There can be no citizenship without information nor information without design

Authors

  • Joaquim Redig PUC - Rio de Janeiro

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51358/id.v1i1.4

Keywords:

design, informação, cidadania,

Abstract

Initially, this paper seeks to emphasise how the creation of the SBDI has provided an important contribution to the development of Design in Brazil, while at the same time identifying those within the process at both a local and national levels. From this point on, the paper concentrates on analysing the constituting components of Information Design - the focus on the receiver, analogy, clarity, concision, emphasis, colloquial questions, opportunity, stability, amongst others - as well as observing how these elements participate in the communication process within the area of Design. By means of examples detected in the daily use of public information within our context, the paper also seeks to verify in which manner the presence or absence of these components contribute to the strengthening or weakening of the notion of citizenship.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

Joaquim Redig, PUC - Rio de Janeiro

Joaquim Redig é designer formado pela ESDI Escola Superior de Desenho Industrial, Rio de
Janeiro, 1968. Designer e Diretor Técnico do escritório Aloísio Magalhães Programação Visual
Desenho Industrial nos anos 60 e 70. Titular do escritório Design Redig Associados desde 1983,
onde atua nas áreas do Design Industrial, Design de Sinalização e de Identidade Corporativa.
Professor na PUC-Rio Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro desde 1975. Autor de 3
livros e artigos sobre Design na imprensa especializada. Professor visitante e conferencista em
diversas faculdades de Design no Brasil e na América Latina.

Published

2010-09-09

How to Cite

Redig, J. (2010). There can be no citizenship without information nor information without design. InfoDesign - Brazilian Journal of Information Design, 1(1), 51–59. https://doi.org/10.51358/id.v1i1.4

Issue

Section

Point of View