explores the legacy and
potential, the promise and power of design in improving the welfare of
humanity. It originated as a collaboration between Bruce Mau Design and
the Institute without Boundaries in which we researched the capacities
and limitations of human efforts to change the world for the better.
From September 16th - December 31st, 2006, the Massive Change
Exhibition came to life in Chicago at the Museum of Contemporary Art.
In addition to the exhibition, the MCA featured symposia,
performances, education programs, and related exhibitions. If you missed this extraordinary exhibition, join the discussion on this Massive Change Blog with
articles and resources documenting Massive Change worldwide.
Visit the exhibition in pictures, and see why Massive Change was the
most visited exhibition in the history of the Vancouver Art
Gallery.
Introduction
There are two reasons to know more about Massive Change: to be
changed and to make change. The events, the book, and our growing
online community are short cuts to provocative thinking about the power
and promise of design. Massive Change will change how you think about
possibilities, for the world, and for your own family, community,
company and country.
Design Economies
Instead of structuring our project around professional design
disciplines, like graphic design and industrial design, we looked at
design from the perspective of the citizen. Design economies are the
regions of our lives that are being transformed, and in some cases
invented, by new capacity designed to shape the world.
Every week, or at least quite frequently, we publish the Massive
Change newsletter. Join the mailing list to keep pace with developments
in the field of global design. Or review all the archived
newsletters.
As part of the research for Massive Change, Institute without
Boundaries team member Jennifer Leonard, created and hosted Massive
Change Radio. Once a week she interviewed world leaders on the front
lines of implementing Massive Change. The program was broadcast on the
University of Toronto's CIUT 89.5 FM from September 2003 to June 2004.
The entire season of multidisciplinary interviews is archived for
download.
Massive Change in Action is an online educational project about our
human ability to create positive change in the world through the power
and promise of design. It is aimed at high school students and teachers
who want to produce a new breed of change maker - citizens who think as
designers. These people would be, in the words of inventor and
philosopher Buckminster Fuller, a "synthesis of artist, inventor,
mechanic, objective economist, and evolutionary strategist."
Published worldwide by Phaidon, Massive Change - by Bruce Mau,
Jennifer Leonard, and the Institute without Boundaries - is not about
the world of design, it's about the design of the world. Intended to
provoke debate and discussion about the future of design culture,
Massive Change is a modern illustrated primer on the new inventions,
technologies, and events that are affecting human culture
worldwide.
Massive Change: The Future of Global Design. Bruce Mau with Jennifer Leonard and the Institute without Boundaries. Phaidon, 2004.
On November 18, 2006, the City of Chicago Department of the
Environment and the Museum of Contemporary Art will produce the Global
Visionaries Symposium: Massive Change and the City. This one-day event,
framed by the City as a place for change, is co-moderated by Bruce Mau
and John Callaway. The symposium includes conversations with global
visionaries - including Stewart Brand, futurist Hazel Henderson, and
biologist John Todd - whose work has had a seminal influence on the
conception of the Massive Change project. Mayor Richard M. Daley will
present each speaker with a City of Chicago Global Visionaries Award
following the symposium.