Martin Avila
ABSTRACT
This thesis studies and speculates upon the interrelations of artefacts
with human and nonhuman agents. These interrelations form assemblages,
some of which have emergent properties, becoming manifestations of processes that we cannot fully control or understand.
The work started by exploring the theme of hospitality and hostility
with the ambition to better understand the ecological complexity of the
design process and its results.
As an assemblage, this work combines different literary,
philosophical and theoretical discourses and traditions with
experimental design in order to develop and articulate the concept of device. A device organizes, arranges, frames our environment and thereby defines and limits possibilities of relation.
Since relations can only be thought through a so-called natural
language such as English, they must be taken into consideration through
the process of languaging, understood by Humberto Maturana and
Francisco Varela as “communication about communication”, and as the most
characteristic feature of the human species. My focusing on linguistic
and biological phenomena is a response to this concern, in an attempt to
understand how this process influences our perception of the world.
Through a series of design projects, the thesis examines the
potential range of an artefact’s relations. It does so by exploring
grammatical associations that affect design conceptualizations, creating
tools (prepositiontools) as well as studying and articulating
forms of symbiosis that an artefact might develop in and with its
environment (¡Pestes!).
Title: Devices. On Hospitality, Hostility and Design.
Language: English.
Keywords: Device, hospitality, hostility, design, languaging, accident, ecology, symbiosis, autopoiesis, umwelt..
See also www.martinavila.com


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