( cont. )
While “design†objects nearly always have an underlying functional purpose – design is not the same as art, although it is increasingly encroaching on art’s aesthetic and provocative territory – the latter definition is more interesting because it implies that the judgment of the observer is the sole arbiter of the object’s non-functional value.
In fact, in the eyes of consumers, design often has nothing to do with function at all (when buying a car or a stereo, the way it works tends to be valued according to a set of criteria called “performanceâ€). Design is something distinct from function.
“Although people are constantly making pronouncements about what is good and bad design, what they are really talking about is taste (fickle and nebulous subjective opinions largely determined by conditioning rather than original insight),†says writer and curator Lesley Jackson. “Design itself has no inherent moral code. Super-decorative design (à la Tord Boontje) has just as much validity as ultra-functional design (à la Dyson). Both are manifestations of creativity, and both have their place in the modern world. Yes, I want my carpets cleaned properly, but I also want to be thrilled by an exquisite lamp.â€
Design retailers agree. “Design is anything and everything that surrounds us,†says Thorsten van Elten, who runs a design shop in central London. “The stuff in my shop is my taste, so my definition of design reflects my taste.†Van Elten stocks a selection of largely contemporary European homewares but also quirky handicrafts and traditional folk objects.
This is anathema to the purists. Since modernism was codified early in the 20th century the design establishment – designers, critics and writers, historians, quangos and museums – has enjoyed a monopoly on the identification of “good†design. With the bauhaus credo of “form follows function†as their yardstick, the exemplars they held up ostensibly derive their merit from the purity of intention and the rigour of execution.
Hence design history books are invariably full of a predictable roll-call of “classics†such as Mies van der Rohe chairs and Dieter Rams alarm clocks. To these elite taste-brokers, anything that did not display functional rigour, or which dangerously flirted with bourgeois decoration, could safely be relegated to the subordinate categories of “decorative arts†or, worse, “styleâ€.
But the opinions of this elite suddenly look dated, as the Design Museum row revealed, and stuff that would previously have been dismissed as frivolous or decadent is now being celebrated in exhibitions and the media. Function is no longer the benchmark of good design and the opinions of the old elite no longer hold such sway.
In many ways, design has been feminised. Most of the celebrated designers and critics of the last century were men and there is a hard-edged masculinity to much 20th-century design. Today’s more pluralistic design landscape has seen a renewed appreciation of decoration, colour and form for their own sakes. Dyson has a masculine taste for machinery; Rawsthorn is a woman who appreciates flower arranging.
On top of this, the nature of designers’ problem-solving role has changed profoundly in recent years. These days, most of the real work in this field is done by unsung programmers, software engineers and material scientists whose functional breakthroughs are all but formless. Modernism’s “machine aesthetic†is a meaningless slogan if the machinery is invisible: the main job of many industrial designers today is to help consumers form emotive bonds with dull circuitry.
Design is now considered to be a condition that certain objects are deemed to possess. And this condition is most definitely to do with how an object looks, as well as numerous intangible qualities the object confers on the consumer – status, fashionability, a sense of belonging and so on. People are as likely to buy “design†objects as an act of self-expression as to meet a functional requirement.
This is not a new phenomenon: people have always expressed themselves through their possessions. Christopher Dresser (now viewed as the first industrial designer) did it for the Victorian middle classes. The difference is that design has gone from being a minority interest to a mass-market phenomenon. And as the public’s interest in design has grown, so the number of people who feel qualified to act as brokers has expanded. A raft of new magazines, TV shows, websites, shops and exhibitions has sprung up to help consumers make decisions.
“Design is the taste of the elite,†says Sheridan Coakley, who runs east London design shop SCP – but there is now a new, and much larger, elite. People like Coakley and van Elten – and no doubt a high percentage of icon readers – probably have fairly similar taste, preferring things that are contemporary (that attempt to solve contemporary problems or address contemporary life); that are innovative rather than derivative; that tend to be mass-produced or batch-produced rather than crafted; that are usually the work of a named individual or team and/or produced by a reputed manufacturer; that are considered enduring (i.e. distinguishing them from faddish and trendy goods). They also tend to be rather expensive.
But a flick through one of the numerous interiors magazines, or a browse in any of the numerous “design†shops or fairs that have sprung up recently, shows that there are now multiple interpretations of what “good†design is.
Thus recent radio adverts for Linda Barker sofas claim that buying one will suddenly trigger an interest in good design, while Ikea’s hilarious new campaign features a spoof celebrity designer looking down his nose at the firm’s well-designed but cheap products. The elite may scoff, but to a certain type of consumer, these products most certainly are “designâ€. And with the advent of mass-market design, the consumer’s definition of “design†has become all-important.
Design schools are reflecting the shift of emphasis towards the consumer experience. “There’s a simplistic view of design which is that it’s a procedure with clearly defined stages,†says Simon Bolton, product design course director at London’s University of the Arts (formerly Central St Martins). “But the drivers and influences have changed radically in the last ten years. Previously it was about form, function and manufacture but now it’s about a whole range of softer issues: emotion, culture, politics and so on. It’s all about connecting with consumers in new ways.â€
This puts the consumer in direct emotional contact with the object without the need for a taste-setting middleman. It’s like music: you hear a particular song on the radio and it does something to you. Likewise, design is the difference between an artefact (or an environment, a space, a website or anything “createdâ€) that has meaning to you and one that doesn’t. And it is entirely subjective.
Dyson’s rationalist argument perhaps represents a desperate counter-attack by a school of thought that knows its days are numbered. “The old guard feel marginalised, they feel threatened,†says Tyler Brûlé, founder and former editor of Wallpaper. “There’s been a wholesale democratisation of design, not just in terms of price, but in terms of access. There are now more stakeholders; borders have been broadened. I think design is anything that improves the way you live. And if the consumer thinks an object that has no function but is a thing of beauty achieves that, then they have every right to declare that a piece of design.†We used to call this stuff objets d’art, but design has subsumed the decorative arts.
Naturally, as a former magazine editor, Brûlé argues that the media has been instrumental in widening the definition. Wallpaper was hugely influential in shifting the balance of power away from the designer and towards the consumer. In many ways it was dictatorial and elitist – it relentlessly pushed Scandinavian retro-modernism and insisted you flew to Stockholm personally to buy it – but it did at least put the emphasis on the act of consumption, rather than glorifying the process that led to the object’s creation. It also healthily broadened the definition of “good†design to include shipping container graphics and the seats on Russian passenger planes.
Wallpaper was also unashamedly about style and many people have never forgiven it for that. “Style†has long been a bogey word to those of a modernist persuasion, since it is considered something that is applied like icing on top of design to make it more palatable, or to mask an inherent weakness in the underlying design.
To the modernists, design was a noble undertaking with a clear, left-leaning social agenda: to harness mass production to provide ordinary folk (they weren’t called “consumers†in those days) with affordable, functional objects that would enable them to live better lives.
The aesthetic of functionalist modernism reflected a faith in the idea of technological progress. In retrospect, it is clear that modernism was an elitist aesthetic imposed from above. And however much modernists derided “style†as form without justification – as bourgeois and decadent – they were among the most dogmatic stylists in design history.
But style is still frowned upon. The following paragraph appears in a rambling 1,000-word discourse titled “what is design?†on the Design Council’s website (
www.designcouncil.org.uk): “There are many misconceptions about design. Sunday supplements and glossy magazines often use 'desgn' as a buzzword denoting style and fashion. While the toaster or corkscrew being featured may be well designed, the result is to feed the belief of would-be design clients that design is restricted to the surface of things and how they look, and that it's best employed at the end of the product development process.â€