Melbourne Design Week returns from 18 May with an 11-day program of talks, tours, exhibitions and workshops touching on all corners of design. Architecture Media associate editor Georgia Birks presents 10 events you won’t want to miss.
“From Country, materials are taken, transformed, and to Country, they ultimately return.” Presented by Wardle, this discussion will explore the stories that materials tell about the environment, the people who make them, and the transactional exchanges in their production and disposal. Practice partners John Wardle and Meaghan Dwyer will be joined by architectural graduate and researcher Michael McMahon, a descendant of the Bundjalung people. Rory Hyde of the University of Melbourne will moderate the discussion.
“We believe that AI has the potential to revolutionize the way we design and acquire architecturally designed homes,” says Kirby Roper, founder of digital architecture platform @home. This panel discussion features architecture and digital technologies experts, who will share their insights on the latest developments in AI and how they can be applied to the field of architecture. There are three panelists: Kirby Roper and Evan Harridge of @home, and Peter Raisbeck of Melbourne School of Design.
Visiting Numbulwar Numburindi artists Rose Wilfred, Joy Wilfred and Janette Murrungun host this weaving circle – an educational conversation and making experience. Artists will share their skills and processes with participants, who will have the opportunity to talk with the artists about their material harvesting and traditional practices. Numbulwar Numburindi Arts is a collective of artists based on the east coast of the Northern Territory. The artists harvest ghost nets and reclaimed fishing nets from their shores to create sustainable woven works.
“How do we build and embrace community participation around civic renewal and urban transformation?” Featuring thinkers across culture, infrastructure and communications, this panel will discuss the concept of “deliberate development” and highlight the role of design in consultation strategies. Speakers include Mary Parker, communications director for the Melbourne Arts Precinct Corporation; Justine Dalla Riva, CEO of the Victorian Pride Centre; and Caroline Bommes of Acciona Energía Australia.
Women and people of colour lead the conversation in this exhibition, critiquing the hyper-individualism of capitalism and calling for a more collaborative approach grounded in the principles of collectivism. How can the knowledge systems and cultural practices of Indigenous and diverse communities shape a more sustainable and equitable society? Perspectives is presented by Collective Futures and The Australian Institute of Architects.
“Would you rather embrace deep-fake technology, or destroy it forever? Design single-mindedly for accessibility, or for aesthetics? Make design awards free, or ban them altogether?” At this event, designers engage in debate on issues big and small, from AI to the environment. Which way will you go? Would You Rather? is presented by Re.Design.
Presented by Australian tableware company The Good Plate, this unique evening is a celebration of dining and tableware design. After an interactive four-course meal, guests will receive keepsakes to take home: the bowls and plates they used.
“If I am more fortunate than others, I need to build a longer table, not a taller fence.” Flack Studio presents this curated exhibition, which responds to the idea of gathering around a table. Works of art and design will facilitate conversation and connection through creative responses to the table and the memories, rituals and habits we associate with it.
Presented by Jingwen (Jina) He, this event will examine the roles of public art, “placemaking” and “activation” in shaping cities. Speakers include Jo Muir, project lead of creative urban places at the City of Melbourne; Stacie Ng, design strategist at Relative Projects; Lynda Roberts, senior adviser of creative communities at RMIT University; and Simon Abrahams, creative director and CEO of Melbourne Fringe.
Set beside the Birrarung, this two-hour workshop will speculate on a near-future flooded world. Participants will engage in “play design” thinking to intimately reconnect with water. The workshop will begin with the launching of a zine that recollects stories of water care in Melbourne. The zine includes a game to be played along the Birrarung, in which participants are invited to reimagine their own relationships with water through interrelational and intergenerational play.