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Symposium Ruptures and Reckonings: A Decade of Critical Design

The Symposium "Ruptures and Reckonings: A Decade of Critical Design" invites designers, (design)anthropologists, educators, and transdisciplinary and independent researchers to reflect on the last decade of critical and decolonial design practices. The event is hosted by the department of Design Studies at Burg Giebichenstein University of Art and Design in Halle. Join us on May 15–16, 2026, for two days of dialogue and critical interventions.

rupture (‘rə(p)t-shər) n., a breaking apart or state of being broken apart; a

breach of peace or concord

reckoning (‘re-kə-niƞ) n., accounting for, or coming to terms with the effect

something or someone has had or will have; a calculation; a summing up; a judgement

Design disrupts - by its very nature it intervenes through acts and artefacts that mediate and shape experience, that come between people and their participation in the world. Critical approaches to design focus this disruptive disposition inward - disturbing or unsettling elements of design education and practice that appear established and stable – and outward, rethinking design’s capacity to bring speculative ideas to life by material means. Such ruptures are revelatory and diagnostic. They disclose unspoken norms, identify taken-for-granted habits, and expose tacit power structures and relations, making them questionable, objectionable and available for acting upon. As such, critical ruptures are generative and can create openings to new interventions, that is, to doing things otherwise.

The last decade has witnessed many such critical ruptures and openings: the call to decolonize design, attend to the more-than-human, and adopt a queer or intersectional approach, to name just a few. Other schools of thought and impulses—to un-make, re-design, repair or refuse—likewise sought to shake up the status quo. These ruptures manifested in design education, design theory/research, and design practice. The results have been uneven, diffuse, and hard to measure.

For example, designers who once sought to disrupt the heteronormative, Anglophonic and Eurocentric canon now confront new challenges and a few old ones: complacency, superficial solutionism, institutional constraints, austerity, exhaustion, and polycrises rooted in enduring colonial legacies. Even though it seemed for a while that once-ridiculed and marginalized perspectives were moving to the center and power relations were shifting, such momentum is now less clear. The arguments that are made today, and the texts that are cited, are the same as they were ten years ago – the knowledge that wanted to break up the canon has itself become canonical and thus robbed of its epistemic radicality.

We believe that this impasse is partly because many important events, interventions, discussions, initiatives and openings that might lead to more lasting changes have not been properly documented, gained visibility, or achieved exemplary status. For example, some art and design schools have attempted to grapple with the implications of decolonial theory and queer and intersectional approaches, but this difficult work is often overlooked or fails to find lasting institutional expression. Other attempts to suspend existing ways of knowing and doing, and to create new situations that redistribute who knows and who does, never quite leave the “experimental” stage. Questions remain about how such theory and methods could be valued, appreciated and put into practice instead of being appropriated, exploited, discarded as soon as complications arise, or passed over in favor of the next trend.

This symposium seeks to make space for a reckoning with critical interventions that have disrupted design over the past decade. We have three broad aims:

  • The first is documentary and analytic: What are the forms that critical design has taken? What were the sites and events of critical design? What kinds of relations were revealed, generated or broken? What kinds of practices were created, critiqued, tried out, modified, discarded, forgotten about or reproduced? What artefacts of disruption can we identify? We see this aim as practicing a kind of anthropology of design through an exploration of its ruptures.

  • The second aim pivots from taking stock of the ruptures of the past decade, to exploring what they tell us about the ruptures we currently inhabit as well as those to come. There is thus an anticipatory and speculative dimension to our symposium.

  • The third aim is to open up the format in which such documentation and reckonings are generated, evoked, or staged. It may be that a traditional roundtable or paper presentation is best suited, but maybe it is a collaborative mapping or research or design exercise, or a co-reading or co-writing session, a method and practice workshop, a collaborative syllabus or curriculum-building activity, a collective evaluation or critique, or a performance.

Call for Contribution

We seek contributions from designers, (design)anthropologists, educators, and transdisciplinary and independent researchers from adjacent disciplines – those who have explored or practiced critical approaches to design over the past decade, whether in the classroom, through research and writing, or in design practice and intervention. These contributions can come in the form of individual or joint presentations (such as a paper, or panel, or a workshop, or a performance, or other formats like those indicated above). In particular, we invite creative and accessible approaches on how to gather and present. What situations of joint inquiry and learning can we materialize for the collective reckoning with and speculation of alternative ways of designing in the world?

Submission Deadline: 10 January 2026

Notification: 24 January 2026

Please submit a proposal with an abstract (max. 300 words) and a short bio to ruptures-reckonings@burg-halle.de by January 10. 

Feel free to also send any questions to this email address.

Event Language: English

The symposium will be held exclusively in person.

Limited funding is available to support the participation of those with accepted proposals.

Organizing Committee: Pablo Abend, Imad Gebrael, Andrew Gilbert, Dandara Maia, Mara Reklies, Elsa Westreicher