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Myth, symbol, ornament: The loss of meaning in transitionEngels-Schwarzpaul, Anna-Christina January 2001 (has links)
Whole document restricted, see Access Instructions file below for details of how to access the print copy. / How meaning is articulated, suggested or repressed in transition processes is an inherently social phenomenon. The history of theorising about ornament bears evidence to this as much as do current practices of ornamentation. From myths, as narratives of meaning, to ‘mere ornament’ – the various signifying practices (and forms of life within which they take place) determine how meaning changes. People will perceive such change differently, depending on their perspectives and circumstances and, under certain conditions, change can be conceived of as loss. This thesis, in its theoretical part, explores issues pertaining to meaning and ornament in epistemology, philosophy, sociology, semiotics, aesthetics and psychoanalysis. In its practical part it seeks to make connections with signifying practices involving ornament in the life-worlds of users, the use of ornament in public buildings, bicultural relationships involving appropriation or misappropriation, and the education of designers in New Zealand. For that, data derived from four empirical research projects are presented and theorised. In the fourth part, theories and practices are brought together to shed light on struggles with ornamental meaning in the past and in the present. Theories, with their classification of myths, symbols and ornament, ignore wide ranges of signifying practices and privilege some form of significations at the expense of others. Because of their separation from the language- games and forms of life of ornamental practice, they often fail to grasp issues that are important to non-theorists. All the research projects demonstrated that the large majority of participants like and relate to ornament. They also showed, however, that Pakeha traditions of ornament are not only perceived to have suffered the same historical rupture as those in the West but also that the theoretical discreditation upon which they were based was used as a tool of oppression when applied to Maori art. Attempts to explain bicultural practices of appropriation or misappropriation without reference to the history of colonisation and present power configurations must fail. Whether or not a cultural image retains or loses its meaning depends on factors such as knowledge, understanding, relationality and co-operation. If culture is, however, treated as a resource for commodification – as it is by the culture industries – cultural elements are subjected to rules inherent in marketing and capitalist economies and their meaning is deliberately changed. Those who ought to be able to deal competently with these issues (designers and other cultural intermediaries) receive little in their education to prepare them for the ornamental strategies and tactics of their future clients. The academic environment is still largely determined by modernist agendas, and ornament as a topic and as practice – continues to be repressed. If a meaningful ornamental language and practice relevant to Aotearoa is to be shared, created, and sustained the divisions between theory and the life-world need to be interrogated; the distance through an assumed superiority of Pakeha to Maori history, culture and people relinquished; and a type of conversation must commence that takes seriously the Treaty of Waitangi as the founding document of this country. The partnership concept of this document facilitates conversation about differential positions and rules and can ‘take us out of our old selves by the power of strangeness, to aid us in becoming new beings’ (Rorty, 1980: 289).
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Esthétique et pratique de la conception sonore au théâtre : le cas de la compagnie de théâtre d’objets La Pire EspèceBézier, Laurianne 05 1900 (has links)
La conception sonore au théâtre est une pratique artistique à part entière présentant des
enjeux multidisciplinaires. Celle-ci joue un rôle particulier dans le cadre du théâtre d’objets,
un genre théâtral où les objets de la vie quotidienne, comme une théière ou un chapeau, ne
sont plus de simples accessoires de théâtre, mais servent d’effigies, évoquent des personnages
ou encore créent de nouveaux espaces scéniques. L’objectif principal de ce mémoire est de
mieux cerner les rôles dramaturgiques que le son peut endosser dans un théâtre marginal tel
que le théâtre d’objets.
Pour ce faire, nous nous intéressons au cas particulier du Théâtre de La Pire Espèce, une
compagnie montréalaise créée en 1999 dont les créations ont été maintes fois primées tant
au Québec qu’à l’international. La Pire Espèce constitue un riche terrain de recherche et ses
conceptions sonores participent à construire son esthétique dramatique très claire et travaillée.
