Kingston Students create alternative Olympic art

A series of alternative Olympic posters have been created by third year Graphic Design and Graphic Design and Photography students at Kingston.

They represent an alternative take on the official designs of a host of internationally-renowned artists, including Tracey Emin and Bridget Riley, unveiled last month.

The posters were designed by the students in response to an assignment set by Creative Review editor Patrick Burgoyne during a guest lecture.

The posters have captured the eye of the press and some have recently been featured in ‘The Observer’, including the one show above, a poster entitled ‘Comradeship’ by student Ran Park.

 

 

 

Student books her passage to India

 

A Kingston University student has won a place on a train journey, travelling the length and breadth of India to look at new design projects.

Karishma Rafferty will join 450 other young people for the trip that will last 15 days and cover 6,000 miles. The 25-year-old, who is currently studying on Kingston’s Curating Contemporary Design MA course, will join the Jagriti Yatra (‘awakening journey’ in Hindi) as it visits cities all over India.

The locomotive leaves Mumbai on Christmas Eve, returning more than two weeks later, having travelled as far north as Delhi and to Madurai near the country’s southern tip.

Karishma’s course director at Kingston Professor Catherine McDermott suggested she apply for the trip. “Karishma won a place, which is fully-funded by the British Council, in the face of fierce competition. I am very much looking forward to her account of the journey.”

Karishma – who was also an undergraduate at Kingston, being awarded a first class degree in Graphic Design in 2007 – secured her place with a CV which includes stints working for publisher Phaidon Press and the Royal Society of Arts in London and for internationally renowned design agency Pentagram in Berlin.

The aim of the journey is to encourage a spirit of entrepreneurship among Indian youngsters and turn “job seekers into job creators”. Most of the passengers will be aged 20–25 and earning less than 120 rupees (about £1.50) a day. They will be accompanied by a select few foreign students with an interest in India’s development, such as Karishma, and experienced design professionals who will be giving talks. At each stop, the passengers will visit people who are already working on solutions to their country’s development and youth unemployment problems.

Karishma is anticipating a very inspiring journey. “I think it’ll be intense,” she said. “Those 15 days on the train are going to be packed with fascinating speakers, visits and discussions, I want to document as much of it as possible for the students and staff back at Kingston University.”

She’s hoping to build close friendships with other participants on the trip with whom she’ll be able to collaborate in the future. “I feel confident that this experience is going to be a huge boost to my career as a designer and curator,” she said.

Although Karishma’s mother’s family is from India, this will be Karishma’s first visit to the subcontinent. Her grandparents were born in Sindh province, which, after the partition of India in 1948, became part of Pakistan. They emigrated, eventually settling in Spain.

“From a personal, cultural perspective, it’s really important,” she said. “My mum is overjoyed for me as well. She hasn’t been to India since she was a child.”

During her first stint at Kingston University, Karishma was part of a team which won a Royal Society of Arts Design Directions award. “Karishma always demonstrates an imaginative understanding of problems,” senior lecturer in graphic design, Marion Morrison, who taught Karishma at the time, said. “Karishma sees experimental design potential in everything she comes into contact with. She’s bound to inspire people she meets on the way and to work selflessly to contribute to any team situation.”

Kingston University’s MA in Curating Contemporary Design is run in conjunction with the Design Museum. The course has partnerships with institutions in London and throughout the world. As part of the course, Karishma will also visit the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou during the Spring. “It’ll be interesting to compare the design industries in China and India,” she said. “India’s is younger than China’s – but there’s a real buzz about it. The Indian people have such amazing skills so there’s a lot of potential there.”

Karishma will be blogging about the journey at www.designyatri.wordpress.com

 

 

A Kingston University student has won a place on a train journey, travelling the length and breadth of India to look at new design projects.

Karishma Rafferty will join 450 other young people for the trip that will last 15 days and cover 6,000 miles. The 25-year-old, who is currently studying on Kingston’s Curating Contemporary Design MA course, will join the Jagriti Yatra (‘awakening journey’ in Hindi) as it visits cities all over India.

