Visualisations: exhibits of design research results
Is it possible to organise an exhibition from design research results? Could this be useful in promoting the transition towards sustainability? In principle the answer should be yes: design research in general, and design research for sustainability, in particular, should generate visions and proposals in a highly communicative way. That is, it should produce high quality visual contents easily presentable in an exhibition. In practice, things are not exactly like that: for many years design research has been mostly oriented in other directions, i.e. towards theoretical and methodological studies. This kind of research is good and necessary, of course, but the result is that today, even though the number of design research conferences, journals and papers is growing, few proposals of new solutions and even fewer visions of possible futures are emerging as design research results. On the other hand, some designers who are developing visions and proposals very rarely consider themselves as researchers and their work as design research.
The Changing the Change initiative aims to promote and give higher visibility to the results of these formal and informal research projects. Therefore, in the process of selecting papers, a special consideration will be given to abstracts and papers presenting highly communicative visual contents.
However, this is only the first step. What we want to do is to organise, in parallel to the Conference, a design research exhibition, Changing the Change: visions and solutions, to make these visions and solutions more accessible, i.e. visible and understandable, to a wider public. For this reason, we are also calling for ad hoc visualisations to be used in the original exhibition we intend to organise. Similarly to the related papers, they may refer to different fields of application: from health, to food; from mobility to fashion; from caring for children to social services, but they must present a clear common denominator: they must show what it could be like to live and to produce in a more sustainable way.
For those who are familiar with traditional research conferences, it has to be underlined that the visualisations we are calling for here are not traditional scientific posters. Such posters are presentations on paper of the same contents as could otherwise have been presented orally at the conference. Here we are referring to visualisations that must be self-standing, highly communicative visions and proposals that must be accessible to the exhibition public at large. (for practical indications on how to submit a visualisation, see in the News and Notes section of this Newsletter and in the Changing the Change website).