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Sometimes I look back at a piece of artwork and I can’t retrace my steps. Where did that line come from? Why did I choose that color? Why a heart?
I think the art I’ve done that I like best is the art where I can’t retrace those steps. It’s art I’ve created where it feels like I dreamed it all. Which I suppose is at least sort of true.
“You really need to be better at thinking on your feet. You were way too quiet in there.”
That’s the fun feedback I got from my boss after a very long “brainstorming” meeting. This was early in my career and I really let it get to me. For years after, I sweated meetings and routinely kicked myself if I hadn’t thrown out a handful of frenzied ideas along with the rest of the group.
I got over it. Eventually.
It took years to learn this about myself, but I finally realized and accepted that everyone doesn’t need to think at the same pace to be effective. I also learned that group brainstorming sessions are complete bullshit. Typically they become an exercise in everyone making sure the room knows how smart they are. I’ve never been part of an idea-vomiting party that resulted in a great solution. Usually they fizzle into an apathetic pile of half-baked concepts that nobody knows how to execute.
I used to listen to my colleagues whip up complex schemes on the fly and bat them around the table like wadded up pieces of paper. I could follow the conversation, but trying to get my own creativity operating in the melee was almost impossible. I had the confidence to speak, I just couldn’t think.
For a while I researched all kinds of articles online to see if I could change the way I operate. I was so sure that I was somehow inadequate. Sure enough, the Internet assured me that I was indeed totally lame because I couldn’t toss out fully-formed ideas like walnuts in a salad.
They made me feel like crap. The thing is, I’m a smart person. I’m a creative person. And one of my unique skills since childhood has been coming up with simple analogies for complex concepts. So it was pretty ridiculous that I was being shamed into feeling that I just couldn’t keep up and had to change.
Here’s how it works for me. I’m an observer, a sponge, a Bounty paper towel of things going on around me. So after I soak up everything in the room, I go away to a quiet place and wring myself out into a basin. It’s only after gaining true understanding of an issue that really juicy and effective ideas get compiled by my brain.
I still admire quick thinkers. It can be fun to watch, and I’ve worked with some truly genius people who could access their brains as quick as a Gmail search.
I’m not going to be that person. More importantly, that’s completely okay. I don’t have to be. You don’t have to be, if that’s not the way you operate.
Think about how you come up with your best ideas. How does it work? What do you do to make that happen? Because the path you took to get there is not going to work for someone else. In the end, the result is what matters. We need to teach our kids this little secret so they can confidently contribute to a team.
I’d love to hear how you operate. Toss it out there in the comments. NOW! Quick! You’re taking too long…
But seriously, I’d love to hear from you. Take your time.
0 Comments on The Fallacy of Thinking on Your Feet as of 1/1/1900
exposed the tick that crawled up my neck from the backseat of the car. Looking for a pair of tweezers was not in my plan for the day and neither was freaking-out. I hate ticks almost as much as I hate horseflies so I did what I had to do.
A summer breeze blew through my hair and took me on the ride of my life. You know that incredible feeling of being swept of your feet by the breeze and the sweet breath of a kiss that has yet to come from a brand new love.Anticipation is pure bliss.
A summer breeze blew through my hair and sudddenly I realized that I had been asleep for hours. My intentions were to just lie and listen to the lulling of the crashing waves. But now as that summer breeze ruffled and tossed my hair,,, bringing me back to reality.... it all came back to me,,,,,
A summer breeze blew through my hair and I was perplexed, as I was indoors at the time!
Jan I am planning on giving you a big shout out next blog post, now this jolly campaign is winding up! You were one of the first to encourage with this blogging lark, so have much to thank you for! lol xx
Well so much for the daydreaming. Now I have to find those tweezers and get rid of this tick so I can get back to the important task I have planned for today. If I don't get the supplies I need and finish this then tomorrow the world will .........
A summer breeze blew through my hair and I realised that, despite everything, this beautiful place would never change. In a world of turmoil, it had remained constant and consistent in its untarnished beauty.
