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Creative process

Don’t Wait for the Muse

21st May 2019 By Radka Leave a Comment

Waiting for the Muse

What is creativity? Are we all creative? What effect has creativity on our lives?

The Creative Brain.

Last week I came across a new Netflix documentary called The Creative Brain. I was really curious about it. Inventors, scientists, artists talk about what they think creativity is and they describe their creative process. I found it tremendously inspiring and hope it will inspire you too. 🙂

So here are a few ideas I loved.


What is creativity?

IMAGINATION

The famous Danish architect Bjarke Ingels says that he tries to materialize as many aspects of his design process as possible to give him and his team the best material for their imagination. Our imagination needs raw material so that it can come up with new ideas. 

“Creativity is the power to IMAGINE the world that isn’t your world yet.”
– Brajke Ingels

For example, Bjarke likes to take two things that already exist and which seem to be ‘two mutually exclusive ideas,’ and work with them, COMBINE them, until he can bring “a third brand new entity to life.” One of his latest projects illustrates this creative process perfectly. The Amager Resource Center (or ARC) waste-to-energy plant near Copenhagen, Denmark combines a plant with a ski slope on the roof.

The Amager Resource Center (or ARC) waste-to-energy plant
Illustration by Radka Zimova King

What is our brain doing during the creative process?

INPUTS

Nathan Myhrvold is an avid inventor and prolific author who likes to do what he calls ‘unlikely things’. He takes things from one place and applies them in another, in a ‘completely different context’. He surrounds himself with a variety of influences and INPUTS.

All those inputs come to our brain and become part of the interplay of our neurons sending a countless number of electrical impulses. Our EXPERIENCES are the raw material for our brain. And they get transformed into new ideas.

TRANSFORMATION

In a similar manner, the famous American movie director and an award-winning visual effects supervisor and producer Phil Tippett says that he needs a lot of different INPUTS around himself. For example, he keeps Scrapbooks that serve as a visual representation of what goes on in his brain. They are to stimulate his imagination and he uses them as a material for his new creations. He likes to BREAK APART and PUT TOGETHER. According to him:

“Creativity is not creating something from nothing but taking what has already been there and TRANSFORMING it”.
– Phil Tippett

REMIX

Robert Glasper, an American singer, pianist and record producer composes jazz music. In his view “Jazz is music made by mixing other music”. He sees creativity as an endless REMIX of inputs. That’s why he says: “Don’t wait for the muse!”

Saxophone Player, Illustration by Radka Zimova King

Don’t wait for the inspiration to come but rather go out to meet it. Experience as much as you can. And that experience will feed your creative process whatever that creative process might be.

USE AND INFORM

A novelist and short story writer Michael Chabon would agree. Michael takes ideas and inspiration anywhere he can. He does not aim to try to do something completely different from what has been created or written. Rather he tries to USE what is already out there. He lets those existing creations inform and help give shape and life to his own creative work. And although we are inspired by existing creations, what we create is unique due to our unique life experience. 


Can creative process remake our lives?

CONNECTION

Ehren Tool is a ceramic artist whose work has been heavily influenced by his service in the Gulf War. When he came back from the war he knew that he did not want to stay in the military service. So he was taking many different courses trying to find out what else he could do. Eventually, he started to work with pottery. Since 2001 Ehren has made and given away over 20,000 ceramic cups. For him making pottery is a creative outlet, a way to channel his feelings and MAKE A CONNECTION: 

“I hope conversations flourish between veterans and the people who are close to them. I also hope that some honest conversation can happen about war and its causes.”
– Ehren Tool

Ehren Tool making pottery, Illustration by Radka Zimova King

YOUR LIFE MATTERS

A novelist and English professor Zachary Lazar found creativity in an unlikely place. Originally he visited the prison as a journalist trying to understand what happened to his father who was murdered when Zachary was just a boy. Zachary later wrote a book Evening’s Empire: The Story of My Father’s Murder. 

But to his surprise, he found something else in the Louisiana State Penitentiary. He realised that there were many creative people there. And he started to come back with a new purpose. It was to help people in prison cultivate their creativity via creative writing courses. And how exactly is it helping them? 

“It helps them see that they are important, that their LIVES MATTER and that other people pay attention to their lives”.
– Zachary Lazar

According to Zachary, crime and punishment “reduce people to the worst thing they have done in their lives”. And that does not really help their rehabilitation. During the creative process of writing, they can begin to see and appreciate themselves, sometimes for the first time in their lives.

