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    Die sanfte Stadt

  • Henk Slager (Ed.)

    The Postresearch Condition

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    Bauteile wiederverwenden. Ein Kompendium zum zirkulären…

  • Manuela Zechner

    Commoning Care & Collective Power. Childcare Commons…

  • W.v. Acker, T. Mical

    Architecture & Ugliness: Anti-Aesthetics and the Ugly…

  • Duncan Bell, Bernardo Zacka (Eds.)

    Political Theory and Architecture

  • Saikaku Toyokawa

    Yoyogi National Gymnasium And Kenzo Tange

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    Curating Digital Art: From Presenting and Collecting…

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    Dizionario Teatrale, Theater Dictionary, Theater Wörterbuch…

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    Caps Lock - How Capitalism Took Hold Of Graphic Design, And…

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    Art/Commons. Anthropology beyond Capitalism

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    (Forced) Movement. Across the Aegean Archipelago

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    Die Macht der Kunst

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    Illiberal Arts

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    Autobilder. Bleistiftzeichungen von Automobilen im gebauten…

  • Luis Berríos-Negrón

    Breathtaking Greenhouse Parastructures

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    IDEA 395. Designing the Digital World: Game Experience and…

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    The Turn of the Century. A Reader about Architecture within…

  • Stefano Harney, Fred Moten

    All Incomplete

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    Gemeinschaft der Ungewählten. Umrisse eines politischen…

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    Art Writing in Crisis

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    Why Are They So Afraid of the Lotus?

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    The Extreme Self. Age of You

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    Can the Monster Speak? Report to an Academy of…

  • Will McLean, Pete Silver

    Environmental Design Sourcebook. Innovative Ideas for a…

  • Walter D. Mignolo

    The Politics of Decolonial Investigations

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    Degeyter - Architect

  • Daniel Decker

    Not Available. Platten, die nicht erschienen sind

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    Stereophonica. Sound and Space in Science, Technology, and…

  • Sou Fujimoto

    Futurospektive Architektur

  • François Bonnet, Bartolomé Sanson (eds.)

    Spectres 2. Résonances / Resonances

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    Denkmalwelten und Erbediskurse

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    Das Neue Hoyerswerda. Ideenhaushalt, Aufbau und Diskurs der…

  • Peter Mörtenböck, Helge Mooshammer (Hg)

    Platform Urbanism and its discontents.

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    Valuing Architecture: Heritage and the Economics of Culture…

  • Dimitra Kondylatou, David Bergé (Eds.)

    The Architect is Absent. Approaching the Cycladic Holiday…

  • Matthew Fuller, Eyal Weizman

    Investigative Aesthetics. Conflicts and Commons in the…

  • Laura Raicovich

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    Undoing Optimization. Civic Action in Smart Cities

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    Power of Play. How play and its games shape life

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    Die Gefühletaktik | The Love Tactic

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    Activism at Home. Architects dwelling between politics,…

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    Philosophie der Migration

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    Glitch Feminismus. Ein Manifest

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  • Calla Henkel

    Other People's Clothes

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    1977. Eine kurze Geschichte der Gegenwart

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    The Ends of Art Criticism

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    Neue Materialismen zur Einführung

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    No Fixed Points: Dance in the Twentieth Century

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    Ideas Arrangements Effects: Systems Design and Social…

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    Computer Grrrls. HMKV Ausstellungsmagazin 2021/1

  • Claude Lévi-Strauss

    Strukturale Anthropologie Zero

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    Die Klimakrise und der Global Green New Deal. Die…

  • Amy Cimini, Bill Dietz (eds)

    Maryanne Amacher: Selected Writings and Interviews

  • Hélène Cixous (Wolfgang Hottner Hg.)

    Die meineidige Stadt oder das Erwachen der Erinyen

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    Architects After Architecture. Alternative Pathways for…

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  • Christine Eyene

    Sounds Like Her. Gender, Sound Art & Sonic Cultures

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    Sound and Affect. Voice, Music, World

  • Tobias Michnik und Leander Nowack

    Übergangsräume. Die Bushaltestellen auf der Berliner…

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  • Peter Sutherland

    Colorado

  • Elias Guenoun

    198 Wood Joints

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    Victor Papanek. Designer for the Real World

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    Wohnkonzerne enteignen! Wie Deutsche Wohnen & Co ein…

  • Elizabeth Ezra

    The Cinema of Things. Globalization and the Posthuman Object

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    Natural Enemies of Books. A Messy History of Women in…

