Design & Color, Winter 2017 week 8

The eighth session of the Design and Color class for Winter 2017 was held on Wednesday, February 22. We shared the last collection of cardboard creations, discussed the results of the last assignment Find A Design Need, viewed another slideshow of What ifs, and had a guest visitor, Valérie Richter, who shared her explorations in color relationships. See the full post for class photos and a full recap.

The eighth session of the Design and Color class for Winter 2017 was held on Wednesday, February 22. We shared the last collection of cardboard creations, discussed the results of the last assignment Find A Design Need, viewed another slideshow of What ifs, and had a guest visitor, Valérie Richter, who shared her explorations in color relationships.

Class recap – some key ideas

Critique – On a Roll

We began class by sharing our final round of cardboard roll creations, which included people’s further development and exploitation of earlier designs. What stands out most about the designs are the ways in which students have incorporated many different techniques and tips that were shared in class. Dick commented on the process of synthesis, and how it utilizes the process of ‘What if?’ Research and exploration are an invaluable part of the process in problem solving, and looking at what other people have done can create ‘a-haas’ for further exploration.

Dick pointed out that the first step of this assignment had been to identify all your options: what are the inherent qualities of this cardboard roll, and what can be done with it? We found out we could cut it, weave it, slice it, paint / dye it, wet it, bend it, etc. This basic question opened the doors for all sorts of explorations, and the results were far better than anyone could have imagined. Many of the resulting designs were also based on identifying a need, such as an eyeglasses holder, or a way to keep salt from clumping up, or containing wires or electronic device chargers.

Dick spoke again about heuristics, and how important it is to be able to identify your thought processes. As he said, “How many of us are really aware of what it is we’re doing?”. As an artist, it is crucial that we recognize consciously what it is we are doing while we are doing it. If we are not aware of what we’re doing, we risk falling into an artistic rut, or not being able to clearly communicate our message to others, or both. By identifying our conscious patterns and framework, we stand to be liberated as ‘educated people’ aware of our options.

Critique – Find a Design Need

The class shared their answers to the last assignment, Find a Design Need.  As could be guessed from the subject, each participant had a personal answer to what they found to be a problem in their lives. The answers ranged from large-scale projects (designing and building a robot, urban planning) to small-scale design needs (lighting for an art piece, recreating a quilt, how to make the perfect egg sandwich). Here is a list of what we heard in class:

  1. Needs a robot for kitchen help, entertaining (like a butler), doing house chores, etc. Has to be portable, efficient, and multi-talented
  2. Sliding induction burners – concerns: venting, space, aesthetics
  3. Colored lights to place behind decorative wood carving – thought of using thin silicone pads, hearing aid batteries, LED lights
  4. Weed control – wants something biodegradable, made from recycled material, and has to be aesthetically pleasing
  5. How to stop a water bottle from rolling inside the car – used Velcro straps and discovered various anchor points inside the car
  6. Wants to mount silk cocoons / silk squares, and wants mounting to disappear – how about using plexiglass, pegs, magnets, wire, etc.
  7. Would like to recreate a quilt that went missing, and also a device to help incorporate all that she has learned in this class so that she doesn’t go back to her old habits
  8. A solution the traffic problem in Paia – solution includes a town redesign, with various facilities for business, education, and tourism
  9. Designing a better egg sandwich so that the egg fits on the English muffin – solution was to cook the egg in a ring so it matches the shape of the English muffin
  10. How about a left-handed bar scanner at the airport, since the current design is meant for right-handed people and is cumbersome for lefties

It was an enjoyable and sometimes hilarious conversation, and it was fun to hear people add their own “What ifs” to other people’s ideas. Dick reiterated that this class was more about process over product, and that the essence of all we learned goes back to using and incorporating the 6 phases of problem solving in our own lives.

And what is the most important phase? Dick reminded us, “What are the givens?” Learn to recognize and identify your preconceptions before beginning a project, and you will uncover more possibilities than you initially imagined. As Dick put it, “A lot of people don’t recognize their problems; they keep stumbling over the same stone in the garden.”

He also cautioned us to give ourselves time to work and explore and play: as he has said before, if you don’t like to play, then you shouldn’t be an artist. “Give yourself the opportunity to let the subconscious work on it”, and also give yourself permission to be frustrated, confounded, or stymied in your creative work – the answers won’t always come easily, and learning what doesn’t work is just as valuable as learning what does work.

