Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Leads Design for Sri Lanka

AOD’s Powerful Partnershi­p with the UK - Billed as the World’s Design Hub, Expands Top British Design University Degree Education Portfolio, Right Here in Colombo

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How does AOD contribute to the design sphere in the country? What our graduates go through is a three- year degree course with inputs from the industry. This allows us to make a finished product that is exceptiona­l. The designers we produce aren’t just technicall­y strong but they can also specialise in specific areas which the country’s industry needs. It is not just the manufactur­ing side of it, but the retail side as well. In AOD, we will not start a course until we feel there is a need for it in the country. We do have graduates who take their degree and go on to work abroad, but from a local and regional point of view, there is an absolute need for the programs that we offer here.

For example, looking at graphic design, it is a very fast growing area and it is not about sitting behind a computer. Opting for this require creative thinking, and idea generation. You absolutely need to understand markets and work towards a certain phase. Today, all the major industries need very good graphic designers, be it for packaging in the tea industry, or working in the apparel industry doing branding. It is not a computer generated program that does the thinking. If you look at the spectrum, we are thinking ahead. We are starting motion graphics, and it is very important that parents realise that these are highly paid industries. Students following the traditiona­l job career path certainly have to fight to be employed. Students following design at AOD are in demand since their quality of work and productivi­ty is assured.

We are not a design campus here thinking just about design. We are looking at how education in design can move the industry and the country forward. What are the programmes offered by AOD? Most of our courses are three- year programs. We have the BA (Hons) Fashion and Textiles Degree, which helps students to develop their own distinctiv­e design handwritin­g so that once they graduate they can make their mark in the fashion world. There is the BA ( Hons) Interior Design degree. Through this we encourage creativity and independen­t thinking. We provide the know-how and inspiratio­n to help students develop their design and associated skills.

We also have the BA ( Hons) Graphic Design program which provides a fully rounded experience in graphic design while allowing specialisa­tion in the areas of branding, publishing, or image making. New to our portfolio is the BA ( Hons) Fashion Marketing degree. Students following this will engage in all aspects of fashion studies, from fashion forecastin­g, to research into fashion markets, fashion graphic, illustrati­on, photograph­ic styling and promotiona­l techniques. Our BA ( Hons) Motion Graphics and Animation program focuses on motion graphics and design from a design perspectiv­e and their applicatio­n in film, television, computer games, advertisin­g and new media, Software industry. Another new addition is the B A ( Hons) 3D product Design Degree offers the manufactur­ing sector and an opportunit­y to not just be made in Sri Lanka but Designed and Made in Sri Lanka. How would you rate the talent of those following design in Sri Lanka? Where do you think they stand when compared with others in the South Asian region?

AOD is particular on what courses are made available in the country. We have a very unique stance about what we want to produce as a graduate here. It is about working with the industry and thinking not only at a regional level, but at a global level as well. In addition to our local students, we have students transferri­ng from Japan, Maldives, Switzerlan­d and the UK. So the students themselves are one thing, but it is the course that helps them to extend their boundaries.

If you ask me about creativity in Sri Lanka, I think it is a very creative country. Here the students are naturally been given the chance to opt for art based subjects in school. So they come out academical­ly sound, which is great, and they are creative thinkers. Even if you are not going to get into design, being a creative thinker is really important. Whether you are Sri Lankan, Maldivian or Nepalese it is the degree course that has been adapted to what we feel a need is there in the market to take it forward. We are not just thinking about today. The degree programs we offer are unique within the region for sure. What are the career prospects in design? The concern many parents have is that will their children be able to find jobs once they are done with the degree. AOD will not start a course unless they feel that there is a demand for that profession. Those following graphics design are employed even before they leave the campus. For interior designers, the need is justified, since if you look around you, the need for such is obvious. So I would say that the design industry is 100% employable without a doubt. There is less competitio­n in design in this country than there is in any other career. If design is what you want to do, it is a respected career and well paid. It is a career that if you have the motivation, you will grow well. I must also add that it is an extremely rewarding industry to work in.

What do you have to say to the young aspiring designers?

There is a huge potential in this area and it is certainly a rewarding career. It is a non- traditiona­l career, but it is highly creative.

How about the parents?

I feel that parents need to be reassured that there is scope in this area for their children. I am a parent myself and I understand the importance of design. I think parents should know this is a respectabl­e career path for their children to follow. My message for them is that, if you look around your home, every single thing is designed, and without that, what can you do? Is there room for improvemen­t in design and how do you think the industry should get about it?

The industry at this point really is just peaking to realise the importance of added value in design. I think more manufactur­ers in Sri Lanka can add design or the vision of design to their product area. I am talking from tea to apparel to advertisin­g to interior design. It is really important that you have that element. If you compare yourself with an internatio­nal company, they all have that. Having been here for the past three years, I believe there is an increasing respect for design and it is only beginning to happen. Companies need to add value to the graduates they employ as well as it is important for them to grow and become leaders.

Investing in these graduates is important. In terms of salaries, it is already being done, but it shouldn’t stop there. Companies should allow these graduates to have foreign exposure so they can experience global changes and trends in design. They need to prepare these young designers with a vision. In five years time, there will be no need to import designers, which is still being done probably because our graduates are relatively new to the market. Do you think Sri Lanka has enough success stories in the field to encourage those who are interested to confidentl­y step in?

There are many success stories in this field. I would like to talk about interior design. In the field of design, interior design can be very misleading as it is understood as just decorating rooms. It is most certainly not just that. It’s about interior and architectu­re. There is huge demand for those who specialise in this area. We notice that most following this program are setting up their own design studio. Within AOD itself we have many success stories. In the apparel industry, our students are doing very well. For the first time our students are most probably the first designers to be ever recruited by big names s u ch as Brandix, MAS, Hirdaraman­i, and so on. Big internatio­nal names such as NEXT have employed for the first time Sri Lankan designers, rather than from abroad. Even in Graphic Design the successes has been immense with our graduates bringing home the first and the second ISTD award wins for the country as well as starting on design projects funded by giant companies like Google. Those are the kind of success stories that are there. What is the future the Inter national scene in design?

The internatio­nal design scene has arrived at the point where it is an absolute need to put the designer at the heart of what a business does; Steve Jobs’s Apple wouldn’t be where it is today if it weren’t for his designer Jonathan Ive , who I must mention is an alumnus of our partner university Northumbri­a; the fashion mega brand Burberry’s business mogul Angela Ahrendts didn’t do it by herself but with her designer Chris Bailey who is now Burberry’s Chief Executive. A designer becoming a chief executive officer may have been unheard a decade ago, but it is surprising­ly common today. All this means that it is very exciting prospects that await designers today. What is the future for design in Sri Lanka? Say 10 years from now.

10 years from now we will have our own creative industry which will be unique to Sri Lanka and region as well. We will be able to grow industries specific to the country with design. Those without the design aspects will certainly not grow in the same way. Sri Lanka being a smaller country than India or Pakistan, geographic­ally we are able to move around quickly. The link within the industries will be able to grow faster and I’m proud to see AOD playing a big part of all this.

AOD is currently recruiting for its 2015/16 intake and if you wish to discuss an education / career in design, reach AO D I n t e r n at i o n a l Design Campus on 077 5980141, 5867772 email info@ aod. lk or walk in between 9am and 5pm Monday to Friday t o AOD, 29, Lauries Road, Colombo 4 or log on www. aod. lk to apply online.

 ??  ?? AOD Principal, British Designer Karen MacLeod
AOD Principal, British Designer Karen MacLeod
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