Design and Transience: DHS Annual Conference 2022 (Hybrid)

CFP: DHS annual conference

London , Turkey
70 Cowcross street
designhistorysociety@gmail.com
https://www.designhistorysociety.org/conferences/view/design-and-transcience

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Design & Transience
Design History Society Annual Conference 2022

// Hybrid Conference
///September 8-10 2022 Izmir Institute of Technology, Izmir, Turkey


Design history has expanded its interest from the permanence of artifacts and the values they embody for the moment of writing to a focus on the processes of writing. Shaped by post-Cold War dynamics, we are now surrounded with a global situation of indeterminacy and volatility that reflects on the transience of populations, natural resources, information, heritage (both tangible and intangible), and settlements i.e. the expandability of the planet. This is further reinforced by the inescapable repercussions of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has radically transformed our daily lives and led to a painstaking realization of our own ephemerality as well as of everything we took for granted. The present moment forces us even more to rethink whether transience has to occupy a place as important as permanence does for the history of design. This conference intends to open up a space for discussions regarding the ways design and design history would deal/has dealt with transience and the lessons to be learnt from design’s encounter with transience.

The multifaceted relation between design and transience enables diverse perspectives and extensive discussions. Imagine the design of temporary settlements (which might end up being permanent) or the design of solutions for humanitarian crises regarding any human need. Imagine the state of information and knowledge being subject to digital retrieval and manipulation more than ever, constantly bringing about the problem of selection, storage and conservation as well as tactics of visualization. Transience also pushes forward an agenda not only of adaptability and flexibility, but also one of vigilance against planned obsolescence. How can design deal with the consequences of Industry 4.0, preempt its planetary impact regarding human and non-human aspects? To what extent can recent approaches like circular design provide a way out of the ecological crisis? How should the historiography of design take on the challenge of transience?

In the light of the discussion above we invite papers that deal with transience and design from a historical or contemporary perspective. Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

Transience as a historiographic challenge: What challenges and opportunities do digital resources and technologies present for design historiography? How can design historians make use of computer and communication technologies in analyzing, documenting, presenting and preserving their resources? What can we learn from design history in
dealing with the complex problems brought about by transience?

Transience as a design challenge: How has design responded to and how would it respond to transience of populations forced by various humanitarian, natural and ecological crisis? What is the role of temporality in shaping approaches to design and designing? How would design deal with the question of ephemerality? How does/did design respond to the ephemerality of human life? How do digital technologies transform aesthetic conventions of
design? What is the role of transience in shaping our relations with the designed objects? How did different design movements frame the temporality of objects?

Transience as a cultural challenge: How is transience inscribed in the materiality of the object? What is the role of designed objects and spaces in the fluidity of cultural, ethnic, national, gender and religious identities? How does the professional identity of designers evolve in response to rapid technological, environmental, economical and social transformations? How would we define aesthetics of transience? How is the transience of human body interpreted in art and design? How does impermanence challenge preservation, collection and documentation? How would museums and other temporary exhibitions like expos respond to transience?

Proposals
The conference will be held in a hybrid format to allow both on-line and in-person presentations. We invite proposals for individual papers, thematic panels of three papers, poster presentations and workshops related to the conference theme.

All submissions will be double blind peer-reviewed.

The deadline for submissions is 11 April 2022.