Title: We two, ours two: towards building an Indian graphic design history
Abstract: Whilst graphic design history is an emerging and recognised academic discipline, Indian graphic design history is almost non-existent and lacks proper acknowledgement as a field of study. Recently, India as a nation has begun to impassionedly acknowledge the importance of design as has been evidenced in recent nation-wide efforts at designing design education, practices and professions. As Dilnot (2009) has described, the territory of design is at least three things: what was and is actualized, what could have been actualized and was not, and what remains to be actualized. This paper makes the argument that constructing a graphic design history of India will enrich India’s endeavours by providing the missing link, i.e. an understanding of what makes design in India distinctive. Using specific examples from the history of the book and printed ephemera in India, the paper reflects on possible considerations and approaches to envisioning a graphic design history of India. It argues against a definition of graphic design that is solely ‘modern’ and typically ‘industrial’ and for a definition that embraces graphic design as a commercial practice in India that has classical (pre 1800) origins. The paper also illustrates the importance of acknowledging a pluralistic approach to graphic design history and one that acknowledges graphic design as a social, technological, economic, political and cultural practice and product.
Publication Year: 2013
Publication Date: 2013-09-06
Language: en
Type: article
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