EXPRESS EMOTIONS

An American actor, screenwriter, director, producer, and musician Tim Robbins, who you might remember from the movies The Shawshank Redemption or Dead Man Walking, runs a similar acting program for inmates in the California Penal System. Tim views Arts as an essential part of Prisoners Rehabilitation Program. He believes that nobody should be defined by their mistake for the rest of their lives. He has witnessed a transformation of the inmates by their involvement in the acting classes.

“Within the space of the acting class, they are not defined by their crime. They can experience that they have LEGITIMATE EMOTIONS and that they have the right to express them. They can feel WHOLE again.” 

“Maybe depression, empty feelings are connected to the lack of creative sparks.” – Tim Robbins

It is not always easy to feel that we can express our emotions freely even outside of prison walls. Our society is not always open or welcoming. So perhaps if via practicing Arts we can express our emotions that we normally cannot, perhaps the creative process is essential to our happiness. 

Tim Robbins’ Actors Gang Prison Project

  

How can we become more creative?

LEARN SOMETHING NEW

Nathan Myhrvold, the inventor I mentioned earlier, gives simple advice. If we want to be more creative we need to force our brain to get off the path of the least resistance. We need to TRY SOMETHING NEW, LEARN SOMETHING NEW. It can be a new job, a new skill to learn, a new hobby. 

The problem with today world is that it often requires specialization. But as Nathan says, “you learn more and more about one thing, until you know everything about nothing.” The trick is not to be bound by specialization and keep learning new things. 

BE FRUSTRATED AND CONFUSED

But part of that process are feelings that many of us are trying to avoid. The feeling of being FRUSTRATED, CONFUSED, and STUPID. Unfortunately, the only way to learn something new is to be willing to feel that way and willing to be WRONG.

RISK FAILURE

Nick Cave, an Australian musician, singer-songwriter, probably best known for fronting the rock band Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, has a similar approach to his music. Each time he sits down to work on a new record he tries to do something new, tries a new style, a new direction. Even though he has a big success with one record, he refuses to repeat the style. He PUSHES the BOUNDARIES OF COMFORT tirelessly. 

“You never know until the end if it’s any good”.
– Nick Cave

By doing so he actually takes risks because he never knows how his audience is going to receive his new music. As he says about his creative process, writing a song can be quite excruciating, “You never know until the end if it’s any good.”

WORRY LESS ABOUT FAILING

An American television producer, writer, and director D.B. Weiss is today best known as a co-creator, showrunner, and writer of Game of Thrones. 

Dan talks about his experience with FAILURE. It might surprise you but he regards his professional writing life as a series of many failures until the Game of Thrones. He does not regard failure as something to be avoided, but rather as something essential to the creative process. In order to be more creative, you should “WORRY LESS ABOUT YOUR FAILING.” Even if you are not satisfied with your creative work today, you can do another tomorrow. You can paint another picture, write another page, compose another song.


Let’s sum it up

Creativity is imagination, an ability to imagine something that is not right in front of us, something that does not exist yet. We need to take in lots of new inputs, experiences, and stimuli, and then by combining, breaking apart, putting together, transforming, and by endless remixing we can bring new entities to life. 

We all posses the power of imagination

We all are creative because we all possess the power of imagination. But life and society around us often do not encourage creativity. And even our brain defaults to the familiar and to the comfort zone. 

Try something new and risk failure

If we want to nurture creativity we should force our brain to try something new, learn something new. We need to embrace some feelings that are not very pleasant. Because without feeling frustrated, confused, or stupid, there is no new learning. We have to be willing to be wrong and push ourselves out of our comfort zone. 

Feel whole and be connected

As a reward being part of a creative process can transform our lives. We can experience that we do not have to be defined by the mistakes we made. We can feel more connected to others, make a conversation, feel that we matter, that our lives matter. We can express our feelings and feel whole again.

If you are interested in this topic, stay tuned. More will be coming from my own research soon! 🙂 Oh, and don’t wait for the muse!

