Description
This issue of diid proposes a reflection on the theme of modernity in relation to design issues. After the great collective modern projects, the idea of progress has become problematized in an omnivorous present and today opens up a series of questions: what is the destiny of the project in a time that renounces the progressive development of history? If the artificial project is the representation of our material culture, what are the forms that still manage to interpret a collective project? Design after Modernity intends to investigate the relevance of modern design and its contemporary expressions.