O really fat fast grasshopper made me jump out of my skin the other day. I was working out doors, weeding and apparently disturbed him, so he got even with me by jumping and scaring me. lol
I finally got around to seeing Art & Copy, the documentary about advertising and creativity.
The doc doesn’t take a critical look at advertising’s effects on our culture. Rather, it aims its spotlight on the power of imagery, persuasion, originality, and the execution of an idea. And regardless of whether you work in advertising itself, I think all creative workers can glean some insight from this doc on how to best use their unique skills to stay ahead of the pack, sell their ideas, and ultimately, themselves.
0 Comments on I finally got around to seeing Art & Copy, the documentary... as of 1/1/1900
I have admired the work of Jochen Gerner for a while now. His style is pure cartooning — taking the complex, and abstracting it into something simple. This minimalist, geometric approach to drawing is not limited to just the design of characters and objects, but also to the layout of the illustrations themselves. The illustrations become diagrams, allowing the viewer to take in a lot of information at a glance.
Looking through his sketchbooks reveals the mind of an artist constantly honing his illustrative shorthand, and his own cartooning vocabulary.
His experiments in abstraction and subtraction is no more evident than in a series of modified IKEA catalogue pages:
When I visited the Owlkids booth at TCAF this year, I was pleased to see that their publishing imprint had released a fun book of drawing activities for kids called ARTastic!: 200+ Art Smart Activities. It’s a colouring book with puzzles, challenges, and creativity-sparking activities all drawn in Gerner’s simple, chunky, kid-friendly lines.
It’s quite similar to Japanese artist Taro Gomi’s equally awesome and art-smart Scribbles, Doodles, and Squiggles drawing books for kids — books that encourage creativity and thinking by requiring one to colour outside the lines.
Creativity is around the corner you have to make some effort to walk through the door and reach out.
Rob Middleton said, on 6/8/2010 3:12:00 PM
Hi, this is the first time I've looked at your site. I really like the top two Jochen Gerner illustrations, especially how he omits words all together. Omitting words and just relying on the strength of the picture is something I have dabbled in myself – it's not always as easy as it looks! Thanks, Rob
Control Q said, on 6/8/2010 11:08:00 PM
That guy rocks ! He made himself essential to economic or scientific press, giving this minimalist (and very educative) vision of the complexity you talked about.
daphne sy said, on 6/9/2010 12:02:00 AM
guys i admired his works!! It is so cool and inherently beautiful..maybe I let myself try to do this things mmmmm lol:)
Derek Neuland said, on 6/10/2010 12:21:00 AM
Wow, I really like his style. I sense a little influence from Chris Ware.
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.
Definitely agree on that attitude. I just can´t do nice-looking sktechbooks for the life of me, but then I realized I don´t have to. My sketchbook is a place that allows for ugliness, smearing and notes, a private place without any fear of being judged, which is why I make a point to not show it to people anymore :)
Frederik Jurk said, on 6/1/2010 1:11:00 PM
Also, I think of the Moleskine as the Mac of sketchbooks. I have to admit, now I kinda want that Miquelrius sketchbook. And a Sharpie. And a datestamp!
Gavin said, on 6/1/2010 4:36:00 PM
Now that's a nice book. Great work!
Oliver Charles Lardner said, on 6/1/2010 6:02:00 PM
I am generally the opposite, I aim for a precious, perfect moleskine but it ends up coming out something like this :) Thanks for empowering us!
Worfette said, on 6/1/2010 10:14:00 PM
I treat my moleskine just like this.
Neil said, on 6/1/2010 11:04:00 PM
Nice sentiment but there's still the same old sketchbook name dropping.
Maartend said, on 6/2/2010 1:38:00 AM
mine's precious and messy at the same time
Hariboy said, on 6/2/2010 1:42:00 AM
Yes!! Let the pristine poser sketchbook backlash begin!
