Abstract
This paper investigates the notion of form as a relational process rather than a fixed attribute of things. Through the lenses of contemporary design theory and symbiotic conviviality, we present a snapshot of the first author’s bakery practice, where the ever-emerging form of sourdough bread is used to discuss ways of attuning differently to dominant understandings of design, making, and materiality. The case presented here follows a practice-led research approach, with different sources of data captured through documentation and reflection. Our findings illustrate the methodological potential of baking to explore form-making as a convivial and symbiotic process. We conclude by laying out a few implications of employing practices of ‘making-with’ as a guiding principle to anchor design activity in an ethos of regenerative, evolutionary, and co-existence-based survival, thus prioritising care and signaling a shift away from the domesticating role of the designer.
Keywords
Baking; form; morphogenesis; sympoiesis; relationality; conviviality
DOI
https://doi.org/10.21606/nordes.2025.6
Citation
Giabardo, G., Vega, L.,and Mäkelä, M.(2025) The bread without form: Attuning to relational ways of making through convivial baking practice, in Brandt, E., Markussen, T., Berglund, E., Julier, G., Linde, P. (eds.), Nordes 2025: Relational Design, 6-8 August, Oslo, Norway. https://doi.org/10.21606/nordes.2025.6
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The bread without form: Attuning to relational ways of making through convivial baking practice
This paper investigates the notion of form as a relational process rather than a fixed attribute of things. Through the lenses of contemporary design theory and symbiotic conviviality, we present a snapshot of the first author’s bakery practice, where the ever-emerging form of sourdough bread is used to discuss ways of attuning differently to dominant understandings of design, making, and materiality. The case presented here follows a practice-led research approach, with different sources of data captured through documentation and reflection. Our findings illustrate the methodological potential of baking to explore form-making as a convivial and symbiotic process. We conclude by laying out a few implications of employing practices of ‘making-with’ as a guiding principle to anchor design activity in an ethos of regenerative, evolutionary, and co-existence-based survival, thus prioritising care and signaling a shift away from the domesticating role of the designer.