La compagnie documente d’ailleurs sa pratique à l’aide de billets de blogs et d’extraits vidéo
accessibles gratuitement en ligne. En outre, ses membres fondateurs, Olivier Ducas et Francis
Monty, s’appliquent à nommer et à définir les processus qu’ils mettent au point et sont aussi
formateurs en théâtre d’objets.
La méthodologie adoptée par la présente recherche repose sur des analyses d’extraits de pièces
(mettant l’accent sur la conception sonore), des observations du processus de création de la
compagnie, ainsi que des entrevues avec des artistes collaborateur·rice·s ou membres de la
compagnie. Croisant les perspectives musicologiques et théâtrologiques, ce travail vise ainsi à
déterminer les caractéristiques de l’esthétique sonore de La Pire Espèce et à mettre en lumière
la dynamique collaborative et interdisciplinaire qui a permis de la développer. / Theater sound design is an artistic practice presenting multidisciplinary issues.
It plays an essential role in objects theater, a theatrical genre in which objects of everyday life,
such as a teapot or a hat, are no longer basic theater accessories. They become meaningful,
evoking characters.
The aim of this master’s thesis is to better understand the numerous functions of sound in a
marginal theater such as objects theater.
For this purpose, this research will explore the case of the theater of La Pire Espèce, a
company from Montreal created in 1999. Their creations, especially their sound design, has
received several awards in Canada and Europe, and represent an interesting research area.
On one hand, sound design is an important element which actively participates in forming their
dramatic aesthetic. On the other hand, the company maintain records of a rich documentation
of their practice with blogs and video extracts available online. The artistic directors of La
Pire Espèce, Olivier Ducas and Francis Monty, theorize their theatrical process and propose
objects theater classes.
The methodology used throught this research consists in interviews with collaborators or
members of the company, in observations of the creative process and in audiovisual captations
analysis extracts. At the cross of musicology and theatrology, this research aims to understand
the factors contributing to the sound aesthetic of La Pire Espèce and to highlight the role of
collaboration and interdisciplinarity in building it.
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Envisioning 3D learning environments in environmental education: an exploration of the Konza PrairieWebb, Natalie January 1900 (has links)
Master of Landscape Architecture / Landscape Architecture/Regional and Community Planning / Howard D. Hahn / “There is an alarming gap between awareness and action on [environmental issues]”
(Sheppard, 2005). Public awareness of how to cope and change with these issues is lacking (Sheppard, 2004; Nicholson-Cole, 2005; Dockerty et al., 2005), but new visualization technologies can begin to bridge the gap through environmental education.
Environmental education focuses on the user exploring an environment, environmental
issues, problem solving and ways to mitigate these issues. While the younger generations (middle to high school students) are much more aware of current and future environmental issues than older generations, the solutions to these problems may not be so apparent. By combining the need to educate young adults about climate change, regional ecosystem climate mitigation, and ecological management for technologically driven youth, middle and high school students can better understand their environment’s impact on climate-change regulation. Through literature synthesis, documentation of existing visualization exhibits and technologies, and preliminary technology exploration, a production process, criteria, framework, and technology recommendations were established. These components informed the final storyboards, which visually organized a proposal to build a 3D learning environment focused on the Konza Prairie and its ecological management practices.
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The relationship between product design and business models in the context of sustainabilityColby, Charles 08 1900 (has links)
Dans les sphères du développement durable, des modèles d’affaires et du design de produit, certains leviers rendent le croisement de ces trois sphères de plus en plus pertinent. Au croisement de ces trois sphères se trouve une opportunité de comprendre les relations existantes entre le design de produit et les modèles d’affaires afin d’aider les décideurs à développer des solutions davantage durables.
L’approche méthodologique de cette recherche utilise un système complexe et est basée sur un paradigme pragmatique. En vue de répondre à la question « Dans quelle mesure des modèles d’affaires et le design de produit sont liés dans un contexte de développement durable? », cette recherche a soigneusement analysé trois cas: Better Place, une compagnie californienne ayant développé une infrastructure permettant le chargement des voitures électriques; Interface Inc., un manufacturier mondial de tuiles de tapis commerciales établi à Atlanta; et Métacycle, un concept d’entreprise développé par une équipe de chercheurs en design à Montréal. Chaque cas a été analysé en corrélant des aspects du design de produit à des éléments de leur modèle d’affaires.
