I recently read Show Your Work by Austin Kleon. It talks about the creative life and highlights 10 ways to find your audience by sharing your work and progress.
Here are some gems from the book that I thought I would share with you:
When she was young and starting out, Patti Smith got this advice from William Burroughs: “Build a good name. Keep your name clean. Don’t make compromises. Don’t worry about making a bunch of money or being successful. Be concerned with doing good work . . . and if you can build a good name, eventually that name will be its own currency.”
Don’t worry about everything you post being perfect. Science fiction writer Theodore Sturgeon once said that 90 percent of everything is crap. The same is true of our own work. The trouble is, we don’t always know what’s good and what sucks. That’s why it’s important to get things in front of others and see how they react.
Just do the work that’s in front of you, and when it’s finished, ask yourself what you missed, what you could’ve done better, or what you couldn’t get to, and jump right into the next project.
Make stuff you love and talk about stuff you love and you’ll attract people who love that kind of stuff. It’s that simple.
If you spend your life avoiding vulnerability, you and your work will never truly connect with other people.
Share what you love, and the people who love the same things will find you.
I also wrote a a blog post about the author’s other book, Steal Like An Artist.
Show Your Work!: 10 Ways to Share Your Creativity and Get Discovered Austin Kleon
A great follow-up to Steal Like an Artist, which details how to be discovered.
Basically, find your people (easy to do with the interwebs) share a lot (easy to do with the interwebs) don’t be spammy (being spammy is easy to do with the interwebs) and learn to take criticism and stick it out for the long term.
My favorite part was when he says “No Guilty Pleasures” because he means it in the way that you shouldn’t be guilty about your pleasures--if you like it, embrace it.
I also like his emphasis on teaching and sharing skills and inspirations and opening up work processes as well as work products. I love that aspect of online maker culture right now. (I think Pinterest is great for sharing and discovering other people’s inspirations and work.)
Overall, it’s very practical, hands-on advice on how let other people know you’re out there, making things.
It retains the same vibe and design aesthetic of Steal Like an Artist and the two work really well together.
Book Provided by... my local library
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Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative Austin Kleon
Who ever had this one checked out before me left a some sticky arrows in the front cover, which was good, because I ended up using them.
This book is a short read--lots of graphics, fun typography, and white space, with some good advice about how to be creative and make your art.
Kleon’s basic point is that nothing is new anymore, so steal inspiration from things you enjoy. As he reminds us, even the Beatles started as a cover band. Also, if you steal from 1 person, that’s plagiarism. Stealing from many is research.
He tells the reader to think about the flaws you see in your favorite artists work--what could have been done differently? If they were still alive, what would they make today? If your 5 favorite artists got together and made something, what would it be? And then he tells us to go make those things.
I also like that he tells us to give our secrets away. Part of it is building a name for yourself, but he also reminds us that Martha Stewart built an empire on telling the world how she does stuff.
It was a great read and well-designed, with a lot of advice and inspiration on how to go out and make art. I really loved it and now I need my own copy to mark up and reread on a regular basis.
Book Provided by... my local library
Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.
It’s National Poetry Month this April and what better way to celebrate than a chat with author, poet, and creative writing instructor Karen Benke.
I read this really intriguing book last night and this morning: Show Your Work by Austin Kleon.
Here’s his premise: Artists would do well to talk about their work as they work. It helps get their audience more involved and is basically just a friendly thing to do. Which sounds right to me–especially the second part.
I’d be interested in hearing your opinions on this: Do you want to look behind the curtain of a writer’s process? Some of the time, at least? Or would you rather just see the finished product and never really know how a book and all its characters and plot came to be?
For me, if someone like JK Rowling wanted to tell me every week what she did to write that current volume of Harry Potter, I’d be ALL OVER IT. But she’s JK Rowling. There might be other writers whose process wouldn’t thrill me at all. Hard to say.
It’s also hard for me to say whether any of you would be interested in hearing about that process from me. My creative mind sucks up all sorts of influences from all over the place, including a lot of non-fiction sources that I enjoy bringing to new readers via my fiction. Would you be interested in seeing that trail of breadcrumbs from initial idea, through research and writing, to final production? Or would you, honestly, not?
I’d really love to hear your thoughts on this! Thanks!
Show Your Work! Episode 1: Vampires (by Austin Kleon)
Austin Kleon launching a video series about creativity and sharing your work? Best news of the week. Can’t wait to see more of these.
Austin’s latest book Steal Like an Artist is a genius little companion book to Austin’s Tumblr and online world — one of the richest and most smartly-tagged resources of creativity, art, finding meaning in one’s work.
by Liz Garton Scanlon
I have to be honest with you.
I think the word “idea” is a little grand.
And by grand, I mean daunting.
An idea is a huge thing, right?
