WEBVTT 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:11.884 One is it was a multidisciplinary school, so we had architects, landscape architects, and what were then called product designers. Now you’d call them industrial designers. 2 00:00:11.884 --> 00:00:18.689 I think that’s what they’ve changed the name to. We didn’t have graphic design, we didn’t have art and design and some of these other disciplines then, but it was multidisciplinary. 3 00:00:18.689 --> 00:00:32.069 So at the beginning everybody took the same basic design course and to this day I have friends who were in my basic design class, most of whom are retired. 4 00:00:32.069 --> 00:00:45.551 So you were taking classes and exploring design problems with students who were going to go on into other fields, related but still a little bit different. 5 00:00:45.551 --> 00:00:55.959 My freshman design professor was Wayne Taylor and he was really good, kind of an architect-artist. 6 00:00:55.959 --> 00:01:08.973 In the design professions there’s always this question of whether you are a professional or an artist or both, you know, and how is a designer different from an artist, 7 00:01:08.973 --> 00:01:19.349 so when you’re in basic design you’re really starting at a very basic level, so it’s really more about art. In those days it was. 8 00:01:19.349 --> 00:01:31.642 You honed your drawing skills. I had a drawing professor, Raymond Musselwhite, who was a sculptor but he taught me–. I love to draw, and I’ve drawn since I was – [way] before I went to college. 9 00:01:31.642 --> 00:01:42.474 He taught me more about drawing because it’s about how you see as well as what you do with your hands. It’s kind of hand-eye coordination. 10 00:01:42.474 --> 00:01:53.049 So the foundation years were all about honing those basic skills, getting ready then to use them professionally, and if you were a landscape architect you’d use them one way; 11 00:01:53.049 --> 00:01:59.690 if you’re a product designer you’re going to be looking at designing cars and other things; if you’re an architect you’re going to start to focus on buildings. 12 00:01:59.690 --> 00:02:10.333 So that didn’t happen until really the third year because the second year you got some more cross-disciplinary things, like a landscape studio in my case, 13 00:02:10.333 --> 00:02:25.015 with Professor Phillips, and you got to really be friendly with other students that were in these other disciplines, one who became my partner after I graduated and was a landscape architect. 14 00:02:25.015 --> 00:02:33.223 So you sort of forge some bonds with these other students and with these other disciplines. 15 00:02:33.223 --> 00:02:43.868 One of the things about the design education is, in this multidisciplinary environment, you were doing this cross-disciplinary work 16 00:02:43.868 --> 00:02:48.439 which is a really important foundation for what happens when you get out in practice.