Two (or three) Tangles

Prem Krishnamurthy writes us a letter. A letter that exemplifies the tangle, weaving moments from his collaborative practice into a meandering text on slowing down, embracing bumpiness and decentring direct design processes. In doing so, Prem illustrates the importance of social and human attention to the design process.
It’s Oh So Quiet (about Palestine)

In their essay, Noam Youngrak Son listens to the silence of the design industry in response to the ongoing genocide in Gaza, Palestine. Critiquing design’s historical involvement with humanitarian crises in this current global context, Noam dismantles the financialised risks of activism assumed by design institutions, seeking and signposting a higher calling for practices of design that reach beyond simply the accumulation of capital.
When a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, do I accumulate symbolic capital?

Arja Karhumaa interrogates the relationship between design academics and design practitioners within the realm of publishing; two step-sisterly professionalisms that can struggle to see eye-to-eye in the quest to disseminate ideas. Writing from her perspective as a weaver of many threads of practice, Arja cross-examines the production of knowledge within the design field, embracing and untangling the complexities within her own publishing communities.
Re-shaping and Re-writing: Raeder’s ever-changing practice

After we said adeus to designer Manuel Raeder at the Tangle in Helsinki, we reconnected to learn more about his unique approach to project briefs– and their favourite furniture!
Looking Back at Looking Forward

We caught up with Chiara after the Tangle to talk about the intersections between research and creative practice.
Chiara Di Leone – Power Play

Kicking off the Helsinki Tangle was researcher and writer Chiara Di Leone, whose talk “Power Play” launched us straight into our theme by examining the techno-economic power structures at play in climate forecasting.
Ryan Waller – You can get with this, or you can get with that

Control was a theme that threaded through Ryan’s talk at the Tangle, where he described that exercising control is often the foundation of power, and how having a certain degree of control over your creative practice can help with forging your own direction.
Laura Pappa – What’s work?

As a graphic designer and typographer fascinated with the urban landscape, Laura Pappa’s work operates at the intersection of place and image. In her talk in Helsinki, Pappa explored her mechanisms of staying engaged in creative practice over time.
Manuel Raeder — BOM DIA BOA TARDE BOA NOITE
Studio Manuel Raeder is an interdisciplinary design studio exploring the boundaries between exhibitions, ephemera, books, type design, editing, publishing, textile and furniture design. Manuel is joining us from Berlin to expand on the studios’ deep involvement in editorial and spatial narratives, as well as its interest in the meaning of books within space, the archive and the future of libraries.
From Tallinn to The Tangle

Just after the tangle, we posed graphic designer Laura Pappa some questions on what places, and people and practices help keep her work at the cutting edge.