Monday 13 February 2012

learn from other people

your creativity is like a muscle - it gets stronger the more you use it. so you keep using it. that isn't the only way you improve. you improve by lerning. sure you can read all the textbooks that tell you the right way to do things, sometimes they will tell you the mistakes to avoid. they will give you strategies on how to improve. the thing to remember about rules - is that often they are there to be broken. one of the best ways to learn is to learn from others. creativity and culture doesn't happen in a vacuum - everything feeds off of everything else. this has never been more true than now in the age of instant gratification and instant access. so when you are watching, listening, reading, viewing someone else's work - look at it and see what you can learn from it and then think about how you can apply that to your own work. that next movie, song, book, gallery is researh for your next piece of work. learn the lessons well and apply them.

Wednesday 8 February 2012

it's not that stupid

if the internet has shown us anything it is that there is nothing like a stupid idea.
it doesn't matter what it is - you may want to do a stop/start animation of marigold gloves enacting hamlet while dancing in the style of pina bausch. it maybe that you want to replace the strings in stockhausen's helikopter-streichquartett (helicopter quartet) with barking dogs. maybe you have a hankering do a fantasy trilogy totally in rhyming couplets.

as you come up with the idea you also wonder what it is going to be like trying to tell/ sell/ pitch the idea to mates and strangers. all you can think of is 'nah! too stupid.'

stop right there sonny jim.
what did i say at the start?
that's right: there is no such thing as a stupid idea.

it may be that you don't think you can pull it off or you may think that it was just a silly idea and doesn't deserve work.
if you believe in it - you can make it happen and you can turn that daft concept into something special.
(please note this is something entirely different from trying to shine a turd.)

all you need to make a creative piece work is the belief that it deserves to be seen.
never worry about what other people think.
you are not being creative for them - you are being creative for you.

remember that idea for painting portraits of hollywood stars on space-hoppers - well it is a go.

Tuesday 7 February 2012

never mind the quality feel the success

there you are working on your latest creation.
you feel good about it. this is the one. this is the one that they will love. you just know it.
you have slaved over it. you have poured your heart into it. you have bled for this piece of work.
it oozes quality.

here is a hard truth.
quality is no gurantee of success.
success is no proof of quality.

this is a double-edged thought as it points to the fact that you can be the best there is at what you do but it doesn't mean people are going to like your work.
it also means that even if you know your work is not the best out there you can still be a success.

look around - your audience has a lot of people competing for their attention. remember that they only have so much time to devote to enjoying the creative work of others and your painting is going up against someone elses poem. his book has to compete against her movie. that song against that video.

it isn't that people don't consume culture as much as they used to it is that there is so much more culture to consume.

that may make it sound like a gloomy situation - it isn't.
there are lots of new ways to get your work in front of people.

more importantly my point about quality/success means that you don't have to sweat every little detail, you don't have to dot ever i and cross ever t.
don't wait until it is perfect.
make it as good as it can be and then let it loose on the world.

the audience isn't looking for perfection.
the audience is looking for something they like and will entertain them.

your mission, if you choose to accept it, is to do just that.

Wednesday 1 February 2012

audience? who cares about them?

for most of us would be creators the question of 'the audience' is a moot one. we don't have an audience.
in some respects that makes us lucky (albeit poor and creatively unloved).
why?
simple because right now you can do anything you want. there is nothing to stop you from being as creative or as experimental as you want. if you dp abstracts and tomorrow you feel like doing landscapes then go for it. if you are a poet and the urge omes across you to do hard core erotica then don't stop.
you can do what you want.

if you are lucky you will beccome famous and successful with your endeavours and then you are going to find yourself having to stick to the grove you have made for yourself.
only when you become a real superstar can you plot a career path that can chop and change.

the other thing about not worrying about an audience, the audience, your audience is that you do this (whatever it is) for your own benefit. you paint, sing, dance, photograph, write, weave, sculpt for your own benefit, you own enjoyment.

for most of us this is the time when we are still learning what it is we are doing. finding our voice, our style. while we are doing that we may as well have fun at it.

because in the end if we don't like what we do there is little chance anyone else is going to.

remember this - the audience starts with you.