Manifestos

Icon Magazine

Gareth Ormerod, Senior DesignerFifty designers, architects and thinkers have their say in the 50th issue of Icon magazine.

This is Peter Saville’s view…

 

MANIFESTO #01
PETER SAVILLE Designer, LONDON

Being a designer used to be like being on a crusade – we were fighters, evangelists. But in the last ten years, since the recession of the early Nineties, the situation has changed. Our establishment has suddenly “got it” and they want “creatives”. Creativity has become part of the business of social manipulation. The problem is that everybody got what they wanted.

Morals
The cultural adventure has been consumed by business. Making things better is a moral issue, but morality and business don’t go together – business is, if not immoral, then amoral. We know we should be keeping people out of stores but we all have to work with business. It can’t really be all about idealism and altruism.

Meaningless design
Much of the work being done now lacks meaning and the designers know it. There’s a reasonable chair design once every five years and that’s usually the result of a new manufacturing or material innovation. We all see what’s happening at Milan – there are countless new chairs and they’re nearly all a waste of space.

Where are the NGOs?
Everyone does their best but you have to pay the rent. Even hospitals have to run to profit. You can’t avoid the issue merely by working for an NGO – even Amnesty and Greenpeace have to be “business facing”. The only bastion of free speech could be the art world, but even that is a preciously engineered marketplace with its own complexities.

Value finding
Creative people have to believe in the value of their work. If you don’t have any belief then you can’t give anything – designing is an act of giving, and a belief in the value of the work fuels the desire to express something. It’s important to know what your values are and to take care of them.

Post-war socio-cultural democratisation
It’s a long term, but broken down it’s simple. Over the last 50 years culture has been disseminated to the wider public rather than being the domain of the privileged. There is an inevitable loss of substance in the process of becoming a culture of entertainment. If it’s not popular, it’s not happening.

Design as drugs
Pop culture used to be like LSD – different, eye-opening and reasonably dangerous. It’s now like crack – isolating, wasteful and with no redeeming qualities whatsoever.

Dystopia
In the early 20th century designers envisaged utopia, they were optimistic and visionary people. We now acknowledge the dystopian reality.

The new cause
I was part of a system that wanted to change the look of the everyday world. That ideal, manifest through consumerism, doesn’t sit well with me now. I am not wealthy and completely understand how we all have to pay our way.

49 further Manifestos here.


[Posted by: Gareth Ormerod]      AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Top 10 British dotcoms to watch

Marcus Duffy, Technical ManagerThe Guardian recently published a list of their top 10 British dotcoms to watch, many of which I hadn’t heard of. It’s nice to see some good ideas coming out of this country. How many times have you checked out the latest cool web app and ended up thinking, “Yeah, it’s cool, but if only they had it with UK data.”

As someone looking to move house in the near-future, I’m particularly liking the GoogleMaps-powered ononemap.com and extate.co.uk

Their top 10 (in alphabetical order):

Dopplr
Social networking for frequent travellers.

Extate
Intelligent search of property websites.

Garlik
Online identity management.

MindCandy
Alternate reality gaming.

Moo
Print on demand: cards, notes and stickers.

OnOneMap
Map-based property search.

Touch Local
Local directory services.

Trusted Places
User-created local information.

Zopa
Peer to peer lending.

Zubka
Recruitment 2.0.


[Posted by: Marcus Duffy]      AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Designing for AJAX and JavaScript

Ollie Harridge, Senior Developer I gave a team presentation the other day on AJAX and JavaScript focusing on how our designers can best tackle this approach in their creative, and how our account managers can describe the technology without sounding like idiots.

The fundamental, non-technical, difference between AJAX and JavaScript is that JavaScript moves stuff around the page, while AJAX is a way of getting/sending dynamic data without reloading the page. That’s about as simple as it gets without pointing and grunting, and I think even Robin almost understood it.

Read more »


[Posted by: Ollie Harridge]      AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Web 2.0 Anyone?

Anthony Jones, Creative ManagerWell, web 2.0 is definitely here as it is the hot buzz-word on every over-enthusiastic marketeers lips. But, what exactly is Web 2.0? There are a few places that have encapsulated it quite well, like Tim O’Reilly of O’Reilly books, who some of you may not know actually coined the phrase, and, of course, the Wikipedia page on Web 2.0.

But, like me, if you would simply like a list of current examples, look no further than http://web2list.com.

It does what it says on the tin!


[Posted by: Anthony Jones]      AddThis Social Bookmark Button