Saturday, 13 December 2025

#Designer - Viktor Papanek



Viktor Papanek (1923–1998) was an Austrian-American designer, educator, and critic who radically challenged the ethics of industrial design.

Brief summary of his work and ideas:

  • Design as moral responsibility
    Papanek argued that most industrial design served consumerism, waste, and corporate profit rather than real human needs. For him, design was never neutral—it always carried social and ecological consequences.

  • “Design for the Real World” (1971)
    His most influential book condemned useless, harmful products and called for design that serves the poor, the disabled, marginalized communities, and the environment. It became one of the most widely read design books in history.

  • Human-centered & low-tech innovation
    He promoted simple, repairable, low-cost solutions, such as radios made from tin cans or community-built tools—anticipating today’s ideas of frugal innovation, appropriate technology, and open design.

  • Ecology before it was fashionable
    Long before sustainability became mainstream, Papanek warned about overproduction, pollution, and planned obsolescence, urging designers to see themselves as stewards of ecological systems.

  • Design education as awakening
    As a teacher, he encouraged students to ask who benefits and who pays the price for every design decision—socially, psychologically, and environmentally.

In one sentence:
Viktor Papanek reframed design from making things desirable to making life viable.

Thursday, 11 December 2025

#PostModern Thinker – Ivan Illich

Here’s a brief, clear introduction to Ivan Illich for people who may not know him:



Ivan Illich (1926–2002): A Short Introduction to His Life & Thought

Ivan Illich was an Austrian philosopher, social critic, and former priest who became one of the most important and provocative thinkers of the 20th century. His life’s work focused on one radical question:

“When do institutions meant to help us begin to harm us instead?”


Key Contributions

  1. Critique of Modern Institutions

Illich argued that schools, hospitals, transportation systems, and even churches often become counterproductive when they grow too large or too bureaucratic. His famous idea of “institutional counterproductivity” shows how systems can undermine the very goals they claim to serve.

Schooling: He believed compulsory schooling creates dependence, inequality, and passive citizens. → Book: Deschooling Society (1971) — where he proposed “learning webs,” a decentralized, peer-to-peer model long before the internet.

Healthcare: Modern medicine, he said, can produce “iatrogenesis” — harm caused by the system itself. → Book: Medical Nemesis (1975). 

2. Tools for Conviviality

Illich introduced the concept of convivial tools — technologies and systems that empower people rather than control them.

A convivial society is one where:

  • people have autonomy,
  • technology supports human creativity,
  • and communities are not dominated by experts or machines.

This idea increasingly resonates today with discussions on AI, sustainable living, and degrowth movements.

3. Critique of Industrial Growth

Illich questioned the myth that “more is better.” He argued that beyond a certain scale, industrial growth destroys ecology, community, and human meaning — a message that feels prophetic in our climate-crisis era.

4. Recovery of Traditional Wisdom

Later in life, Illich explored how pre-modern cultures understood embodiment, friendship, gender, and hospitality—ideas he believed modern societies had lost or distorted.

Why He Matters Today

Illich’s work is important for anyone thinking about:

His writings invite us to imagine a world where technology serves people, not the other way around — a theme that aligns deeply with many contemporary questions about AI and human agency.

Tuesday, 9 December 2025

Poetry


Truth is a Soft Fart

Truth is a soft fart—

green, gassy, unapologetic.

It drifts through polite silence,

hunting your denial.


It will move you,

or remove you—

depending on how tightly

you cling

to what rots.

Monday, 8 December 2025

Poetry - Un-do-U-UN

 


#poetry · Satire · Systems · Reflection

Sunday, 7 December 2025

Arsitektur Modern dan Vernakular (bag.2)

Ketika Arsitektur dan Kota Tidak Lagi Mendengarkan Alam [dalam konteks Banjir Besar Sumatra]


Bencana banjir besar 2025 yang baru saja terjadi di Aceh, Sumatera Utara, dan Sumatera Barat akhir tahun ini bukan hanya persoalan cuaca ekstrem atau curah hujan yang meningkat. Itu juga merupakan cermin gagalnya hubungan antara manusia, ruang hidup, dan alam.

Kita membangun kota dan rumah seolah-olah sungai, tanah, dan ekosistem hanya latar — bukan makhluk hidup yang juga punya hukum, ritme, musim dan siklus.

Arsitektur dan perencanaan modern sering mengasumsikan bahwa teknologi mampu mengatasi segalanya:

  • sungai bisa diluruskan, 
  • rawa bisa ditimbun, 
  • air bisa “dipaksa” keluar lewat drainase beton.
  • Tetapi air tidak pernah lupa jalan pulangnya.


Dari Rumah Panggung ke Rumah Beton[industri] Berstruktur Kaku

Di Sumatera — terutama Aceh dan Minangkabau — arsitektur tradisional [vernakular] sejak ratusan tahun lalu telah paham cara hidup di tanah rawan banjir, gempa, dan perubahan alam.

Rumah adat yang tepat guna:

  • dibangun panggung agar banjir tidak mengganggu aktivitas manusia,
  • memiliki struktur kayu elastis untuk gempa,
  • menyisakan ruang bagi aliran air, angin, dan makhluk lain yang berbagi habitat.
  • Bahan bangunannya bernapas — bukan kedap seperti beton.


Ketika pola lama ini ditinggalkan, dan diganti dengan 'rumah-gedong' [beton]:

  • bangunan massif berbahan beton,
  • dinding dan lantai kedap air,
  • fondasi yang mengunci tanah,
  • halaman yang disemen penuh,
  • maka kemampuan alam menyerap air hilang. 


Rumah tidak lagi adaptif — ia melawan situasi ekologis.


Urbanisasi: Ketika Ruang Hijau Menyusut dan Air Kehilangan Jalan

Banjir bukan hanya karena hujan. Ia terjadi ketika:

  • resapan hilang,
  • sungai disempitkan,
  • rawa dikonversi menjadi perumahan,
  • beton menggantikan tanah.

Setiap taman yang ditutup di-aspal, di-paving, di-semen, setiap sungai yang dipersempit demi jalan, setiap bukit yang dipapas untuk cluster perumahan adalah keputusan desain yang memindahkan air — bukan mengelolanya.

Dan semua air yang tidak lagi diserap akan kembali dalam bentuk banjir.

Air tidak pernah balas dendam — air hanya mengingat gravitasi.