Fabrica studios under
[a continuation of https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:44e0540587e5 in case it's lost]
"âŚSo where we once had a Film department full of six or seven film-makers ...
Film_previously
... we now have a studio called "Document"âlooking at the changing forms of documentary, across all media, as well as the practice of documenting projects as design inputâwhich is comprised of a multidisciplinary team that should look like this soon:
Documentstudio2
What is the benefit of this, in practice?
Well, we have a studio dubbed "Being & Dying", for example, which addresses 'end of life' (more info here.) Ask a room full of industrial designers to address this issue and, with all due respect, you might variations on a better coffin. Ask architects, you might get a better aged care residence. Graphic designers might come up with a better design for some palliative care guidelines. No bad things in themselves; just that it's unlikely to produce the step-change we now need (I've been through all this before here, explaining why a Department of Health can no longer improve, "solve" or properly address our health, and so on.)
And no disrespect to the disciplines mentioned; it's just that's what most of our education does to people: locks them onto these tracks, "disciplining" them to produce what it is supposed that industry needs, actively constraining the tools they use and the practice model they exist within. Architects are generally trained to create buildings; as if a building is always the answerâonly the very best, breaking outside of that mould (a Cedric Price for instance), tend to be free enough thinkers and practitioners (Price's solution of a divorce instead springs to mind.)
The problem is this: the world has got more complex, and actually more interesting. Yet our institutionsâeducation, government and much of enterpriseâare still structured as if it's the 19th century. (Education in particular: yes, there are all kinds of radical disruptions happening and about to happen, but broadly, much education is still working through 19th century or mid-20th century models. Cue obligatory Ken Robinson speech.)
And so Fabrica must be in another mode. We are on the end of this formal education systemâalong with an emerging set of other entities, such as CIID, Strelka, Sandberg Instituut, Design Academy Eindhoven and a few othersâand I see our role as a potential "Unfinishing School", designed to bust open that thinking and re-explore the broader possibilities that 20th century education has closed down (note again Ken Robinson's anecdotes on how divergent thinking is actually diminished by education.)
So our studios might develop the better coffin, the better aged care centre, the better leaflets, sensitive preventatitve health campaigns, thought-provoking art, but importantly, more besides, including entirely new things emerging from the synthesis of all these skills, perspectives and technologies.
Disciplinary thinking is certainly still required, to my mind, and should be developed at earlier stages of education (though even here there are interesting questions about how and when, and to what extentâgiven the new tools available to the auto-didact, and the greater respect afforded to learning in practice, once again. I had several great conversations about this in Melbourne a couple of weeks ago about thisâwith Jeremy Yuille and Martyn Hook at RMIT, and John Warwicker and Justin O'Connor at Monash University.)
But at research stage, where we are, we can assume a strong stem of disciplinary craft has already been developedâthey don't get in otherwiseâand that our job is to broaden perspectives through juxtaposing that disciplinary craft with out disciplines, other cultures, other perspectives. (I also like Joi Ito's thinking that what we really need are interdisciplinary peopleâif not antidisciplinary organisations. I couldn't agree more, for what it's worth, though I also know that we'll need a diversity of personality typesâplants, shapers and finishers, for instanceâto really deliver.)
(To continue a bit of practice development, we are setting up "guilds" that run alongside the studios; these are essentially social practices to maintain those conversations, those interestsâguild leaders get a small budget to take discipline-oriented groups of people to exhibitions, to buy some books, show some films in our cinema, or just pull people together in a bar when they just want to talk kerning, 3D printers or the work of Walter Murch for a bit.)
The studio model also gives a fluidity the departmental model cannot allow; it enables us to 'boot up' a studio, perhaps in response to a client or particular scenario, relatively easilyâwhich is not so easy with a disciplinary context, unless you continually invent new disciplines, which is considerably harder. It also enables people to move between studios, and between projects (something that had been unnecessarily difficult previously.) The number of studios is limited only by our resources, rather than the number of core disciplines in the world, and it enables us to broaden horizons considerably. For instance, our first set of studios cover topics as broad as politics, death, journalism, and urban cultures, for example.
A key component is that it is also built for collaboration. We are actively looking for partners who want to work in this way. This means an external partner can financially sponsor a Fabrica studio in order to publicly explore their particular areas of interest (if it's of interest to us too, of course.)
Yourstudiohere
If you're interested, get in touch with me via here.
And if you're 25 or under, and want to develop your thinking and practice in one of these areas, you can apply for a Fabrica scholarship.
Your name here
So far, the response, from inside and outside, has been positive. We're in active conversations with at least four major educational establishments about the Fabrica Studio modelâthey are keen to learn by participating, and observing from the inside, particularly around their research agendas which they know can no longer be constrained by "faculty thinking"âand also with a few potential commercial clients who are interested in sponsoring a studio. Our ability to produce tangible outputsâthrough makingâand expertly communicate them, means that it's R&D, product development, media and communications simultaneously. Should be interesting.
The current set of Fabrica studios is listed here and below, and there will be more to follow in the coming months, no doubt.
