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by Melanie Jones
This particular view of the Coolum AGDA Conference incorporates various
windows of perception:
a) the mythical abyss that separates Perth from the rest of the designing
country
b) the many years since I have worked as a practising designer, having
evolved into a writer for designers
c) The vast leap between lowly delegate and deified speaker (especially
those presenters that deign to bestow their magnificence from across the
seas)
d) The guilt associated with enjoying oneself where one should ostensibly
be serious, learning and learned!
In short, I had a hell of a good time!
With each national event that I attend, the geographical and vocational
gaps are bridged little by little. Designers are a really fun bunch of
humans - and let's face it, all of our "encounters" (R. Valicenti, Coolum
1997) are between human colleagues, human clients, human suppliers and
human bank managers (although here I may justifiably be challenged).
For a few days, the Hyatt became a seething millpond of rampant humanity
knowledge imparted and absorbed; experiences shared (and subsequently
gossiped about at breakfast the next morning); mysteries uncovered (and
gossiped about, as well) and we all just love a jolly good debate, don't
we?!
It never ceases to amaze me, that considering how we pride ourselves on
presenting the right image to our public - how we dress, how we behave,
the sheer beauty of our work - after a few drinks there's a mad scramble
to reduce oneself and one's peers to the lowest form of toilet humour and
highest average of four letter words per sentence!
Sort of restore's ones self confidence: if we are all such predictable
animals, then it doesn't matter where you think you rate in the industry,
your viewpoint will always be valid and valued. And that is the beauty of
all of us convening and cohabiting for such a vital pause in our everyday
lives.
As for the content of the conference itself, the presentations were of
enormous worth. Each and every one of the speakers offered their
colleagues a variety of gifts. From my personal viewpoint, the great
leveller was the thought process behind the presentation. Given that we
all know design is a subjective creature - there is never just one right
solution to any problem - I loved the individual way each speaker
approached his/her task.
Humphrey McQueen performed fascinating intellectual surgery on his visual
subject matter; Lynn Trickett was universally endearing with the warmth,
wit and whimsy of her works and words; Gary Emery, whilst not so present
as a personality, made a huge contribution with his daring experiment
into unfamiliar territory.
David Lancashire unlocked many spiritual doors with his stunning and
thought provoking Kakadu interpretations; Lynda Warner gave everything of
herself with her willingness to collaborate generously with fellow
artisans, to put herself on the line artistically and critically, and to
confront her fear of public speaking; Rick Valicenti took us home to
sleep over, and then had us doing mental gymnastics understanding and
aligning ourselves with his fabulous creations; and John Gollings gave us
an informative bird's eye view of the technological shifts in his visual
craft.
I would like to thank all of the above for their generosity and efforts.
In their own ways, they have given me more of myself to bring home! In
the same vein, thank you to Martine and QLD AGDA for facilitating a
brilliant show, and exposing AGDA for what it is - well worth the
membership!
Finally, to revisit points a) - d):
a) the mythical abyss that separates Perth from the rest of the designing
country is considerably decreased - we all have the same basic
aspirations, fears, challenges and triumphs, no matter where in Australia
we reside.
b) the many years since I have worked as a practising designer, having
evolved into a writer for designers, makes not one whit of difference. If
designing is a human game, then I'm definitely still on the field, no
matter what position I play.
c) The vast leap between lowly delegate and deified speaker (especially
those presenters that deign to bestow their magnificence from across the
seas) foreshortens into a sidestep - one needs only to be asked, and then
to give the matter some thought. Each of us is, after all, the ultimate
expert in the matter of our own life and experience!
d) The guilt associated with enjoying oneself where one should ostensibly
be serious, learning and learned! Bullshit - if we're not enjoying it,
we shouldn't aught to be doing it!
Cheers!
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