Tag: Pune Design Festival

  • Pune Design Festival ready to roll out 17th edition

    By Our Staff

     

    The 17th edition of the Pune Design Festival (PDF), organized by Pune chapter of Association of Designers of India (ADI) will be held at Hotel Hyatt Regency on the Pune-Ahmednagar Road on February 3 and 4, 2023. The Festival will be held from 9 AM to 7 PM on both the days.  The 17th edition of PDF, which is a national-level annual convention of professionals, educators, and business houses related to the field of design, returns to be held in physical form, after it was held online for two years due to COVID-19 pandemic.

     

    Said ADI Pune Chapter President Rugwed Deshpande: “The theme for this year’s PDF is ‘Nxt 25’, where there will be discussions and deliberations on subjects related to changing paradigms of designs in terms of use of technology, approach of young designers in the next 25 years. The focus of the festival is on understanding how to engage with emerging or new technologies in the field of design. The theme will bring forth discussions, debate, case studies and workshops that showcase the future forward design.”

     

    There will be three keynote sessions by Samar Singh Jodha, who is the Founder and Executive Director of Red Balloon (on Creativity versus Inner Voice), Meeta Malhotra, Editor in Chief of ‘The Hard Copy’ Magazine, (on Pune: For Design, By Design) and Bharat Bala, who is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Bharat Bala Products (on History of the Future).

     

    The two-day event will also see special felicitation of some individuals, personalities who have made outstanding contributions to the field of design. Veteran design educator Kirti Trivedi will be felicitated for contribution in design education, while Pradeep Sinha, product designer and educator, and Mala Sinha, textile designer and founder, Bodhi, will be feted for pioneering efforts in design entrepreneurship.

     

    Other speakers for the Festival include Bharatbala, a distinguished film-maker, Nikki Gonnissen, an experienced designer at Thoknik in Amsterdam, Kenneth Segal, an expert in large-scale public transportation projects from Israel, Aniket Das of Ultraviolette Automotive and Rupali Bhave, a noted theatre professional.  The topics of discussions range from ‘Drama in Design’ to Challenges in the Design Business.

     

    Moreover, an initiative titled ‘Battle of Projects’ initiative will be held.  Under the initiative, students of design submit their final year projects and best awards/recognition is given to the best 30 projects across 11 different categories.

     

    Another initiative ‘Open House Workshops’ is also being held alongside, where those interested in design and design students, will be able to visit open studios and they can attend free workshops on subjects related to design.

     

  • Pune Design Festival will take place on 11-12 January

    By A Correspondent

     

    It’s that time of the year when the design fraternity converges in Pune for the Pune Design Festival. The Association of Designers of India (ADI) – Pune chapter is organising 13th edition of the Pune Design Festival on January 11 and 12 at Hyatt Regency.

     

    As good design is inclusive and co-creative, notes a comunique, this year’s conference theme “Collab” will bring to life discussions around collaborations beyond design.

     

    With 22 talks, seven workshops, panel discussions, film screenings and award presentations, the conference will span across two extended days. The conference will open with music by Vasu Dixit.

  • Pune Design Festival on Feb 16-17

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Association of Designers of India (ADI) will present the 12th edition of the Pune Design Festival(PDF)in Pune on February 16 and 17. The event will be at Hotel Hyatt Regency in the city. Based on the theme of ‘Designism’, the #PDF2018 conference will open at 9am on February 16 with a keynote by Bunker Roy and will conclude on February 17 by the unveiling of the first edition of Lexus Design Awards in India.

    A statement issued by ADI says thisyear’s conference will discuss the designist’s perspective of design as a principle and ideology contributingto creation ofbetter systems, services, products and communication.

    #PDF18has 22 interactivetalks, sixworkshops, threemovie screenings,two mentoring sessions, a panel discussions and two design awards nights.

    #PDF18 will open with a sarod jam between father-son product designer duo of Bhargav andNeeraj Mistry. The opening keynote will be followed by HyperCollective’s K V Sridhar (Pops) and cross-cultural designer Tarek Atrissi from Europe.

    One of the highlights of #PDF 18 will be Late Prof MP Ranjanmemorial session by sustainability visionary Neils Peter Flint and social innovator Swapnil Chaturvedi. Sonal Dabral of Ogilvy India (an NID graduate) will deliver the closing keynote at #PDF18.

