CONF: DHS Annual Conference 2019 (5-7 September 2019), Northumbria University at Newcastle-upon-Tyne

Dr Elizabeth Kramer, Academic Convener

Dr Janine Barker, Academic Co-Convener

 

This year’s theme ‘The Cost of Design’ explores the complexities of the historic and contemporary relationship between design and economy. Both ‘cost’ and ‘economy’ are to be considered beyond the financial. Cost is envisaged as the exchange of resources, meaning or value. Design is both influenced by, and can shape, economic systems. This year’s conference will look at how design sustains, accelerates or challenges dominant systems and examines the resulting social, cultural, economic or environmental consequences that arise.

 

The theme for this year ties very closely to the location of the conference. The North East of England, particularly the urban centres of have witnessed dramatic changes in terms of our design and creative industries. Coal mining, ship building, and glass production all contributed to the region’s prosperity in the late 19th and early 20th century. A shift in politics and economics in the 1970s and 1980s saw these industries decline. A change was needed and in the 1990s investments came which led to the regeneration of certain areas, notably the Newcastle-Gateshead quayside with the BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art (2002) and the Sage Gateshead (2004); in Middlesbrough with the Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art (2007); and Sunderland’s National Glass Centre (1998).

 

The conference venue at Northumbria University carries further significance.  The rise of the polytechnics in the late 1960s and early 1970s was a direct response to the political and social changes that resulted in a shift in British higher education that sought to support vocational and practice-based studies through the provision of contextual studies. In 1969, Newcastle Polytechnic, which would then become Northumbria University in 1992, was formed. In addition to the formation of communities of practice, academics desiring to develop a critical approach to design history came together. To facilitate this, the first conference, ‘Design 1900 – 1960’ was convened by the division of the History of Art and Complementary Studies at Newcastle Polytechnic in 1975. The delegates in attendance continued to meet regularly and in 1977, the Design History Society was formed. This year’s conference is therefore a homecoming of sorts, celebrating and reaffirming connections made over the years as well as developing new connections and networks.

 

Keynote speakers:

Guy Julier, Aalto University, Finland

Tereza Kuldova, University of Oslo

Aric Chen, Tongji University

Alice Twemlow, Royal Academy of Art The Hague (KABK)

 

For more information and registration: https://costofdesign2019.com/

 

 

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