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of Deniz Cem Önduygu

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The first issue of the new Leonardo Electronic Almanac is out on Amazon since January 2012. I did the identity and the editorial design of the journal, and recently got hold of some copies and documented it here. (The typographical cover art “MISH MASH” was done by Emre Parlak.)

LEA is the electronic arm of the pioneer art journal, Leonardo – Journal of Art, Science & Technology. It is itself a peer reviewed electronic journal dedicated to providing a forum for those who are interested in the realm where art, science and technology converge. The new LEA, with Editor-in-Chief Lanfranco Aceti, is a collaborative effort between The MIT Press; Leonardo/ISAST; Goldsmiths, University of London; FACT; and Sabancı University. In addition to the electronic format on its website, it is now available as print on Amazon.

The 17. International Symposium on Electronic Art, ISEA2011 Istanbul, has begun, with hundreds of artists and academicians from all over the world and my design work all over Istanbul. There’s a lot to document (the program booklet, flyers for the biennial press package, tote bags, signage, artwork captions, badges, etc.) but I’m not going to be able to do it decently before next month*, so I’ll just put a few teasers here.

Registration desk at the Sabancı Center, Levent

Exhibition poster at Kadıköy-Karaköy Pier

The banner at Taksim Square for the Uncontainable exhibition

The banner at Taksim Square for the Uncontainable exhibition

 

The main exhibition Uncontainable is at the Taksim Square Cumhuriyet Art Gallery (right next to the red banner above), be sure to drop by. You can get detailed information about all the exhibitions, events, performances, paper sessions, panels and workshops at the website. You can follow the tweets about ISEA2011 here, and this is the Facebook group of the event.

I’d really appreciate if you send me any photos you took showing ISEA2011 visuals/objects in some way, from around İstanbul. This is especially a call to any friends of mine reading this.

* Edit: You can see most of the documentation here:  http://www.denizcemonduygu.com/work/isea2011/

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I found this book, Heresies Exposed: A Brief Critical Examination in the Light of the Holy Scriptures of Some of the Prevailing Heresies and False Teachings of Today by William C. Irvine, at a second-hand book seller in Kadıköy. Lucky me; my favorite two subjects, evolution and modernism, get the longest chapters. I sincerely hope that with this beautiful and well-organized book, I shall finally see how I have been faltering from the Way – especially after reading how “atheism is the enemy of science”. Cuz, you know, I love science.

Oh, and good news for any post-structuralists out there: it’s not heresy!

The horrible celebration cards made by amateur Photoshop users bombarding our email boxes every holiday and new year isn’t news. No, this post isn’t about the visual qualities of vernacular design. This is about something else – something I still am baffled about.

Many definitions of design put the stress on the verb “to decide”. Design education is not about teaching techniques for creating beautiful imagery; its main purpose is to teach the students to make conscious, unambiguous and intelligible design decisions that they can articulate and defend. You are not considered a designer if you produce lots of cool alternatives without being able to choose between them with good reasons that can be explained to the client. When you see a designed object, be it a gorgeous museum building or an ugly celebration card, you know that it is the result of many design decisions – good or bad, conscious or intuitive – that have eliminated many alternatives – with huge or slight differences – along the way; “this is the one”, you can say, “this is the end of the bottleneck”.

Well, sometimes you can’t, as it appears. You may reason that the difference between professional design and vernacular design is the quality and/or the quantity of the design decisions involved. Let me present you an actual example that reminds us that the whole existence of the most critical decision is also a question: a corporation (a printhouse indeed), so proud of the two alternatives they created for the new year card that they cannot decide which one to send. And the result? They send them both. Attached to the same email.

This, for all I know, is against the very nature of the thing that we call design, in its broadest sense. You just cannot say “Well, we can’t decide, let’s go with both!” at the end of a design process; that decision has to be made, one way or another. At this point, it is crucial to distinguish this particular situation from two categories: (1) the complete non-existence of design decisions (the position of not giving a shit about design, at all) and (2) the existence of a strategic decision to create a system of coexisting alternatives instead of one single thing (the 2009 AOL identity by Wolff Olins being a hot example). Whoever created and approved these celebration cards clearly care about design; the fact that they have prepared two alternatives is the most obvious proof. (The filenames, “1.jpg” and “3.jpg”, suggest that they also eliminated one at least.) It is also clear that these are not designed to belong to a system of alternatives: nearly everything about them is different, including the textual content.

Okay then, am I simply surprised to see amateurs ignoring yet another design principle? Not quite. In the end, the issue here is well beyond the scope of pure visual design. Let me restate it: this situation, for all I know, is against the very nature of management. This is against the nature of communication. This email with two attachments reveals a lot about the company through – the lack of – a visual communication design decision, and it isn’t good news.