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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A five page paper which looks at the ways in which computer technology and the globalisation of communication has changed design concepts, and the extent to which such technology is leading towards a ‘paperless society’.
Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JL5_JLcompdesign.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
- January, 2013 To Use This Report Correctly, Please
It could be asserted that the growth of modern technology, the Internet and global communication has changed the way in which we communicate so radically that
the concept of the paperless society related solely to design cannot be seen in isolation from the more widespread developments in technology which have affected society as a whole. The
student could perhaps look at the question from two perspectives: firstly, what effect has the new technology had on art in general, in terms of the way art is defined
and constructed, and secondly, what differences has it made to graphic design in particular, both in terms of new design tools and new ways of disseminating finished designs.
The relationship between art and technology has, since the innovation of advanced computer graphics and CGI, been something of an uneasy one. Harris (1997) points
out that art should be seen as a way of attempting to describe the world, whatever the medium, and that technology offered a way of bridging the gap between modernism
and the popular culture of mass communications. There has been a tendency to dismiss computer art as being in some way inferior to other, more traditional forms; it is seen
as too impermanent, too easy to construct, and too concerned with popularisation rather than meaningful content. In the early days of computer
art, this was probably a fair comment. The student might like to consider a comparison of, say, any traditionally acclaimed work of sculpture, such as that by Rodin or Moore,
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