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Archive for the ‘creativity’ Category

Some ten years ago my daughter lived way up in the very north west corner of Scotland – just outside Durness. There was a local pottery run by a woman called Lotte Glob. Her work was really not like any other pottery I’d ever seen. As well as making cups and utility pottery (but quite exquisite and each piece totally unique), she gathered materials from the ground around where she lived, mixed them into works art and placed the art back into the landscape where she’d gathered the material. The idea completely caught my imagination. Over a few trips we collected a number of cups. I love how underneath each one is just two words “far north”.

Here are some of them –

lotte glob mugs
lotte glob mugs
lotte glob mugs

She has an exhibition currently and she’s published a beautiful book about her “floating stones” project.
I saw her exhibition at the Watermill Bookshop in Aberfeldy last weekend. It was stunning. Look at this simple tile for just one example –

lotte glob tile
lotte glob tile

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hidden passion

See the passion flower hiding behind these leaves?

This made me think about passion. Passion must be one of the KEY ingredients of a good life I think. What makes a good teacher? Their passion. OK, you need a lot more than passion, but my argument is that those who are passionate about their teaching, passionate about their students’ learning, are the best teachers. What makes a good doctor? Passion. Passionate about his or her patients. Passionate about people, and about healing. Yes, I agree, a doctor needs a lot of knowledge and skill, but without passion for their work, they really aren’t such good doctors.
You could say this about any profession I reckon. If you are a professional and you’re not passionate about what you do, you’re in the wrong profession!
You can also say this about creative people – artists, musicians, writers and so on. Without passion for life, and for their creativity, they just don’t create such great works.
Bland isn’t good.
“Whatever….!” isn’t good.
Long live passion!

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Look at this

200 generations illustrated

This is a little drawing to illustrate the fact that there have been only 200 generations (each of about 25 years) since the beginning of recorded history right up to the present time. Isn’t that amazing? This grabbed me for two reasons. First, it really captures just how little time has passed since we began to record human history. That’s quite mind boggling (and humbling) in itself. But, secondly, it was the simplicity of the image which really caught my attention. I came across this on the digital roam blog…..that’s Dan Roam’s blog.

Dan Roam has written a book about using visual thinking and I think it looks GREAT. The book is called “Back of the Napkin”. Every day I draw simple little pictures for patients to help explain quite complex ideas like health, disease, healing, how to tackle allergies, and so on. Dan’s set up a web site to accompany his book. Go and check it out. He’s made a great little series of flash videos which I highly recommend. There are four of them (drawn on the back of a napkin!). Watch them all. It’ll only take a few minutes and I bet you’ll find it thought provoking about how we see and how we communicate with pictures.

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Oh sometimes somebody just does something simple but original with the internet.

I LOVE this video.

This is one of those videos to watch when you want to smile. It’s heart-warming and just plain JOYOUS

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Station poem

My post about the blackbird spotted from the delayed train prompted my friend, the poet, Larry Butler, to send me a poem he had written some time back. You can see why it came to his mind on reading that post. I’ve asked him for his permission to publish it here and I’m delighted to say he’s given me the ok – so here it is –

        • Clarkston station missed the 6:30,
        • half an hour to wait on a red bench
        • in the sun with coffee and chocolate,
        • an apple but nothing to do. What
        • more could I want:  less busy traffic
        • on Busby Road, more twitter of blackbirds.
        • A girl with big silver circle earrings
        • turns revealing 3 white stripes on her blue

          track suit trousers.  That’s all I need.

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I was sitting sipping a coffee at an outside table in the cafe at the market the other day and I saw this seed lying on the table.

seed

I thought I’d capture it and share it with you.

Isn’t it amazing? If you look closely, there are two capture devices built into it! At the left end, there’s a tiny, wee hook-shaped hair for grabbing onto something and, at the other end is this delicate and exquisite brush of fine, fair hairs for carrying it far in the wind.

Seeds have always been a source of wonder to me. How can such a tiny object turn into a flower, or a bush, or a tree? I guess if you are knowledgeable about such things you’ll know what this seed might become – I’m afraid I don’t! One of the subjects which enthralled me at university was embryology. How on earth can a single, fertilised cell turn into all the diverse types of cell in the human body and grow in the right places?! Awesome!

