“Design Life Now,” a new survey of contemporary design
in America, is the third triennial exhibition in the Cooper-
Hewitt National Design Museum’s series. Sponsored by
Target under the aegis of the Smithsonian Institution, the
exhibition “celebrates the technological innovations, artistic
evolution, and cultural impact of design,” and “reveals the
nearly infinite ways in which design affects how we see, understand
and experience our contemporary world.”
While it is true that design is a component in many fields of
human endeavor, this triennial defines design in the widest sense;
thus, almost any process or object qualifies for inclusion. Therein
lies both the strength and the weakness of this marvelously entertaining
but overly ambitious show. Is there really any connection,
however tenuous, between book design and aeronautics? One
might well question whether the museum is overreaching: How
can a small institution like the Cooper-Hewitt seriously hope to
do justice to such a broad range of disciplines, all of which have
widely disparate functions?

ACCONCI STUDIO’S 2003 PODSHAPED
“ISLAND” SPANS THE RIVER
MUR IN GRAZ, AUSTRIA, AND
HAS A PERFORMANCE SPACE, CAFÉ
AND CHILDREN’S PLAYGROUND.
THE DOME-AND-BOWL-SHAPED
ISLAND, MADE OF INTERLACED
STEEL MESH, GLASS, ASPHALT
AND RUBBER, HAS BECOME A SYMBOL
OF THE CITY.
The Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum is now a branch
of the Smithsonian, but it originated as a modest collection of interior
design-related objects (such as textiles, wallpapers and rocking
chairs) assembled by industrialist Peter Cooper’s three granddaughters
and located until 1976 on the fourth floor at the institution
he founded in 1859, The Cooper Union for the Advancement
of Science and Art in New York City (my alma mater). I remember
fondly the hushed and darkened rooms where students could go to
sketch from the objects, unhindered by guards (or many visitors).
Today, the collection is housed in a land marked mansion on
Fifth Avenue built in the 19th century by the Carnegie family, and
the museum’s mission is far loftier than originally envisioned—
it aims to be the ultimate arbiter of contemporary design and has
chosen to encompass and evaluate a vast array of specializations
including architecture, robotics, animation, fashion, medicine,
military, theater and jewelry design, in addition to more traditional
design areas such as graphic and industrial design.
”What is design, anyway?” might just as well be the title of this
show. But never mind … there is plenty here to entertain, stimulate
and enlighten every girl and boy. Though constrained within the
Museum’s minimally modified residential structure, the exhibits
manage to hold their own. Advice: Just go and enjoy the show. So
what if the curators have struggled to find a theme to unite their
choices (they admit it is a “subjective snapshot of the moment”)? It
is a wonderful collection of oddly juxtaposed but mostly worthy-of-
attention “stuff.”

KEN SMITH’S INSTALLATION OF BRIGHTLY COLORED FLOWERS ON MESH FOR THE EXTERIOR
WALLS OF THE THE COOPER-HEWITT NATIONAL DESIGN MUSEUM TYPIFY HIS WORK: HE USES
SPLASHES OF COLOR THAT REVEL IN THE REALM OF THE ARTIFICIAL TO DISGUISE AND CONCEAL
URBAN SURFACES.
There are 87 designers or design groups represented in “Design
Life Now.” The corporate world is well represented, as is the military/
industrial complex. As might be expected, Target has a
stake in the show with its deservedly heralded ClearRx prescription
system, designed by Deborah Adler: a redesign of traditional
pharmaceutical drug packaging which incorporates color coding,
hierarchically based typography, and reshaped containers to
aid legibility and understanding, making mix-ups less likely. It’s
unquestionably an important contribution to our quality of life
and safety.
Some of the technology exhibitions
feel decidedly dated. Google
and Apple’s iPod series are so much
a part of our daily lives that their
inclusion in Design Life Now seems
redundant. Indeed, technology—
especially of the internet variety—
changes at such a rapid pace that
it’s understandable the museum has
not been fleet of foot enough to
stay current. But where is YouTube,
which has been touted in every major
media outlet including the cover
of Time magazine? By the time of its
inevitable inclusion in the next design
triennial, this will be very old
news indeed. The exhibition’s curators
settled on their choices over a
year ago, when YouTube was largely
unknown and its influence was yet
to be felt. But if the triennial is to
be relevant, it must be responsive to
the pace of change.
Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner promises to transform the air travel
experience: quiet, spacious room-like cabins with far larger, electronically
dimmable windows, total connectivity including internet
access, ceilings which mimic daylight or evening skies, and
increased air filtration and humidity. And we will have more time
to travel, as our mundane domestic tasks like floor vacuuming and
washing will be performed by iRobot’s Roomba and Scooba, elegant
objects with “programmable efficiency.”
TOP: RON GILAD’S DEAR
INGO LAMP LOOKS LIKE AN OVERSIZED
CEILING SPIDER AND CAN
CURL UP IN A TIGHT MASS OR UNFURL
ITS “LEGS,” CATCHING THE
SPACE UNDERNEATH IN ITS “WEB”
OF LIGHT.