     

    Meanwhile, Design Expo will be held concurrently withthe presence of leading design at the nearyIshanya Mall on February16 to 18, 2018. This expo is open to public and would be an ideal opportunity for anyone who is considering design as a career, notes a communique.

     

    Registrations for #PDF18 will be open till February 15 athttp://www.punedesignfestival.org

  • Pune celebrates Design, 10th year running

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    With the objective of celebrating the power of creativity and design thinking, the Association of Designers of India (ADI) is holding the tenth edition of the Pune Design Festival (PDF).  Based on the theme of ‘DesignX’,  PDF 2016 will be held on February 26 and 27 at Hyatt Regency, Pune. This 2-day fest will showcase and rejoice the power of design which contributes in creating communications, products and provide a great impact on quality of living. Considering it as the need of hour, the 10th edition of PDF will be offering exciting interactive sessions, workshops and a better platform for connectivity.

     

     

    1. 10 years of PDF:

    A small spark has caught on and become into a huge event over the years. This is an amazing coming together of people, and its an interesting process of working together – which perhaps could be a more interesting study as the making of the event.

    Bala Mahajan: President

     

    2. Design over the last ten years:

    Design has now percolated everywhere. But things that were spoken in the 2006 PDF is still relevant today too. So design thinking has been and still is as relevant. It only has become more mainstream.

    Darpana Athale: Vice-President

     

    3. How Businesses are finally taking note of the design input:

    We got more partners this year! Design was always considered as a latent benefit earlier, related to big brands and ventures only. But in recent times, more and more businesses are looking at design and designers as the drivers and influencers.

    Ashwini Deshpande: General Secretary

     

    4. Theme of PDF 2016:

    DesignX (Design raised to the power of X) The exponential power of design thinking.  ‘X’ is the magic that design brings to the table. Each of the speakers has brought out that magic to their own fields – from social to venture capitalists.

    Siddharth Kabra: Treasurer

     

    Beginning the festival with an interesting note, there will be a unique way of reinterpretation of music by renowned Indian composer, Rajat Dholakia and design by the guru of animation, Suresh Eriyat in a very unique style. Later, the festival will have a keynote session of political columnist and design activist Uday Dandavate, followed by Mickey McManus’ presentation on ‘Curiosity + Empathy = Mindful design’.

     

    The highlight of this edition of PDF will be a memorial session on Late Prof MP Ranjan, a highly respected design thinker and a senior faculty member of National Institute of Design (NID), Ahmedabad by Swati Ramanathan. Catering to the five problems of modern society: Ageing, Healthcare, Energy, Mobility and Education, the fest will also host a ‘Design Swarm’ – a unique overnight workshop based on the theme of ‘Designing for a better world – Cradle to Cradle’, which will be hosted by designer Surya Vanka, ex-Director of User Experience at Microsoft.

     

    There will also be focused sessions on design and entrepreneurship, design in business, design and academia at the two-day event. Addition to this there will also be sessions which will showcase the contribution of designers in shaping the future of Smart cities and development. An example being Kiran Bir Sethi, founder of ‘aProCh’ – an initiative to make our cities more child friendly. She has also founded ‘Design for Change’ (DFC) – the world’s largest movement of change – of and by children.  DFC is in over 30 countries – impacting 25 million children.

     

    The concluding keynote session will be delivered by acclaimed  advertising films director, Prasoon Pandey.

     

    More than just a celebration, the fest will be filled with interactive lectures, workshops and insights by designers, design thinkers & evangelists from diverse domains. These being Danish Husain, theatre actor and co-founder of Dastangoi;   E Phani and Sanath PC who have worked on the visual effects of movies like Bhaag Milkha Bhaag and Baahubali; Pratap Bose of Tata Motors, to name a few.

     

    PDF 2016 will also host panel discussions on culture, education and business bentures, one-on-ones and provide a chance of networking under one roof and cultural exchange. It will be a medium in creating, collaborating and celebrating good designs.

     

  • Pune Design Festival: For the designers, by the designers

     

    L to R: Ashwini Deshpande, Balkrishna Mahajan & Darpana Athale

     

    First off, MxMIndia is a media partner of the Pune Design Festival. Over the last year, MxM has been associated with multiple design events, as we believe it’s a domain largely unaddressed by other media publications. We surely have designs on design. But to add the disclosure to this interview is being unfair to the organizers and the fraternity. For, we would’ve carried this interview regardless of our business association.

