Archive for the ‘Communication Design’ Category

Edge: exhibition of graduating Kingston Illustration and Graphic Design students

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

In our digital driven age, is print with its varying forms relevant to the progression of contemporary design? Kingston Design students respond to what print means to them and the evolving industry, which has traditionally seen print as an integral part of its output. 

The response to this project, which started as a discussion about print within our industry and its relevance to their generation, has escalated into an insightful and intelligent series of surprising outcomes.

The student’s ambition has resulted in an exhibition and future publication that we genuinely feel is special, highly relevant and showcases a new generation of designers and illustrators who are thinking beyond the edges of Design, Education, and Print.

The exhibition takes place in Stour Space, in Hackney Wick, which overlooks the Olympic stadium and park.

EDGE
Private View: Thursday 1st March – 6pm onwards
Daily opening hours 9am-5pm
Open until 2nd April

www.theedgeofprint.tumblr.com

Stour Space
7 Roach Road
Fish Island
E3 2PA

Kingston alumnus becomes New Balance ‘Excellent Maker’

Friday, February 24th, 2012

Kingston alumni and eco designer  Osian Batyka-Williams is being featured in the new advertising campaign by shoe company New Balance as one of their ‘Excellent Makers’. Osian now works as an industrial designer, furniture maker, teacher and builder and believes in utilizing eco-friendly practices as often as possible— with most of his pieces featuring recycled and/or reclaimed materials.

As part of the campaign, Osian be working with them on various projects and producing some commission pieces over the next twelve month.

To see the campaign and to find out more, please visit:

http://www.newbalance.com/facebook/excellent-makers/excellent-maker-osian.php

Students’ towering textiles take London Fashion Week by storm

Thursday, February 23rd, 2012

Exhibiting their latest creations at London Fashion Week can be a dream come true for even the most established of fashion designers. So a group of 18 Kingston University fashion students could hardly believe their luck when they found their work in the limelight at one of the industry’s most prestigious events just a few months into the first year of their degree.

After teaming up with top British artist and designer Dr Noki, they have just showcased their work as part of London Fashion Week’s Estethica exhibition. The ethical showcase, which celebrates designers who reuse, reinvent and recycle, played home to the students’ creations which gave a quirky lease of life to old items of clothing.

“The starting point for the project was inspired by a book Dr Noki showed us called Not a Toy,” 19-year-old student Steph Smith explained. “It was full of genderless, faceless characters which is what we wanted to create using the old clothing that we sourced.”

All 55 first year students promptly set to work gathering items of clothing from attics and charity shops, grouping garments that would work together to help them create a series of towering textile creations, dubbed fashion couture monsters in Dr Noki’s design brief.

“We worked in pairs taking the discarded clothes apart and then set about piecing them together into something new,” fellow student Juan Torkel Spade, 22, said. “My partner Rene Bedell and I tried shredding and unravelling knit pieces, also knitting our own individual sleeves and trouser legs to incorporate into our design.”

The design process was different to what they were used to. “I usually build something up after working with a sketch and trying out different pattern cutting techniques,” Argentinean-born Juan said.

The students’ even had the chance to bring some of their creations to life in a film screened during London Fashion Week. “Finally wearing our work and being a physical part of it was really exciting,” Steph said. “Seeing it beamed on to the big screen in the main courtyard at Somerset House was amazing and totally unexpected.”

Dr Noki who is well known for pushing the boundaries of design with his NHS (Noki’s House of Sustainability) brand of customised clothing and sustainable silhouettes, praised the young designers for their energy and enthusiasm. “I like to teach students how to balance the need for change through fashion textiles, but keeping the emphasis purely on creative design. I feel this is paramount at such a young age,” he said.

The results were extremely impressive, Dr Noki added. “All the students worked incredibly hard during the project,” he said. “It wasn’t always my intention to exhibit so many of their designs but, thanks to the British Fashion Council’s Estethica platform, the project has been pushed further, wider and faster than I ever imagined.”

Course director Elinor Renfrew said the collaboration really encouraged the students to stretch themselves. “Graduate Fashion Week has always been an excellent opportunity for us to showcase our work, but for our first years to be exhibiting their designs with Dr Noki at London Fashion Week was absolutely fantastic,” she said. “The way the students worked together and responded to a brief with a very tight deadline was phenomenal.”

The Kingston students’ ‘Fashion Freaks’ were on show throughout London Fashion Week, which ran from 17 to 21 February.

 

Kingston student reports on India trip

Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

As previously featured on the FADA blog, Kingston student Karishma Rafferty won a British Council funded place on a trip of a lifetime travelling the length and breadth of India to look at new design projects. The MA Curating Contemporary Design student joined 450 other young people for the trip that will last 15 days and cover 6,000 miles. Please  visit  http://blogs.kingston.ac.uk/fada/2011/12/14/student-books-her-passage-to-india/ for more information.

