Shop > Monographs

Out of Stock
#15551

Immutable: Designing History

Date
2022
Publisher
Onomatopee
Format
Monographs
ISBN
978-94-93148-42-0
Size
5 × 7.8 inches
Length
126 pp
Genre
History, History
Description

Immutable: Designing History explores the banal genre of the document and its entanglement with statecraft and colonial(ism/ity). This is framed as a ~5,000 year chronology, imbricating the developments of money and writing — from Mesopotamian clay tablets to distributed ledgers, like the blockchain. Immutability figures as a design imperative and hermeneutic for considering a variety of techniques (material, technological, administrative, etc.) of securitization against the entropy of a document’s movement through space/time, and the political.

This project is driven by a contrast: design educators tend to teach forms like logos, books, websites, etc., but not passports, money, property deeds, etc., in spite of these being, I contend, design’s most profoundly consequential forms.

As an alternative historiography, Immutable gestures both towards anthropologist Laura Nader’s call to “study up” (on those in power), and the radical educator Paolo Freire’s recognition of the “limit situation” as a generative condition for emancipatory praxis. The book’s aim is to orient graphic design towards the vocation of imagining, naming, and remembering beyond the horizons of its role as a managerial, administrative, and colonial instrument that imposes a rationality of vision and accountability upon what is knowable, thinkable and sayable.

  1. immutable 1
  2. immutable 2
  3. immutable 3
  4. immutable 4
Images:1234
 

Related Items

  1. Colin Campbell and Jon Davies: More Voice-Over: Colin Campbell Writings
  2. Paul Chan: 2000 Words
  3. Arnaud Gerspacher: The Owls Are Not What They Seem: Artist as Ethologist
  4. Dan Graham and Josh Thorpe: Dan Graham, Pavilions: a guide
  5. Aime Iglesias Lukin: This Must Be the Place: An Oral History of Latin American Artists in New York, 1965-1975
  6. Adam Lauder: Out of School: Information Art and the Toronto School of Communication
  7. Stan Douglas: Abbott & Cordova, 7 August 1971
  8. Gareth Long: Kidnappers Foil
  9. Nathalie Zonnenberg: Conceptual Art in a Curatorial Perspective
  10. Liisa-Rávná Finbog and Katya García-Antón: Čatnosat. The Sámi Pavilion, Indigenous Art, Knowledge and Sovereignty
  11. Cory Arcangel and Stine Janvin: Identity Pitches
  12. Georgiana Uhlyarik  and Wanda Nanibush: Toronto: Tributes + Tributaries, 1971-1989
  13. Erwin Wurm: Onomatopee 37: Laughing Prohibited!
  14. Katrin Koffman: Ensembles Assembled: In Full Color
  15. Movements and Centres
  16. Grete Neseblod: The True Meaning of S.M.H.
  17. Mina Stone: Cooking for Artists
  18. Kaari Upson: 2000 Words
  19. WRITTEN ON THE WIND: Lawrence Weiner Drawings
  20. Jeff Wall
  21. Leo Amino, Minoru Niizuma, and John Pai: The Unseen Professors
  22. Adriano Pedrosa and Tomás Toledo: Afro-Atlantic Histories
  23. Tiffany Sia: On and Off-Screen Imaginaries
  24. Peter MacCallum: Documentary Projects 2005 - 2015
  25. Ariella Azoulay: The Civil Contract of Photography
  26. Edith Heath: Philosophies
  27. Russell Miller: magnum: Fifty years at the front line of history
  28. grupa o.k. (J. Myers and J. Szupinska): Supplement 4: Stagelessness
  29. Abigail Solomon-Godeau: Photograph at the Dock
  30. David Diviney and Tom Sherman: Exclusive Memory
  31. Niele Toroni: Catalogue Raisonnable, 1967 - 1987, 20 Ans d’Empreintes
  32. T&T: Onward Future
  33. Jan Wade: Soul Power
  34. Rose Marasco: At Home
  35. Esra Akcan: Abolish Human Bans: Intertwined Histories of Architecture
  36. FASTWÜRMS Donky@Ninja@Witch: A Living Retrospective
  37. Tila L. Kellman and Michael Snow: Figuring Redemption: Resighting myself in the art of Michael Snow
  38. Marina Roy: Sign after the X
  39. Meschac Gaba