Per Mollerup, "Pretense Design: Surface Over Substance "
English | ISBN: 0262039486 | 2019 | 224 pages | PDF | 74 MB
English | ISBN: 0262039486 | 2019 | 224 pages | PDF | 74 MB
How some design appears to be something that it is not—by beautifying, amusing, substituting, or deceiving.
Pretense design pretends to be something that it is not. Pretense design includes all kinds of designed objects: a pair of glasses that looks like a fashion accessory rather than a medical necessity, a hotel in Las Vegas that simulates a Venetian ambience complete with canals and gondolas, boiler plates that look like steel but are vinyl. In this book, Danish designer Per Mollerup defines and describes a ubiquitous design category that until now has not had a name: designed objects with an intentional discrepancy between surface and substance, between appearance and reality. Pretense design, he shows us, is a type of material rhetoric; it is a way for physical objects to speak persuasively, most often to benefit users but sometimes to deceive them.
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