From Voice ~ Topics: social responsibility, theory

Conceptual Design: Building a Social Conscience

In 1917 Marcel Duchamp, under the pseudonym “R. Mutt,” submitted a urinal to the New York Society of Independent Artists. Despite the Society’s statement that it would accept work by any artist who paid the six dollar fee, the “readymade” was rejected. “Whether Mr. Mutt with his own hands made the fountain or not has no importance,” Duchamp wrote in his magazine The Blind Man. ”He chose. He took an ordinary article of life, placed it so that its useful significance disappeared under the new title and point of view—created a new thought for the object.”

With that puckish, unpromising piece of provocation was born one of the most productive currents in 20th century culture, Conceptual Art. Forty years after Duchamp’s urinal made its first splash, the shock waves of its influence were still spreading. John Cage picked up the theme, and by the 1960s composers such as Lamonte Young and Cornelius Cardew were making conceptual music: (“Tune a brook,” wrote Cardew, “by moving the stones in it.”)

But has there ever been “Conceptual Design?” At first glance the question looks silly; all design is “conceptual” in the sense that it depends on the conceptualization of problems and solutions. But how could the rarefied, ridiculous intellectual games of a Duchamp or a Cage work in an applied art, a field where briefs and clients, not critics, collectors and curators, define the parameters?

Even those hostile to the idea of “Conceptual Design” might want to agree that some branches of design are more “conceptual” than others. Graphic design might be more “conceptual” than furniture design, for instance, and design teaching might be more “conceptual” than graphic work. If we accept Duchamp’s definition—the replacement of an object’s “usual significance” by a “new thought”—then every startlingly original design is in some way conceptual. It’s conceptual when Philippe Starck takes George Carwardine’s classic 1932 anglepoise table-lamp design and reproduces it, blown up huge, as a floor-lamp for Flos.

But to be truly “conceptual” in the way that Conceptual Art is, design would have to cut its ties with objects, materials and practicality. The concept would have to become sufficient, in and of itself; the idea would have to be the finished design.

Are we seeing something like this happening in design? I think we are. There’s a generation of young designers who, almost a century after Duchamp, seem to share something of his spirit. In recent months I’ve interviewed young designers like Åbäke, Alex Rich and Redesigndeutschland. What I notice about their work is that it shares a quality I can only describe with words like “conceptual” or “immaterial.” Rather than products, these people are designing situations, intervening in existing arrangements, framing everyday activities in ways that make us think of them, unexpectedly, as “design.” And although they’re often satirical in tone, these designers share a concern with ethics and responsibility; one of the reasons the design they make is so often immaterial is their sense that the last thing the world needs is more objects, more consumer goods. The widening ripples of Duchamp’s gesture blend, in their work, with the repercussions of a gathering concern around issues like sustainability, community and responsibility: to be conceptual is, after all, to be thoughtful.

The first Åbäke piece I saw was design you could eat: a “trattoria” they organized this May as part of the Berlin event Designmai. The food was delicious, but there was also the sense that the designers, even as they prepared yogurt with mint, olive bread, tomatoes, radishes and mozzarella for an invited audience of about 40 people, were making a “performance” in the manner of contemporary artists like Rirkrit Tiravanija (who served Thai vegetable curry at 303 Gallery on New York’s Spring Street) or Susan Ciancolo (who made an installation called Run Restaurant at Alleged). Their latest projects include setting up a “plant exchange” at London’s Columbia Road Flower Market.

Redesigndeutschland, based in Berlin, Germany, mock design’s hopeless, triumphalist fascination with standardization by proposing a universal photography portrait format, a decimal organization of time, and a new unit of measurement, the RIN. Alex Rich is a British designer now based in Tokyo. He likes to describe what he does as “gentle intervention”. When I interviewed him for ID magazine recently he told me he’d collaborated with Åbäke on a London project which involved “reverse-vandalizing” the benches in an East London park. Without a client, and without the permission of the local authorities, Rich and friends mended several public benches which had been reduced, by vandalism, to bare concrete struts. In another “action,” Rich made a series of T-shirts reproducing murals visible from the entrance to Finsbury Park train station in North London. He then asked actors to stand around the subway exit wearing the shirts, hoping that commuters would be surprised—and perhaps charmed—to see T-shirts bearing a reference to something local instead of something distant or global. Rich’s themes overlap with ideas familiar from conceptual art movements like Situationism, Psychogeography and Appropriationism. But, says Rich, “appropriation and intervention are not really the same thing. Appropriation means taking over ownership; intervention means leaving something in the public domain.”

