Why Items: Is Fashion Modern? Exhibition in MoMA Is A Must See

MoMA's new design exhibit, Items: Is Fashion Modern? is a must see. It is fashiondeconstructed so that we can see its parts and pieces.

Curated by Paola Antonelli, Senior Curator of MoMA's Architecture and Design, the idea for the exhibit started with a list, one she started for her own personal interest, entitled, "garments that changed the world." This list eventually became the 111 things that together can constitute our whole understanding of fashion of the last 100 years. They are things we wear, from safety pins, to jeans, to perfume, to accessories, and even tattoos.

"And what a list it is, from kaffiyehs to kilts, flip-flops to guayaberas, pencil skirts to moon boots, Speedos to Spanx." -Guy Trebay, The New York Times

As with the best exhibits, this one will change the way we think about its subject. Here's why:

Fashion's complexity made simple

Antonelli has made the vast complexity of fashion seemingly simple, without sacrificing the breath of it. A simple number to remember, 111 items; mapped out in one big, clear drawing on the outer wall of the exhibit; laid out in simple, clean, well-lit visual displays once you step inside. Everything feels intentionally pared down to make fashion easy to understand and digest. It is fashion organized into a system, like an alphabet.

As such, the exhibit is a beautiful example of one of design's core functions--to make the complex simple, easy to understand, use, and accessible to many. That is why most people love Apple products, even child can understand and use them in no time. In the same way, a child will get this exhibit and so will we.

You own at least some of these items

This is the rare museum exhibit where you can walk through and say, "Ah, I own this." Or if you go to the exhibit wearing your white t-shirt; your old Levis 501's; a whiff of your Chanel No. 5, your Dr. Maartens boots, or luxuriously, a single strand of Mikimoto pearls, you will actually be wearing a museum piece.

New Yorkers and Fashion go together like bread and butter

The great fun here is that it is hard to separate this exhibit from its visitors . The aisles crowded with New Yorkers (and out-of-towners who have the New Yorker dress code down) are as interesting as the exhibit itself. On opening night you couldn't help but smile at the beautiful tattoos of the people looking at the tattoo display, or the deftly tied ties of the men in suits eyeing the neckties, or women in shoes as fashion bending as the shoes on display.

Poetry: archetype, stereotype, prototype

In reading Antonelli's 2016 notes on the exhibit announcement, I learned that she conceived the exhibit experience as "stereotype, archetype, prototype". Stereotype is the version of the item as we've come to recognize it, the archetype is the contextual story of the item and the prototype is an exploration of where the idea can be further taken. Antonelli gives the example of the DVF wrap-dress which illustrates the concept well.

"For example, if Diane von Furstenberg's 1974 wrap dress represents the stereotype of this design form in the 20th century, then Items will extrapolate backwards in time through examples such as Charles James's 1932 Taxi Dress, all the way to the archetype of the kimono. If, in the course of exhibition research, a type emerged as ripe for a redesign or was identified as a potential vessel for technological, formal, economic, or social transformation, we have decided to commission a new prototype."

It is the poetry of the concept behind the execution that makes this exhibit stand out as a timeless expression of fashion. But like any good design, you don't need to know the conceptual backbone to appreciate the end result as the user. But once you know it, it gives you more reason to celebrate the hard work that went into creating a thing of beauty.

I came out of Items: Is Fashion Modern?, thinking "I now get it. I understand fashion." If you asked me, I can draw it for you. I can explain it to you over the phone. I can even explain fashion, and what it is made up of, to a kid. That is good design.

Items: Is Fashion Modern? opens October 1, at MoMA, New York.

This article first appeared on Inc.com on September 29, 2017

What to Ask Yourself Before Launching Your Next Big Project

To launch is propelling something--a rocket, a computer program or even your career--with a forward trust. It is implicit that once you launch something there's no going back. Because of that, we're often fearful of launching. And this is where The Launch Book, by CEO coach Sanyin Siang, comes in handy.

Siang, who is also the Executive Director of Duke University's Coach K Center on Leadership & Ethics, explains that one of the biggest reasons we procrastinate or don't launch is fear of failure. That's why instead of focusing on skillsets or talent, she focuses on the mindset for launch.

To know if you have the right mindset, here are 6 key questions Siang wants to make sure you ask yourself before launching your next big project:

1. Start with Asking - Is this You?

Every launch has its ups and downs. To get one through the downs, there has to be a strong sense of belief that's the result of the launch being in alignment with who you are. For example, if you are pursuing a career change, is the new career consistent with your passion and what energizes you? Is your definition for what success looks like in that career in alignment with your values?

