This week I was challenged to create something that represents the work I intend to present based on the continuums I defined last week. The key intentions I'm trying to move towards are: Inclusive vs. Exclusive, Discover vs. Teach, Public vs. Private.
Instabored is a poster I designed for the setting of public bathrooms. It aims to bring back boredom to the toilet. Instabored is a printed poster of the entire Instagram User Agreement. Even in 2012, 75% of Americans reported using their phones in the bathroom. Rather than distracting ourselves on our phones, Instabored provides an opportunity to rediscover boredom.
Boredom has become a key focus of my thesis and is even more on my mind this week because New Tech City, a technology podcast on WNYC, just yesterday launched their biggest project ever, Bored and Brilliant. Their project aims to get people to rethink their relationship with technology, (specifically smartphones for their project) and tap into the creative potential of boredom. They are doing this through a week full of podcasts with accompanied daily challenges.
Studies on boredom have shown that the performance of boring tasks have creativity-boosting effects. Test subjects who were given the boredom inducing task of copying the phone book for 15 minutes, outperformed a control group on a standard creativity test. When groups were given the more passive boring task of simply reading the phone book, they outperformed both groups. Passive boredom, which leads to mind wandering, fosters creative and productive boost.
We eat, sleep, commute and even go to the bathroom with our phones. As New Tech City points out, the average mobile user checks their phone 150 times a day. Much of this time, especially time spent waiting in line, standing on the subway or sitting on the toilet used to be spent letting one's mind wander and being bored. Instabored aims take back our time on the toilet from distraction, and instead fill it with boredom.