A warm welcome to the 2009
Royal College of Art Show Part
Two – our exhibition of Design,
Communications and the Humanities,
and a glimpse of the shape of things
to come. Surprisingly, there still
aren’t many exhibition spaces in
London where visitors can see and
experience contemporary design and
communications created by up-and-coming
practitioners. The RCA is
certainly one of them.
A Chinese friend of mine gave a
lecture a couple of years ago, about
the aspects of Britain that were most
highly regarded in China. There were
two above all, he concluded. One
was financial services. The other
was design and engineering. At the
beginning of this year, he contacted me
again and wrote, “Correction: just one!”
Design isn’t the icing on the cake; the
first thing to be top-sliced when times
get hard. It is, as many commentators
have said over the past few months,
essential to all our futures. And, as
my friend added, so is art and design
education – a sentiment recently
echoed on the other side of the world
by Michelle Obama when she spoke
at the opening night of American
Ballet Theatre: “My husband and I,”
she said, “believe strongly that arts
education is essential for building
innovative thinkers who will be the
nation’s leaders of tomorrow.”
She was thinking, as was my friend,
of the sorts of graduate who say,
“Why not?” rather than, “Why?” The
sorts of graduate who, even when
others are in the slough of despond,
will have a strong belief in the
future; not as any kind of feelgood
factor, or in an uncontroversial or
unchallenging way. Instead they
will believe that doing something
about it, and making a difference,
is a worthwhile thing to attempt –
especially trying to humanise and find
a sensible way through an extremely
complex world of technology; a
brandscape. They’ll have their finger
on the pulse of contemporary culture;
they’ll be flexibly minded, multicultural
– they will think of cultures
rather than culture – good at setting
their own agendas and solving their
own intellectual and visual problems,
highly motivated and full of attitude,
completely at home in the digital
universe, excited by an unpredictable
world where the goalposts keep
shifting and products are made of thin
air, and in tune with future trends.
More than all these, they will have a
profound belief in the possibilities of
the future.
“What’s the point of design?” the
founder of the Arts and Crafts
movement William Morris was once
asked, just after he’d delivered
a lecture on ‘The Useful Arts’ in
Birmingham. His reply? The point
of design, “is to give us hope”. Art
and design students are already
five times more likely to be self-employed
than any other university
graduates – and they are particularly
good at constructing worlds around
themselves in very entrepreneurial
and improvisatory ways. Worlds
where products and services seem
to be blending together; where
in-house has turned into in-system;
where there’s no longer a stable
idea of function; where design isn’t
just something you do to things, it’s
something that happens in a cultural
and economic context; where there’s
a sense of stimulating industry
rather than criticising it or even
serving it; and where designers and
communicators can become strategic
thinkers in the world of business.
Because, as the last decade has
shown us, the creative industries
want above all to be stimulated with
strong creative ideas.
People tend to ask, “What do you
make?” This is, of course, usually a
reference to how much one earns,
or how big one’s bonus is, or how
generous is one’s expense account.
If you’d asked this of an art and
design student, say, 20 years ago,
he or she would probably have
replied, “I make things, and I make
them very well.” But if you ask this
of one of today’s students – whose
work is exhibited in this SHOW Two,
and described in this catalogue – he
or she would probably say, “I make
a difference.” And they’d be right. Which is why they have a particularly
important role to play in difficult
times – as Franklin D Roosevelt
realised when he launched the Works
Progress Administration, part of the
New Deal, in mid-1930s America.
This Introduction is written in very
different circumstances from last
year’s. I wrote this time last year of a
buoyant economy, of RCA graduates
entering a world that increasingly
welcomed them with open arms, of
the visitors queuing up to see the
work of the College. I’m sure this
year’s SHOW Two will attract just
as many visitors, if not more – but
it takes place against a background
of deep instability, a completely new
experience for students who have
graduated over the last decade.
Whether their work will reflect this
– and whether the practices of the
designers and communicators and
writers who are exhibiting in it will
be significantly affected – only time
will tell.
One thing remains certain. The
College’s annual Shows have in
recent years become a major fixture
in the calendar of art and design.
There’s a growing public interest in
– a passion for – design across the
spectrum, and not enough places
to see it. The RCA Shows are the
culmination of our postgraduate
students’ studio work and research:
a series of individual exhibitions
amounting to one big exhibition, a
glimpse into the ideas factory of the
College itself, an opportunity to open
our doors to the public even wider
than before, a testing of research ideas
and a calling card on behalf of all
the talented exhibitors who are in the
process of launching themselves into
the worlds of design, communications
and the associated humanities.
