Image for Digital Design

Digital Design : A History

See all formats and editions

A groundbreaking history of digital design from the nineteenth century to todayDigital design has emerged as perhaps the most dynamic force in society, occupying a fluid, experimental space where product design intersects with art, film, business, engineering, theater, music, and artificial intelligence.

Stephen Eskilson traces the history of digital design from its precursors in the nineteenth century to its technological and cultural ascendency today, providing a multifaceted account of a digital revolution that touches all aspects of our lives. We live in a time when silicon processors, miniaturization, and CAD-enhanced 3D design have transformed the tangible world of cars and coffee makers as well as the screen world on our phones, computers, and game systems.

Eskilson provides invaluable historical perspective to help readers better understand how digital design has become such a vibrant feature of the contemporary landscape.

He covers topics ranging from graphic and product design to type, web design, architecture, data visualization, and virtual reality.

Along the way, he paints compelling portraits of key innovators behind this transformation, from foundational figures such as Marshall McLuhan, Nam June Paik, and April Greiman to those mapping new frontiers, such as Jeanne Gang, Jony Ive, Yugo Nakamura, Neri Oxman, and Jewel Burks Solomon. Bringing together an unprecedented array of sources on digital design, this comprehensive and richly illustrated book reveals how many of the digital practices we think of as cutting-edge actually originated in the analog age and how the history of digital design is as much about our changing relationship to forms as the forms themselves. This book’s distinctive cover design features an overlay of raised dots printed in clear ink.

The dots are tactile representations of the pixels that make up so much of digital design and refer to the origins of the term “digital”—digitus is the Latin word for finger, the most basic means of counting.

As with the printing of braille, the pattern of raised dots is made to be felt with the fingers, or digits.

Read More
Available
£33.60 Save 20.00%
RRP £42.00
Add Line Customisation
2 in stock Need More ?
Add to List
Product Details
Princeton University Press
069118139X / 9780691181394
Hardback
17/10/2023
United States
English
288 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour)
29 cm