Can D&AD change for good?

Under Neville Brody’s presidency, D&AD is undergoing some important changes to the way it’s run and what it hopes to achieve. Will they be enough to reinvigorate an organisation which marked its 50th year last week?

When you think of D&AD what do you think of? For most people, it’s awards and that’s a problem. Not that D&AD doesn’t want people to enter its awards. The problem is that it wants to be thought of primarily as an educational charity, using the money it generates from all those awards entries (over 20,000 per year) to nurture the next generation of designers and creatives. To do good not to slap backs.

The link, between the money-making and the money-giving, where that money goes and the good that it does, has not been made clear enough. This has been allied to and connected with a background of, particularly in the design community, a growing sense of disillusionment with D&AD and the feeling that it is no longer relevant.

But what if there was an organisation which supported needy students who are struggling to pay tuition fees in these difficult economic times with bursaries or scholarships? An organisation that was helping to break down the homogeneity of the creative industries by offering financial help to students with disadvantaged backgrounds? Making sure that industry and academia talked to each other and supported each other? Supporting graduates coming into work, providing training and networking? While at the same time performing a valuable role in the professional community by championing the best of its community’s work, reinforcing the value of what it does and acting as a forum for debate and the exchange of ideas. That’s what D&AD wants to be known for and, in large part, it’s what it already does.

Somewhat lost amid the hoopla of its 50th birthday celebrations (top), D&AD has announced a significant change – the launch of the D&AD Foundation. D&AD is being re-organised to separate the awards and professional services side of what it does from its educational activities. In future, the ‘business’ side of D&AD will concentrate on making as much revenue as it can from its awards and professional training courses. The Foundation will be funded and supported by the profits generated by these activities.

The Foundation’s cash will support students through their education and then, through internships, apprenticeships, mentoring and activities such as the Graduate Academy, through the first years of professional life until they are in a position to be entering – hopefully winning – the professional awards themselves. At that point, D&AD will expect the circle to become complete as those who have themselves benefitted from D&AD’s support, offer their own to the next generation, perhaps through endowments or gifts but certainly through entering the awards

This clarified agenda for D&AD is being driven by its chief exec Tim Lindsay and incoming president Neville Brody (subscribers can read a revealing interview with them both in the supplement with the October issue of CR, shown above). Both also recognise the need for D&AD to grow its membership if it is to genuinely represent the industry and offer more to professionals than just the chance of winning an oversized pencil.

“D&AD is often accused of being less relevant today,” Lindsay admits in the interview, “but the way you make yourself relevant is to make yourself useful and the way you do that is to provide a product and a service that people find they need recourse to frequently. You need to take a look at yourself and ask whether what you are doing is right for the emerging generations. I think D&AD has done quite a good job on students and quite a good job at the more mature end of the industry but it has missed out the middle. We can disconnect with people when they’ve been in the business for two or three years until they win an award.”

But is winning an award even that important to younger designers and creatives? “If awards are about peer review and peer approval then you get that much more widely and rigorously and instantly by putting something up on YouTube than you do by entering an awards show,” Lindsay concedes. “We have to be much more than an awards show. We have to offer great training, great speakers, to be a great place to have discussions. And, most of all, we want to make money to put into the Foundation.”

Brody also wants D&AD to be more vocal in the interests of its members. “We’re not going to be shy of raising our voices more politically,” he promises. “What this government has done to creative education in this country is an absolute fucking disaster. They’re shooting themselves in the foot. A huge amount of UK income comes from the creative services, so what possible good can come out of killing creative education? I don’t support the idea that industry should be paying for education but we have no choice, so let’s formulate a positive response, make it work and stick two fingers up to the government.” D&AD, he says, “needs to have a more strident voice to defend the profession we represent and to help protect students who want to go into creative education.”

Lindsay and Brody are promising a more active, engaged D&AD that has a clear remit to support education in practical ways. The Foundation, they hope, will set out where D&AD’s priorities lie, to an extent not seen in its previous five decades. That sounds to me like something worth supporting, but what do readers think?

A lot of people have been very critical of D&AD in the comments here: What do you want from D&AD that it currently fails to provide?

Where should it be concentrating its energies?

How would you like to see it change?

 


CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here


CR in Print
In our October print issue we have a major feature on the rise of Riso printing, celebrate the art of signwriting, examine the credentials of ‘Goodvertising’ and look back at the birth of D&AD. Rebecca Lynch reviews the Book of Books, a survey of 500 years of book design, Jeremy Leslie explains how the daily London 2012 magazine delivered all the news and stories of the Games and Michael Evamy explores website emblematic.com, offering “data-driven insights into logo design”. In addition to the issue this month, subscribers will receive a special 36-page supplement celebrating D&AD’s 50th with details of all those honoured with Lifetime Achievement awards plus pieces on this year’s Black Pencil and President’s Award-winners Derek Birdsall and Dan Wieden. And subscribers also receive Monograph which this month features Rian Hughes’ photographs of the unique lettering and illustration styles of British fairgrounds

Please note, CR now has a limited presence on the newsstand at WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at train stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your WH Smith store or a local independent newsagent can order it for you. You can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, call us on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 970 4878 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

Leftover Refrigerator

The Impress Refrigerator has an intriguing way of storing food. It holds containers or bottles in such a way that you can never forget that you have placed them there. It consumes lesser power when fewer items are placed, thus conserving energy. The open interface makes it easy for you to access the food and also never forget about them!