There has been a lot of discussion
about public value lately, discussion
that has had extra urgency at a time
of diminishing resources. We hope
the RCA Shows 2009 will – as ever
– contribute, and tangibly, to this
discussion. RCA students consistently
produce exciting and challenging
work, and many will already have
achieved recognition in top national
and international competitions. We remain committed to nurturing
originality, creativity, innovation and
professionalism within our walls: the
words creativity and innovation have
become the great clichés of public
policy in recent years – here, they are
real. The SHOW is always a powerful
visual demonstration of the latest
ideas of students who have studied,
researched and practised here,
and for all of us it is the highlight
of the year. So it is with very great
pleasure that I present the work of
the postgraduates completing their
work at the Royal College of Art in
summer 2009. A total of some 416
students from over 39 countries will
be exhibiting from six courses.
When I graduated from a traditional
university, my final year work was
read by three examiners – and my
aunt, actually – and that was that.
When RCA students graduate, in
addition to their examiners, their work
is seen by – exposed to – thousands
of members of the public. I’m not
quite sure how to define the term
public value but I’m sure these Shows
are a good example.
In this catalogue you will find the
contact details of our graduating
students. Unless styled as MPhil
or PhD students, in other words as
research students, the individuals
whose details can be found in the
following pages are all final year
Master of Arts students. Some have
chosen to make a short statement
about their particular themes and
interests and some have indicated
their future plans on graduation. The
images shown here are a combination
of pre-Show and Show work. You can
find an online gallery of this work,
plus student CVs and statements, by
visiting our website www.rca.ac.uk.
My sincere thanks go to all those who
have supported the Royal College
of Art – the institution, its courses,
its equipment, its projects, its prizes
and its students – throughout the
academic year 2008/9: in particular
The Conran Foundation, which is
an educational charity aiming to
promote a better understanding of
good design and visual culture, and
which is very generously sponsoring
this year’s Shows – for the fourth year
running – enabling them to happen
in such a professional way. We have
never before had such a perfect
match between sponsor and SHOW.
The Trust’s mission is precisely the
College’s mission as well. Without
investment from the private sector,
supplementing our public income,
the College would be a poorer place
in many more ways than one. And
investment it is: investment in the
future, and especially important in
difficult times. Not short-selling or
playing the market or building a
casino inside the bank, but solid
investment in the future. Many of the
individual exhibits, and the specific
environments in which they are
presented, have been supported in
this way. Others who are supporting
this year’s SHOW include Interbrand
– who have helped us make our
strong case to government – and
the Financial Times, our much-valued
media sponsor. Also, the
Helen Hamlyn Trust, which gives
very generous support to our Helen
Hamlyn Centre devoted to ‘design
for our future selves’ – one important
thread running through this year’s
SHOW embodied in its prestigious
Design Awards.
This is the last time I will be writing
a Rector’s Introduction to the RCA’s
Summer Show catalogue. After a
professional lifetime at the College
– as, successively, tutor, senior tutor,
professor, Pro-Rector and, since
1996, Rector – I have decided it is
time to move on. My successor is
Dr Paul Thompson, who currently
directs the Cooper-Hewitt Museum
of art and design in New York – an
excellent choice. He will be taking
over in the summer.
My time as Rector has coincided
with a welcome new emphasis in the
public sector on the key importance
of the ‘creative industries’ and of
innovation, and the College has taken
full advantage of this shift. So I leave
it ‘on a high’, in excellent condition.
Also in my time there have been very
significant developments in Design,
Communications and the Humanities,
too many to list here. To name a few:
there has been the rise of Design
Products, the evolution of Design
Interactions, the coming of age of
Industrial Design Engineering, the
re-orientation of Vehicle Design as a
much more thoughtful department,
and the pioneering of a cultural
approach to Architectural education.
In Communications, the re-definition
of ‘Graphics’ and ‘Illustration’ for the
digital age and the radical extension
of the discipline’s boundaries; and
the move centre-stage of Animation
– model, drawn, painted, computer.
And in the Humanities, the
foundation and development of the
History of Design, Conservation and
Curating Contemporary Art. Across
the College – and especially Design
– there has been the rise and rise of
the Helen Hamlyn Centre, and the
foundation of InnovationRCA, our
bridgehead to the worlds of business
and industry. The College in 2009 is
a very different place from the one I
took over as Rector in 1996.
A few months ago I was able to
announce a donation of £5 million
from the James Dyson Foundation
towards the building of our completely
new campus in Battersea – which will
in the end accommodate all of the
Fine Art departments and, in time,
Applied Art as well, in addition to a
large lecture theatre, a gallery and
start-up units for graduate designers.
This is the single largest donation
from an individual in the long history
of the College. What better symbol of
the dynamic relationship between art
and design, something the College
has stood for since 1837. And what
better antidote to the current gloom?
This SHOW Two is another. Warm
congratulations to the graduating
students of summer 2009. We all
look forward very much to hearing
about their achievements, about the
difference they have made, over the
coming years – as we undoubtedly
will, whatever the economic climate.
They have nothing to fear but
fear itself.
Professor Sir Christopher Frayling
Rector and Vice-Provost
Royal College of Art