Ron VonTaint said, on 6/2/2010 6:15:00 AM
“I wanted it to be the opposite of all those precious, perfect moleskines you see online…” good thing his intentions line up with his abilities. If he set out to draw really great drawings he might have run into a problem.
“Also, I think of the Moleskine as the Mac of sketchbooks. I have to admit, now I kinda want that Miquelrius sketchbook. And a Sharpie. And a datestamp!” -Frederik Jurk So now the Miquelrius is the Mac of sketchbooks, if by your implied logic a “Mac” is anything that looks nice and lots of people want but you think is overvalued? “Hi, You're a Mac.”
steve said, on 6/2/2010 10:20:00 AM
Sloppy, sketchy, “precious”, clean – it's all a matter of preference – no right or wrong approach. Different strokes for different folks (and I happen to love my Mac).
ISO50 recently approached some leading figures of the design world to learn how they deal with creative block. The results include advice and strategies from the likes of Nicolas Felton, Audrey Kawasaki, Khoi Vinh, Mark Weaver, and Erik Spiekermann.
Some highlights:
“I go on a long run, bike ride, walk with the dog; Anything but work on the project. Good ideas are stored in fat so if I burn some off I can free them up and use em.”
“Good ideas are stored in fat so if I burn some off I can free them up and use em.”
I also like this little play on words, even if I don’t think it rings true:
“Remember, a rut is also a groove.”
The two most common themes that seem to recur in the advice given: reading/consuming information to develop a bank of ideas from which to draw, and getting out of the house/office/studio to free your mind, reflect, and glean inspiration.
Leaving the immediate work area is sometimes essential. Some of my favorite ideas came from taking a quick walk or changing the scenery somehow. Staring at the computer screen is the worst for generating ideas.
Ingmar Drewing said, on 4/27/2010 7:05:00 AM
Trying to clear my mind completely works well for me. This way I am either successfully meditating or some new ideas are coming along ;-)
Becka_K said, on 4/27/2010 7:13:00 AM
I drop everything and go for a walk or a drive somewhere. Sometimes reading something like a magazine helps too (just something to keep your mind off of the block).
Frank Zweegers said, on 4/27/2010 7:20:00 AM
Taking a break and resetting my mind works the best. Sometimes I have an idea or a vision but just can't put it on paper so I change the scenery, go for a walk or do something completely different just to disconnect.
Blake Himsl Hunter said, on 4/27/2010 8:29:00 AM
I usually take a small break, maybe twenty minutes. Sometimes I just scribble down some bad ideas to get them out of the way so my brain can get to the better ideas.
Debra Styer said, on 4/27/2010 5:14:00 PM
Don't you hate it when this happens? Read in case of emergency.
jacqueline c said, on 4/27/2010 8:18:00 PM
I like to curl up in bed under some blankets and zone out into a state of torpor. Sometimes I go to sleep, and sometimes I just think about stuff until I'm ready to get back up.
steveloya said, on 4/28/2010 5:01:00 PM
I listen to Tycho's music (and that of similar artists).
D. Romanell said, on 4/29/2010 4:19:00 AM
I've tried to take a break and walk away, but that seems to offer more distractions than it's worth, which doesn't do much for motivation. Some times the best way to get beyond a creative block is to stay put and keep grinding. Push through instead of trying to get around, as it were.
Miguel Cura said, on 5/1/2010 1:53:00 AM
I get together with friends, and talk ideas. We trade fresh perspectives and different ways of tackling “the task at hand”. It's easy to get caught up in The Fishbowl of working on your own stuff all the time, so it's valuable to chat up with fellow human beings.
well put Saul. If only all designers, ad agencies and clients cared about good design.
Jay Montgomery said, on 1/25/2010 7:21:00 PM
Words to design by. Thanks Saul.
headsign said, on 1/25/2010 11:00:00 PM
I couldn't agree less. Trouble is we also got to pay our own bills and many client who realize that we work on idealistic terms to fulfill our own vision of beauty will start to exploit this. For myself there are two aspects: one is I'm an artist whose goal is making beautiful or meaningful things no matter whatsoever, but the second one is I'm a designer whose primary job is… making money for myself.
