Upcoming innovative materials show

An upcoming conference in Frankfurt has two titles. We prefer the first, Material Vision; the second is more descriptive, but a total mouthful–Materials for Product Development, Design and Architecture
International Trade Fair and Lecture Forum.

36 products and materials distinguished by a combination of innovative materials, successful design and intelligent functionality have been chosen for the Design Plus Award on the occasion of Material Vision in Frankfurt am Main from 16 to 18 June 2009.

Materials on display range from flexible stone(!) to superelastic resins, hemp-based parchments and more.

The Material Vision website has a brief interview up with Design Plus juror Christof Struhk:

…Why is Material Vision worth visiting?

Material Vision is a must for visitors seeking contact with companies, who have come to realise that ultimately it’s the designers and product developers who decide how a material is used. What they can expect from the exhibiting companies is a receptive approach to communications with designers. Unfortunately this is not a given – in many companies the belief still reigns that the only appropriate people to talk to are the technicians and engineers. As far as manufacturers are concerned, I can recommend Material Vision as the perfect place to make contact with the creative target group. It is also the place to be seen for anyone who understands that the creative is an indispensable part of the product development process.

Read the rest here.

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BKLYN DESIGNS Starts Today!

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Every year, BKLYN DESIGNS gets the head start on New York Design Week (and every year we ask them why why why!), so this year’s no different. The show starts today–anchored in DUMBO–and this edition proves to be the strongest yet. Julie Scelfo in The Times yesterday ran down some of the highlights, so check that out, and don’t forget to stick around ’til next week for more furniture, exhibitions, and general design carousing.

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Upcoming exhibition of South Korean products

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Next week Koreannovation 2009, an exhibition of South Korean products and designs, comes to NYC. Over 500 products will be on display (many of them never-before-seen in the U.S.), spread across eight categories: Green Building, Beauty, Home Goods, Commercial, Personal Care & Health, Toys, Home Care, and Small Appliances.

Surprisingly, registration and attendance is free; just hit the link above.

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Sustainability: The Exit Strategy, with Ezio Manzini!

Sorry for the last-minute notice, but if you’re free tonight, Eco-Design Network o2NYC is holding Sustainability: The Exit Strategy, with the amazing Ezio Manzini.

What does it mean to design for the very peculiar kind of social innovations that is characterizing the contemporary society? What does it mean to steer designing networks towards more sustainable directions? What conceptual and practical tools are needed?

The emerging features, as the cases of socio-technical innovation on which they are based, are characterized by four keywords: small, local, open and connected.

For tickets or more info, click here.

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Tonight: Creative Storytelling with Your Host, Brian Collins!

storytelling here.jpgThis very evening, the effervescent Brian Collins will moderate Creative Storytelling: Innovative Design in Advertising & Branding at New York City’s Tribeca Cinemas Gallery. The mediabistro-sponsored panel discussion features non-traditional marketing guru Sebastien Agneessens (Formavision), multitalented creative director Jason Koxvold (PerfectFools), Mr. Multiplatform Dan LaCivita (Firstborn Multimedia), and Vivian Rosenthal (Tronic Studio), a creative force behind campaigns for Target and Diesel. Collins will extract from them the secrets to creating compelling stories, solving business problems, and connecting clients to customers through innovative advertising, branding, and interactive design. Hurry up and click here to learn more. UnBeige readers (that’s you!) can save a whopping $25 on the registration fee by entering the priority code UNBEIGE25 at checkout.

NYC Creative Confab preview: 2 Questions for Liz Danzico of SVA’s Interaction Design MFA program


As far as Interaction Design goes, Liz Danzico has just about done it all, from managing information architecture at Razorfish and Barnes & Noble; to serving in directorial and editorial roles at Boxes and Arrows, Happy Cog Studios, Rosenfeld Media and the AIGA; to teaching at Columbia, FIT and the New School. Her most recent position has her incorporating all of these roles and more, as head of the School of Visual Art’s MFA program in Interaction Design, where she is called on to not just develop curricula and review student and professional portfolios, but teach the topic as well.

As someone deeply familiar with both the educational and hiring side of the rapidly expanding IxD field, Liz proves a remarkable resource for learning about what makes for good design training, a good design team, and a good design hire; which is why we’re honored to have her on the panel of the upcoming Coroflot Creative Confab in New York City. A couple of questions about initial contact and portfolio review are here to get you started, but expect considerably deeper discussion on these and other topics of design employment on the 15th.

1. You’ve mentioned before that the portfolio is just one part of a larger story that a creative professional needs to tell. What is the element of that story that is most often missing, or not up to snuff, in applicants you’ve reviewed?

A portfolio of work is a curated experience. It’s an applicant’s chance to shape the way that I’m viewing his or her approach, methods, process, and best thinking; but oftentimes, a portfolio only contains final pieces, as applicants are overly concerned about presenting perfection. Polish doesn’t communicate process though, and therefore I’m left with only part of the story. Messy problems — and how applicants work through them — can show a great deal more in a portfolio than one finished, airtight solution. It’s then the applicant’s job to curate those into an experience for the portfolio viewer.

