Your cart is currently empty!
Your cart is currently empty!
+++Communities - Creativity - Narration+++
+++Peter Benz, Huaxin & Justin Chiu-Tat Wong+++
+++
‘Our call accepts that there may be an infinite number of equally valid, but possibly less accessible – or merely accessible by certain communities – knowledge systems, much like concurrent physics is considering the existence of a multiverse of parallel universes.’
| A peer-reviewed journal published in conjunction with Cubic Society and Cubic Research Network
| An academic discussion within the pursuit of advancing knowledge via design disciplines
| A reflection on the existence of different knowledge forms
Many knowledge forms are predominantly practical in nature and aligned with creative practices in the arts. The arts themselves are alternative knowledge systems on their own right. When conventional formats have exhausted their possibilities, creative workers like artists and designers create a space for exchange between themselves and their audience. Creative production is thus about making previously inaccessible knowledge available by giving it form. This issue is a reflection on the different knowledge forms that are informed, established and passed on within communities in non-academic ways. The featured contributions seek to experiment with narrative forms, recombine research materials, represent public communities and integrate algorithmic principles to uncover the unseen.
€25.00
€25.00
Design / New titles / Theory
‘Our call accepts that there may be an infinite number of equally valid, but possibly less accessible – or merely accessible by certain communities – knowledge systems, much like concurrent physics is considering the existence of a multiverse of parallel universes.’
| A peer-reviewed journal published in conjunction with Cubic Society and Cubic Research Network
| An academic discussion within the pursuit of advancing knowledge via design disciplines
| A reflection on the existence of different knowledge forms
Many knowledge forms are predominantly practical in nature and aligned with creative practices in the arts. The arts themselves are alternative knowledge systems on their own right. When conventional formats have exhausted their possibilities, creative workers like artists and designers create a space for exchange between themselves and their audience. Creative production is thus about making previously inaccessible knowledge available by giving it form. This issue is a reflection on the different knowledge forms that are informed, established and passed on within communities in non-academic ways. The featured contributions seek to experiment with narrative forms, recombine research materials, represent public communities and integrate algorithmic principles to uncover the unseen.