‘Alphabet’, pencil-tip structures, Dalton Ghetti, USA. Photo by Sloan T. Howard Photography |
For designers, making is a chosen vocation: a way of thinking, inventing and innovating. It’s a delight to be able to shape a material and say ‘I made that’.
I particularly liked the way materials have been juxtaposed so that the soft ‘fur’ of an animal or dress is composed of hard metal, or a robot exoskeleton made of wood.
Every object in this exhibition has been made by adding, subtracting or transforming material, or by combining these processes.
Many people think that craft is a matter of executing a preconceived form or idea, something that already exists in the mind or on paper. Yet making is also an active way of thinking, something which can be carried out with no particular goal in mind. In fact, this is a situation where innovation is very likely to occur.
Even when making is experimental and open-ended, it observes rules and structure. Craft always involves parameters, imposed by materials, tools, scale and the physical body of the maker. Sometimes in making, things go wrong. An unskilled maker, hitting the limits of their ability, might just stop. An expert, though, will find a way through the problem, constantly unfolding new possibilities within the process.