The Ethics of Making: Design for Reuse and Repair : Developing an alternative strategy for studio-based craft and design in a world full of stuff
Abstract
We exist at an interesting point in time. Waste is exponentially
increasing; resources are diminishing; yet we are accumulating
more and more possessions. The world is inundated with stuff; it
is everywhere—in our houses, our offices, on our streets and
littering our environments. Stuff has become a problem.
This is a conundrum for studio-based craft and design (SBCD),
the lens of this project, which, like many design endeavours, has
a preoccupation with the design and the making of products. This
reality raises challenges around roles, responsibilities and
ethical imperatives that drive SBCD in the 21st Century. If it is
acknowledged that design (action) and craft (making) is
responsible for authoring the construction, altering and
interaction of our built environment, then perhaps both are
powerful tools in how we shape our physical existence on this
planet.
SBCD, however, appears to be in crisis often marginalised as a
vocation taught and practiced bound to past models that fail to
sufficiently make links with salient issues of our time. As such,
over the last several years many educational programs that have
supported SBCD across Australia have been discontinued or
amalgamated into larger homogenous programs; the last decade or
so has also seen a swag of cultural organisations move to drop
“craft” from their titles; and there appears to be a decline
of professional craftspeople. , , This presents as another
conundrum and raises the question of the value and relevancy
around SBCD’s offering to a rapidly changing and increasingly
complex world.
Yet SBCD has many worthy inherent attributes. It is a localised
practice that supports a local ecology that further promotes
high-level technical, material and creative skills. Because SBCD
also focuses on an individual in a studio free from industrial
constraints or imperatives, this gives a practitioner critical
agency. But for SBCD to make a relevant and timely contribution
to a world drowning in things will require a decoupling from
existing modes of practice and a deeper understanding of design
and its impact to social, cultural, political, economic,
emotional, environmental, historical, ethical and technological
imperatives—an exploration beyond lingering Modernist ideals of
design as an aesthetic ‘form-giving’ pursuit.
This is the motivation for this practice-led-research: To
interrogate the ‘whys’ and ‘hows’ of practice and to seek
and develop an alternate strategy for SBCD that squarely faces a
question that essentially unravels the very core of what it
does—why make more stuff? Through exploring a broader
perspective of design and by focusing on universal issues that
transcend any one discipline, this research considers that SBCD
turn attention to dealing with that which already exists. This
manifests with a focus on creative challenges and opportunities
for design’s engagement with reuse and repair. Effectively, I
use SBCD as an exploratory tool for inquiry into a) environmental
concerns of waste and these links to design; b) as a strategy for
giving alternative values to goods that have been discarded; c)
and as a practice that engages with social, cultural and ethical
concerns when presented with issues outside of domestic
disciplinary concerns.
Initially revolving around the sub-genre of furniture and
objects, the practice that is presented here transforms into a
much wider scope of what could define a model of SBCD within an
Australian context. Through performing ‘micro-interventions’
into globalised flows of transient materiality, this research
develops a case for SBCD. When recomposed within an ecology of
practice, and by redirecting offerings that engage with issues
beyond an object, SBCD has a relevant and worthy contribution to
make to both the sustainment of the built environment and to
material culture.
This project is the beginnings of an alternative mode of
practice.
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