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Didactics

Visual Systems

The course Visual Systems investigates the nature and dynamics of wholeness: the tension between parts and wholes; how systems connect, relate and influence parts in relationship; and how these principles can serve the purpose of designed products.

Human beings are, intrinsically organizers and pattern seekers, apparently due to a drive within us toward wholeness and integration for a sense of order, harmony, and unity in everything we are compelled to perceive this universe of complexity (including our personal relationship to it) as an operating “system” having underlying rules for principles that serve structure, meaning and function.  

Hence, system thinking plays a significant role in every part of our lives, whether we do so consciously or instinctively, and so becomes a natural inherent feature in design, in every part of design without exception.  

This course Visual Systems is an inquiry into systems thinking. This inquiry reflects two aspects of design: a) system as a way of looking at objects in their holistic sense as product of interacting parts and principles (from contrast, hierarchy, pattern, grid, proportion, symmetry, to narrative, information, networking, etc.); and b) as a generating system to create objects—i.e., a process for search to invent and innovate in an apparent universe of synchronous order and chance. 

Although systems theory opens a vast territory of potentially related design interests (e.g., social, cultural, environmental, etc.) we focus on the dynamics of the visual language to open perceptual awareness and deepen insight into the nature of design, with our main question being: how can we reveal the subtle in the obvious, the limitless in the limited?