Tuesday. 01 February 2011. 15:00 UTC
Jürg Lehni and Stewart have been invited as tutors to a one month workshop at the
Royal College of Art organized by the
Helen Hamlyn Centre and sponsored by
Research in Motion. As part of the workshop proceedings Stewart will be speaking about his work at the
RCA tomorrow afternoon at 13:30 in the Performing Arts Lab (on the first floor of the Stevens Building). Jürg will do likewise the following Wednesday.
Friday. 03 December 2010. 16:00 UTC
Next Tuesday
Jürg Lehni and Stewart are conducting a workshop for
Sara De Bondt’s masters class at the
Royal College of Art in London. The pair will introduce themselves and talk a bit about their separate practices before giving a design brief to the students. The results of this brief will be examined the following Tuesday.
Wednesday. 15 December 2010. 11:30 UTC
A rather good day to pause and review. In November Robert Gerard Pietrusko and Stewart unveiled their latest collaboration, Under Vine, for the SFMOMA’s new exhibition How Wine Became Modern: Design + Wine 1976 to Now. Under Vine is a data animation describing a modernized view of wine production and export.
Last week Jürg Lehni and Stewart visited Sara De Bondt’s Design Without Labels class at the Royal College of Art to conduct a workshop. The two gave a “subjective and fragmented” history of programming (beginning with punch card looms and largely avoiding actual computer languages all together) and then delivered an assignment brief challenging the students to create their own language and example applications for the following week. More after the jump…
Sunday. 24 July 2011. 16:00 UTC
This year the
Royal College of Art’s catalog for graduating
Communication Art & Design (CAAD) students was composed of responses to three different conversation prompts. (See catalog for full descriptions:
Fact and fiction in a digital context;
The value of things—Material artefacts in a digital world;
New models for publishing.) Respondents to these prompts included students,
RCA staff and external designers, critics, architects and artists. And of course, your humble, X-Files obsessed narrator—having previously participated as a visiting critic for the
How-to How-to workshop and the
Blackberry workshop. And so this
strange little X-Files tribute series has now spun off a small printed piece entitled
Trust No One. The beautifully designed catalog is of course full of
CAAD creativity and if you have the opportunity to acquire one (or better yet, meet with the graduating
CAAD students) I strongly suggest that you do. —Stewart
Thursday. 22 December 2011. 18:00 UTC
The year is at its end—a moment to reflect upon twelve months of experiments, achievements, and blunders. 2011 opened with
multiple trips to Karlsruhe, Germany to collaborate with the
ZKM Center for Art and Media on a very early version of
trans_actions. In
February Stewart served on the judging panel for TED’s Ads Worth Spreading competition and tutoring a month long workshop at the
RCA with Jürg Lehni.
April was packed: More visits to
ZKM, the Creativity and Technology conference posted my
Code Play lecture video, Paola Antonelli wrote an article for Domus about data visualization that used
Exit as an example, and I posted some odd
X-Files triptychs.
More after the jump…