Impress Refrigerator is a 2012 Electrolux Design Lab Top Ten finalist entry.

Designer: Ben de la Roche


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Leftover Refrigerator was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Brooklyn’s Barclays Center opens

News: Barclays Center, a 19,000-seat indoor sports arena designed by SHoP Architects and AECOM, opens to the public in Brooklyn this weekend.

Barclays Center

The arena will provide the first Brooklyn home for basketball team The Brooklyn Nets and a venue for music concerts at the major intersection between Atlantic and Flatbush Avenues.

The completed building was delivered by design-and-build contractors The Hunt Construction Group, with a ribbon-like steel facade designed by New York studio SHoP Architects and a 19,000 seat arena planned by AECOM.

Frank Gehry was the first architect to work on the project, but developer Bruce Ratner dropped the original design in 2009 in favour of a cheaper alternative. Gehry’s masterplan also included sixteen residential towers, which are still proposed but not yet constructed.

Barclays Center

Following the Barclays Center’s inauguration on Friday, journalists have had mixed reactions to the scheme. In the New Yorker, critic Alexandra Lange describes the building as an “alien presence” that is ”big, dark, and without scale,” while New York Times reporter Liz Robbins writes that “the arena stands as an island, a reminder of what is missing.”

Meanwhile, New York Magazine‘s Justin Davidson speaks favourably about the building, calling it ”a great, tough-hided beast of a building” that is “juiced, genial, and aggressive all at once.”

The Barclays Center will officially open on Friday with the first of eight sold-out concerts by rapper Jay-Z.

See more stories about New York »

Photography is by Bruce Damonte.

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Olympic regeneration claims are “bullsh*t,” says Rowan Moore

Future of the Olympic Park

News: architecture critic Rowan Moore has labelled Renzo Piano’s Shard skyscraper as a “serious failure of planning” and described claims that the Olympics will regenerate east London as “bullsh*t”.

Moore, architecture critic of the Observer, said the £12 billion spent on the London 2012 Olympics had created a “big buzz” but criticised the organisers of the games for justifying the cost by claiming they would regenerate east London.

Rowan Moore

“The deal with the Olympics ought to be really simple,” Moore (above) told Dezeen during a filmed interview yesterday. “It’s this very big amazing event which, if it goes well, gives the host country a big buzz, as happened with the London Olympics, and for that you have to pay £12bn, or whatever the real cost is. And that’s almost the beginning and the end of it. If you wanted to regenerate east London there’d be much, much easier ways to do it than holding the Olympics, and much cheaper.”

He added: “But the people who promote the Olympics find it hard to admit that. They say it’s about regeneration, it’s about boosting sporting legacy, it’s about boosting business, it’s sustainable. All these things are absolute bullshit.”

Moore, former director of the Architecture Foundation and editor of Blueprint magazine, made the statements as part of a wide-ranging interview with Dezeen to coincide with the publication of his new book, Why We Build (below). The book explores the forces – including hope, power, money and sex – that drive the creation of architecture.

Why We Build by Rowan Moore

“On the Olympics site they’re going to build about 12,000 homes and I think they’re going to make about a similar number of jobs,” Moore added. “If you’re really saying you have to hold the Olympic Games in order to achieve the equivalent of a middle-sized market town in east London, that’s just daft. That’s not how you go around regenerating things.”

More than 11,000 homes will be built on the site of the Olympic Park in the next 20 years, according to plans set out by the London Legacy Development Corporation, with the first new development made up of apartments converted from the Athletes’ Village.

Moore added: “I think they’ve done a better job than most previous Olympics, but it’s really up in the air what happens next. It could be a great model for how to improve areas. I mean, people in Stratford say it’s given them pride in the place, so that’s great. The big question is whether we get the usual housebuilders moving in and doing their usual product and essentially creating private enclaves.”

The Shard

Moore also discussed The Shard (above), the 300 metre high skyscraper by Italian architect Renzo Piano, which opened above London Bridge Station in July this year.

“The contribution of it to its immediate surroundings is pretty minimal,” Moore said. “You can be ten feet away from The Shard and if you’re looking away from it you wouldn’t know it was there.

