Designers are complicated, each of them multi-dimensional worlds unto themselves. Their approaches, skills and techniques, their choice of materials and areas of practice and expertise, their obsessions, stylistic flourishes, strengths and weaknesses, all make them each unique and different from each other.
From a designer who once offered the opportunity to experience a volcano in your living room, to a designer who re-imagines your minor quirks as beautifully visualised data, to the designer who, among other things, repurposes robots to work as cocktail mixologists, here’s the first part of a series of short documentary films directed by Christian Svanes Kolding, created as conversation starters to celebrate the spectacular diversity of designers working today. Kolding is a filmmaker, writer and artist from Copenhagen, currently living in New York.
This series starts with the “extreme experience” designer, Nelly Ben Hayoun, followed by a profile of the information designer Giorgia Lupi, and then concludes with a brief portrait of Eddie Opara, the innovative graphic designer and partner at Pentagram.
Like Ben Hayoun’s work, Lupi’s designs are immersive, often exploring human quirks of daily life. By transforming them into data, her work reveals deep patterns and emotionally rich concerns. Absorbing it is not unlike reading sheet music in its lyricism and poetry, but Lupi designs data to frame problems, helping audiences develop better context and understanding for how solutions can be discovered and action can be taken.
The three films hint at how the role of the designer is primed for expansion while they also shed light on the way practices from other disciplines influence the approach to design.
Produced for the Interaction Design Association (IxDA), each two-minute segment surveys their more recent work, as well as the philosophies, which guide their understanding of their role as designers.
What they all have in common is a multi-disciplinary approach to problem-solving, complemented by an enthusiastic desire to engage their audiences, as well as other designers, and a joyful curiosity that is expressed through the way they each see and live design.
As the films themselves testify, these three designers take on responsibilities beyond what was once considered traditional: not only are they artists, architects, filmmakers, inventors, musicians, and directors, but they are cultural commentators, anthropologists, and not least, entrepreneurs and business leaders with an eye towards making a greater contribution to society.
Giorgia Lupi spoke at Design Indaba Conference 2017. Her full talk and interview will be released on the website soon.