Archive for October 20th, 2009

Today’s Edward Tufte Seminar

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Today I attended a one-day course titled “Presenting Data and Information” taught by Edward Tufte in Chicago, which I signed up for on somewhat of a whim a month or two ago. Though the topic of the seminar wasn’t directly related to my field, per se, I thought it was relevant enough to my work as an animator and illustrator to warrant attending. I am, after all, a creator of graphics. And even if it had no relevance whatsoever, I still find Tufte’s work intriguing. So that alone was reason enough to go.

I enjoyed the course greatly. Topics covered included interface design, integration of graphics with text, the importance of resolution, what makes a graphic engaging and communicative vs boring or confusing or irrelevant, and why PowerPoint is the most god-awful way to present information ever. A lot of time was dedicated to that last point. Too much time, in fact. I guess it was justifiable considering that the audience consisted mostly of business types who probably give PowerPoint presentations all the time. I, however, wanted to hear more about the graphics.

Overall, I would say that my biggest take-away from the seminar can be summed up in a quote that Tufte said toward the beginning of the day,

There is no such thing as information overload, only failure of design.