The locomotive leaves Mumbai on Christmas Eve, returning more than two weeks later, having travelled as far north as Delhi and to Madurai near the country’s southern tip.

Karishma’s course director at Kingston Professor Catherine McDermott suggested she apply for the trip. “Karishma won a place, which is fully-funded by the British Council, in the face of fierce competition. I am very much looking forward to her account of the journey.”

Karishma – who was also an undergraduate at Kingston, being awarded a first class degree in Graphic Design in 2007 – secured her place with a CV which includes stints working for publisher Phaidon Press and the Royal Society of Arts in London and for internationally renowned design agency Pentagram in Berlin.

The aim of the journey is to encourage a spirit of entrepreneurship among Indian youngsters and turn “job seekers into job creators”. Most of the passengers will be aged 20–25 and earning less than 120 rupees (about £1.50) a day. They will be accompanied by a select few foreign students with an interest in India’s development, such as Karishma, and experienced design professionals who will be giving talks. At each stop, the passengers will visit people who are already working on solutions to their country’s development and youth unemployment problems.

Karishma is anticipating a very inspiring journey. “I think it’ll be intense,” she said. “Those 15 days on the train are going to be packed with fascinating speakers, visits and discussions, I want to document as much of it as possible for the students and staff back at Kingston University.”

She’s hoping to build close friendships with other participants on the trip with whom she’ll be able to collaborate in the future. “I feel confident that this experience is going to be a huge boost to my career as a designer and curator,” she said.

Although Karishma’s mother’s family is from India, this will be Karishma’s first visit to the subcontinent. Her grandparents were born in Sindh province, which, after the partition of India in 1948, became part of Pakistan. They emigrated, eventually settling in Spain.

“From a personal, cultural perspective, it’s really important,” she said. “My mum is overjoyed for me as well. She hasn’t been to India since she was a child.”

During her first stint at Kingston University, Karishma was part of a team which won a Royal Society of Arts Design Directions award. “Karishma always demonstrates an imaginative understanding of problems,” senior lecturer in graphic design, Marion Morrison, who taught Karishma at the time, said. “Karishma sees experimental design potential in everything she comes into contact with. She’s bound to inspire people she meets on the way and to work selflessly to contribute to any team situation.”

Kingston University’s MA in Curating Contemporary Design is run in conjunction with the Design Museum. The course has partnerships with institutions in London and throughout the world. As part of the course, Karishma will also visit the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou during the Spring. “It’ll be interesting to compare the design industries in China and India,” she said. “India’s is younger than China’s – but there’s a real buzz about it. The Indian people have such amazing skills so there’s a lot of potential there.”

Karishma will be blogging about the journey at www.designyatri.wordpress.com

 

Pictures copyright Rain Design.

Nuclear Institute honours surveying lecturer for “outstanding” article

A Kingston University lecturer has been honoured for his investigation into Britain’s plans to build a new generation of nuclear power stations.

Dr Bahram Ghiassee’s paper looking at the siting of the new stations, correctly predicted that three of the locations originally chosen by Britain’s energy companies would not meet the strict legal requirements imposed by international, European and British law. The paper was written more than a year before the Government finally drew up a revised list in June this year.

The Nuclear Institute has now awarded its Pinkerton Prize to Dr Ghiassee, who is a senior lecturer in Kingston’s School of Surveying. The prize is awarded for an article of “outstanding merit” published in Nuclear Future, the Institute’s journal. Dr Ghiassee received the award at a special dinner at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London’s Park Lane.

Britain’s existing coal-fired power stations will begin to be retired after 2015. The Coalition government plans to give the go-ahead for eight new nuclear plants over the next decade. Dr Ghiassee is well-qualified to assess the validity of these plans as he holds both a PhD in Nuclear Engineering and a Masters of Laws (LLM). He is a member of the UK Environmental Law Association, the International Nuclear Law Association (Brussels) and the Nuclear Institute (UK).