Les résultats montrent que dans le contexte du développement durable, le design de produit et les modèles d’affaires sont interdépendants. Les résultats peuvent être résumés en six points: il existe des relations applicables universellement; les innovations de design substantielles jouent un rôle important dans le développement durable; la « durabilité » peut être une qualité émergente d’un modèle d’affaires; les partenariats peuvent être vitaux pour l’intégration des systèmes; un modèle de services a des bénéfices et des limitations considérables; le design peut agir comme levier à l’utilisation d’énergies renouvelables. Pratiquer simultanément l’innovation du modèle d’affaires et du produit peut apporter une valeur ajoutée, susciter des opportunités et augmenter l’efficience sur plusieurs facettes. Toutefois, les risques et les coûts de tels procédés sont souvent très élevés.
En aidant à comprendre et définir comment les trois sphères mentionnées plus tôt sont interdépendantes, cette recherche pourrait idéalement inspirer des recherches supplémentaires sur le sujet. L’application par des organisations de la méthodologie et des apprentissages résultant de cette recherche peut permettre à d’autres d’utiliser le croisement entre l’innovation de produit et l’innovation du modèle d’affaires afin de résoudre des enjeux sociaux et environnementaux complexes. / Certain drivers in the fields of sustainability, business models, and product design are making the intersection between these three fields increasingly relevant. At this intersection is the opportunity to understand the relationships that exist between product design and business models to help decision makers develop more sustainable solutions.
The methodology of this research uses a complex systems approach and is grounded in a pragmatist paradigm. To answer the question “In the context of sustainability, in what way are business models and product design related?”, this research has carefully analysed three cases: Better Place, a US based company that has developed a charging infrastructure for electric cars; Interface Inc., a global commercial carpet tile manufacturer based in Atlanta, Georgia; and Metacycle, a company concept developed by a team of design researchers in Montréal, Québec. Each case is analysed by correlating aspects of product design to elements of the business model and assessing how these relationships affect the sustainability of the company.
The results show that product design, business models, and sustainability are inextricably connected. The results can be summarized in six key insights: there are universally applicable relationships; discontinuous design innovation can play a vital role in sustainability; sustainability is an emergent quality of a business model; key partnerships support systems level integration; a service revenue model has significant benefits and limitations; design innovation can help drive the shift to renewable energy. Conducting business model innovation and product innovation simultaneously can have large payouts in the form of creating new value, uncovering opportunities, and increasing efficiencies many fold, however the risks and costs of such a process are often very high.
Applying the methodology and lessons of this research to one’s own organization could help to uncover new opportunities for innovation and help create more sustainable solutions. This research, by helping to understand and define how these areas are inextricably related and interdependent, will hopefully inspire further research on the subject and help others to use the intersection between product design and business model innovation to solve complex problems, be they social, environmental or otherwise.
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Regards des praticiens en design industriel sur les dimensions identitaires de la pratique du design au QuébecSimard, Eve-Line 09 1900 (has links)
Cette recherche pose un regard sur l’articulation des changements sociétaux émergeant de la négociation entre les mondes globaux et locaux et leurs impacts sur la sphère professionnelle du design industriel au Québec. Nous proposons de mettre en lumière les dimensions identitaires qui caractérisent la pratique du design industriel. Nous référons aux théories de l’identité, aux théories de la globalisation et au contexte particulier de la pratique du design québécois à travers ses aspects socioculturel, politique et économique. Le concept d’identité nous permet d’explorer l’interprétation des designers de leur pratique professionnelle dans un contexte désormais glocal (Robertson, 1995). Suivant une démarche qualitative basée sur les entretiens en profondeur, nous explorons l’interprétation du caractère identitaire de l’activité professionnelle auprès de trois générations de designers. Nous examinons également le sens qu’ils prêtent au concept de communauté du design, à leur système de valeurs et à l’avenir du design industriel québécois. / The following research examines societal changes that have emerged as the result of the negotiation between global and local influences on the profession of industrial design in Quebec. The study attempts to articulate these changes by analyzing theories and processes of identity and globalization. By reviewing current literature on the socio-cultural, political and economic dimensions of design, we will complete a portrait and highlight the complexities of the current state of industrial design in the province. Through qualitative interviews of nine practicing designers, divided into three generations, we will present an actual overview of the practice of industrial design in Quebec. In doing so, we will investigate the multidimensional aspects of their practice as well as explore their professional community and the value systems that influence their actions. This will provide a critique from the designers perspective of their practice, as well as their view of the future of design in Quebec.
