Project: General

Thanks and Acknowledgements

RISD will never exist as a printed and fixed doctrine of educational ideals or a set of board-appointed expectations; its true greatness stems from the commitment and excellence of individuals like Krzysztof, Maria, and Brian. I thank them sincerely for their work and the opportunity to learn from them in a truly unique way.

This exercise would have never been possible without the mentorship and guidance of David Bogen and his challenge introducing me to the concepts of ethnography and research over the past few months. The conversations I have had with David have pushed me to find a deeper understanding and appreciation for every situation I find myself in.

I must also thank Jessie Shefrin, the core group of the RISD Strategic Plan, notably Margot Nishimura, Rosanne Somerson, and Ken Horii, for their on-going commitment to  RISD’s excellence and their respect and inclusion of my ideas into conversations much larger than any one of us.

Finally, I could not create a list of this nature without thanking Tom Ockerse. Tom has been my most influential advisor during my tenure at RISD. His counter balance to my pragmatism and his ability to challenge me to look deeper to understand myself has literally changed the way I learn and appreciate what I do.

77 Perspectives from the Class of 2010

RISD is an amazing and mysterious place. The talent and amount of creative output on our campus is staggering and nearly impossible to quantify. We invite luminaries from around the globe to challenge us, inspire us, and push us to be our best. However, at times we forget to stand back and attempt to understand what RISD has really given us and what we’ve given back.

It is common practice to cite that “students” are what make a school great but in the case of RISD, our students truly play a unique role in that statement. By the nature of the studio environment, the intensity of our pursuits, and the general personality of our work, RISD students stand alone in their importance in shaping the academic environment and experience.

This book isn’t meant to encapsulate the breadth, depth, or richness of that perspective but rather act as snapshot to provide a look into what really makes RISD, RISD. It is the work and people. I hope this will be a resource to provide you with the perspectives of an amazing collection of talented individuals as they make the transition from this school out into the world they will someday hopefully impact.

Thank you to all the students that participated in this exercise (see full list of names at the back of the book).

Concept Models

Balance::Institution

Connections::Cooperation

Connections::Communication

Divisions::Pedagogy

Core::Depth

Partners::Interaction

Partners::Breadth

Support::Advising

Support::Institution

Current Model

Current::Structure

Faculty Perspectives & Quotes

After a careful review of my emails, notes, and sketchbooks (excluding freshman foundation – still looking for those), I’ve compiled a list of quotes and observations by RISD faculty and administration members (inspired by Scott Stowell’s similar exercise):

Just walk. And breathe. (John Maeda, President)
Just think and make. And be nice to others. It will all be fine. (John Maeda, President)
All messages are subject to outside noise, affecting the quality of the message. (Hans van Dijk, Graphic Design)
Just think about toys and the power of imagination; that’s all design is. (Hans van Dijk, Graphic Design)
Culture shock is an individual being illiterate to the signs of other cultures. (Hans van Dijk, Graphic Design)
Plot is like the pencil outline that guides the designer. (Hammett Nurosi, Graphic Design)
Mediated images are the scribbled bedside notes of our cultural dreams. (Natalia Illyn, Graphic Design)
Letters are things that help us think of other things. (Lucy Hitchcock, Graphic Design)
Let’s keep our secrets, secret. (Lucy Hitchcock, Graphic Design)
We think in generalities but we live in details. (Tom Wedell, Graphic Design)
The form is the meaning. (Hammett Nurosi, Graphic Design)
Humans are intrinsically organizers and pattern makers. (Tom Ockerse, Graphic Design)
Our biggest failure is our failure to see patterns. (Marilyn F., Graphic Design)
A system is a way of looking at an object as a kit of parts. (Tom Ockerse, Graphic Design)

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Writing Visualization

As part of my personal reflection I have been attempting several different approaches to visualizing my writing and moving it from the “practical” to the dialectic and poetic. For the past four years I have lived between the creative and pragmatic and believe that creating this synergy with my writing will allow me to appreciate and articulate my thinking in a new and exciting way.

So far this experiment has been somewhat futile in capturing the completeness of thought that my writing possesses but I have started to create more freely and experiment with these ideas, hopefully leading to an effective and eloquent output soon. Below are some of my early explorations and their corresponding essys:

The Deconstruction of Language, 2007

HBS Application Essay, 2009

More images after the jump…

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Preliminary Presentation

Presentation slides delivered to Degree Thesis section to introduce the class to my ideas and goals for the upcoming semester.

Digital_Presentation_2_25

Thesis Proposal

The world is in a rut. Previously successful systems, business practices and infrastructures are breaking down in our society on all sides. The policies, methods, and problem solving approaches of the twentieth century have been turned on their head over and over again. Amid this social upheaval, the powers that be seem to have come upon a miraculous solution once again–this time, it is the process of creative thinking. Across boardrooms, executive offices, and on bookshelves, the call from science, industry, business and technology could not be louder– they see “creatives” as the next big thing, the saviors of business. Call it whatever you’d like, design thinking, creative problem solving, innovation, the semantics are irrelevant, and only add to the navel-gazing and empty speak that is being written by hoards of successful business people and designers alike.

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Willem Van Lancker © 2010. All rights reserved.

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