Difference in Perception
The map is not the territory.
This quote from philosopher Alfred Korzybski refers to the idea that an abstraction or reaction about something is not the thing itself. While Korzybski is making a statement about confusing representation and reality, it can be directly related to human perception as well.
Take, for example, color. How does one know that the color they perceive is actually the color they are seeing? Someone who is color deficient doesn't know that. Everyone around them tells them a certain "color" is red — and they may believe that to be so — but the color their brain actually perceives is something closer to green. Is that distorted perception (as the majority of the populace may believe) or is that simply their "truth"? The matter of perception is extremely complicated.
Would it be a stretch to say that every single event in human life affects perception? Even if one small experience does not directly affect my perception, it is a collection of experiences that has an indirect affect.
Taking a look at daily mundane practices, such as a trip to the grocery store, I would imagine it has no direct impact on anything other than my budget or amount of empty space in my refrigerator. However if I have a negative encounter with a cashier, it is highly likely I will avoid that cashier's lane the next time I am at the store because I perceive that he is careless. The reality of the situation could be that he just learned some bad news and was simply distracted. He didn't pack my eggs in the grocery bag upside-down intentionally but my perception of his ability as a cashier is altered.
We do not see things as they are, we see them as we are.
Anais Nin wrote this beautiful, slightly stinging, but very true statement that raises a bigger question in my mind; do these differences in perception matter? Or are those nuances in perception what make us human?
I wonder, were there no differences in perception, would there be need for design research?
One week of grad school is…
48 line, value & interval studies1 paper describing an object without using descriptive language Lots of reading 63 form studies 1 book review event 1 workshop + 2 posters 1 research presentation providing a solution for the retail pharmacy experience 3 blog posts 10 hours of B'stro work 1 happy, slightly delirious, exhausted, crazy-eyed 1st year student
Just Enough Research
Design research is a hard slog that takes years to learn and time away from the real work of design, right? Wrong. This new book from A Book Apart on Design Research by Erika Hall of Mule Design seems to answer this question and more (+ tips on learning to conduct successful DR).
Make things. Do stuff. Have fun.
Is is good? Who cares?Is it perfect? Why does it matter? Is it fun? Good.
D/R: Personal Statement / What Am I Doing? (Redux)
Exactly one year ago I was furiously prepping an artist talk — aptly titled "What Am I Doing" — for the design students at IPFW in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Other than being a great exercise in holding the attention of 75+ undergrads for 3 hours it also provided a great space for me to find connecting threads in my personal work and think about what I had been doing over previous years. Now, a short year later, I find myself asking the same question with about a million more added to the mix. What am I doing? What inspires me? What matters to me? What is my goal? What do I want to do?
What inspires me?Anything. Nothing. Everything. It would be a lie to say there is always one thing that inspires me. I'm the kind of person who tends to hop from project to project so depending on the environment, project and even time of day, nearly anything can provide inspiration. From a piece of trash on the ground to experiencing something ordinary from a child's perspective, I find it amazing the things that trigger the brain.
What matters to me?1. Doing good work. Growing up, I watched my parents do things they didn't necessarily want or enjoy but followed through because it was something they had committed to. And it wasn't any sort of crappy work either; if they said they were going to do something, they did it, and they did it well. That made an impact on me and is something I've carried on.
2. Surrounding myself with good people, personally and professionally. As the saying goes, "You are the company you keep." I always try to friends with and be in the presence of the people I want to be like. At a young age, I learned that people are people no matter who they are or what they're known for. Fairly often I reach out to people I admire, even when they seem out of my social-sphere.
3. Being happy. At the end of the day, no matter I'm doing, I want to be proud of what I'm doing, and doing what I enjoy. That is a big part of what drives me.
What is my goal?Continuously create. Taking a look at my personal work, I see a multiple unrefined and disconnected alphabet series, wacky Alice in Wonderland-esque creature drawings, and bits and pieces of work that I start but never finish. One thing that stands out when looking over my short career is the willingness to try new things. Rarely — if ever — have an end goal in mind other than to keep creating; keep doing things. It's an overwhelming desire I can't control when it comes and leaves me feeling empty and frustrated when it's not there.
What am I doing?Trying to figure it out. I like to think that I shoot too high, take too many chances and veer a bit too far off the well-paved road in favor of some shiny object in the bushes. But the truth is, my path is pretty ordinary; throw me in a room with a bunch of other MFA candidates and what I'm doing looks pretty normal. My initial reaction to that realization is dismay. I want to be special and different. What does that mean? I haven't figured it out yet but I have a desire to do something big. Something people notice. Something that makes a difference.
What do I want to do?Think differently and always be a little uncomfortable. I have absolutely no idea. At the highest level, I want it to do something that makes people think about things a little differently, something that makes me happy, and something that makes me uncomfortable enough to keep exploring.
The Creative Process
Words of truth from Kazu Kibuishi. Anyone who tries to tell you differently is lying.