posted on 2012-02-22, 14:04authored byRobert G. Harland, Maria Cecilia Loschiavo dos Santos
There are few opportunities when the poor and prosperous can be spoken
about with respect to the same, shared cultural experience. And yet, visual
culture, and the design process that contributes to its materialisation in
specific contexts, offers an opportunity to recognise a socially inclusive activity
that reveals similarity rather than difference. This paper celebrates an
ephemeral aesthetic that is appreciated by people at different ends of the
economic, political and social spectrum. A mutual appreciation for the
medium of collage differs only in terms of the environment within which the
recycled object is eventually revealed. This paper explores some of these
different contexts, and those who recognise and practise this phenomenon in
a South American and European context. The conclusion of this speculative
and exploratory study is that there is potential to develop this unique medium
as an accessible and inclusive visual language, giving voice to those who
often do not have the opportunity or the means to speak and be heard.
Collage is recognised as a channel that mediates between social exclusion
and inclusion when political and economic means have been exhausted. The
resulting ephemeral aesthetic is proven to have visual appeal, satisfying lowand
high-order human needs.
History
School
The Arts, English and Drama
Department
Arts
Citation
HARLAND, R.G.and LOSCHIAVO DOS SANTOS, M.C., 2008. The ephemeral aesthetic of spontaneous design on the streets of Sao Paulo. IN: Durling, D. ... et al., (eds). Undisciplined! Proceedings of the Design Research Society Conference 2008, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, UK, 16th-19th July 2008.