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by mr_overalls
2670 days ago
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I'm an enthusiast of early 20th century architecture schools like Art Deco, Prairie Style, Streamline Moderne, and Danish Modern (for furniture & housewares) because the clean lines and geometric shapes can function as a design philosophy in a variety of areas. And obviously, web aesthetics like Material Design already reflect the ideas of Bauhaus and other schools. But has anyone tried to replicate the "feel" of specific architectural approaches in their web design? For example, how would Frank Lloyd Wright design a website? Is it possible to incorporate more organic approaches like Art Nouveau without producing too much distracting visual clutter? Put another way, what architectural/design movements could provide inspiration for the next evolution of web design? And as further food for thought, wouldn't widespread use of AR/VR would serve to strengthen the link between architecture and human-computer interaction? Your personal computing environment could become an actual space - in the architectural sense - in which to do work. The first thing I'm going to do, of course, is replicate the Johnson Wax Factory's Great Workroom. https://goo.gl/PF665e |
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They’re distractions.
Web-design in my view should follow Swiss layout and typography which is widely considered to be the most objective, neutral, clear and universal theory of graphic design. Some parts of Swiss layout already permeate in everything we do - Grid system(Brockmann et al) for example. Or Helvetica and Univers in typography (Frutiger et al).
Everything else is decoration. Obviously, if you build a website for a music band, then all bets are off. My view is about common web design.