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Artist
John Maeda (born 1966 in Seattle, Washington) is a Japanese-American graphic designer, computer scientist, university professor, and author. He is the current President of the Rhode Island School of Design. His work in design and technology explores the area where the two fields merge. Maeda was originally a software engineering student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) when he became fascinated with the work of Paul Rand and Muriel Cooper. Cooper was a director of MIT's Visual Language Workshop. After completing his bachelors and masters degrees at MIT, Maeda studied in Japan at Tsukuba University's Institute of Art and Design to complete his Ph.D. in design. In 1999, he was named one of the 21 most important people in the 21st century by Esquire. In 2001, he received the National Design Award for Communication Design in the United States and Japan's Mainichi Design Prize. Maeda is currently working on SIMPLICITY, a research project to find ways for people to simplify their life in the face of growing complexity. His research has led to the publishing of Laws of Simplicity, his best-selling book to date. He currently lives with his wife, Kris, and their five daughters, in Lexington, Massachusetts. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
TEDTalks : My journey in design, from tofu to RISD - John Maeda (2008)
5072TEDTalks : Simplicity patterns - John Maeda (2007)
3803TED: John Maeda: How art, technology and design inform creative leaders - John Maeda (2012)
754How Something Made Doesn’t Matter
95Follow the Leader
9623andRISD
97Printmaking with Prof. Henry Ferreira
88Dustin Hostetler from Threadless
89Complete, or Not Complete
810Grad Program Info Session
8TEDTalks (video)
TEDTalks (audio)
TEDTalks (hd)
Ruminations on RISD
Zakony prostoty
The Laws of Simplicity Design, Technology, Business, LifeDesign, Technology, Business, Life (Unabridged)
Законы простоты
John Maeda's Album
Machines process data, and data alone can’t always paint a complete picture.
Simplicity patterns
Redesigning Leadership (Unabridged)
Machines are good at repeating tasks endlessly.