It’s the @ symbol on the computer keyboard, which is an essential component of every e-mail address. Millions of us type it each day, usually without thinking about it. Yet the Museum of Modern Art in New York has deemed it to be such an important example of design that the @ has been officially admitted to its architecture and design collection.
You may be wondering why a keyboard symbol should be lauded as a design coup. It’s a reasonable question, and the answer tells us a great deal about how design and our expectations of it are changing.
Let’s start by looking at the @. No one knows for sure when it first appeared. One suggestion is that it dates to the sixth or seventh century when it was adopted as an abbreviation of ‘ad,’ the Latin word for ‘at’ or ‘toward.’ (The scribes of the day are said to have saved time by merging two letters and curling the stroke of the ‘d’ around the ‘a.’) Another theory is that it was introduced in 16th-century Venice as shorthand for the ‘amphora,’ a measuring device used by local tradesmen.
Whatever its origins, the @ appeared on the keyboard of the first typewriter, the American Underwood, in 1885 and was used, mostly in accounting documents, as shorthand for ‘at the rate of.’ It remained an obscure keyboard character until 1971 when an American programmer, Raymond Tomlinson, added it to the address of the first e-mail message to be sent from one computer to another.
At the time, he was working for Bolt, Beranek & Newman, a technology company that was developing a communications network for the US department of defence. Tomlinson was responsible for the messaging service. He wrote the addresses in computer code, which needed to be translated into a form of words that the rest of us could understand.
Having decided that the first half of the address should identify the user and the second the computer, he looked for a symbol to indicate that he or she was literally ‘at’ that machine. The @ not only had a similar meaning, but was so seldom used that it was open to reinterpretation.
We all know what happened next. The @ became a supernova of the digital age and part of our daily lives, although that still doesn’t explain why it has been elevated to MoMA’s design collection.
There are some 1,75,000 pieces in MoMA’s entire collection, and roughly 28,000 in the architecture and design section, which includes everything from some of the 20th century’s most famous cars and chairs to the archive of the modernist grandee Mies van der Rohe.
The committee must be convinced that each addition meets the entry criteria. Does it excel in terms of form and function? Does it embody the values of clarity, honesty and simplicity that MoMA considers essential to good design? Has it has made an impact on our lives? Is it innovative? Then there’s the clincher. “If this object had never been designed or manufactured, would the world miss out?” said Paola Antonelli, senior curator of architecture and design at MoMA.
How did the @ fare? Brilliantly, according to Paola. By giving that once obscure accountancy symbol a new application without distorting its original meaning, Tomlinson was deemed to have checked all of MoMA’s boxes in terms of form, function, values, cultural impact and innovation.
Fair enough, you might say, but what does its transformation have to do with design? After all, the new @ looks exactly the same as the old symbol, and isn’t a physical object like the chairs, cars or architectural drawings that you’d expect to find in a design museum.
That’s exactly why MoMA admires it. First, both the old and new @ fulfil the same function of simplifying and clarifying something that’s fiendishly complicated to make and interpret: handwritten script and computer code respectively. Paola describes that as “an act of design of extraordinary elegance and economy.”
Timeliness matters to MoMA too, and the new @ is timely not only in its economy but also precisely because it is not physical (just like equally dynamic areas of contemporary design such as software and social design). “MoMA’s collection has always been in touch with its time,” Paola said, “and design these days is often an act with aesthetic and ethical consequences, not necessarily a physical object.”
That’s why MoMA decided against adding a specific version of the @ to the collection in favour of using it in different typographic styles and sizes. Paola likens it to the museum’s acquisition of ‘The Kiss,’ a performance art piece by Tino Sehgal, in which a couple embrace for several hours. Just like the @, each performance can take a different form with new protagonists — though there is a difference. MoMA reportedly paid $70,000 for ‘The Kiss,’ while the @ is joining the collection free.