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Biomimicry and innovation in sustainable design : understanding its innovation supporting characteristics compared to ecodesignMichel, Yves A 04 1900 (has links)
Depuis la dernière décennie, le biomimétisme est une discipline en plein essor dans le monde du design durable. De plus en plus, cette stratégie prend place dans plusieurs facettes du design, que ce soit dans le design industriel, dans l’architecture ou encore dans le design urbain. Le livre de Janine Benyus intitulé Biomimétisme: Quand la Nature Inspire des Innovations Durables (1997) est largement reconnu comme étant le catalyseur de la stratégie et comme l’indique le titre du livre, le biomimétisme est très souvent associé à l’innovation.
Le but principal de cette recherche est de mieux comprendre le lien entre le biomimétisme et l’innovation. Cette recherche sur le biomimétisme comprend un objectif mineur et deux objectifs majeurs. Le premier objectif cherche à comprendre le véritable lien entre le biomimétisme et l’écodesign. Le second objectif vise non seulement à valider la théorie selon laquelle le biomimétisme est une stratégie menant à des solutions de design innovantes, mais également à établir quels types d’innovations ont été générés par cette stratégie. Finalement, le troisième objectif est d’identifier les aspects du biomimétisme qui mènent à des solutions de design innovantes. Pour accomplir ces objectifs, cette recherche utilisera une approche qualitative supportée par des études de cas et une revue de littérature.
Afin de contextualiser les deux derniers objectifs, cette étude établit que le biomimétisme et l’écodesign sont des stratégies complémentaires plutôt qu’en compétition. Les conclusions de cette recherche démontrent que la théorie proposant que le biomimétisme soit une stratégie d’innovation est valide et que la discipline est surtout apte à générer l’innovation radicale. Finalement, la recherche indique que l’analogie de distance et la transdisciplinarité sont les deux aspects du biomimétisme aidant à produire des solutions de design innovantes.
Le biomimétisme est mieux connu dans le contexte du design durable et cette recherche permet de mieux comprendre le biomimétisme dans le contexte de l’innovation. Considérant que le biomimétisme est une discipline qui suscite beaucoup d’intérêt des milieux académiques et privés, cette recherche participe à l’expansion de la connaissance sur le sujet et propose de nouvelles pistes de recherche sur le biomimétisme et l’innovation. / Biomimicry is a growing design discipline that has gained much recognition throughout the last decade in sustainable design. The bioinspired design approach is finding its way across design disciplines from product design to architecture and urban design. The book, Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature, by Janine Benyus is credited to launch the design movement and as indicated in the title, biomimicry is often presented as a strategy for design innovation.
The goal of this thesis is to gain a better understanding of biomimicry in the context of innovation. This study has two principal objectives and a minor objective. The first objective aims at understanding the correlation between biomimicry and ecodesign. The second objective is to validate the notion that biomimicry is a strategy supporting design innovation by establishing what kinds of innovation has been spawned by this approach. And finally the third objective is to identify the aspects of biomimicry that lead to innovative design solutions. To fulfill these objectives, this research will employ a qualitative approach and supported literature review and case studies.
To contextualize the last two objectives, the study clarifies that the qualitative approach of biomimicry and the quantitative approach of ecodesign are actually complimentary and thus together form a more comprehensive approach to sustainable design. The findings of this study also validate that biomimicry supports innovation, specifically radical innovation. To finalize, the study demonstrates that the two aspects of biomimicry responsible for innovation are the use of distant analogy and transdisciplinarity.
