Blurry Target
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2018
Abstract
Creativity and critical thinking ultimately involve recombinations of larger areas of accrued knowledge known as "schemas" or "chunks". To foster a creative studio environment, many professors adopt what they believe to be an Itten-esque attitude: open-ended projects facilitating discovery, with both the student and instructor intuitively feeling their way toward a goal. Despite ideological differences between Walter Gropius and Johannes Itten at the Bauhaus, there was a shared sentiment about creativity as a fundamental pedagogic goal. Many beginning design instructors' goals contain an echo of Itten's primary pedagogical task: "To liberate the creative forces and thereby the artistic talents of the students". An appropriately structured problem defines a goal, but loosely—in other words, it provides a blurry target. Like an object materializing in fog, a blurry target is one that can generally be recognized by the group but of which there is no shared or clear understanding of a final form or process that constructs it.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Developing Creative Thinking in Beginning Design
First Page
39
Last Page
50
Recommended Citation
Sofranko, T. (2018). Blurry Target. Developing Creative Thinking in Beginning Design, 39-50. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315622927-3