BRASILIA #6 —On Doing and Not Doing

BRASILIA #6 —On Doing and Not Doing

Release: September 2019
Volume: 136 pages
Format: 22 × 28,5 cm
Price: 8.00 

There is chaos on the roads of our brave new world. Ideas, inspirations, opportunities roar past on all sides. Anything is possible; everyone is doing something. But what exactly? In the sixth edition of Brasilia Magazine, designers set out on a quest for meaning. Lena Dierkhüse discovered that Tinder may not lead to a great love, but can help you swipe away the need to make a decision. Jens Mahlstedt knows that anyone who does anything always does it wrong anyway. Karen Fromm shows us that photographic truths are increasingly called into question and advises us to form our own opinions from the diversity of possible information sources. Walter Hellmann and Franz Deckert tell us why traditional trades and solid specialized knowledge are indispensable. On the statistical level, Katharina Krämer has collected 10,000 things in her life. She wonders whether she can now release herself from this responsibility, while Katrin Brümmer explains how the power of objects can be used for the meaningful design of public space. And so we drive along on the Autobahn of endless possibilities, looking right and left, up and down. With a bit of luck we see lakes to the left and castles to the right. Creative inspiration and answers to questions both old and new can be found everywhere. Then why not try looking within? This is the seat of imagination, creativity and inventiveness. One thing is clear: you can’t do nothing!

Publisher

Hochschule Hannover, Fakultät III – Medien, Information und Design

Art Direction

Vivian Dehning

Photographer

Lucas Bäuml und Lando Hass, David Carreño Hansen, Martynas Katauskas, Jan Staiger, Ricardo Wiesinger, Ole Witt

Illustrator

Alicja Boß, Philine Dorenbusch, Julia Thomas, Mel Wilken

Release

September 2019

Format in cm (w × h × d)

22 × 28,5 cm

Volume

136 pages

Language

English, German

ISBN

978-3-932011-96-2

Out of stock
BRASILIA #6 —On Doing and Not Doing