Biomimicry is typically observed in the context of sustainability and this thesis aims to observe and understand biomimicry in the context of innovation. Given the growing interest in biomimicry by academia and the private sector, this research also will propose new paths of research in biomimicry and innovation and thus hopefully provoke new insights on the subject.
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War brides: a practice-based examination of translating women’s voices into textile artBeccue-Barnes, Wendy Davis January 1900 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy / Department of Apparel, Textiles, and Interior Design / Sherry J. Haar / Research about military wives has been limited. In academia, most research centers on the soldier and/or the family as a unit. When literature does address only the wife’s perspective it rarely presents a positive portrayal of her life. However, it is not just literature that shows a gap in exposing the voice of the military wife. Art-based works rarely focus on her perspective; and methodologies, such as practice-based research, rarely utilize actual voices as inspiration. The aim of the current study was to discover the voice of the military wife, examine it through a feminist lens, and then translate those voices into artwork that represented the collective, lived experience of the women interviewed. Three methodologies were utilized to analyze and translate the voices of military wives into textile art. These three methodologies: practice-based research, phenomenology, and feminist inquiry provided a suitable structure for shaping the study to fulfill the project aim. Interviews conducted with 22 military wives revealed two overarching themes: militarization and marriage; as well as multiple subthemes. Three subthemes were recognized as being the most prominent: relationships, separation, and collective experience. These themes were used as the inspiration for the creation and installation of three textile art pieces. The current study serves to fill the gaps in both the literature and the artistic process by presenting both the positive and negative aspects of the military wife’s lived experience and using that lived experience as inspiration for textile art.
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Changing the nature of the city: integrating phytoremediation for the future of Kansas City.Mallinckrodt, Stephanie January 1900 (has links)
Master of Landscape Architecture / Department of Landscape Architecture/Regional and Community Planning / Jason Brody / There are six square miles of vacant land spread throughout Downtown Kansas City unkempt and untouched for the fear of what may exist in the soil, air, and water and the consequences that come with it (COR Team 2010, EPA 1997). Not developing the vacant/underutilized land causes more harm than good for the city, the locals, and the environment. It costs the city loss of tax revenue (Holt 2002). It hurts locals’ property values and possibly health. It inhibits the environment’s functions with potential toxins. By activating vacant/underutilized land through phytoremediation and redevelopment, it can meet the needs of the projected population growth in the next 30 years, accommodate the Rock Island Corridor, and dissolve any threats of contamination. With the threat of possible contamination on the vacant/underutilized land, surrounding properties, and industrial properties within the culturally rich Jazz and Crossroads districts downtown, phytoremediation is used as a continuation of the Rock Island Corridor’s linear park system and transit in the city context while allowing for redevelopment.
The strategy examines regional to site specific strategies where phytoremediation is used to connect people to the environment, contain contaminant-producing places, and counteract contamination from new development. The development serves as a model for Kansas City to use the Rock Island Corridor to control site-specific problems as a catalyst for redevelopment of districts to solve large-scale issues through the use of phytoremediation. Phytoremediation allows for light contaminant production industries to remain functional and rely on phytoremediation to clean some of the waste to prevent excessive clean up in the future.
With the help of the phytoremediation and development, it allows for us to understand how phytoremediation works while preventing sites from becoming vacant/underutilized urban areas for the betterment of the community as a proactive strategy to prevent brownfields. Phytoremediation supports sustainable preventative/remediation strategies while catering to community needs such as redevelopment along Rock Island Corridor and Common Line, multi-modal transit, Metrogreen, character of place, and city life. It blends site suitability with community needs, while creating a cleaner more efficient environment that is aesthetically appealing.
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Understanding the past to imagine the future : the history of industrial design practice in AlbertaProchner, Isabel 03 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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L'orfèvrerie québécoise dans le contexte muséal : une relecture contemporaine de la Collection Henry Birks d'orfèvrerie canadienneBlain, Marie-Pier 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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