It requires freshness and originality, it encompasses possibility, it is—not to get all god-like here, but—the beginning of everything!
Meanwhile, we’re always being told, “There are no new ideas!”
Poet Audre Lord said, “There are no new ideas. There are only new ways of making them felt.” And there are all those books and lectures that tell us there are only about seven plots available on the whole entire planet. And you guys. There is even a web site called “no new ideas” and it is just a blank page!
So. Phew. That’s out of the way.
No new ideas.
We can’t find what isn’t there.
But, this puts us PiBoIdMo folks in a bit of bind, doesn’t it?
What are we supposed to do for the rest of the month?
Well, personally, I think we should try for something smaller.
Not a whole new idea everyday—just a new perspective.
(And, guess what? The Greek origin of the word idea is idein, which means “to see”! Which means I’ve got support from ancient sages here, so let’s go with it.)
What if all we need is a new way of looking at things?
And what if that way is a child-like way?
A child, said author Olive Schreiner, “sees everything, looks straight at it, examines it, without any preconceived idea.”
Have you ever noticed what kids want to do when they’re riding a down escalator? They want to run up it!
Kids don’t look at things as if they’re static or rule-based or already defined. Surprise and experimentation are everyday affairs. Freshness and originality and possibility—all those things I found so daunting above? Ha. Child’s play.
And children, you’ll remember, are our audience.
So, what if we look straight at life today and examine it?
What if we let our preconceptions slip away and see things as children see things?
What if we imagine that socks are pockets (A Sock is a Pocket for Your Toes) or that the whole wide world could fit in a book (All the World) or that a worm and a bird could be best friends (Noodle & Lou)?
What if look around, each of us, at the animals in our houses and yards, the food on our tables, the books on our bedside tables, and we just plain see them in a new way? That’s all I’m going to do today, and you should join me. We’ll leave the grand and daunting to someone else…
(And now for the party favors!)
These really great photos that are all about accessing a child’s perspective.
This one is my favorite:
And then this fine bit of musing by a
Austin Kleon shares photos of his sketchbook. I applaud Austin’s efforts to ensure that his sketchbooks are not precious things, but rather places for messy, reckless doodling and thinking.
Posted by John Martz on Drawn! The Illustration and Cartooning Blog |
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2 comments
Tags: Austin Kleon, Creative Thinking, Drawing, sketchbooks
I loved your perspective. When I babysit my grand-daughter I often am on my knees looking at the world how she sees it, at a lower level.
Thanks for reminding me.
Lynn
That was excellent. That photo of the bus… that is exactly the kind of photo I get when I give my 4 year old the camera… and I love it. I love seeing the world from his small stature… how tall I appear to him, the random things that catch his attention and he finds worthwhile capturing. This may be another way to experiment with the “new perspective.” Give a kid a camera and see what they see! Thank you for sharing!
As my six year old (going on 13 year old) has grown up, so as my writing. I really needed this reminder to get a new perspective on things. The one year old and I will be toddling around on the ground together this morning and as she discovers the world, I will be rediscovering it. Thanks!
Hi Liz, thank you for such a thought provoking post. I love the quotes and the the picture. Yes, seeing through a child’s eyes is the perfect way to get new ideas. Thanks so much for the reminder.
Hi Liz. “Eureka!” Fabulous post. I love your way of thinking – looking at things from a child’s perspective. Gives everything,such as ‘normal things’, a fresh approach. Love it. Helen
Loved the way you put your thoughts together in this post. I especially liked the quote by Audre Lord. Thank you for this perspective.
Absolutely love All the World! Reading to my students during National Poetry Month is one of my new traditions.
Enjoyed the post, Liz!
Thanks for sharing Austin’s thoughts on how to steal like an artist
Enjoyed this post. I love the fact that Audre Lord’s quote says there are only new ways to make ideas ‘felt’. Isn’t that what we hope our picture books will do, strike a chord and be felt by our audience.
Thank you Liz!
Great post! : )
Great post, Liz. A reminder that sometimes looking at everyday things from a different perspective is all we need…and whaddya know? There’s my PiBo idea for the day! (woohoo!)
Thanks for a very fun and thought-provoking post. I’m going to bend my brain a bit and try to see things as a kid would. I think good times are ahead.
I like your post as it reminds us to look at each day with a fresh perspective. My own “baby” has grown up but I now help take care of my best friend’s 17 month old and I get to “rediscover” the world through her eyes…and THAT means lots of PB ideas!
Thank you for the reminder. I love the picture on the bus -my favourite, too -and the one of the table where the cake looks enormous! I’m going to be doing some crawling around today… Thanks, Clare.
Great post! Thank you for sharing it. And I love your work!
We all need reminders and this is one of them! Thank you for the great post!