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    Clean Living under Difficult Circumstances. Finding a Home…

  • Benjamin Bratton

    The Revenge of the Real. Politics for a Post-Pandemic World

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    Genossenschaften. Geschichte, Aktualität und Renaissance

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    Das Schaltbild. Philosophie des Fernsehens

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    Biennials: The Exhibitions We Love to Hate

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    Im Schatten von Design. Zur dunklen Seite der Gestaltung

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    NERD - New Experimental Research in Design 2

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    Nightswimming. Discotheques from the 1960s to the Present

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    Party Studies Vol. 1: Home Gatherings, Flat Events, Festive…

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    Harun Farocki. Unregelmäßig, nicht regellos. Texte 1986–2000

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    Architecture. From Prehistory to Climate Emergency

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    Design. Think. Make. Break. Repeat. A Handbook of Methods (…

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 394. Class for Graphic Design Circle of Education,…

IDEA 389. Feminist Moments: Thoughts on graphic design possibilities from the issue of gender

Direction by Idea
Design by LABORATORIES (Kensaku Kato, Hiroyuki Kishida)

The British art magazine Art Review ranks the most influential figures in the contemporary art world in its annual “Power 100.” In 2018, #MeToo ranked third place. The movement, which first spread around the world in 2017 following the sexual harassment accusations in Hollywood, is now expanding its influence into the art and design fields.

At around the same time in South Korea, a feminist novel Kim Ji-young, Born 1982 (Cho Nam-joo, Minumsa) became a big hit. The story of women living in the modern world, which until then had remained largely undiscussed, and the feeling of something being out of place—having to live through difficulties and face unreasonable circumstances and inequality as women—were described through the life of the main character, Kim Ji-young. The book struck a chord especially among the readers of the generation, and the Japanese version also recorded unusual sales. Starting with the “Korea, Feminism, and Japan” feature in the Bungei magazine (fall 2019) that summarized this trend, and with the additional help of Korean feminist literature, many people in Japan began to focus on gender bias in their immediate surroundings.

Looking at the gender situation in Japan, medical school entrance exam discrimination against female and repeat applicants that came to light in 2018 has caused a huge ripple effect. In response to this incident, gender equality became the main slogan at last year’s Aichi Triennale where they attracted attention by dividing the list of participants into almost equal numbers of male and female artists. Having stepped into an age where it feels more unnatural to remain ignorant of the gender issue, we find ourselves standing amid a “feminist moment,” regardless of our gender.

Faced with a society in which gender inequality exists, what questions can we ask through design? Graphic design, essentially, has the ability to challenge society through visual language. If this is true, what actions can designers take? This special feature was designed to introduce examples that delve into these ideas.

In addition to the aforementioned feminist movements, in South Korea, issues such as the sexual harassment problem in the art industry became apparent at around the same time. These incidences urged female designers in the graphic design industry to work on projects and exhibitions that focus on fellow female designers and their achievements. Our feature opens with two exhibitions, “The W Show: A List of Graphic Designers” and “Peony and Crab: Shim Woo Yoon Solo Show,” both of which were produced by female designers and introduced diverse examples of graphic design exhibitions.

While the former equally juxtaposed female designers from different generations through a list and database, the latter used the concept of a fictitious female designer. In it, seventeen designers produced and displayed various works that the fictitious artist would have produced, and the project attested to the participating designers’ shared intention to not be dictated by a fixed format or stereotype, or even by the fact that the titular artist is a “woman” and that the show is her “solo exhibition.” While their approach is different, neither of these two exhibitions was about showing a particular style; they were practices of speculative design that illuminated the attitudes of the graphic designers.

Among other Korean designers featured in this issue, new and old female designers from Japan, the United States, and Europe also lead their field and have pioneered their careers. However, they are not necessarily feminists, and not all are consciously confronting the gender issue. As was the case in the two exhibitions in South Korea, gender does not necessarily command a specific shape or design style, and it is not our intention to link gender and style in this feature. That is to say, in considering the possibilities of future graphic design, establishing such constraints as “female” and “male” is meaningless, and neither the creators nor the recipients of design should be bound by “style” or anything else inserted between brackets. In this feature, we decided to set a gender bias on the project itself to force us to return to that sense of ordinary. It is in addition to this that we contemplate how to question our society today and challenge the true value of design.


IDEA Magazine
IDEA 389. Feminist Moments: Thoughts on graphic design possibilities from the issue of gender
Seibundo Shinkosha, 2020, IDEA389 2020.4
36,00 €