Category Archives: Drawing + illustration

New Walk (and Bike) City

Image courtesy of the NYC Dept of Transportation

Image courtesy of the NYC Dept of Transportation

So Turnstone’s updates here were scare during a chunk of 2012, and here’s my excuse: I took an 8-month walk around New York, a bit like Phyllis Pearsall, tireless authoress of the London A-Z, did in the 1930s. I went analog and on secondment to join a larger design team for a really special project:

Transportation Nation and Brooklyn Spoke explain exactly what for in these previews of the NYC Department of Transportation pedestrian and bike share wayfinding systems, projects that are set to appear across the city in 2013. More about those to follow here in the coming months as the projects get off – and on – the ground.

Meantime, if you look lost at any intersection on or off the grid, the person approaching you to give you directions, whether you’d asked for them or not, is probably me.

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Filed under Cities+buildings, Collaborative creativity, Content management, Design for good, Drawing + illustration, Government, Interaction design, Interdisciplinary, Material culture, New York City, Patterns+systems, Programmed spaces, Storytelling, Sustainability, Transit, Turnstone rates, Updates, Urban, Words+pictures, Workplace

On air, up in the AA air

PrintAmerican Airlines’ inflight business show, Talk Business 360, interviews Turnstone Consulting in its latest episode, talking about visual scribing. If you travel on an AA or US Airways flight anywhere in the world during April and May, business or coach class, you’ll be able to listen to the whole program from your seat, on Channel 9. That’s on air to five million passengers up in the air. And, for terrestrial listeners, Turnstone’s 3-minute segment is available here:

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Filed under Bigger Picture, Collaborative creativity, Drawing + illustration, Independent consulting+small business, Just published, Programmed spaces, Storytelling, Turnstone, 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]

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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.

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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

Turnstone in words and pictures

Turnstone has returned to its drawing roots this year, inspired by collaborations with Ludic Group, the international innovation consultancy. By invitation, Rachel takes visual notes for corporate-level strategy meetings. Sample concept drawings and diagrams from closed client sessions can’t be shared, but more illustrative images are here on the Turnstone web site. Rachel also presented at  LaydeezDoComics in London in December 2011.

In September, QR This, Turnstone’s review of the Museum of Modern Art’s interactive media exhibit, Talk to Me, appeared in the Architect’s Newspaper.

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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)

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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

Turnstone remembers

Turnstone remembers two inspiring friends and coworkers, who both passed away in the past year and a half:

Angelo Kontarinis was a great friend at and after our time working together at IBM, and Sylvia Harris, among many other things, a collaborator, champion for women in business, designers of color, decent design for citizens, and personally, she was a fairy godmother to the Taxi07: Roads Forward project. Both were great designers and, above all, really good people, both missed.

The Sylvia Harris Citizen Design Award has been established to support projects that inform and inspire the public, and the dedicated designers who create them. Details about contributing funds to the Award are here.

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Filed under Collaborative creativity, Design for good, Drawing + illustration, Interdisciplinary, Outside inspiration, Turnstone rates, Women, Workplace

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.

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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

The power of pictures

This week, Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman have the cover story for Newsweek magazine, a suite of articles on the science of fostering creativity in children, while the RSA have recently put their animated creativity to good use, inviting one of Turnstone’s favorite geographers, David Harvey, to explain the crisis of capitalism.

And if that doesn’t burst a cloud, the World Press Photo show returns for 2010 to the United Nations on its annual world tour this August. If you only look at world news coverage on your iphone, it’s time you stared at some big colorful prints of what’s going on beyond your tweeting, browsing, outstretched arm in the hallowed halls of the place that’s supposed to make it all better.

Yerba Buena Arts Center SF

Yerba Buena Arts Center SF

Last but not least, Turnstone can’t rave enough about the Yves Béhar-curated TechnoCraft show at Yerba Buena Arts Center, just opened in San Francisco. Divided into Crowdsourcing, Platforms, Blueprints, Hacks, Incompletes, and Modules, it includes work from Marti Guixé, Max Lamb, the Bouroullec brothers, the prisoners of St Quentin jail, and…you.

Refreshing to see an industrial design show that doesn’t just show off the usual suspects, but shows off the unusual suspects, and then makes you think about our old friend creative agency: how you can do, undo and make do with clever stuff with what’s in the world around you. Fast Company has a nice review here. Our only gripe is that there’s no exhibit catalog. Not even an a propos coloring-in book.

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Filed under Blogroll: Designed+Built, Collaborative creativity, Design for good, Drawing + illustration, Economy, Education, Exhibits, geography, Interaction design, New York City, Outside inspiration, Turnstone loves, Words+pictures

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.

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