Thursday, March 31, 2011

Critical Debates in Design | Task 7: Advertising

After reading Ken Garland's manifesto (1984 and 2000 versions) I couldn't agree more. It is interesting to see how the manifesto got more serious and urgent with time meaning that designers haven’t done much about it. The text is urging them to put their talent and skills into more important matters than selling unnecessary products or services. Consumerism is getting faster and faster and bigger and bigger causing a lot of environmental and social side effects. There are also many serious, global cultural political or economic issues that require designers' attention and problem-solving skills. I believe designers in any sector have enough power to make a significant change for good in our society. It is foolish to think that designers can do it all by themselves but it is a good start. Designers working in advertising or communication can make a big impact by influencing masses of people's behaviour.

Knowing that we have to recognize that it is extremely important to regulate what is advertised but at the same time be cautious about who and how does that. I have known of this campaign advertising ghd hair-styling equipment that used part of the Lord's Prayer alongside  “eroticised” female imagery that have been judged as offensive to Christian and therefore forbidden from being screened on Tv again. In my opinion, though regulation is needed, we are at risk of being over-sensitive and consequently fall into censorship, very limited freedom of expression and alienation that it is not an easy task to draw the boundaries and impossible to keep everybody happy. 

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