Research in Art and Design: An Analyzing Essay by Andreas Sjöberg
Research in Art and Design: An Analyzing Essay by Andreas Sjöberg
Research in Art and Design: An Analyzing Essay by Andreas Sjöberg
The common goal for both the texts is to categorize and give a historical background to scientific and research based approaches to art and design. They also have in common to suggest new ways of looking at the connections between the different fields. Nigel Cross Designerly Ways of Knowing: Design Discipline Versus Design Science takes a more narrow focus than Frayling when he describes the recent history of science in design. Both texts brings up the problem that art and design for long has been seen as separated from the cognitive analysis of scientific methods, while arguing that they have a lot of common ground. Cross however discusses the problems that has arisen earlier when the design process has become too intertwined with scientific methods. He argues that the debate reached a point where the intuitive thinking so essential for design was suppressed to a degree that hurt the practice. What especially caught my interest in the texts was the quest to scientize design as described in Nigel Cross text. Given the historical background, I can really see the reasons behind the emergence of that debate in the light of an increasingly industrial and scientific society. It was also a debate that was very present in the field of architecture, both in its first wave during the 1920s and its second during the 1960s. The new spirit both Theo van Doesburg and Le Corbusier spoke of in the 1920s I find both fascinating in the artifacts (to use Cross language) it spawned as well as the influence it had on art and architecture during the 20th century. I have at times used methods to progress with projects in the spirit of creating the machine for living Le Corbusier spoke of. I really think it helps to keep this very concrete approach of generating your work but remembering that it is one approach out of several. In the second wave of trying to merge scientific methods with the practice of design in the 1960s, I can see a more problematic approach to design emerging. I think it is very hard and not particularly beneficial to establish a body of intellectually tough, analytic, partly empirical, teachable doctrine about the design process as Buckminster Fuller propagated for. At least from my point of view within architecture, viewing the design process like this would make it too narrow. Architecture is in the end of the day a task that is more complex than to simply solving an equation, even if I like that aspect of it, I remember that it is only one way, a simplistic way, of looking at the practice. Therefore I can agree with much of the criticism of the design methodology that surfaced in its backlash in the 1970s. I agree with J. Christopher Jones when he opposes the continual attempt to fix the whole of life into a logical framework. The whole idea of establishing a method for design work I think is unfitting considering the uniqueness that often is required from the result. The debate between those opposing and supporting methodology in design I however find interesting. Especially when it comes to how design is taught in schools. Again going back to architecture which I think is really hard to find a good balance in teaching since there cannot be a one true method of acquiring the knowledge you need. Still it needs to provide the tools necessary to take part in the work place of architectural practice.
This question is also something I have reflected upon myself during my time in school. I realize that the most important thing we take with us is the skill of creating spaces, which of course have to be learned intuitively, by doing. For me, I can at times find it hard to keep track of what I have learned. I suppose it is a skill that dawn on you through time, which I have kind of sensed through being more confident in how to start new projects. As my time in the bachelors programme is nearing an end I begin to wonder if I should have tried to establish an informal personal method from which I initiated design projects. Viewing this recent workshop in the light of this I think it would have been better suited earlier on in the education to help us identify within the role of the designer. The way the school has mixed teaching concrete knowledge that works as essential tools of taking part in creating the built environment as well as stimulating the intuitive mindset of creation could then have been merged in a way that would be easier to grasp for the students. But I can see the benefits of this workshop in this time considering we have been working within the research field of architecture for a while with the Everyday Dharavi project. These texts have helped in how we should relate the research to the design process we now are to begin.