Designing for Irrelevance

Main Article Content

Will Owen Scott-Kemmis

Abstract

My job title is ‘designer’ but I’m reluctant to describe myself as a designer for a number of reasons: first, because the practice has a lot to answer for; and second, because I don’t do a whole lot of design. I help groups of people to collaborate and converse their way through problems towards solutions—activating a latent capability for design in people as they think and work differently, together. The sense of agency that accompanies this is intoxicating. This work can produce strategies, systems, and services, as well as spaces, objects, and graphics. The awareness that design can shape both our (intangible) experiences and our (tangible) environments—and that, as a mode of thinking, it can be accessible, inclusive, and participatory—shifts it from a practice to a stance. In this sense, is design a choice that we make to perceive and move through the world in a contextual and intentional way? What does this mean for the practice of design?

I respod to these question by reflecting on my experience of participating in the Indonesia Australia Design Futures project.

Article Details

Section
Curated Works: Designing Futures in Indonesia
Author Biography

Will Owen Scott-Kemmis, Second Road, Sydney

Will Scott-Kemmis is a designer and facilitator who has been working on complex social problems for the past five years. An industrial designer by training, his interest in the context and systems in which design exists drove him into design philosophy, social innovation, and the practice of service and system design. From the safety and security of people in public protests, to the mental health of children and families in Western Sydney, his work focuses on bringing people together to reframe problems and collaboratively design solutions.

Will is currently working at Second Road, a strategic innovation consultancy based in Sydney.