FABRICA STUDIOS 2013
BEING AND DYING Studio Lead: Ivor Williams Researching and investigating current approaches to dying, through experimental design focusing on end-of-life care, assisted dying and suicide. Including broader issues around health and the environment, preventative and holistic healthcare, to challenge the notion of death in stark opposition to life. Utilising a wide range of approaches and perspectives, projects will develop new dialogues and models to engage with some of the most deep-rooted taboos in contemporary society. We use Fabrica as a test-bed and experimental environment, and produce books, essays, films, apps, self-directed research projects in collaboration with partners that range from experimental aesthetic reflectionsâdesign fictions, media, exhibitions, installationsâthrough to service design- and experience design-led engagements with clients, such as health services, clinics, schools. Follow our activities on tumblr and twitter.
CAMPAIGN! Studio Lead: Erik Ravelo The Campaign studio reinvents the contemporary campaign, drawing on social movements, guerilla campaigns, new enterprise and innovative social media. It explores the emerging DNA of social innovation and organisation, working particularly with Benettonâs projects. Its focus is challenging social and cultural issues: wars, censorship, diversity, inequality, environment, religion. The studio deploys arresting imagery to capture attention, and tools to build genuine resilience.
COLORS Studio Lead: Patrick Waterhouse COLORS is a quarterly magazine published in six bilingual editions: English + Italian, French, Spanish, Korean, Portuguese and Chinese, and distributed worldwide. Each issue covers a single topic, from Transport to Shit to Art, questioning and deconstructing through in-depth research that always begins with an idea. COLORS stretches the limits of what print can be, and also works across media including books, videos, internet, installations and exhibitions. More at colorsmagazine.com/
DESIGN DIALOGUES Studio Lead: Sam Baron We produce artefacts that bring a unique view or statement to a particular context, produced through design processes that are questioned each time. We work with languages and dialogues, visual and spoken sketches, hybrid products and approaches, and through constant editing. It enables us to create collections that absorb and build upon our own cultural differences and habits, drawn from several parts of the world, and yet address the context we are working with. We work on different scales from artisanal to industrial, from conceptual projects to international exhibitions, always paying attention to meanings and how things are done, in order to deliver the best experience to customers, clients, viewers and participants.
DOCUMENT Studio Lead: Ries Straver The Document Studio focuses on documentary and documentation as an integral part of the creative process. We employ the languages and techniques of audio-visual documentation and digital storytelling to reflect on current social and cultural issues. We investigate the blurry line between fiction and non-fiction. We document with the aim to understand, but we use documentary to pose questions rather than give simplistic answers. We make film, video and animation and web-based media. In many cases a combination of those; hybrid projects across different platforms. Our stories are about real things, yet our work is based on ideas and imagination.
NETWORKED POLITICS Studio Leads: Joseph Grima and Marco Ferrari The Network Politics studio explores how cultures of decision-making, from formal politics to informal protest, have radically evolved in the age of the network. We observe the changing nature of protest both as a collective and individual activity - movements such as Occupy, the Indignados and the Arab Spring, or the digital activism of Wikileaks and Anonymous - reading it in relation to the physical space of the city. We are interested in social and political crises triggered by new technologies and the shifts in the balance of power they bring about. We engage peer-to-peer economies, decentralized currencies, radical transparency and open source culture to develop tools of social innovation for the digital era. We work on research, design and communications projects with clients from governments to galleries, in order to effect real change, as well as producing our own media, documentaries, exhibitions, platforms and objects, software, scenarios and events. Follow our activities on tumblr.
SLOW JOURNALISM Studio Lead: Enrico Bossan We are a growing force made of multi-media storytellers and journalists. We believe that investigating social and cultural change, through researching and shining a light on events, makes the economic and political powers ruling a society accountable. Our challenge is to cover the unseen, the forgotten, and the invisible neglected by traditional media. We publish and distribute self-directed journalistic reportage, photography projects, narrative works, multimedia and video documentary. To understand contemporary reality and its abrupt changes, we evolve with its communication tools.
SOUND INTERACTIONS Studio Lead: Francesco Novara We explore the relationship between sound and objects, spaces, people and interactions. We use sound as a starting point, but the outcome might be objects, media, events and artefacts. Sound is one of the least understood yet most powerful senses and we produce self-directed research projects, in collaboration with partners, that explore the power of sound as interface, as medium, and as environment. These are often installations or artefacts, produced via a multidisciplinary team capable of producing spaces, media, objects and sounds as holistic experiences. We design new interfaces and experience around music, as well as exploring new formats and models for music and musicians in addition to making and performing music.
URBAN CODES Studio Lead: Aaron Siegel Our Urban Codes studio creates new tools in order to better understand contemporary cities, citizens and urban cultures. It focuses on how people interact with each other and their environment, the changing norms of living in cities, how people navigate and communicate in their urban environments, and the types of artifacts, markings and patterns that urban cultures create both physically and virtually. Urban Codes creates exhibitions, installations, media, apps and artifacts in order to articulate research about how contemporary communications technology is changing the way we live, work, play, organise and create in cities, buildings and communities. Follow our activities on tumblr."