Definition of Industrial Design T. Maldonado
In 1961 the old definition of Industrial Design at the first congress ratified ICSID (International Council of Societies of Industrial Design) in Stockholm in 1959 and frequently amended, was replaced by the following proposal for Successive T. Maldonado:
"Industrial design is that design activity is to determine the formal properties of industrially produced objects. For formal properties must be understood not only the features, but above all the structural and functional relationships that make an object is a coherent unit in terms of producer that user. For, while the exclusive concern for the appearance of an object often hides the desire to make it appear more attractive or even mask the weaknesses constituent, the formal properties of an object-at least as I understand it here - they are always the result of the integration of several factors, be they functional, cultural , technological or economic. In other words, while the exterior features about something as something alien, that is not tied to the object and that has not grown with it, as opposed to its formal properties are a reality that corresponds to its internal organization, and that it bound with it evolved. "
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