Guest visitor: Valérie

To show us a successful result of what happens when we don’t give up on our what ifs, Dick had invited a visitor, Valérie Richter, who has been working on color mixing and the tri-hue watercolor technique for the last couple of years. She shared with us her recent work, including more stripes and explorations with landscapes and flower studies. Dick spoke of her work as a shining example of what happens when you stick with a project and don’t give up when faced with frustration. Please see this post (Valérie’s stepping stones) to hear about her journey in her own words, and this post from Color Relationships 1, Spring 2016, for more information.

Video: Red & Blue are not primary colors

This video demonstrates the principle by which the rich variety of colors in relationship Valérie achieves are created using only the three primaries, yellow, magenta, and cyan. (Stripes start about 1 minute in.)

Class photos

Class materials

Dick’s last slide show of What if images came with this statement and question, “As artists, we have choices. The DNA of our art – does it come from our core beliefs?” Something to think about as we end this eight-week session.

Presentation – Final What If?

Additional / supplementary materials

Dick asked the class to watch a recent PBS Nova episode, The Origami Revolution, before today’s session. It’s no longer available online, but here’s the description:
The centuries-old tradition of folding two-dimensional paper into three-dimensional shapes is inspiring a scientific revolution. The rules of folding are at the heart of many natural phenomena, from how leaves blossom to how beetles fly. But now, engineers and designers are applying its principles to reshape the world around us—and even within us, designing new drugs, micro-robots, and future space missions. With this burgeoning field of origami-inspired-design, the question is: can the mathematics of origami be boiled down to one elegant algorithm—a fail-proof guidebook to make any object out of a flat surface, just by folding? And if so, what would that mean for the future of design? Explore the high-tech future of this age-old art as NOVA unfolds “The Origami Revolution.”

Design & Color, Winter 2017 week 2

The second session of the Design and Color class for Winter 2017 was held on Wednesday, January 11. We critiqued the various homework assignments; heard from Dick on ‘heuristics’ and the 6 phases of creative problem-solving; and explored further the meaning of a ‘module’ and how to create designs that are not ‘freaks’! Read the full class post for handouts, visuals, and more information.

The second session of the Design and Color class for Winter 2017 was held on Wednesday, January 11. We critiqued the various homework assignments; heard from Dick on ‘heuristics’ and the 6 phases of creative problem-solving; and explored further the meaning of a ‘module’ and how to create designs that are not ‘freaks’!

Homework assignment

  1. Exploit your discoveries and inspiration from the toothpick modules class critique, continuing to explore, or creating one or more finished (glued on black backing) designs. Remember to record your thoughts, discoveries, fenceposts (decisions/criteria), and critique.
  2. Continue exploring ongoing assignments “On a Roll” and “Draw a Square”.

Class recap – some key ideas

Critique – “On a Roll” assignment

Class began with students sharing notes, observations, and discoveries about the On A Roll challenge. Dick had the class break off into groups of two, and they followed the ‘On A Roll Critique’ sheet as they shared their discoveries with their partner.

[gview file=”https://dicknelsoncolor.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/OnARoll-crit.pdf”]

After 10 minutes or so, we reconvened as a class to discuss the findings. Students had produced an array of objects, including seedling planters, eyeglass holder, a children’s mobile, and even a small lamp!

The highlights of the discussion:

  • “Recognize your fence posts.” What is the purpose of your creation – is the final design going to be utilitarian? Or decorative? What other options are there?
  • If you don’t have time to produce or act on your ideas, write them down.
  • Dig deeper … what else would you modify? “Some of the most creative things will happen when you are the most restricted.”
  • What did she decide as fence posts? “You’ve got to be conscious of what you’re assigning yourself … Look at all of your options.”
  • What is the given? What are the inherent qualities that you are dealing with? The cylinder. The cardboard material. Absorbency. Resiliency. Wrestle with the givens now, and you won’t find them limiting later.
  • “Synthesis is such an important design concept. What is synthesis? Putting two or more different ideas together.” Some of the best and most creative ideas come from synthesizing aspects from seemingly incompatible sources – you never know what might happen if you stretch your imagination!
  • “The subconscious is a marvelous tool – let it fester.”

