Feb 10, 2009

Marks and Meaning: Version Zero by Dave Gray

I have been reading several books over the past few weeks including: Seeing Voices by Oliver Sacks and Disrupting Class by Clayton Christensen but I have found that these books like all the other books I have been reading about visual thinking and visual learning have been missing one very key element: VISUALS. This may seem like a ridiculous and obvious thing but all the literature I have had to read without being able to interpret any of what I have been trying to learn through visuals. This has been very frustrating to me as I am a visual thinker who wants to learn about visual thinkers. It's almost as if the people writing the books can never truly understand what they are talking about because they won't engage in it.

So, assuming that I was going to find yet another book full of words, words, and more words I was delighted to find a book that talked about visual thinking in a visual way. The book is of course Mark and Meaning: Version Zero by Dave Gray. Dave Gray is the head of XPLANE a visual thinking company and is a man who seems to be able to put his money where his mouth is when it comes to talking AND showing visual thinking. In the same place even. Something that seems totally unheard of in the world of academia.

As I have been searching long and hard to find visuals that could act as guides when crating visuals for my own work I kept coming up empty handed until now. Although his book is essentially a work in progress I think it is an excellent example of explaining visual thinking in visuals and it has renewed my sense of hope in finding visuals.

Unfortunately his book, as of right now, is only available on Lulu. I highly recommend it for visual thinkers or people interested in visual thinking and he seems very open to discussion and feedback making it more like a living document than anything else (meaning it will change over time with feedback and conversation).

I know this may seem like a book review but it was really about finally finding some sort of visual output for visual thinking for the first time in my research and although it is quite rough it is a refreshing thing to help break the visual-less slump I've been in.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Hi Sam!

Great to hear that you are finding value in the book! Have you joined the email discussion yet? Lots of interesting conversations there. Send me an email if you want an invite: dave dot gray at gmail dot com.

Thanks for the great feedback, it's really encouraging!

Dave