#OPEN DESIGN WORKSHOP


#opendesign

This is an experimental workshop where questions are raised and speculative, fun, answers are suggested, regarding the role of social media as a force that shapes our relationship with products, culture and ourselves.

For this workshop, Open Design products (or artifacts) are created and presented with other mediums to become pieces of entertainment, politics, self promotion, artistic, marketing, or any other focus of choice, for the main purpose of having an impact on social media platforms.

Challenging the participant’s creativity and using Open Design methods with CNC machines, this fun and work-intensive workshop will include designing and realizing objects and then boosting them with photos, video, animation, sound and effects to be shared and perform on social media as individual and group work, including Open Design platforms, where others can download and copy them.

About Ronen

Ronen Kadushin (b. 1964) is an Israeli
designer and design educator living in Berlin since 2005. He taught furniture design and design creativity courses at leading Israeli and European design academies
since 1993. In 2004 Kadushin developed the Open Design concept, where the designs of his products can be downloaded, copied, modified and produced, much as in Open Source software.
Based on this concept, he formed Open Design, a design and
production company for furniture, lighting and accessories which are produced in Berlin and sold in Europe and the USA. Open Design products are regularly presented in solo and group exhibitions world wide, and published in professional literature.
Kadushin is a creative consultant in the field of marketing
and brand strategy, teaches Open design courses in universities and speaks at conferences.

Anmeldung

Bitte meldet euch per Mail für den Workshop an. Die Anmeldung ist bindend.
Es stehen 20 Plätze zur Verfügung

Kosten

Für die Anmeldung am Workshop entstehen erstmal keine Kosten. Das Honorar für Ronen hat der Studiengang aus QSL-Mitteln finanziert.
Es können Kosten für Materialien und die Nutzung von Maschinen wie dem Lasercutter entstehen.


Termin & Ort
17.–21.2.2020