TY - JOUR
T1 - Recoding abandoned products : student visual designers learn to sustain product lives and values
AU - Gill, Alison
AU - Mellick Lopes, Abby
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - This article outlines the development, delivery and evaluation of a student project for visual communicators in a second-year teaching unit where students are learn-ing about the communication contexts of product value and consumer attachment to commodities, shortening product life cycles and design's contribution to material and symbolic waste. The student exercise is part of a pedagogical strategy to seed education about sustainable design practices and was developed in response to an ongoing research project titled On Wearing. One of the recommendations of this project is to investigate the role of Visual Communication Design in supporting more enduring relatiotiships with existing products. The students were asked to employ the visual strategy of 'recoding' to reconceptualize abandoned products, a strat-egy of manipulating signs to suggest new values more aligned with the interests of sustainability. Recoding is a political semiotic strategy that draws upon the practice of 'culture jamming', a form of aesthetic subversion that destabilizes the meaning of corporate branding through the clever manipulation of visual signs. Here, we explore recoding as a value-creation strategy that could model and support more endur-ing relationships between products and people. This article reflects on the students' creative responses to the challenges of recoding within a learning context and evalu-ates the project's ability to advance the research findings, namely the potential for visual communications to function as a form of symbolic salvage and support for practices of resource recovery and reuse.
AB - This article outlines the development, delivery and evaluation of a student project for visual communicators in a second-year teaching unit where students are learn-ing about the communication contexts of product value and consumer attachment to commodities, shortening product life cycles and design's contribution to material and symbolic waste. The student exercise is part of a pedagogical strategy to seed education about sustainable design practices and was developed in response to an ongoing research project titled On Wearing. One of the recommendations of this project is to investigate the role of Visual Communication Design in supporting more enduring relatiotiships with existing products. The students were asked to employ the visual strategy of 'recoding' to reconceptualize abandoned products, a strat-egy of manipulating signs to suggest new values more aligned with the interests of sustainability. Recoding is a political semiotic strategy that draws upon the practice of 'culture jamming', a form of aesthetic subversion that destabilizes the meaning of corporate branding through the clever manipulation of visual signs. Here, we explore recoding as a value-creation strategy that could model and support more endur-ing relationships between products and people. This article reflects on the students' creative responses to the challenges of recoding within a learning context and evalu-ates the project's ability to advance the research findings, namely the potential for visual communications to function as a form of symbolic salvage and support for practices of resource recovery and reuse.
KW - culture jamming
KW - education
KW - recoding
KW - visual communication
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/518974
UR - http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=vth&AN=84199616&site=ehost-live&scope=site
U2 - 10.1386/adch.10.2.233_1
DO - 10.1386/adch.10.2.233_1
M3 - Article
SN - 1474-273X
VL - 10
SP - 233
EP - 253
JO - Art, Design and Communication in Higher Education
JF - Art, Design and Communication in Higher Education
IS - 2
ER -