Below is Karishma’s account of the trip.

On Xmas Eve 2011 I found myself standing on a crowded platform with around 600 others waiting to board the most ambitious train journey in the world. Journeying almost 8000km in 15days, the 450 participants in the group came from 24 different states in India and 23 countries worldwide. This annual journey called the Jagriti Yatra or awakening journey seeks to inspireparticipants to thinkentrepreneuriallyaround India’s development.

 Each day the train pulled in at some new part of the country and we were whisked off on 10 buses to listen to local role-model speak about their enterprises. The speakers and visits were incredibly diverse. In Bangalore we heard Narayana Murthyexplain the vision and values that his silicone-valley like IT company with over $6bn revenue while in a small village in Rajasthan,Bukner Roy explained howGranniesfrom rural areas all over the world were coming to Tilonia to learn how to be solar engineers atBarefoot College.

 Coming from a comparativelysmall country like England, it is hard for a first time visitor to comprehend the scale and diversity within India. Living on a train with people from 24 out of the 28 different states certainly helped highlight the huge differences in culture, attitudes and language across the country. Almost 70% of the 1.2bn population live in rural environments and most of those areas will each speak a language other than English or Hindi. India is filled with multi-millionaires and many cities are thriving ports for business and development. In contrast, villages such as Nerankati in Tamil Nadu felt relatively untouched my modern technology or ways of living. Need in different parts of the country vary from lack of basic sanitation and power (both in rural and urban environments) to modern issues such as lack of infostructure capable of handling the rubbish created from all the new consumer products.

 The country is morphing and developing at such a rate that it is hard to imagine how these changes will be manifest themselves in even just a few years. You’ve almost certainly heard theprediction thatIndia will soon overtake China as the largest population in the world, well it will also be the youngest population in the world meaning a big opportunity for new ideas and attitudes to blossom. Jude Kelly, Artistic Director of the Southbank Centre and Chair of Culture for the 2012 London Olympics joined us for the last leg of the journey. She spoke inspiringly in Rajasthan about the role of women within this change. In a time of whirlwind transformation in these ancient lands, social and cultural change as well as every other, is in the making.

 A running joke on the train was that everyone from Britain was a designer and every Indian was an engineer. A cliché maybe but it really felt true at the time. The train was filled with young Indians wanting to become entrepreneurs, a strange new concept to many. Explaining my design background to crowds of engineers proved a daily challenge despite it being a key aspectof many of the organisations we visited. The vision at Arivand Eye Care in Madurai is to eradicate unnecessary blindness, a widespread problem in India. By re-designing the whole system of treatment, each Arivand surgeon can treat 200 patients a day as opposed to 5 a dayin the US.The hospital nowattracts top medical students from all over the worldwho study at Arivand to learn the ethos and model that makes the (once) unbelievable a reality.

 Although my whirlwind experience was mostly spent seeing India through a train or bus window, it was enough to get a feel for the challenges and opportunities the country has to offer. It was wonderful to be surrounded by so many young entrepreneurs looking at ways to make a positive contribution to their country. Given my design background, I couldn’t help imagining the incredible opportunities for designers in the country too. This dual potential for designers and entrepreneurs to shape a country is something that I am really excited about. Change is afoot and India is at the frontier. What did I learn on the train journey of a lifetime? I learnt that there are incredible opportunities out there; the most important thing you is a vision.

 For updates on my new project, a platform for discourse on the crossovers between design and entrepreneurship follow @designpreneurProject on twitter and for more on my Indiatrip visit www.designyatri.wordpress.com

 Karishma Rafferty is a current MA Curating Contemporary Design student and a graduate of BA Graphic Design at Kingston University. 

Kingston MA Fashion students participate in Kingston University, KTN, InCrops Sustainable Luxury event:

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

Sustainable Luxury Event

Thursday 01 Mar 2012 - The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, London

Dates
Starts: Thursday 1 Mar 2012 @ 15:00-19.00

Location

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining,
1 Carlton House Terrace,
London,
England

Organiser

https://connect.innovateuk.org/web/materialsktn/overview

https://connect.innovateuk.org/web/sustainable-luxury-event

 

Well-read Kingston students book themselves a spot on Channel 4

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

A short film made by two Kingston University students to highlight the plight of public libraries has been shown on Channel 4.

Illustration and animation students Joe Sparrow and Grethe Bentsen made the film ‘Ex Libris’ (Latin for ‘out of books’) as their final year project at the university in south west London. It has been shown as part of the Random Acts – a nightly series of short films which precede the channel’s documentary and music programmes between 11pm and midnight.

“Libraries are something I feel really strongly about and I’m very concerned to see that they’re under threat – and that people of my generation don’t make as much use of them as they could,” Joe, 24, said.