Despite his foresight in identifying that the three sites – at Braystones and Kirkstanton in Cumbria and at Dungeness in Kent – were not suitable for new nuclear plants, Dr Ghiassee believes most of the other proposed stations will be built. “The Fukushima nuclear accident has had a negative impact on the public’s perception of nuclear power, with Italy suspending its plans, Germany phasing out its fleet, and China slowing down the pace of construction,” he admits. “But I’m convinced that the UK government will not reverse, nor review, its policy on nuclear power, and that we shall witness the construction of at least four new nuclear power plants in England and Wales in this decade.

The prize-winning article was one of four, looking at the UK’s legal obligations in commissioning new nuclear power stations. The award is named after the Nuclear Institute’s founder John Brownie Pinkerton and was presented by its president Norman Harrison.

Dr Ghiassee, who lectures in European, environmental and planning law and sustainable development at Kingston University, is currently working on a fifth paper. Meanwhile, the debate about nuclear power shows no sign of going away with a recent House of Lords report accusing the government of an “Argos catalogue” approach to commissioning new stations.

 

Design Road, Dubai in collaboration with the Faculty of Art, Design & Architecture

Design Road is a series of workshops for the Creative Industries being held across the Middle East in the coming year. Kingston University are delighted to be academic partners along with colleagues at Elisava School of Design, Barcelona for these workshops, which start in Dubai. Sponsors include the British Council,  Spanish Ministry of Culture, Dubai Culture and Tashkeel Arts Center.

Participants are local creatives, innovators, ranging from postgraduate students to professionally placed practitioners.  They include Christoph Lueder from the School of Architecture & Landscape, Gillian Russell, MA Curating Contemporary Design course and Leo Duff, Faculty of Art, Design & Architecture, Overseas Development.

MA Curating Contemporary Design sponsored Samer Yamani,  a Syrian curator, in February 2011 for a four week curatorial residency at the Design Museum. 

Venue: Tashkeel, Dubai, UAE, 1 – 5 December 2011.

Collecting and Collectors of Contemporary Design conference at the Design Museum

Tuesday 6 December, 10am – 4.30pm

Collecting and Collectors of Contemporary Design conference

This is the second conference in 2011 The School of Design has organised with MA Curating Contemporary Design course and the Design Museum. With a century worth of objects to choose from and new work emerging all the time, what are the factors influencing the shape and future role of contemporary design collections? How do the expectations of the collector and the aspiration of being collected impact on the output and role of the designer? This burgeoning field is dramatically changing the landscape for designers, educationalists, museums and the commercial sector. In this one-day conference in partnership with Kingston University, the Design Museum hosts a number of presentations and discussions identifying current and future issues facing collections and collectors of design and crafts. 

Tickets from the Design Museum website:
http://designmuseum.org/ and a report will be posted in the New Year.

Topics and speakers include:
Museums and Galleries as Commissioners and Collectors Deyan Sudjic, Director, Design Museum

Independent Galleries:
Rabih Hage, Director, Rabih Hage Gallery
Auction Houses for the Contemporary
Jeremy Morrison, Independent Art Advisor and Consultant, formerly Head of 20th Century Design, Sothebys

Private Collector:
Tony Brooke, SPIN

So Far, The Future – Twelve Days of Science and Design

Science and Design – alternative Xmas market – So Far, The Future Gallery - 44 Emerald Street, London WC1N 3LH

In 2012 the School of Design is leading on Dream Lab, an interdisciplinary science/design project delivered to 40 Chinese Universities. To kick start the theme a seasonal recommendation: Rebecca  Pohencenik, one of our School of Design alumni and a Dream Lab team member is launching 12 Days of Science and Design, 8-20 December, 12-7pm. So Far, The Future: http://www.so-far-the-future.co.uk/exhibitions/12-days-of-science-design

On sale are science/design Xmas gifts/wrapping paper and workshops curated by super/collider.  Register for the workshops at: www.super-collider.com.