2. Who Is My Tribe?

Engaging others in your idea or career launch not only provides emotional support, but it can create additional personal accountability along the way, and be key to eliminating any blind-spots you may have.

"You may be a solo launcher but, if you are to have a chance at success, you can't approach it as a solo endeavor."

Engaging your tribe will help you imagine a larger set of possibilities than what you originally started with. Especially if you intentionally include naysayers in your launch tribe.

3. What Is Failure?

Failure is an outcome other than the one you hoped for. Redefine failure as not doing your best on the things that you can control and letting go of the things that you cannot. And on both aspects, be able to process and learn from when things don't go as planned. What if we take a longer view and see each failure and mistake along the way as a learning that can enable us towards greater success.

4. Am I Falling Into The Comparison Trap?

Siang tells the story of Carlo Dolci, a painter of the Medici's, the greatest family in Florence of his time. He fell into a deep depression when he realized that a fellow painter could complete a painting in mere hours while it took Dolci months, and this led to his decline. Beware. Even the most talented can fall into the comparison trap (Dolci was one of the greatest painters of the 17th century and a favorite of Thomas Jefferson and Nathaniel Hawthorne.)

5. What Am I Pursuing?

If you are launching in pursuit of becoming your best self then you've tipped the scales for success your way. Looking at the launch as a discovery process will ensure your succeed even if your launch "fails" in the marketplace. When you are pursuing the best you, there is no risk, because each step along the way becomes a learning process for achieving that.

6. Am I Generous?

The most successful people, from CEO's to students Siang works with, share a common behavior. They invest their time, energy, talent, and networks in helping others succeed. "Don't wait until you think you've achieved success to become generous and helpful to others. You become successful by helping others every step of the way."

My favorite aspect about The Launch Book is how Siang includes the story of the launch of The Launch Book at the end of the book. "The irony of launching this book is that I experienced everything I was writing about...I became the reader." It reminded me of how in launching Design the Life You Love, I became my first student.

This article first appeared on Inc.com on September 22, 2017

Why Is Some Procrastination Good For You

If we didn't procrastinate life would be so much simpler.

More than 60% of people I have interviewed, did workshops with and taught Design The Life You Love to over the last 7 years have told me that procrastination is the #1 thing they would like to change about themselves. "If only!" they say. We feel guilty, beat ourselves up and feel like losers because we procrastinate.

I say stop beating yourselves about procrastination. Like most things in life, we need balance. Some procrastination is actually good for you.

1. Procrastination lets you put life first

My favorite procrastinator is also one of my favorite writers, Richard Ford, author of The Sportswriter and Independence Day. Ford would watch sports on TV, have phone conversations, travel long distances to buy a used car--anything it seems--before going back to writing. He calls this putting life before working, or in his words, "you get to put lived life first".

"At the end of a very lengthy period during which I did basically nothing whatsoever of any good to man nor beast, I got back to work. That is, I started writing again," Ford told the New York Times.

2. While you're procrastinating, your subconscious is working

According to Mason Currey, author of Daily Rituals, Kafka was a notorious procrastinator. He wrote after 10:30 or 11 at night, and even then it was mostly diary entries and letters. He'd also take 4 hour naps. He was hardly alone. Frank Loyd Wright famously drew the plans for his famous Falling Water between breakfast and lunch, in other words the time between when his clients the Kaufmanns announced they were coming over to review the plans and their time of arrival. He had procrastinated for an entire year.

A certain amount of procrastination is necessary for creative problem solving and imagination to happen in your subconscious. This is when your brain connects the dots between unrelated ideas to make-up new ideas.

3. Some nervous energy is good for work

If you've ever spoken on stage, you know that a little anxiety is good for you. I haven't met anyone who likes it, but it is the way your body prepares you for your performance.

Pushing yourself in a corner is almost a prerequisite for giving birth to new ideas. There is no place to go, but forward. It heightens your senses, makes you feel an acute need to get on with it. Writer Margaret Atwood is no stranger to it. She spends, "the morning procrastinating and worrying, and then plunges into the manuscript in a frenzy of anxiety around 3:00 p.m.", as noted by Piers Steel in his book The Procrastination Equation.

4. You can plan time for procrastination as well as productivity

Parkinson's Law, written by Cyril Northcote Parkinson states "work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion." Time is flexible. Take advantage of it. Being a mom taught me to do things that used to take one hour in 10 to15 minutes. I still meet my deadlines, and I am sure you do, too. Instead of beating yourself up about how much you procrastinate, go with it.