2. When someone emails you a first contact, expressing interest in a professional or academic position, what qualities are you looking for in that email?

It’s very simple:

1) Respect for instructions. Did the applicant follow directions? Initial queries often come with specific requests (e.g., “please use XX in the subject line”), and it’s important that they be honored. Ignoring this sort of thing can indicate a problem dealing with instructions further down the line.

2) Knowledge of email etiquette. Did the applicant write a respectful, appropriate email, in terms of length, correct salutations, spacing between paragraphs, and appropriate signature files? If not, this may be an early indication that he or she lacks seminal communication skills critical to getting a job done. I might disqualify a person solely on the basis of a few such exchanges.

3) Ability to be brief. Was the applicant clear and succinct, and was the email of appropriate length for the question at hand? Email, particularly a first query, should never exceed more than a paragraph or two in my opinion. If it does, this suggests an extraordinarily expository person, and sometimes that’s not what we’re looking for.

Danzico, along with three other top-of-their-field designers and recruiters, will be pulling from her broad array of design, educational and hiring experiences during her hour on the Confab panel. The event also offers the chance to meet and trade notes with some of the best design firms and creative professionals in the Tri-State area. See the Confab page over on Coroflot for more details, and registration information.

Coroflot’s Creative Employment Confab
May 15th, 2-5 pm
Art Directors Club
106 W 29th St. @ 6th Avenue, New York City

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“Mobility” concept wins Buckminster Fuller Challenge

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It took a team of nine to win the Buckminster Fuller Challenge, namely, a team of MIT researchers and students led by professor William J. Mitchell, who took the top prize with their Sustainable Personal Mobility and Mobility-on-Demand Systems:

Mobility-on-Demand systems utilize fleets of shared-use lightweight electric vehicles placed at automatic charging racks throughout a city. The CityCar and RoboScooter, both folding vehicles, along with the Green-Wheel Bicycle, minimize parking space and can be picked-up and dropped-off at any rack. Mobility-on-Demand systems maximize mobility and dramatically reduce congestion and pollution through energy and land-use efficiency.

Top prize is a cool $100,000, to be awarded at a conferring ceremony at the Chicago MoCA on June 6th.

Above is the winning team’s RoboScooter, which was realized as a full-scale working prototype. It is, however, just a portion of the winning concept; you can check out the rest of it here.

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World Design Congress – turn “Made in China” into “Created in China”

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Source: CCTV.com

“Made in China” will be transformed into “Created in China.” The [Icograda] World Design Congress, praised as the “Olympics of the design world” will be held from October 24 to 30 in Beijing. It will be the first time that China has won the right to host the event. Then, 800 well-known designers from around the world will gather in Beijing, where they will discuss the urgent problems facing the world design industry as well as the development of the industry. […]

The conference is co-sponsored by China Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing Gehua Cultural Development Group, the National Center for the Performing Arts and the Beijing Industrial Design Center. The theme of the conference is “Xin” symbolizing the communication of “messages”, the transmission of “faith”, dialogues seeking transparency and mutual trust, and cross-boundary global cooperation. The conference will last for seven days and will consist of four major themes, “design for more people, harmonious and sustainable development, communication and defining the future and design.”

>> Read article

via Bruce Sterling

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Wordless Book Writers of the World, Unite!

globe pencil sharpener.jpgIf a picture is worth 1,000 words, how much is a 150-page graphic novel worth? This and other illustration-minded brainteasers will be fodder for discussion tomorrow afternoon during three back-to-back events at the PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature, now underway in New York City. First up is a conversation with author Neil Gaiman, the creator of the popular Sandman series and the recently adapted Coraline. Then settle in for “1,000 Words: The Power of Visual Storytelling,” in which the force of nature that is Jonathan Ames—himself a recently minted graphic novelist (The Alcoholic)—will chat with David Polonsky (Waltz with Bashir), Shaun Tan (The Arrival), and Emmanuel Guibert, who has documented war in Afghanistan and Europe in his graphic novels. Finally, at 4:30 p.m., grab your Strand tote bag for Adrian Tomine‘s conversation with alternative manga pioneer Yoshihiro Tatsumi, whose work Tomine has helped bring to American readers. Expect an animated conversation about the evolution of comics in Japan, the U.S., and around the world.

Upcoming Innovation: Design as Competitive Advantage conference

Next Friday, Philadelphia University’s East Asia Business Center is holding an event called Innovation: Design as Competitive Advantage. Keynote speaker Eric Chan of ECCO Design will kick off the one-day conference, which focuses on how “Design and innovation can help businesses navigate the economic crisis,” and specifically focuses on Asian brands and firms seeking to do business in Asia.

Click here for more information.

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