Thats an idea. I haven't tried that with this class yet. I will add though, that the projects he's having us do are entirely abstract. "Create tension and rhythm in an orthogonal non-rectilinear Model, using design hierarchy and different axis to create a design thats pleasing to the eye"........ Thats an example of one of them.
To put it in layman's terms, Tension is following certain angles and using space around those angles, rhythm tends to be using a series of objects within a single form to imply similarity between them even if they're different, orthogonal is basically 3 dimensional, non-rectiliniar means "no Squares, Rectangles, cubes, corners, or Angles", Hierarchy can basically be boiled down to "1 large, 1 medium, 1 small" in this case, though it has to do with proportion to each other as well, and different axis of course means none of the three can be "aiming" along the same axis, or ideally shouldn't be (This one can be bent, "If you have reason to do so" as the professor puts it).
Out of all of that, the crux of the problem I'm having, I think, is "Pleasing to the eye"...... The idea behind modern design apparently is that Design is Objective. Meaning that most people should be able to look at a design and without much discussion (if any), come to a consensus on whether its a good design or not..... I can definitely agree with that in part....
But two things keep cropping up to me whenever I'm doing this,
1: is that there is without a doubt some bit of subjectivity to this (Meaning individual preference in this case. For me, Id be just as happy designing the next Earth Excavator as I would designing the next McClaren P1), and
2: If people with ASD are just wired differently, wouldn't that serve to either separate us some distance from objectivity (Group consensus) or make it more difficult? The second one I feel is the more pertinent question, and I would definitely say that thats how I feel anytime I walk out of class with a new one of these projects or sit down and see what everyone else has built....
Thanks for reading through all of this if you have.
Aldran