Rather than giving yourself generous amounts of time to do something and then eating into it with other unplanned activities, give yourself a shorter time and figure out what you want to do with the extra time.

5. Always being on deadline dulls your mind

I have this rule: no work on Saturdays. In other words Saturday is my planned procrastination, 100%. I am free to do whatever I, or my family, want, without feeling guilty. I know if I worked some on Saturday, I would get ahead and it would mean less work for the upcoming week (I do work 1 to 2 hours on Sundays). But working all the time dulls my mind. It makes me lose my appetite for the pleasure of going back to work and giving 100% come Monday.

6. Many things really do take care of themselves

Sometimes things take care of themselves in the time you've procrastinated. New data comes in, someone else comes up with the answer, you read something unrelated that actually turns out to be related, you have a lunch conversation that inspires you in an unexpected way.

In other words, life happens. Life wouldn't be life and we wouldn't be human if we didn't procrastinate. So embrace it and reap it's benefits. And take comfort in being a part of an elite group of people that includes Leonardo da Vinci (famous for not completing his works), Bill Clinton (in contrast to Hillary Clinton) and J.K. Rowlings (who tweets regularly about how she procrastinates), among many, many others.

I should note, though, that the inspiration for this article came from my inability to write it from Sunday to Wednesday.

This article first appeared on Inc.com on September 15, 2017

Which Websites Can Spark Ideas For Non-Designers

If you want to keep up-to-date on business as an entrepreneur, you go to inc.com.

What if you want to keep up-to-date on design, where do you go? Especially if you're not a designer?

Here is a list of our favorite websites compiled by our studio, Birsel + Seck. These are the links we go to for inspiration, information and to remind ourselves of the power of design. They're not limited to design websites and are in fact intentionally eclectic to give us a holistic, big picture view.

If you want to innovate you need to be innovative in terms of your research. This is what I learned from Jim Long, who was the director of research at Herman Miller. In that spirit, I hope these links will provide you with a new perspective for your next research endeavor--

1. Core77: Premier design website. I have a soft spot for Core77 because the founders, Eric Ludlum and Stuart Constantine, launched it in a windowless studio next to mine in Pratt Engineering basement in 1995.

2. Kickstarter: Gives us an idea of what people like enough to support with their money and other ideas being put out into the world.

3. Futurism: Future of everything which means a lot of Elon Musk, robots and AI.

4. Fast.Co Design: Design meets business.

5. Scientific American: Science made relevant (most of the time).

6. Pinterest: Pictionary for anything and everything, but as importantly today's version of mood boards (much better than cutting and pasting pictures on Foamcore).

7. Behance: For reviewing design talent. Just click to open a portfolio.

8. Awwwards: Best visually clean websites.

9. Death To Stock: A great site for beautiful photographs sent monthly right to your desk.

10. Design Clever: A very simple, highly visual site for inspiration on everything design, from graphics and packaging to product to interiors.

11-15. DezeenDesignMilkDesignboomThe Dieline and Mocoloco are the must-view, classic, beautiful design websites.

16. Brainpickings: Maria Popova's incredible brain. She calls it "the inventory of the meaningful life." Every Sunday.

17. Pew Research Center: To keep up to date with statistics in a very diverse set of subjects--politics, social media, social trends, technology.

18. Medium: A lot of different contributors on a lot of different subjects, including but not limited to design and design thinking, with 3-4 minute reads.

19-20. Quartz and Quartz Africa: Curated to give us a wide perspective on daily news in a short amount of time. I especially like the section, "While You Were Sleeping."

21. Radio Garden: Design muse comes to music. Here is a world map with radios from all over the world. Turn the world and click on a radio on the other side of the world. Currently listening to FIP in France.

And when your eyes are glazing over from too much websurfing, visit Rafaël Rozendaal, a visual artist whose websites attract 50 million visits a year. Matisse's paper cut-outs meets Escher. Hypnotizing, simple and surreal.

This list is subjective and incomplete. Still, if you're not a designer, you now have a long, rich list to dive into to keep up to speed about design and the other things that inspire us. And if you are a designer, hope there are some new finds here for you too.

What are your favorites? Help us discover.

My special thanks to Yuka Hiyoshi, our favorite visual researcher who now works at Steelcase, and our wonderful team at Birsel + Seck: Bibi Seck, Seda Evis, Leah Caplan, Selin Sonmez and our intern Meltem Parlak, for helping compile this list.

This article first appeared on Inc.com on September 12, 2017