Ex Libris was shot in two of the university’s libraries – on the Penrhyn Road and Knights Park campuses – and in the main public library in Kingston-upon-Thames. It shows a variety of mythical creatures coming out of a book that has fallen on the floor. The monsters were made by Grethe out of cardboard and then brought to life through animation by Joe.

“The aim of the film was to capture a sense of the enchantment that you can discover in a library,” Joe continued. “It’s all about the weird and wonderful stuff you can stumble upon when you aren’t expecting it.”

The Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals has estimated that 600 of England’s libraries are under threat of closure due to pressure on local authority budgets.

Joe and Grethe’s film was spotted by Chris Shepherd, who commissions animations for the Random Acts and who now also lectures at Kingston.

“When I arrived at Kingston University, I had a look at some of the films that students had made over the past few years and I was overwhelmed,” he said. “Some of them were amazing – really strong on design and style.”

As well as Joe and Grethe’s film, Chris selected two other animations by recent Kingston graduates ‘I Fall Down’ by Jesse Collett and ‘What Makes Your Day?’ by Napatsawan Chirayukool to show on Channel 4.

Joe is currently working on a new animation for Cartoon Network.

Visual Research: An Introduction to Research Methodologies in Graphic Design

Monday, February 6th, 2012

Congratulations to Ian Noble, Course Director, MA Communication Design, The Design School, on the highly regarded second edition of Visual Research: An Introduction to Research Methodologies in Graphic Design A complimentary review by Dawne Bell states ‘this book illuminates the potentially problematic issue of how to relate theory to practice.  It then goes on to provide a framework that enables the reader to generate an awareness of the theories and, through reflection, question their interpretation and in doing so enhance understanding.

http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/projects/networks/issue-16-january-2012/visual-research-an-introduction-to-research-methodologies-in-graphic-design

LOL (Lots of Love): Design Tutor Rachel Davies collaborates on award-winning production at Rose Theatre.

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

 

 

 

 

Friday Feb 10 at 7.30pm

Rose Theatre Kingston, 24-26 High Street, Kingston, KT1 1HL

Known for its witty and profound dance theatre, Luca Silvestrini’s award-winning Protein has struck dance gold with this timely production – back by popular demand, following performances across the UK in 2011.

Logging on to our lives online, LOL (lots of love) delves into the world of electronic communication to uncover the evolutionary shift that social networking and the internet are having upon the way we live and love.  Against a video wall of screen-gazing individuals, six cyber soulmates stylishly nail the language of life online in their quest for romance.  Talking and dancing at speed, they make hilarious straight-to-the-audience confessions, and dance the physical equivalent of poking and tweeting.

With video animation by Rachel Davies and original music by Andy Pink, these ingredients conjure a razor-sharp commentary on our Facebook society, and an affecting rendering of human need.

http://www.lotsoflove.net 

http://www.racheldavies.com

Kingston Students create alternative Olympic art

Wednesday, December 14th, 2011

A series of alternative Olympic posters have been created by third year Graphic Design and Graphic Design and Photography students at Kingston.

They represent an alternative take on the official designs of a host of internationally-renowned artists, including Tracey Emin and Bridget Riley, unveiled last month.

The posters were designed by the students in response to an assignment set by Creative Review editor Patrick Burgoyne during a guest lecture.

The posters have captured the eye of the press and some have recently been featured in ‘The Observer’, including the one show above, a poster entitled ‘Comradeship’ by student Ran Park.

 

 

 

Student books her passage to India

Wednesday, December 14th, 2011

 

A Kingston University student has won a place on a train journey, travelling the length and breadth of India to look at new design projects.

Karishma Rafferty will join 450 other young people for the trip that will last 15 days and cover 6,000 miles. The 25-year-old, who is currently studying on Kingston’s Curating Contemporary Design MA course, will join the Jagriti Yatra (‘awakening journey’ in Hindi) as it visits cities all over India.

The locomotive leaves Mumbai on Christmas Eve, returning more than two weeks later, having travelled as far north as Delhi and to Madurai near the country’s southern tip.

Karishma’s course director at Kingston Professor Catherine McDermott suggested she apply for the trip. “Karishma won a place, which is fully-funded by the British Council, in the face of fierce competition. I am very much looking forward to her account of the journey.”

Karishma – who was also an undergraduate at Kingston, being awarded a first class degree in Graphic Design in 2007 – secured her place with a CV which includes stints working for publisher Phaidon Press and the Royal Society of Arts in London and for internationally renowned design agency Pentagram in Berlin.

The aim of the journey is to encourage a spirit of entrepreneurship among Indian youngsters and turn “job seekers into job creators”. Most of the passengers will be aged 20–25 and earning less than 120 rupees (about £1.50) a day. They will be accompanied by a select few foreign students with an interest in India’s development, such as Karishma, and experienced design professionals who will be giving talks. At each stop, the passengers will visit people who are already working on solutions to their country’s development and youth unemployment problems.