     

    It was tough meeting all the co-organisers of the event, so for this interview, MxMIndia met Ashwini Deshpande, Balkrishna Mahajan and Darpana Athale. The three captains of their respective enterprises – Elephant Design, Ticket Design and Sarvasva Design respectively – took time off their busy schedules of work and putting the finishing touches to the festival to speak on PDF and how it’s different from all the others. Excerpts from the interaction:

     

    It’s the eighth edition of the Pune Design Festival and a lot of people didn’t know it existed. So, where were you all these years?

    Ashwini Deshpande: Yes, we’ve not really been media savvy to be honest. And in all fairness, we’ve just kept it Pune-centric. The idea wasn’t to go that national when we started out. When we started out the idea was that we were here in Pune and no one considered Pune to be the centre of anything.

     

    The objective was not just the conference, it was ‘let’s just celebrate what design is’ because nobody knows it and at least Pune should know, if not any other place. When we started, we didn’t have the vision that we’ll become a national event. But somewhere in the third or fourth year, we realized that it’s a very unique event. Nothing like that was happening anywhere. The uniqueness of this is that it’s being curated by designers. Designers who are practising, successful, experienced and still have the thirst to know more. Because whoever we want to listen to and learn from gets  invited. So that’s why it’s probably stayed within us and as we have more knowledge-sharing, we realize more people should get that knowledge. That’s really how we thought of getting out there and telling about it.

     

    Balkrishna Mahajan: Your question about where were you all these years is something that we also ask. But it’s not an agenda-drivem activity where we have to put up a show of a certain kind and we don’t plan round the year to work toward this. The nature of the whole thing is very organic. And we have an Association of Designers of India, so, everybody takes out time to create  the content for it, contact speakers, make sure we have the right kind of people coming in and that’s how it’s  been But we want to grow big! We want to make this a much larger event with more people participating. But so far we’ve been happy with what we have got.

     

    Darpana Athale: I think when we started out our first idea was to create an awareness of design and the second was to promote designers and design from Pune. And in the first two-three years we also realized was that in design itself, there’s a huge diversity. There are a lot of fields. And every year, we’ve always tried to get in people who’re doing different things in different fields of design. And I think because we’ve been so focused on content, that we didn’t concentrate on marketing or creating a strategy for promoting this event.

     

    Do you think you’ve been able to achieve the going national bit?

    Reaching national? We’ve reached  international,  quite frankly, though a low key international.

     

    In terms of numbers, how many people from Pune versus out of the city?

    If we’re an audience of 2000250, I think about 30 per cent will be from outside. Interesting, it’s the outside number that’s growing?

     

    And all these from Mumbai, or even elsewhere?

    Mumbai, Bengaluru, Delhi, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, and we even have people from outside the country too. Not  just the speakers. A lot of people who are planning their visits plan it around the two day of PDF.

     

    Other than design agency folk, are you able to attract clients and marketers to the event?

    Very much, in fact we’re getting our clients to sponsor the event… because that’s the interest we created. In fact this year, a lot of our clients will be be visiting.

     

    What is your pitch to clients and how do you attract corporate to attend the event?

    When we said content driven, it’s not just design for designers or designers speaking only to designers, we make it a point to include a lot of what’s happening in the industry or other fields of design. Maybe even architecture or heritage, craft… The scope is quite varied. Everybody who comes can take something back. And the other thing is that sometimes we have workshops specific to/for industries. We also have site visits. Sometimes we also open out offices for people to come and take a look, to see how a designer works. It’s an open house.

     

    People can just walk into a design studio on designated days. A lot of parents and media come in. So what we do is, show a typical process of how a product has been created or how a design has been evolved. So that exposure also helps and people can see a design. Because, normally this isn’t something that’s very easily accessible.

     

    Your theme this year of ‘Design Unlimited’ is very general. Can you tell us more on what to expect at the PDF

    There’ve been years where we’ve focused on design. Last year, our theme was regenerate. So we focused on repurposing, redoing, recycling and so on.  This year we thought that we’ve seen and heard a lot of designers talk about their design process, their design journey. There are a lot of fields other than design that embrace design thinking. Or there are a lot of designers who’ve used design thinking principles and gone and done something else. Hence this year we’re trying to open it out and look at those ideas and journeys. There are people who’ve gone into design for social impact. So we try to think how they use design thinking principles for social impact. There’s somebody who’s just become a venture fund for social impact who’s been a practising designer for about 30 years! So we’re trying to think of how design is affecting fields other than design? That’s really how our horizons are going to be wider and the younger designers will actually look at design in a far wider spectrum.

