We live in a global ecosystem marked by interconnected challenges, including climate change, social inequalities, urban transformations, health emergencies, digital transitions, and crises of care and living. These are complex problems with multiple interdependent factors, often in conflict with one another. Some are defined as “wicked problems” (Rittel & Webber, 1973) – ‘wicked’ not because unsolvable, but because they defy stable definitions and demand situated, reflective approaches fostering dialogue across disciplines.
In this context, design itself – by its very nature an instrument for proposing scenarios, establishing relations, and opening directions – is called to rethink its aims and responsibilities. It should be conceived not merely as a resolutive gesture or linear response, but as a relational and open practice, capable of interpreting uncertainty, generating visions, and developing tools for reading and navigating contemporary complexity.
The symposium The P(r)o(bl)em – a title that recalls and reworks Anatol Knotek’s visual poem The Solution (2020), in which problem and solution coincide in a linguistic gesture – aims to serve as a transdisciplinary forum to reflect on the idea that critical narration, the ability to tell and interpret, can itself constitute a response to wicked problems. From ‘problem’ to ‘poem’: rather than offering solutions, the symposium seeks to open critical and generative spaces that activate new research trajectories and foster encounters among heterogeneous forms of knowledge – humanistic, scientific, technological – and diverse practices, both analog and digital, within a framework of methodological and cultural cross-contamination.
Within this context, particular attention is given to the adoption of emerging tools – including generative artificial intelligence – not only as operational or design responses but also as speculative and critical resources. Such tools can contribute to scenario building, the imagination of possible futures, and the experimentation with new languages and forms of representation.
The symposium invites the scientific community to contribute to this reflection through case studies, prototypes, and narratives that highlight the potential of design as a critical and transformative practice, capable of articulating the complexity of the present and opening possibilities for the future through new means. Contributions may follow three main lines of inquiry. These should not be regarded as rigidly separated domains but rather as possible orientations through which to interrogate contemporary complexity and to explore design as a critical, speculative, and transformative tool.
Authors are invited to submit an original contribution developing a theoretical, critical, or design reflection consistent with the themes proposed by the symposium. Each contribution must include a written text and an authorial image that visually represents its contents.
The text should be between 8,000 and 10,000 characters (including spaces) and may be written in either Italian or English.
The image should be representative of the contribution and of original authorship, produced in a square format (80×80 cm) and in high resolution (300 dpi).
All materials must be submitted by email to info@theproblem-symposium.com.
For detailed information on the submission documents, contributors are required to consult the author guidelines and use the text template, available below.
Additional content will be shared through the Instagram page @theproblemsymposium.