If what we’re seeing really is the impact, a hundred years on, of Conceptual Art on the discipline of design, it’s nice to see that, in the interim, something has been added to Duchamp’s playful mischief-making: a social conscience.

About the Author: Nick Currie, also known as Momus, is a design writer, musician and contributing writer to Design Observer.

  1. link to this comment by Tobias Brauer Wed Nov 02, 2005

    I’m not sure that the examples you are referring to qualify as “conceptual design”. I see them more as run-of-the-mill conceptual or performance art. The work may be pieces of art made by designers but that does not assure that it is design. These are designers experimenting in art.

    Design does not allow for a conceptual movement. If I where to pick up a rock and call it “art”—like it or not, it then becomes art. It may not be good art, but it is art nonetheless. Design doesn’t work in this same way. I can’t simply pick up a rock and call it a design. Design is something else. It includes the communication of a specific message plus art. Conceptual design would only be half of a design.

    I can see a case for design being experimental in its delivery method or media (i.e. printed on food or a message comprised of everyday objects)—but without successfully conveying a specific message I think we’re back to art. And I’m not even hung up on legibility—I’m simply referring to communication. Art implies some levels of interpretation without specific communication or message resolution being necessary; design does not. Design needs to communicate something specific to a broader audience. Design needs a resolution.

    Additionally, I’m not so sure that as designers we should want to be included among the conceptual artists. There’s a certain amount of public and professional respect that comes from successfully realized calculated thought. I believe it to be a core mission of design to intellectually challenge its audience through engagement in a concept as opposed to spouting off dictums causing further disassociation from that audience. Conceptual artists don’t really care if you “get it”; as designers we should care.

  2. link to this comment by Joseph Coates Wed Nov 02, 2005

    In the early 1990s, I wrote a similar paper on this idea. It could best be described as a thought experiment but was never published. It stemmed from my background as a fine art student studying with John Baldesari, Michael Asher, Mike Kelly, and Doug Huebler, then getting my MFA in graphic design from a very design oriented program. My brain has always been in both the conceptual world and the practical design world. So if I think like a designer but have influences of conceptual art, what does that make me if I produce work that is categorized as design by some or "art" by others?
    Doug Huebler poured a line of sand on a road. As cars drove over it, it vanished. That was the "art". (The photo sequence of it vanishing was for sale though...). Another project was photographing every person on the planet. Was the impossibility of the task the "art"?
    I don't think design and conceptual art are necessarily separate at all, even with clients and money involved for design or galleries and dealers for 99.99% of all art. Perhaps there is room for .05% of all design to be conceptual?
    I also agree that there are more examples appearing. Perhaps an argument could be made for Tibor Kalman's work. Not all of it but some of it.
    The design work of Annelys de Vet http://www.xs4all.nl/~annevet/weblog /
    comes to mind, but applied in real world terms.
    Maureen Mooren and Daniel van der Velden http://www.designmuseum.org/design/index.php?id=119
    could also be placed in this zone. But they are doing it using the grammar and language of design.
    I like to think Ian Hamilton Finlay http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/features/story/0,11710,968266,00.html
    is also a designer who is flirting with this notion. The perspective from the fine art world is he is an artist, perhaps, flirting with design.
    Also, what about concrete poets? That seems very conceptual but can be about poetry and typography. Finlay combines type, nature, poetry, landscape, political, historical, and aesthetics. Is he an artist or a designer or a poet?
    Designers taking time to research deeper into the pioneers of 20th century design - the Futurists, Dada, and Constructivist designer/artists - will discover that, there is nothing new under the sun. To most viewers of the time, these twenty somethings were not artists or designers just radicals. Now they represent The Academy.
    Since the very nature of conceptual art is about making anything into art - an action, an idea, or an object, why not design? The actions or proposals of the designer, artist, poet, architect, in any context, can become anything to anyone.

  3. link to this comment by João Marrucho Thu Nov 10, 2005

    The most incredible conceptual piece ever invented is money. The Valuable Idea. World economy equilibrium depends on how much that Idea is being taken seriously, and worse yet, it urgently demmands that ideas stop being sold has they are now. Tino Sehgal, (coreographer/artist) is for me the one who has reached more closely the pure conceptual piece of art. He sells no photos of his work, no pictures are allowed in flyers, no material representation at all. He is not even on the scene.
    Check galeriejanmot for an example.
    Sometimes I wonder I museums and clients do not pay with a sentence: "Here are your 50 thousand dollars."
    Is it conceptual design just another design after art (Kitchalize-it! kind of thing)? Like Phillip Morris did with arts and crafts.
    Pardon my Typo's (if any). I am Latin!

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