     

    It’s a festival organized by designers, for designers etcetera.. would you also be  looking at  issues which concern designers in terms of general hygiene kind of topics?

    Within the festival, we try and have a variety of topics. But apart from the festival, our association events also cover these things. So we have done seminars on IPRs because designers are supposed to be really poor at making contracts. In fact there are many who don’t even do any contracts. So we want them to come to a level and get educated and have certain kinds of standards. How to write proposals, how to have contracts done, how to have IPRs in their name? So we’ve done an IPR seminar and we do all such activities around the year. This is in Pune. We also did a program for schoolchildren called Generation D. That’s not just for designers. It’s a voluntary activity done by designers for schoolchildren who’re on the verge of going out and making a career choice. And our focus was not on how to make them understand how to take up design as a career. That would happen anyway. But our focus was to create a design aware generation. Because every field apart from design has to use design to make a better world. So we believe managements needs to understand how design can help them in their business. Or another field of work needs to understand how design can impact their field. Generation D was a program we reached through Sakal’s*NIE programme. Some 15,000 school students were exposed to the concept of design in that year.

     

    Clearly, the work does not stop at the Pune Design Festival. Other activities go on.

     

    While people appreciate the need for good design, in times of slowdown, many of these good-to-haves take a backseat, right?

    On the contrary, this is the appropriate time for design intervention. There are different ways of looking at design. One could look at design as an outermost layer to add to your products or your services to make them better. Or you look at it as a very intrinsic, central element. If your brief for design means that you need to work in a challenging environment or market situation, that’s the time you need to design more effectively so you can reach out to markets faster and create products and services that will cater to that requirement. It’s not a transient thing… just for a few months or weeks. We need to plan much ahead… seven to eight months at least. You need to plan for what’s going to come in.

     

    A lot of companies still go for international designers despite the rising dollar rate. Is that reason for worry for homegrown designers?

    It has been a worry but I think things are changing quite a bit. Clients have become more aware that there’s equally if not better design or designers available locally. So to up the brand value at times, sometimes yes, you get in a one-off international designer. But the trend has completely changed in recent times.

     

    Your set of speakers is interesting. You even have the Oscar-winning Resul Pookutty around.

    Before we speak about Resul, we’ll speak about how we’ve chosen the speakers. Since it’s ‘Design Unlimited’ we’ve tried to seek people who are not mainstream designers. There are mainstream designers as well, but people who’ve crossed some boundary or from some boundary, they’ve come into design. That’s really how we chose our speakers. And I think most of the time was spent on who to invite. So Resul was interesting because he’s a sound designer. The word design is used in a very different context in his  case. And we really wanted to understand the process a sound designer would follow. Someone of his experience, his talent and his genre of music, which is different. So we thought let’s try and understand how other designers follow a process. Is it similar or is it different? That’s really our interest in looking at people from different fields. Other than that, he’s well-known because of the Oscar and his work. But there are others are equally well-known in the field of design. For example, Mikal Halstrop who’s coming from Denmark. He runs the largest and most successful design offices in Europe. Compared to India, Europe has known design as a profession for the longest time. For us, it’s probably 30-odd years and for them it’s a100 years. How do they deal with ups & downs? How do they deal with need of design or no need of design? It’s much worse there, you know. So we really want to understand what keeps them going? Because we will reach there in some time. Then we have two very interesting sessions from mainstream designers. But what we really wanted to understand is how design happened yesterday and how it happens today.The two fields we’re talking about are museum design and typography and font design. What made people go into these fields 40 years ago and what makes them go into it now and how are they different. We call this session Yesterday-Today or Now & Then.

     

    There was a session called Beyond Design where people who’ve been traditionally trained as designers but have broken away,  they’ve setup their own businesses which is design-led but leveraging their design skills to set up independent business models  for themselves which would mean a product store pr your own brand. Like Mukul Goyal and Ayush Pasliwal. We also have Saskia Dies who’s a German jewellery designer. All in all, a lot of content on the two days.

