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New German research finds a darkened room encourages freedom of thought and inspires innovation.
Collaborate by burning the midnight oil, like Edison Globe and Mail “From his earliest days renting space in workshops and small laboratories, Edison collaborated with others."
Via Richard Reubenstone
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Topics: Fighting Inner Battles To Be More Creative - Steven Pressfield; Eric Maisel Creative Catalysts by Gail McMeekin Scott Barry Kaufman on Creativity
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“It’s not the writing part that’s hard. What’s hard is sitting down to write. What keeps us from sitting down is Resistance.” Author Steven Pressfield goes on to describe in his book ‘The War of Art’ how this “Resistance” holds people back from being more creative. The book emphasizes that confronting creative blocks is an “Inner Creative Battle” against mental varieties of enemy, some of them very subtle, not so clear and definable as an outer foe.
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"During your working lives, you will have to reinvent yourselves many times. Success and satisfaction will not come from mastering a fixed body of knowledge but from constant adaptation and creativity in a rapidly changing world."
Global firm IDEO incorporates human behavior into product design -- an innovative approach being taught at Stanford. Charlie Rose profiles the company's founder, David Kelley.
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Canon and Ron Howard present Project Imaginat10n, a film festival inspired by your photos. What will you inspire?
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When do we lose the wonder and awe of childhood? How do we become so solemn and cynical? What happened to the simple sense of humour we used to have, when anything remotely silly could provoke giggles?
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“Don’t compromise yourself. You’re all you’ve got.” That is great advice from Janis Joplin - but we may do just that: compromise, stifle ourselves, shut down what we are capable of, creatively and in other ways – often based on our self-limiting thinking.
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Habit, teachers, and even our best intentions often act as stealth saboteurs of ingenuity. Yet awareness of the forces that blunt creativity can nurture the innovator within. Reframing known problems offers a creative fix. By Art Markman. "My least favorite phrase is think outside the box. Yes, it's trite, but worse, it's meaningless. What in the world does it mean to think outside the box? Presumably, that you should come up with ideas that fall outside the norm. But that's not helpful advice. You can't know that you have come up with a new idea until after you've generated that idea in the first place."
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At the beginning of her course at the University of Wisconsin, cartoonist Lynda Barry wants to get to know her students by their work, instead of their personalities. So, instead of learning their names, she assigns them all "brain names," like Thalamus and Hippocampus. In all of her courses, professor Old Skull — as she is known by her students — aims to strip away the stiffness of adulthood and plug people into their innate creativity. As part of Talk of the Nation's "Looking Ahead" series, Barry talks with NPR's Neal Conan about the future of cartoons and creativity.
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The motivation for and specific nature of a brainstorming group is what matters in how well its members come up with creative ideas. Psychologists have different perspectives on whether and how much brainstorming groups help develop creativity.
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For businesses driven by creativity, hard work doesn't always result in success. In fact, it could hold you back. (The Key to Innovation? Stop Working So Hard!
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“I didn’t speak the language and didn’t have any friends, [so] my parents bought a piano for me,” she wrote, hoping it would provide their daughter with a productive way to spend her free time. And, to put things mildly, the plan worked out: she earned the top prize at the International Steinway Piano Competition soon after her studies had commenced.
In terms of creativity and originality Deerhoof are true innovators in the music realm. The New York Times has even said “Deerhoof is one of the most original rock bands to have come along in the last decade.” I’ve been a fan for years and was stoked to be able to see them play at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art last year when I coincidentally was in town for a conference. I had a hunch Think Jar Collective and its readers could learn from Deerhoof‘s creativity and was grateful to be able to chat with one of Deerhoof’s founders Greg Saunier
Have you ever spent an hour staring at a blank piece of paper, willing some new ideas to spill onto the page, only to feel disappointed and exhausted when nothing materializes? "You might be going about brainstorming the wrong way. To generate new ideas, give your brain a break. Try starting with a clear mind, and avoid being so direct in your thinking. "When Albert Einstein said, “Why is it I get my best ideas while shaving?” I think he was on to something with this observation."
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"Amanda Palmer's keynote speech, delivered on May 4th, 2013 at Grub Street's Muse and Marketplace Conference (part of the NEA-funded Publish it Forward series), touches on what it means to be a writer -- or an artist of any kind -- in this new digital age where gatekeepers no longer control the means of distribution and it's just "your voice to the world." She poses the question: Without intermediaries, how can writers bridge the "noisy, crass" marketplace and their secluded, protected writing rooms or garrets which afford them the distance and silence to write their novels, poems and essays?"
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Psychologist Scott Barry Kaufman says developing creative thinking involves moving back and forth from broad fields of attention, to more narrow ones. He refers to research arguing that “mind wandering serves multiple adaptive functions, such as future planning, sorting out current concerns, cycling through different information streams, distributed learning (versus cramming), and creativity.”
Expectations are great when they help you think about what you want to accomplish. Expectations can also help you envision opportunities and problems you could face before they actually develop. Ex...
Via stan stewart
Where creativity lies We want to believe that creativity is regularly awe-inspiring. It’s not though. As I was sitting in a bookstore the other day I noticed a woman commenting on a feature story of...
Via stan stewart, Dário Viegas
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Living the artist’s life can be very stressful, but not if you shift from feeling your work is a demand, to an opportunity that feels enjoyable.
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By Scott Barry Kaufman, Ph.D. - What is greatness and how do people get there? Is greatness born or made? Is greatness the result of talent or practice? Few other questions have caused such intense debate, controversy, and diversity of opinions. The heights of human accomplishment have always fascinated us, and for good reason.
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There are four distinct roles to be performed for the creative process to be as effective as possible. Each one requires that you play different characters, with different mindsets and skills. The roles are: Explorer, Artist, Judge and Warrior. Roger von Oech deconstructs the four archetypes of creativity. Of course, this model is highly reductionist, missing many critical aspects of the creative mind, chiefly the Bisociator and the Connection-Weaver. From Explore - "A discovery engine for meaningful knowledge, fueled by cross-disciplinary curiosity. A Brain Pickings project edited by Maria Popova..."
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"Artists need to be outsiders in order to really view what's going on. That little bit of detachment has been great for me... As artists, we have to be brave. If we aren’t brave, we aren’t artists.” Writer, Producer, Director Paul Haggis
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Won't it be nice when we can leave behind the old notions of creativity, as mentioned in this article, and move forward with open attitudes toward it, and practices that engage revitalizing new thinking and action,
SCHOOL=CREATIVITY