[Artbeyondsightmuseums] Design Meets Disability
Lisa Yayla
fnugg at online.no
Mon Dec 28 11:33:44 UTC 2009
book review of Design Meets Disability by Graham Pullin
Even the sighted often suffer from a sort of blindness. When another
human being walks into their visual field with an "impairment," the
immediate reaction is frequently either to stare or to look away.
Whether witnessing genetic, geriatric or accidental injuries, healthy
people have an aversion to being reminded just how fragile their bodies
are. Consequently, a book called /Design Meets Disability/
<%20http://www.amazon.com/Design-Meets-Disability-Graham-Pullin/dp/0262162555/?tag=core77-20>
isn't the first thing that a "fashionable" designer might pick up off
the shelf no matter how sexy amputee/paraplegic Aimee Mullins happens to
be, nor how gorgeous Cutler and Gross's eyewear advertisements appear
... and that, um, short-sightedness is rather unfortunate. Although it
was released a while ago, Pullin's book is worth a look.
http://www.core77.com/blog/book_reviews/book_review_design_meets_disability_by_graham_pullin_15597.asp
Design Meets Disability
http://www.amazon.com/Design-Meets-Disability-Graham-Pullin/dp/0262162555/?tag=core77-20#noop
A talk with Graham Pullin
excerpt
A WHEELCHAIR CAPE is a large, tent-like piece of waterproof clothing
used by the wheelchair-bound to keep dry in the rain. A cross between a
giant bib and a barber's smock, it's functional, but not much else. In
some ways, says designer and researcher Graham Pullin, it further
reinforces the disability of its wearer.
"It's certainly not streetwear," he says.
But what would happen if, say, an underground fashion company for bike
messengers took on such a design? And what if the result not only lent
some mainstream cool to the person using it, but sparked new ways of
thinking about waterproof design and technology? Those unlikely
marriages are the kind Pullin wants to inspire with his new book,
"Design Meets Disability." Pullin, a lecturer in interactive media
design at the University of Dundee in Scotland who trained as a medical
engineer, makes a strong case that better design for disabled people
could pay off in unexpected and important ways, not only for users but
for society overall.
(Andrew Cook)
"Disability could actually be a source of incredible inspiration for
design."
http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2009/03/15/a_talk_with_graham_pullin/
garden
http://candaceroserardon.blogspot.com/2009/12/tale-of-two-cities.html
Small towns need unique features, and this park featured a scented
cottage garden designed for the visually impaired by a gift from a
certain Myrtle Currie. It was an interesting request on Mrs. Currie’s
part, one which I could appreciate and remember.
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