Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Where Children Sleep


Has anybody come across this book?  The New York Times covered this book a few weeks back. You get to stare at the bedrooms of children which becomes a social commentary on their lives and the places they live. Kind of like Selby except for kids and not just for the rich and famous. Read about it and look at the inside here. NYT 

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Designers & Books


Designers & Books
is a website devoted to compiling booklists/commentary from designers and architects of all types. With lists comprised of both design literature and sources of personal inspiration, contributors include names like John Maeda, Michael Bierut, Michael Graves and Stefan Sagmeister. My reading list just got so much longer...

Monday, April 4, 2011

Ottawa Love: 254 Elgin

The only place I get magazines. :D

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Recently Read: Kathryn Moore - Overlooking the Visual


Moore, K. Overlooking the visual: Demystifying the art of design. (2010). Routledge: New York.
Carleton Library Call #: NK1505 .M66 2010 (Floor 3)

The full title is "Overlooking the Visual: Demystifying the Art of Design".

THE. IRONY. KILLS. ME.

Some excerpts:

The crux of the problem is that an intractable rationalist paradigm dominates our thinking to such a degree we no longer give it much thought. ... Reinforced by a host of beliefs and suppositions it exiles materiality to a metaphysical wilderness where it languishes, separated from intelligence, safely hidden out of sight, out of mind. (p 6)

The fundamental dichotomy between body and mind enshrined in perceptual theories creates an insuperable quandary that endures within any aesthetic experience. Is the resonance of the experience created by the recognition of something perfect, an unchanging truth out there in the world, or by a frisson with innate, archetypal structures in mind, the subconscious, pre-conscious or some kind of universal knowledge embedded in our genes? (p 53)

"Overlooking the Visual" explains design teaching and practice particularly through landscape architecture, although the content applies to all facets of design. Moore posits that Western thought perpetuates several false dichotomies which limit the way we design: thinking vs seeing, intuitive vs rational, theory vs practice. These dualities are interpreted by society as rules to live by, rather than simply a "philosophical construct". Interesting, no? It wasn't quite clear to me how freeing ourselves of these dualities would improve design, so I was rather excited to read the rest of the text.

(More after the jump)

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Recently Read: Austin Howe - Designer's Don't Read



Austin Howe - Designer's Don't Read
Carleton Library Call # : NK1510 .H69 2009 (Floor 3)

A bunch of essays regarding (graphic) design practice. Howe stresses the importance of designing for the client's needs, working with advertising and marketing execs, being willing to defend a great design and learning from examples of successful firms.

2/5

CON
-More targeted to graphic designers.
-Very limited insights.
-Some essays are written terribly.

CON?
-Incredibly pretentious.

PRO
-Quick read.
-A lot of (attractive) people look at you on the bus if you read it in such a way that the cover is in full view of half the passengers. Especially in the Glebe. For example:


B-T-Dubs, some decent book reviews here: http://www.designersreviewofbooks.com/