See more solutions in the “On a Roll” homework submitted online.

Critique – “Toothpick modules” assignment

The class then moved on to viewing and discussing the past week’s homework: creating toothpick ‘modules’, and subsequent designs based on those modules.

[gview file=”https://dicknelsoncolor.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Toothpick-crit.pdf”]

Dick had pointed out in the last class that the designs should have a logical sequence, like a DNA strand, where the growth of the design is not random or arbitrary, but refers back to its origins as it evolves. Part of keeping the design in relationship to itself is using the toothpick as the guide; or as Dick said, “The toothpick is the measure of all things.”

Comments about keeping the design in relation to itself:

  • Does the design have a conclusion? How do we know when it’s going to end?
  • What are the static / non-changeable elements? What factor does change? (See the handout on ‘Toothpick Programming Tips’ in the ‘Class Materials’ section).
  • Dick critiqued many of the designs as having “imposed” factors, and students wanted to know what exactly that meant:
    • “That someone has introduced change or a decision randomly: you don’t know it’s going to happen, you can’t predict it [based on the earlier design decisions].”
    • Change [in tempo, direction, etc.] should be in relationship to the other parts, based on the DNA of the design as it began.

About recognizing your fence posts:

  • How many options do you have at every step / for every decision?
  • At all junctures, remember your elements of restraint, and keep to them. (Remember, restrictions breed creativity!)

About composition:

  • “What does the black [the ground] creeping in between the ends [of the toothpicks] do?” Watch for opportunities to use figure/ground reversal.
  • “This is an example of ‘1 + 1 = 3’: when the toothpicks have made a secondary figure [that the viewer sees first],” or created an illusion such as an object seen in perspective. The design becomes more than the sum of its parts.
  • “A much stronger element [in terms of visual tension] is a vertical. A vertical has tension; a horizontal is at rest. The most stable orientation is the vertical-horizontal axis. The most dynamic is the diagonal.” Be aware of these factors when creating a design: what message are you trying to convey?

See more toothpick module studies submitted online.

Heuristics

Before giving the lecture, Dick spoke briefly about heuristics. The understanding of heuristics has been an interest of Dick’s for decades, and is the pivotal theme around which the entire Design & Color series is based. As Dick quickly defined it, heuristics is “being conscious of what you are doing while you are doing it.” Merriam-Webster defines it as: “involving or serving as an aid to learning, discovery, or problem-solving by experimental and especially trial-and-error methods; also: of or relating to exploratory problem-solving techniques that utilize self-educating techniques (as the evaluation of feedback) to improve performance.” Dick asked that the following thoughts on design and heuristics be included in this post.

[gview file=”https://dicknelsoncolor.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Design-Heuristics.pdf”]

Lecture on the 6 phases of creative problem-solving

For the lecture, Dick elaborated on the 6 phases of creative problem-solving, and discussed why these steps are key to the artistic process. For his notes on the 6 phases, please refer to the slide show images in the ‘Class materials’ section below, and the one-page summary near the bottom of the post. (And since I love words, I looked up synonyms to add to the descriptions of the six stages. – Holly):

1. PRECONCEPTIONS (assumptions, bias, delusion, favoritism, inclination, mind-set, narrow-mindedness, penchant, predilection, preference, prejudice, proclivity, tendency)

Dick calls this the most difficult stage, since it is very challenging to recognize your own biases. Dick spoke at length last week on this particular stage, calling our preconceptions (the ‘givens’) “our greatest enemy”. As a starting point, he encourages us to identify our givens based on our materials first (what do we take for granted about paint, pencil, canvas, paper, clay, stone, etc.). Discovering the preconceptions we hold about physical materials can help us later to recognize some of our interior, and somewhat intangible, blocks: what mental, emotional, and aesthetic biases do we harbor? And are these biases blocking our way as artists?

“You are telling yourself ______________, you’re just not aware that you’re telling yourself that.”

“If you make it a habit to ask yourself these kinds of questions [what are my preconceptions/prejudices/biases? What are my options? What else can I do here?], it will become second nature.”

