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Tony Whitfield is a designer who merges his art with his conscience. Starting out as a fine artist, he finds that there are equally strong statements to be made in the design world. Working with a company -- run by a woman -- in Guyana, Tony is designing sustainable furniture which will soon be found in Aveda stores across the country.

His accomplishments notwithstanding, Tony laments the interconnected and self-perpetuating inner circles of the design world. And as chair of Parsons School of Design Product Department, he helps guide the emerging talents that may break - or break into - that world.


DB: You've been involved in many different areas of the design world, from fine art to galleries and cultural agencies, and now furniture design and education. Yet you feel that there is still an out of reach inner circle.

TW: I would love to break down the clique. Some would say that it's not really a clique, because these people don't all know each other, and they don't all get along...the truth of the matter is it's the same people; it's the same circle.

DB: Define "clique." You don't have to name names.

TW: I think that what's happening is startling: When you look at the exhibition that opened the ICFF [International Contemporary Furniture Fair] last year, and see that it was "the faces of design at the millennium," and it was 28 white men, I think that there's no way to avoid the fact that certain things do define the clique. And it continues to define that clique because those people have an ability to bring other people along. They have the power, they have some connections, they can create situations, and they can make the referrals. They could be doing things like saying, "I think you really need to be looking at these women, these people of color, these people who are here, who have been working as well." And they don't do it, because they're so afraid that this opportunity is their last opportunity.

 

Dean LA MC Table
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Ana Lo Arm Lounge


LG: People are amazingly closed-minded, when it comes to picking the "visionaires" of the moment.

TW: And they are ungenerous; they are extraordinarily ungenerous about people who don't fall into their immediate circle.

DB: Do you think that circle extends to the press as well?

TW: Yes.

LG: One of the reasons we wanted to start "Visual Seltzer" is that we were tired of the same people getting coverage over and over. I have had so many discussions about that ICFF / MoMA exhibit...there were no women, no people of color, and some of them may be very talented, but...

TW: Another startling thing is, not one of those 28 men said, "I don't want to be in this." The more powerful of them could have said, "I'm tired of this," and send out a press release and say, "based upon this kind of line up.."

DB: Assuming that they knew who else was in the exhibit.

TW: They knew. That show had been floating around for a long time.

LG: Well, that's an interesting question. Should people say, "Who else is going to be in this? What are you representing here?" When I worked in the fashion biz, the same type of thing happened, where, there were a handful of people being covered, and it wasn't exactly diverse.

TW: Exactly. And there has to be a point where someone says, "y'know, I don't need this; I have enough going on; I don't need to be in this show."

DB: It would be more interesting if they had those people pick someone else, as a designer who they respect, or they feel represents something.

TW: I don't think that's really the issue. Because the wise ones among them will choose the politically wise person.

LG: As opposed to a more interesting or "risky" person?

TW: For [someone like] Karim Rashid to say, "I don't want to be in another all-white male show," you know, it suddenly becomes fodder for all sorts of articles and a discussion of his principles. The thing is, it's often said about this "group"and this "circle" that they are the ones who are doing the interesting work. And that they are the ones who are the important designers. Truth is, that a lot of the ability to do interesting work comes from having opportunities to do it.

DB: To be encouraged?

TW: To say that your work is interesting, and to push you forward, and to set new hurdles, and to create new opportunities. But if the opportunities are kept to a limited circle, it has the impact of destroying careers. And removing people from the picture.

DB: By bypassing them...?

TW: Right. And, the editors take part in this and it's such a small circle. The magazine Wallpaper, which has so built it's reputation on this "global perspective," has done a really interesting thing. In a recent issue, there's a double page spread, in typical Wallpaper fashion, of all the people who work at Wallpaper, and there is one face of a person of color in that entire spread. Which I think seems ok to them in that it is a way of reflecting how glamorous they are because all of their people who work there can be drawn up as "pretty" people. And you've got to wonder, [with] a company like this, who could pull anyone from anywhere to work there, they could pull from the talented and trendy, and yet...it's not happening.

DB: Do you think it reflects the design world as a whole, or the magazines?

TW: I think it reflects the design world as a whole.

Miles C


Socabot


DB: If you scan the aisles at the ICFF, I don't think that the audience is much more diverse than the exhibitors.

TW: It's not.

LG: Are they or are they not diverse?

DB: It's a three part thing. If you look at the award winners, it's not very diverse, and then, if you look at the exhibitors, it's a little bit more diverse, and then, if you look at the attendees, a little bit more still, but not a lot.

TW: It's not. And it's so bold and it's so blatant in so many ways. It's a very dangerous moment. Because, the diversity issue has become far less of an issue for this field, that was never any good at it. There's a book I picked it up when I was in Italy called "100 faces of design," or "1,000 faces of design" -- a huge number. And, I think there are 7 Japanese people, and all of the rest are white or European. And it's also debatable whether one of them is considered a "whole" Japanese person, because everyone else gets a full page and she only gets half a page with her husband.

LG: That's horrible!

DB: You've been in a couple of positions, now at Parsons, and previously at the Manhattan Borough Presidents Office, and the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, where you can attempt to address this. What kind of things do you think you can do?

TW: People have to be hired to do things; they have to be hired and given an opportunity to do things. And with that hire, you have to make an investment to a certain extent. You have to be willing to work with them.

DB: Does that make it analogous to affirmative action?

TW: Very much so. I think it's very necessary in this field; this field never had it, or it wasn't particularly effective.

It's so interesting coming to this field...from politics and from the not-for-profit art world. Because, in not-for-profits, there are very real kinds of checklists that you must respond to; you must be aware of them and you have to be responsible on some level to them. It's like, "no, you have been told five times that your board of directors needs to diversify; we're not funding you this year." Or, in government, they go down the checklist: does it respond to people with disabilities, does it deal with this issue, does it deal with that issue, what's the environmental impact, etc. There are real constituencies who will hold you accountable. [Because] the design industry is not really funded by grants, there isn't anything that holds designers and the industry accountable.

 

Click to read part 2. (You're more than half way through....)

 

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