“The Shard is clearly an icon, and it is very clearly a product of the last 10 years, in that it is by a famous architect, it’s a striking shape, it’s funded by Qatari money, it’s the sort of speculative building that was made possible by a planning culture in London that was very developer-friendly, very much about attracting investment.”

Moore criticised the way the tower fails to interact with, or benefit, the surrounding area. “[It] is sort of amazing, and a serious failure of planning, that you could put that much investment into a place and not have a positive idea about what the whole place is going to be.”

In an interview Dezeen published with Renzo Piano earlier this year, the architect claimed The Shard was designed to be “quite gentle”. “I don’t think arrogance will be a character of this building,” said Piano. “I think its presence will be quite subtle. Sharp but subtle.”

Despite its failings, Moore admits the skyscraper has already become a popular addition to the skyline. “The principles behind it are all wrong, but it has captured people’s imagination and it has become part of the mental furniture of London in a way that I think is positive,” he said.

“Also The Shard just proves that this stuff is going to go on forever – we’re always going to have Shards, always going to have Burj Khalifas, always going to have Chrysler Buildings, so there’s always going to be big money and it’s always going to build big buildings.”

You can read an extract from Moore’s new book, Why We Build, in our story published last month. The story also contains details of a competition to win a copy of the book, which closes tomorrow. A movie and transcript of the interview with Moore will be available soon.

Moore told Dezeen that the book explores “the interaction between architecture and human emotions and desires” and the failure of architects to understand how people actually inhabit buildings, and also draws attention to those architects who Moore believes “allow people to finish the story” of a building, such as the Brazilian modernist Lina Bo Bardi.

Dezeen’s coverage of The Shard includes an interview with Renzo Piano and a movie of the building’s construction.

Our London 2012 Olympics coverage includes Olympic architectureThomas Heatherwick’s Olympic cauldron, reports on Paralympic design and our own medals for the best loved Olympic designs.

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Chen-Williams Bookend

DIY bookend instructions from the dynamic duo behind Chen-Williams

Chen-Williams Bookend

Last week, HTC hosted a design tour of New York City, with visits to some of the area’s top designers and creative thinkers. We got to join in for a workshop in the backyard of The Future Perfect with Chen Chen and Kai Williams, the Brooklyn-based duo behind Chen-Williams….

Continue Reading…


The Fly Phone

FlyIdea is an amazing phone that features an alluring interface. I simply love the dongle-earphone that performs a myriad of functions. The dongle essential functions as wireless earphone, and syncs with the phone to work as a camera, gaming sensor, music controller and video recorder. Both the earphone and phone work independently and together. The concept offers an innovative way of using the phone with the added functionality of the earphones dongle.

Designer: Tryi Yeh


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
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(The Fly Phone was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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LED hats by Moritz Waldemeyer for Philip Treacy

A whirring helicopter of LEDs creates the illusion of a glowing hat in this design by Moritz Waldemeyer for Irish milliner Philip Treacy (+ slideshow).

Hats by Moritz Waldemeyer for Philip Treacy

Six blades, each fitted with a strip of LEDs, are attached to a propellor headpiece worn by the model. When in motion, the blades disappear from view and a huge halo of light seems to float in mid-air.

Hats by Moritz Waldemeyer for Philip Treacy

Above photograph is by Chris Moore

“It has long been my aim for the technology to disappear, to dissolve it into the surface of the work so that the light effects themselves become the focus,” explained Waldemeyer.

Hats by Moritz Waldemeyer for Philip Treacy

Above photograph is by Chris Moore

Waldemeyer also created a basket-like cloak that covers the wearer from head to foot with a mesh of 6000 LED lights.

Hats by Moritz Waldemeyer for Philip Treacy

Threads soaked in resin were woven around a styrofoam frame to become rigid once dry, making the structure light enough to be supported by the model’s head.

Hats by Moritz Waldemeyer for Philip Treacy

The creations were unveiled as part of Philip Treacy’s Spring/Summer 2013 collection at London Fashion Week last Monday.

Hats by Moritz Waldemeyer for Philip Treacy

Waldemeyer recently created 140 costumes embedded with LEDs for the closing ceremony of the London 2012 Olympics and a choreographed light show for the Paralympics closing ceremony.

Hats by Moritz Waldemeyer for Philip Treacy

Other designs by Waldemeyer we’ve featured on Dezeen include a laser suit for U2 singer Bono to wear on stage and laser drumsticks and LED wands for singer Ellie Goulding.

Hats by Moritz Waldemeyer for Philip Treacy

Photographs are by Moritz Waldemeyer, except where otherwise stated.

See all our stories about fashion »
See all our stories about LEDs »
See all our stories about Moritz Waldemeyer »

Here’s some more information from Waldemeyer:


Fresh from producing 140 LED light-embedded costumes for the London 2012 Olympic closing ceremony, designer Moritz Waldemeyer has turned his attention to hats in an extraordinary collaboration with Philip Treacy.