Dancer in the night, Illustration by Radka Zimova King

Filed Under: Creative process, Creativity, Imagination, People Tagged With: arts, failure, feeling whole, helping, innovation, learning something new, Netflix, The Creative Brain

Watercolor crayons color sketching

1st April 2019 By Radka Leave a Comment

Recently I picked a new medium for drawing and painting – Watercolor Crayons. The reason was to try some medium and method that might be practical for drawing and painting outdoors and in public spaces. A medium and technique that would be usable for daily sketching in color. Since I love using a brush and paint it is often tricky to open a watercolor or gouache paint set in a cafe or outdoors. The process is too wet and messy to use in public spaces. But not with WATERCOLOR CRAYONS! 🙂

Sketching in a Prague cafe

When using Watercolor Crayons you can combine a rough drawing with brushwork. How I do it is first I draw in color and then I use water and brush to apply washes over the drawing. After the wet layer dries I sometimes use the crayons again to add details, lines, and a new overlay of colors. It can be quite quick and definitely a very fun process.

Watercolor Crayon Color sketching urban detail

It is great for sketching and for noting down visual ideas you might have while outdoors or on the way. There are other ways as well. You can draw on the spot and then work with the brush later at home. Or you can use another water-based medium over the color drawing such as watercolor or gouache paints. It is definitely a great technique to experiment with. 

Watercolor Crayon Color sketching Prague Kozi ulice

Outdoor Watercolor Crayon Sketching – what you need

Watercolor Crayon Color sketching Outdoor set

What you need:

  • A small sketchbook A5
  • A set of watercolor crayons
  • A brush of medium size – ideally a flat one that enables you to apply a thinner line as well as thicker one depending on the angle you hold it

  • a small rug or a packet of handkerchiefs to wash away accessive water
  • a small water container 

It can all fit in a small A5 size bag 🙂

Watercolor Crayon Color sketching set in a bag

Some of my watercolor crayons sketchings 

Watercolor Crayon Color sketching Abstract yellow and red

Watercolor Crayon Color sketching detail tree Watercolor Crayon Color sketching Abstract lines detail Watercolor Crayon Color sketching Abstract art Watercolor Crayon Color sketching nature patterns Watercolor Crayon Color sketching Abstract lines with red Watercolor Crayon Color sketching Abstract Watercolor Crayon Color sketching Abstract detail lines and washes Watercolor Crayon Color sketching Abstract floral design Watercolor Crayon Color sketching boat detail

Filed Under: Creative process, Detail, Watercolor crayons Tagged With: experiments, painting in a cafe

Back on track and what else is part of the process

12th November 2018 By Radka Leave a Comment

 

Summer sketching landscape with crayons

Returning to my website last week was a nasty surprise for me. I found out that my site was hacked and after some digging into the issues I realized that the best way to ‘fix’ it would be to delete it completely and start from fresh. Today I can say I am back on track. But it did not feel like that at the start.

Initially, it was very depressing. Then I started to realise that it might be a great opportunity to refresh my websites’ look and feel and improve lots of other things as well. Apart from securing my site better for the future as well as backing it up more frequently it also brought me back to the question ‘Why am I doing this?’

Why am I doing this?

The great thing about having to go back is that it makes me think again about the process and what it is I really want. What is my aim here apart from sharing what I create? After I went through the initial feeling of being angry with the hacker, then I felt sorry for myself, but soon I started to feel grateful. Now I feel thankful for his or her cheeky act. Because it was like a good kick in the ass. It is a reminder, a voice saying, ‘hey, either you are here for the long run, or just give it up, because it is not worth the hassle’.

And with art, I am here for the long run no matter what. It is something that started when I got my first colour pencils and markers at a very young age. And it will end only… Well, as long as I am here it is not ending because it is who I am.

Incubating time

So as well as rebuilding the site I am going through my drawings, paintings, sketches, and writing down many ideas about what I would love to do next. It is very exciting actually. Some sort of ‘incubating’ time period.

Oh, and this week my exhibition in AdAstra is ending and I will be preparing my paintings and prints for the customers who bought them. And I will be wrapping them, photographing them, shipping them. Three large paintings were especially popular. So I decided to make them available as prints so that more people can enjoy them in their homes. You can order them either by emailing me at radka[at]radkazimovaking.com or from my online shop. Enjoy your day and don’t forget to get back on track in case you got off it! 🙂

Fauvism Female figure oil painting on canvas by a contemporary artist

Kiss Acrylic on canvas Prague Dancing House contemporary painting

Prague oil painting on canvas framed Radka Zimova King

[rl_gallery id=”114″]

Filed Under: Acrylic painting, Creative process, Fine Art Prints, Oil painting Tagged With: Acrylics, Back on track

© Radka Zimova King 2018

 

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