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Didactics

Semiotics for Design

The course Semiotics for Design applies the principles of semiotics to design practice and its use of the visual language system.

From early to late 1970s the course began as a general RISD Graphic Design course called Visible Language, which embraced the theory of semioticsto teach students about the mechanisms of meaning. Since then, the theory of semiotics continued as a core component in the curriculum concerning questions of meaning, cognition, reference, truth, and reality. After all, communication means depend entirely on the creation of “signs” as the vehicles for communication, and semiotics is known as the “theory of signs”.  

However, while students held on their primary curriculum interest for developing “practical” skills, any design studies that were of a theoretical nature were accepted in a limited way. Hence, it was not until the late 1970s, after years of establishing the fact that “theory” (like semiotics) was essential to the overall learning experiences, that the name Semiotics for Design could be appreciated more up front and in the open. 

This course helps not only to unpack the ideas and complexities involved in communication, but how to pack them into a meaningful design interface for communication. This includes to explore the depth of perception and how attention and awareness play critical roles in forming relationships for meaning; how to stimulate intuition and insight in our search for design innovation; and how to transform semiotic principles into practical methods for design. Lectures, case studies and practical studio assignments expand this semiotic landscape with intimately related issues that help create truly inspired design, including such theories as visual narrative, the parallax view, systems theory (pattern, wholeness, David Bohm’s implicate order, and the web of life), and why such principles as indeterminacy, chance, and continuity necessitate design as a contemplative practice vs. being understood as merely a rational, logical activity.