Immersion

Photograph of pile of graphic design books on a white table

Although I had already seen the PDF of the course materials it is always exciting to get the box emblazoned important learning materials! One of the joys I have found of life-long and life-wide learning (Redecker et al., 2011) is that as I get older I am much clearer about the best way to approach my own learning. I can recognise the moments of anxiety and confusion and sit with them more comfortably, reasonably confident that at some point I will move forward. At the moment I am aware of a niggling sense of trepidation as I move into what feels like a different field and away from the photography modules.

There are several things I know will help me at this point:

  1. Immersion: getting a sense of the field, its history, its contexts, its movers & shakers, current debates and future directions
  2. Pattern spotting: for me this is about making connections with things I have some knowledge of, by finding connections I recognise it gives me both an entry point and helps steady my confidence. Finding frameworks like Gestalt, rule of thirds and some familiar designs (even if I didn’t know the designers) has all helped me see a way into GD1
  3. Doing stuff: getting stuck in straight away on exercises both in the course materials and from other sources. Sketching, collecting postcards, noticing more of the graphic design around me

So, as several books arrive I am playing, sketching, pinning, collecting and focusing on the things I can do. As opposed to looking ahead and focusing on the things I might think I can’t do at the moment like use Illustrator properly or design a logo! Postcards here I come…!

References:

Redecker, C., Leis, M., Leendertse, M., Punie, Y., Gijsbers, Kirschner, P., et al. (2011). The Future of Learning: Preparing for change: JRC/IPTS European Commission.

 

Getting Started – Paper

 

Piece of paper

I want to be an Origami sheet

They can make a boat of me

Then make a rose of me

For the friend to cherish me.

 

I want to be an art sheet

The artist can paint on me

Sketch their mind on me

Craft something new on me

For the world to adore me.

 

I want to become a plain sheet

For a writer to scribe on me

To open their heart on me

To recite a poem on me

For the readers to review me

Neeti Tibrewala, 2016

If I have learnt anything from my first two OCA courses it is not to be afraid of the blank page. I feel like I am facing multiple blank pages at the moment – GD1 is a new direction (my last two courses being photography based), I have had to set up a new blog and I have a new sketchbook – I needed to find a good place to start.

I am a little apprehensive because I also have to learn Illustrator and In-Design quickly. I am pretty familiar with Photoshop and have used Inkscape, PageMaker and Publisher in the past so I am hoping that will at least help me get going.

I like that the course starts with some of the basic building blocks and talks about paper, so I set myself a small exercise of exploring the different types of paper I had in the house. My new sketchbook is now adorned with an amazing variety from natural and handmade papers to photo and coloured tissue paper. It feels good to have taken a first small step and I actually quite like the collages too!