporary context of learning and advancing interaction design, it was interesting to compare this year’s graduate candidates’ portfolios with last year’s, as admissions reviewers for SVA recently: Of a consistently high standard, applicants’ work seems to be a weathervane for the zeitgeist. In 2010, anxiety and efforts towards system-change stood out in the work, in a climate of deep economic uncertainty. This year, there are still a contingent of do-design-for-good-ers, but the applicants’ preoccupations seem to have turned back to enterprise and storytelling again. Happier times? And how will the bumps of the last few years impress on the next generation of creators and inventors?

Turnstone will be back soon to update our 2009 50 women we admire in tech story, and 20 years of architectural restoration we thought we’d left alone, report back on our talks to Harvard and Carnegie Mellon grads and Harlem 5th-8th graders, and dig up some press coverage curiosities we’ve come across during this season of Taxi of Tomorrow. Stay tuned.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Academia, Brain vitamins, Cities+buildings, Collaborative creativity, Design for good, Drawing + illustration, Economy, Education, Exhibits, Interaction design, Interdisciplinary, Just published, London, New York City, Programmed spaces, Transit, Turnstone rates, Urban, Women, Yellow cabs

Project: Interaction

Two great second year students, whom I had the pleasure of teaching at SVA last year, are now doing some awesome geek girl outreach. As mentioned in the SVA Interaction Design newsletter this week:

In a few weeks, two MFA Interaction Design graduate students are going back to high school! Katie Koch and Carmen Dukes, co-founders and teachers of Project: Interaction, will head out into the world to share their passion for interaction design. Katie and Carmen will work with a group of ninth and tenth grade girls at the Urban Assembly Institute for Math and Science for Young Women in a ten-week after school design education program they developed for high schoolers.

The two have been preparing for this moment for about a year, employing a user-centered approach to conduct on-site research and observation at area high schools, and interviewing teachers and designers to discover the needs of high school students.

From what they learned, they’ve developed a program that focuses on teaching creative thinking and problem solving methods—critical tools for designers—to help high schoolers address problems in their surrounding communities. The program challenges each student to rethink what she sees each day, closely observe the environment around her, and use teamwork to come up with big ideas. During the program, students will take a field trip to New York City based digital agency R/GA to experience interaction design in practice.

The program begins September 29. In the meantime, Katie and Carmen have just launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise funds for this semester and to expand into more schools in the new year. Head over to Kickstarter to help support their project!

Leave a Comment

Filed under Academia, Brain vitamins, Design for good, Education, Interaction design, Outside inspiration, Turnstone, Turnstone rates, Women

Not a drop to drink, desalinate, fish…

In June, as the oil splurge seeped on, global engineering firm, Arup, began – quite coincidentally – a round of international workshops on the future of oceans, for their Drivers of Change program. Turnstone was privileged to participate in the New York session and delighted to recommend Liam Young’s architectural perspective for the London roundtable. After all, the discussion pivoted on exactly what he does everyday, pondering Tomorrow’s Thoughts Today.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Brain vitamins, Corporations, Epoch, Events, geography, Government, Interdisciplinary, Outside inspiration, Storytelling, Sustainability, Technology, Think tanks, Transit, Turnstone rates, Urban, Words+pictures

Shave your head to save the Gulf from the oil spew?

An incredible chapter in Lovins’/Hawken’s “Natural Capitalism“, much mentioned on these pages, describes how human hair, yes, that swept off barbershop floors, effectively absorbs crude oil from water. Is it time the nation shave our heads and drop the clippings into the Gulf of Mexico? Like everyone else, Turnstone fears it may now be too late, even for this zany Plan B. Still, a provocative question of when waste becomes an asset in a crisis.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Bigger Picture, Brain vitamins, Cities+buildings, Corporations, Design for good, Economy, geography, Interdisciplinary, Material culture, Outside inspiration, Patterns+systems, Policy, Programmed spaces, Storytelling, Sustainability, Technology, Turnstone

ET, Phone the White House

Famous for explaining plagues and exploding spaceships in pictures, and railing against the ills of Powerpoint, Yale statistician and info design evangelist, Edward Tufte, has been appointed by Obama to the Independent Recovery Advisory Panel. To misquote Tufte himself, this may represent an exercise in making (un)clear, as well as clear, thinking visible, no snark intended. It’s awesome, as one friend suggested, that the White House gets it. And as Ben Fry said at Columbia the other week, “We’ll never have less data. [We'll just need] better ways of hiding it and learn how to ignore the right things”. Power to the picture.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Brain vitamins, Design for good, Drawing + illustration, Economy, Interdisciplinary, Outside inspiration, Patterns+systems, Policy, Think tanks

D-Crit hosts Turnstone’s first 2010 Roundtable

This week, Turnstone hosted our first roundtable of 2010, gathering a designer’s dozen around (guess what) a table for equal parts seriously chat, cheese sticks and slapdash, but perfectly fit-for-purpose scenario-building and ideation.

Thanks to Alice Twemlow, Department Chair of the School of Visual Arts Design Criticism MFA, for opening up the D-Crit space for us. What an inspiring place their library/conference room is: Were it not for the lure of a high ticket cocktail in this over-designed, fancy pants hotel lobby after, we all might have stayed to read the journals all night.

Insight came fast and furious from this crop of design power rangers too. It was great to bring together so many of those we’ve exalted on these pages previously. In no particular order, thanks to these guys for participating: Our D-Crit student hosts by default, John Cantwell and Avinash Rajagopal, device consultant, Robert Faludi, Sarah Williams, Co-director of Columbia’s Spatial Information Design Lab, ITP student, Alex Kauffmann of Milk UsLargetail.com’s Jose Mejia, David Mahfouda of Weeels, Jen Lam, media alchemist at the New York Public Library, MoMA design curatorial assistant, Kate Carmody and Chuck Yust, of Unified Field. We’ll make another happen soon.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Brain vitamins, Collaborative creativity, Education, Events, New York City, Outside inspiration, Turnstone at work, Words+pictures