Till Lassmann (who drew the cute Chalkies we linked to in the summer) has posted a creative set on Flickr of random tape drawings. Till randomly stuck pieces of masking tape onto his paper, and then added linework to complete the drawing. Great idea!
The TV Show, animated by Sugimoto Kousuke and featuring the music of Takayuki Manabe, features a creative use of colour as a variety of narratives, nested within each other, soon begin to meld together. And what a fun video it is.
The momentum this video builds as it goes along is fantastic! I have to admit, the internet has severely dampened my patience for watching online videos through to the end, but I couldn’t take my eyes off this one until the final frame.
amped said, on 12/10/2009 10:30:00 PM
this video MADE my day! i was laughing at the end!
Australian illustrator Guy Shield successfully proposed to his girlfriend (now fiancée) last weekend using a series of carefully designed but seemingly arbitrary illustrations. The illustrations, when folded into a specific structure, spelled out the hidden message.
I’ve seen video trailers as ads for books and comics before, but here’s something that’s new to me, and I think fairly original. Illustrator David M. Buisán has created a promo reel of sorts for his illustration portfolio, similar to an animator’s promo reel, but with static images set to music. It definitely makes the task of sifting through an artist’s body of work, and trying to decide which piece to share with you guys, far easier.
I think it’s a brilliant idea, and I’m surprised I haven’t seen more of this sort of thing. I’m certainly going to create one for my work.
Illustration promo reel is a great idea.
I saw the promo reel by Lois van Baarle (http://loish.net/) and I loved how she put illustrations along with video.
I’d like to have one myself, but obviously I never find time to do it!
Mike C said, on 10/1/2009 4:31:00 AM
Pretty cool, nicely edited together too.
Sort of seen this done but never this well or purely for print style illustration.
Not a bad idea :)
Somewhat related, this reminded me of Daria !
-U! a.k.a. Uriel A. Duran said, on 10/1/2009 9:27:00 AM
This reminds me of my own creativity. While one can envision amazing and fantastic things, they are all just figments of the imagination.
I cannot recall where I heard this quote (and I’m kind of butchering it) but “art is not about making up a great idea, it’s about getting something down.”
Awesome video, it’s such a great concept, and such an amazing find. But…
Why isn’t this filed under the Typography category? Because, unless somebody decides to use a similar approach in illustrating their work, this video seems to be completely about a novel way to develop a type of font. (heck, even “creativity + ideas”, “more inspiration”, and “Technology” seems like a more fitting categories.)
tessar said, on 7/27/2009 5:17:00 PM
this is pretty amazing. it’s awesome how literally grand design is going. if you haven’t seen it, check out alice’s herb font: http://www.tofudesign.com/blog/?p=424 also.
Johnny said, on 7/27/2009 9:32:00 PM
Durtin, good eye. Don’t worry; categories on the site are soon changing, and thought it may not look like it, it’s definitely filed under Typography.
Durtin said, on 7/27/2009 10:25:00 PM
That’s cool, Johnny, cool… Wait a sec. Would that mean the site is going to get a face-lift or just an update?
Jillian Tamaki offers up some fine advice on keeping a sketchbook:
Your personal work (sketchbook) and jobs (projects) are not separate. Your sketchbook work should be experimental and free and represent what truly interests YOU. Discoveries made in your sketchbook can and should find their way into your paid work.
The idea behind this methodology is similar to writing a song. There are only a few musical notes, but by rearranging their order, length and speed you can create an infinite amount of songs.
0 Comments on Nate Williams on generating ideas as of 7/13/2009 6:26:00 PM
Martin Wilson remarkably creates images of words and symbols using every frame in a roll of film sequentially. He explains his process:
My pictures are painstakingly created frame by frame on 35mm film. I get the whole film developed, scan it, then piece the final image together on the computer, making a large contact sheet. It’s only when the completed film strips are laid out side by side in the contact sheets that the final image appear.