Do you think this seed might become a great tree somewhere? Like these ones?

forest sky

I also went to a garden festival and one of the stalls sold seed pods. Look at their diversity!

seedpods
seedpods
seedpods

So, there’s two things that amaze me about Nature – creativity and diversity. These are such important features of human beings too, aren’t they? How little we guess about the potential of a baby! How little we know about his or her uniqueness! Amazes me every time I think about it!

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installation

I saw this today in the Jardins d’Albertas in Aix en Provence. From the distance I could see these amazing billowing sheets. I don’t know what they are made of but they floated, danced and drifted constantly. Then as I got closer I noticed all the deck chairs scattered across the grass. I thought they were for people to sit on, but then realised they were part of the same art installation.
The whole set was totally engrossing. I stood here, transfixed, and somehow, those deck chairs seemed like the animals you see at the zoo and in a moment, suddenly, you think “They’re all looking at ME!”
Only once I’d uploaded the photo did I see all the shadows, and there’s one of the ways in which a photo can let you see something even more clearly. Why didn’t I notice the shadows at the time? Well, I’m glad I see them now!

I love a good art installation and I’m a big fan of Anthony Gormley, however, I’m afraid I couldn’t find any information at all about the artist responsible for this work.

Here are some more photos from other angles………
sheets
catch the sheets
rear view

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I came across two very different examples of weaving yesterday

nets
nets and ropes

and, then, further on, outside a shop

baskets
baskets

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From the driveway up to the place where I’m renting an apartment in Provence I can see Mont St Victoire –

mont st victoire

And just down the road a little I can see it more clearly –

mont st victoire

Mont St Victoire was a huge inspiration to Paul Cezanne. Take a look at this lovely (silent) video of some of his paintings of this spectacular mountain.

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The science of creativity

Phil Wilson, has a superb post on his blog about a lecture he recently attended in Brighton. It was a lecture about creativity and was delivered by Margaret Boden, Research Professor of Cognitive Science at Sussex University (in fact her whole department sounds both fascinating and exciting!). I highly recommend reading his whole post, but let me just highlight two of the main ideas he describes – first is Boden’s classification of creativity – combinatorial creativity (the making of associations between concepts or things to create something new); exploratory creativity (which comes from practice in an area and develops new methods, concepts etc from doing – skills increase this way, and then from a highly skilled perspective, new methods arise); and, transformational creativity (which emerges out of exploratory creativity but which changes the whole way of seeing something). Each of us has a greater or lesser tendency to use one or more of these not mutually exclusive methods. I think, for me, the combinatorial method, is key. I’ve always loved diversity and seeing the links between things and ideas. I like “synthetic” thinking which brings together different observations and thoughts to create new ideas. I like taking discoveries in one area of human endeavour and seeing what they can teach us about another area.

How about you? Do any of these three kinds of creativity strike a chord for you?

The second idea he highlights is that thing that happens when we get stuck with something and the solution only emerges after we go and do something else. He postulated that the something else was a kind of latent phase, but Boden says she thinks its about rest. That got me thinking about that old saying “a change is as good as a rest for the brain” (does anyone know where that saying comes from?).

Actually, taking a complex adaptive systems perspective, think of it this way – one of the characteristics of a CAS is of “attractors” – these are like points which suck everything in their environment towards them. Basically, they become like the stuck points of the system. Thought can be like that. A thought, or a chain of thoughts can get stuck in a place or a loop and it can then be hard to make any progress. One way to break free of these “attractors” is to change the environment in which they exist. How we do that is change our environment for a short while – take a walk, (yes, Phil, stand under water in the shower!), take a holiday, engage in something else. There are many ways to change the environment of the day, or part of the day. I think what that does is releases the stuckness, frees you from that “attractor” then something new emerges……a new thought, idea, solution – (creativity is the emergence of a new state in CAS terms)

What do you do to release yourself from these “attractors”? How do you let go of things to help the solutions and creative ideas emerge?

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