2. EXPANSION (amplify, breadth, buildup, deepening, develop, enhancement, elaboration, enlargement, evolution, fleshing out, increase, magnification, opening out, spreading, unfolding, unfurling, widening)

In this stage you expand on the revelations you discovered in the first stage. Research, experiment, play, and see where your mind and the materials take you. At each moment of decision-making in the artistic process, you have a chance to discover more options, or alternative approaches. For the toothpick assignment, this means pausing whenever a new toothpick is to be laid down: why is it going here? What was my rationale? What other options are there?

Identify your options … You have to pay attention to what you are doing. If you can’t see what you’re doing, you’ll miss your options.

3. CONVERGENCE (amassing, application, assembly, centering, close attention, coalescing, combination, compacting, compression, concentration, confluence, consolidation, fixing, focus, intensification, joining, junction, linkage, massing, meeting, merging, narrowing, unity)

This is when you have done some experimenting, you have found aspects that you like, and you are ready to focus on certain features. At this stage, you gather and concentrate those elements that are going to be in your final piece. This is the stage of ‘fence posts’, and Dick speaks of ‘corralling’ your ideas and assigning boundaries. By consciously selecting boundaries, you give your work focus and identify your goals for the piece. As was written in a previous post: “Another factor in reaching independence is the acknowledgment of boundaries. … Part of this week’s assignment is to be aware of the boundaries inherent in any piece of work, including those set by the technical elements (subject matter, materials, forming process, etc.). These decisions are what become our ‘fence posts’, that which defines and dictates our goal.”

Build your fence; choose your fence posts – the fence posts are absolutely critical.

4. DEVELOPMENT (addition, advancement, betterment, build up, chrysalis, elaborate, enrichment, flowering, furtherance, go ahead, growth, improvement, increase, perfecting, progression, maturation, maturity, refinement, ripening, unraveling)

This is the stage of actual work: carrying out your ideas and inspiration. During this stage, you will most likely discover that not everything will turn out as planned: some ideas were better than you imagined, and some were not. The point of this stage is to create and make ‘real’ what was before only ideas and thoughts; every action, no matter if it is ‘successful’ or not, will inform you as you move towards your goal.

5. EVALUATION (analysis, assessment, commentary, critique, decision, determination, discrimination, extract, examine, finding, judgment, opinion, option, pick, preference, rating, review, valuation, verdict)

Dick often says this is one of the two most important phases (the other one being Exploitation). At this stage we objectively view our work, and evaluate how our decisions turned out: was/were the experiment(s) successful? Was the goal reached? Is the (visual) message clear? By critiquing your work, you give yourself a chance to applaud what worked (what was successful), and acknowledge what needs further development (what was not successful).

Dick says there are only 3 things to ask when evaluating work:

  • What was I trying to do?
  • Did I do it?
  • Was it worthwhile?

6. EXPLOITATION (act, action, activity, application, doing, effect, effort, engagement, enterprise, exercise, exert, handiwork, labor, manipulation, motion, movement, operation, process, progress, transference, undertaking, use, work, workmanship) 

The last stage is the blossoming and the maturing of all that has come before. This is another stage of experimentation, where you take everything learned in the previous stages and exploit it. The intersection of your ideas and the real world will add its own impression to the piece, the result of which you never would have predicted. From an Advanced Drawing post: “[Dick] also made note of how important it is to move on to the ‘exploitation phase’ of an idea: once you fully understand a concept, it’s important to play with it and see how it can be used in ways you had not previously thought of. This is the step that leads to true creativity, where you open the door for surprise revelations to occur while you experiment.”

Modules and programs

For the homework (to go further with our toothpick studies, and exploit what we’ve learned), Dick had a few pointers that he stressed (see ‘Toothpick Programming Tips’ handout near bottom of post):

  • Check your fence posts.
  • Write down the elements of change and elements of restraint.
  • Follow Nature’s design: it’s not from the outside in; it starts with those few [cells] and programs, and then grows outwards.

As Dick concluded, “If you really understand the idea of programming and relationship, then the constraints can be infinitely creative.”

Class photos

Class materials

Presentation: The Six Phases of Problem Solving

Additional handouts

Here is a convenient summary of the six phases of creative problem-solving all in one sheet.

[gview file=”https://dicknelsoncolor.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/6-PhasesPrbSol.pdf”]

Here are some visual and verbal hints on the toothpick assignment.

[gview file=”https://dicknelsoncolor.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/ToothpkProgrmOpts.pdf”]