Each work usually takes months to complete, as each frame is obsessively taken in sequence. No pasting together after the event, no cheating in Photoshop!
If I make a mistake or take a frame out of place I start the film again from the beginning.
2 Comments on Martin Wilson photography: the film is the image, last added: 6/10/2009
I thought from the image above that the arrows were placed in front of the camera, but it’s even more amazing than that, as he obviously searches out just the right pictures. Check out Oranges and Lemons or Double Yellow Lines on the site. Brilliant, not just from a technical standpoint.
The Brainstormer is a fun little application designed by Andrew Bosley to generate random sketch topics by combining random words. Let’s give ‘er a spin:
Invention, Egyptian, fishing boat.
Remorse, colonional, zoo.
Conflict with a god, mechanized, attic.
This sort of thing is just as useful for writers, cartoonists, and anyone stuck in a rut who just needs that little seed of an idea to get going.
Thanks, guys, for posting this! I hope that it’s useful to other artists and authors. If interested, there’s a little more information about The Brainstormer on my blog: http://www.andrewbosley.blogspot.com
Kim said, on 6/5/2009 2:08:00 PM
Awesome! I love these things. Here’re a couple of similar ones I’ve got bookmarked:
This, though, is probably the best one I’ve seen yet. Fab. =D
Mike C said, on 6/5/2009 8:39:00 PM
Nice one, been thinking of ways to brainstorm and this does all the work for me ;D
Should be very useful for getting out of my creative slump !
A Mess said, on 6/8/2009 8:04:00 AM
Back in the ancient days of magazine cartooning, there was a device like this (cardboard, of course, or maybe plastic): Three disks of different sizes secured by a small brass rivet in the middle so they would spin. A cartoonist named Lo Lenkert, I think, was the inventor. Nice to see web version, and with such a nice design. I’ve got to get to work now on that Invention, Egyptian, Fishing Boat combo. Look for the results in the next New Yorker.
Michael Nobbs has created a small booklet called 75 Ways to Draw More which he offers up on Flickr for free download. Like the title says, the book contains 75 light-hearted ideas for getting people to draw more. He plans for there to be a Flickr group of the same name in a week or two in which people will be able post drawings made in response to the book. Get to work!
0 Comments on 75 Ways to Draw More as of 4/24/2009 12:47:00 PM
exposed the tick that crawled up my neck from the backseat of the car. Looking for a pair of tweezers was not in my plan for the day and neither was freaking-out. I hate ticks almost as much as I hate horseflies so I did what I had to do.
...and that was weird because I don't have much... ? ;)
LOL,
Janet
PS
I liked your sentences.
And I liked yours! Too funny!!!!
and it made me think of days at the beach with warm sand and cool waves. I love the beach, the sand, the waves and breezes blowing through my hair.
Anne and Sasha
dried off the sweat as I hiked uphill. What a wonderful feeling! :-)
A summer breeze blew through my hair and took me on the ride of my life. You know that incredible feeling of being swept of your feet by the breeze and the sweet breath of a kiss that has yet to come from a brand new love.Anticipation is pure bliss.
A summer breeze blew through my hair and sudddenly I realized that I had been asleep for hours.
My intentions were to just lie and listen to the lulling of the crashing waves. But now as that summer breeze ruffled and tossed my hair,,, bringing me back to reality....
it all came back to me,,,,,
Wow. Now I remember why I love to blog!!!!
A summer breeze blew through my hair and I was perplexed, as I was indoors at the time!
Jan I am planning on giving you a big shout out next blog post, now this jolly campaign is winding up! You were one of the first to encourage with this blogging lark, so have much to thank you for! lol xx
Well so much for the daydreaming. Now I have to find those tweezers and get rid of this tick so I can get back to the important task I have planned for today. If I don't get the supplies I need and finish this then tomorrow the world will .........
A summer breeze blew through my hair and I realised that, despite everything, this beautiful place would never change. In a world of turmoil, it had remained constant and consistent in its untarnished beauty.