Words with... / Paola Antonelli, USA
Shaping the future
Paola Antonelli is senior curator of architecture and design at The Museum of Modern Art (Moma) in New York. Having worked at Moma since 1994, Antonelli became its inaugural research and development director in 2012, a role that has seen her lead countless symposiums at design events across the globe. Her latest? Agency for the Future: Design and the Quest for a Better World at Singapore Design Week. To find out more about the convention, we spoke with Antonelli on this week’s episode of Monocle on Design.
What was on the agenda at the symposium?
My life is about showing that design is an important force for society; it’s not just embellishment or cute chairs but rather an enzyme for progress. It can be, of course, an object but it can also be a structure, a system or an interface. In a way, this symposium really showed the various ways in which design can make the future happen. We’re not talking science fiction and we’re not talking 50 or 100 years from now; we’re talking about the next steps. So it really is a way to take stock of where design is now and think about how it can move in the future and help progress.
What are the challenges for the near future?
To begin with, the environmental crisis that’s underpinning all other crises. But there’s also a crisis of democracy, poverty, the pandemic – you name it – and they’re all related. But we now have some tools to deal with these issues: system thinking, visualisation, information design, the design of infrastructures and speculative design that tries to imagine how humankind can move forwards and live with other species.
What can designers do to help tackle these challenges?
We want designers to sit at the table when policies are made and when the future is imagined because the training that designers have is pragmatic and visionary. That’s what we need today.
To hear more from Antonelli, listen to ‘Monocle on Design’ on Monocle 24.