Philip Treacy’s catwalk show at the Royal Courts of Justice marks the master hat designer’s return to London after 12 years in the most hotly anticipated event of London Fashion Week. The show, sponsored by Swarovski, includes a specially chosen selection of Treacy masterpieces and a collection of original Michael Jackson stage outfits designed by Michael Bush and Dennis Tompkins, the auction of which will take place on 2 December conducted by Julien’s Auction in Beverly Hills.

An eye-catching and technologically advanced piece is a new design by Moritz Waldemeyer. A delicate illuminated basket type sculpture extends down from the head to envelope the model’s entire body. “Philip presented us with an unusual challenge,” says Moritz. “It was a visionary idea that was difficult to achieve using conventional techniques in millinery.” Studio Waldemeyer’s solution was to weave an intricate mesh of threads around a specially designed styrofoam core. The threads are soaked in resin, which when dry are rigid allowing the design to be complex, but also very light.

The result is an object that looks impossible, especially when you think that it is supported by the head alone. 6000 LED lights integrated into the webbed surface and programmed with animated sequences enhance the illusion of weightlessness. It typifies Waldemeyer’s innovative approach towards lighting design, which has brought him international acclaim. When the lights shine directly out into the audience the structure itself becomes invisible – the model appears enshrouded in a floating cloak of light.

Moritz again drew on the idea of weightlessness when asked to design his own piece for the show. This time a continuous band of light sweeps around the head with no apparent physical connection to the wearer at all. This uncanny effect is achieved courtesy of a carefully positioned propeller headpiece – each blade is finished at the end with LED lights. When in full motion the blades themselves disappear leaving only an ethereal halo of light. It’s millinery for the 21st Century.

The Treacy catwalk show caps a busy summer for Studio Waldemeyer. In addition to designing outfits for Brazil’s dazzling dance display at the Olympic Closing Ceremony, Waldemeyer also created an elaborately choreographed LED light show for the Paralympic Closing Celebrations.

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Movie: the making of the Olympic cauldron

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the Olympic cauldron
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Icon Awards 2012

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Dezeen promotion: the inaugural Icon Awards for British architecture and design were launched during this year’s London Design Festival and voting is now open for the Icon of the year award.

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: Zaha Hadid – Icon of the year nominee

Anyone can vote for the he Icon of the year, and the following ten architects and designers have been nominated for their contribution to the industry:

» Zaha Hadid
» David Chipperfield
» BarberOsgerby
» Rem Koolhaas
» Yves Behar
» Patricia Urquiola
» Thomas Heatherwick
» Renzo Piano
» Herzog & de Meuron
» Michael Hopkins

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: David Chipperfield – Icon of the year nominee

Readers can vote for their preferred winner on the Icon awards website.

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby – Icon of the year nominees

The winner will be announced in a dedicated issue of Icon magazine published on 7 December 2012.

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: Rem Koolhaas – Icon of the year nominee

Other awards will be presented to architecture, design and technology projects, selected by Icon magazine and judged by industry experts.

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: Yves Behar – Icon of the year nominee

Icon is monthly architecture and design magazine published by Media 10.

Here is some more information from Icon:


Icon magazine launched the inaugural Icon Awards at this year’s London Design Festival. The Icon Awards will celebrate the very best in architecture and design from Britain and across the world.

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: Patricia Urquiola – Icon of the year nominee

There will be ten categories, judged by leading names and industry experts, covering all aspects of the industry – from high-profile buildings to emerging talents and from interiors to technology. It will also focus on socially responsible and ethical projects. There will also be a very special people’s choice award: Icon of the year.

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: Thomas Heatherwick – Icon of the year nominee

Selected by Icon and judged by experts, the Icon Awards promise to be one of the most prestigious prizes in the design calendar.

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: Renzo Piano – Icon of the year nominee

Icon of the year

Icon has nominated ten architects and designers for their outstanding contribution to the industry. Now they invite you to choose a winner.

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: Herzog and de Meuron – Icon of the year nominee

Visit www.iconmagazineawards.com and vote now.

Voting is open for the Icon Awards

Above: Michael Hopkins – Icon of the year nominee

All will be revealed in the dedicated Awards Issue, on sale on 7 December 2012.

www.iconmagazineawards.com

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London Design Festival 2012: Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

LDF12_JOAPw.jpg

So, it turns out Keiichi Matsuda’s epic ‘Prism’ insallation wasn’t the only installation to be taking over the secret spaces of the V&A museum this London Design Festival.

German designer and artist Rolf Sachs has been playing with the vast stone stairwells of the museum by dropping individual droplets of bright, primary coloured pigments six storeys earthwards to explode in a burst of swirling colour into a small glass water tank.

LDF12_JOAP3.jpg

(more…)