     

    One last question and I would like the three of you to respond to. Pune Design Festival is just a day away, but if you were to make a pitch to someone who’s undecided or unaware, what would you tell him or her.

    BM: I think what’s exciting about Pune Design Festival is that it’s one platform where we hear a lot of design stories being told by people from across generations.  And what’s exciting about this is not just their stories, but also the people who come to the festival! Anybody who comes here has touched upon design in some form or the other. So it’s not just the sessions at the festival but also what happens during it. There’s a lot of interaction and people exchange stories too. And that’s what’s interesting because not everybody’s going to speak at the festival. So people exchange stories and their successes. The fact that it’s run by designers and there’s no other agenda to it. It’s completely based to create a platform for designers. It’s not-for-profit.

     

    DA: It’s an affordable event and an affordable celebration. In two days you get some of the best people from India in this field, from everywhere! And they are accessible, you can talk to them, listen to them, it’s not like a formal thing where you have to come and sit. There’s a lot of learning and sharing on the stage as well as off it. There’s a lot to take back from the programme. The good thing is there’s a lot of variety. It doesn’t focus just on one aspect of design but it focuses on design through various things.

     

    AD: I’ll try and remember the feedback we’ve got from people who’ve come and spoken or attended and the one thing that they always keep saying is that the positive energy that goes around the two days. It’s the difference between an event management-driven event and a people-driven event. People into design are the ones who’re managing it and planned it too. So I think that positive energy goes around in all directions. The second thing is that it’s not that the speaker will speak and go away. They are very accessible because the format is such that you can easily approach them. And then there are workshops. We missed mentioning this. We have three very interesting workshops. One is the kite workshop which will happen on the terrace of the venue. A Canadian designer who’ll conduct the workshop on the terrace. Where do you get to have that kind of fun in a conference? Her name is Skye by the way, Dr Skye Morrison. And there will be beer also! There’s always beer…

     

  • Pune Design Festival on Feb 14-15

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Association of Designers of India (ADI) has announced the eight annual edition of the Pune Design Festival (PDF). It will be held on February 14 and 15 at Hotel Le Meridien, Pune (*See Disclosure).

     

    According to Ashwini Deshpande, Managing Committee, ADI Pune Chapter and co-founder Elephant Design, the PDF is a one-of-a-kind initiative organized by practising designers from Pune. “As always, it will be a glocal platform with a mix of designers and design thinkers from India and overseas,” she said.

     

    Pune Design Festival, has earned accolades for exploring diverse design and design-led business segments, noted a communiqué adding: “This year’s theme, Design Unlimited, will celebrate wider interpretations by exploring fields other than design that embrace good design.”

     

    Since 2010, Pune Design Festival also celebrates work by design students through a student project competition in the following categories:  Industrial Design, Graphic Design & Visual Communication, User Interface Design, Media- Film & Animation, Transportation Design and Craft-based products.  The competition is open to all design students across the country for coursework and student projects. Entries should be submitted as soft copies, not more than 3 jpeg files of A3 size at 72 dpi resolution to competition14@punedesignfestival.org.  Submission mail must mention category name in subject line. Entry is free. This is also the eighth edition of student competition. In the past there have been winners from design schools across the country including Ahmedabad, Delhi, Mumbai and Pune. The jury comprises well-known design professionals from across the country.

     

    Said Nachiket Thakur, Head of Design at Mahindra Composites and part of the managing committee of the ADI Pune Chapter has been leading the awards initiative: “Battle of Design Projects – a student design projects competition is being arranged for the fourth time in a row. We started this initiative to encourage the good design work happening in various design schools in India. One of the competition winners last year went on to win the Red Dot award in Singapore for the product concept category. The competition is getting overwhelming response with each passing year. We are extending the submission deadline to February 1.”

     

    Said Nikita Kanade, who was a winner in the 2013 edition: “Pune Design Festival is a wonderful platform to meet designers across disciplines and also to get your work noticed and analysed under their watchful eyes. I had the privilege of being associated with PDF 2013 through the student project competition where I won in the visual communication category. The event triggered insightful thinking and also opened gates for new conversations and design collaboration opportunities. It is a great window of opportunity for young designers to step in the professional world and experience a slice of it.” Ms Kanade was a student at MIT-ID when she participated in the competition and now works with Microsoft. More information on PDF is available on www.punedesignfestival.org.

     

    *Disclosure: MxMIndia is a media partner of the Pune Design Festival