Karishma is anticipating a very inspiring journey. “I think it’ll be intense,” she said. “Those 15 days on the train are going to be packed with fascinating speakers, visits and discussions, I want to document as much of it as possible for the students and staff back at Kingston University.”

She’s hoping to build close friendships with other participants on the trip with whom she’ll be able to collaborate in the future. “I feel confident that this experience is going to be a huge boost to my career as a designer and curator,” she said.

Although Karishma’s mother’s family is from India, this will be Karishma’s first visit to the subcontinent. Her grandparents were born in Sindh province, which, after the partition of India in 1948, became part of Pakistan. They emigrated, eventually settling in Spain.

“From a personal, cultural perspective, it’s really important,” she said. “My mum is overjoyed for me as well. She hasn’t been to India since she was a child.”

During her first stint at Kingston University, Karishma was part of a team which won a Royal Society of Arts Design Directions award. “Karishma always demonstrates an imaginative understanding of problems,” senior lecturer in graphic design, Marion Morrison, who taught Karishma at the time, said. “Karishma sees experimental design potential in everything she comes into contact with. She’s bound to inspire people she meets on the way and to work selflessly to contribute to any team situation.”

Kingston University’s MA in Curating Contemporary Design is run in conjunction with the Design Museum. The course has partnerships with institutions in London and throughout the world. As part of the course, Karishma will also visit the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou during the Spring. “It’ll be interesting to compare the design industries in China and India,” she said. “India’s is younger than China’s – but there’s a real buzz about it. The Indian people have such amazing skills so there’s a lot of potential there.”

Karishma will be blogging about the journey at www.designyatri.wordpress.com

 

 

A Kingston University student has won a place on a train journey, travelling the length and breadth of India to look at new design projects.

Karishma Rafferty will join 450 other young people for the trip that will last 15 days and cover 6,000 miles. The 25-year-old, who is currently studying on Kingston’s Curating Contemporary Design MA course, will join the Jagriti Yatra (‘awakening journey’ in Hindi) as it visits cities all over India.

The locomotive leaves Mumbai on Christmas Eve, returning more than two weeks later, having travelled as far north as Delhi and to Madurai near the country’s southern tip.

Karishma’s course director at Kingston Professor Catherine McDermott suggested she apply for the trip. “Karishma won a place, which is fully-funded by the British Council, in the face of fierce competition. I am very much looking forward to her account of the journey.”

Karishma – who was also an undergraduate at Kingston, being awarded a first class degree in Graphic Design in 2007 – secured her place with a CV which includes stints working for publisher Phaidon Press and the Royal Society of Arts in London and for internationally renowned design agency Pentagram in Berlin.

The aim of the journey is to encourage a spirit of entrepreneurship among Indian youngsters and turn “job seekers into job creators”. Most of the passengers will be aged 20–25 and earning less than 120 rupees (about £1.50) a day. They will be accompanied by a select few foreign students with an interest in India’s development, such as Karishma, and experienced design professionals who will be giving talks. At each stop, the passengers will visit people who are already working on solutions to their country’s development and youth unemployment problems.

Karishma is anticipating a very inspiring journey. “I think it’ll be intense,” she said. “Those 15 days on the train are going to be packed with fascinating speakers, visits and discussions, I want to document as much of it as possible for the students and staff back at Kingston University.”

She’s hoping to build close friendships with other participants on the trip with whom she’ll be able to collaborate in the future. “I feel confident that this experience is going to be a huge boost to my career as a designer and curator,” she said.

Although Karishma’s mother’s family is from India, this will be Karishma’s first visit to the subcontinent. Her grandparents were born in Sindh province, which, after the partition of India in 1948, became part of Pakistan. They emigrated, eventually settling in Spain.

“From a personal, cultural perspective, it’s really important,” she said. “My mum is overjoyed for me as well. She hasn’t been to India since she was a child.”

During her first stint at Kingston University, Karishma was part of a team which won a Royal Society of Arts Design Directions award. “Karishma always demonstrates an imaginative understanding of problems,” senior lecturer in graphic design, Marion Morrison, who taught Karishma at the time, said. “Karishma sees experimental design potential in everything she comes into contact with. She’s bound to inspire people she meets on the way and to work selflessly to contribute to any team situation.”

Kingston University’s MA in Curating Contemporary Design is run in conjunction with the Design Museum. The course has partnerships with institutions in London and throughout the world. As part of the course, Karishma will also visit the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou during the Spring. “It’ll be interesting to compare the design industries in China and India,” she said. “India’s is younger than China’s – but there’s a real buzz about it. The Indian people have such amazing skills so there’s a lot of potential there.”

Karishma will be blogging about the journey at www.designyatri.wordpress.com

 

Pictures copyright Rain Design.