What is creativity? What does it mean to be original and creative?
What fosters creativity, and what hinders it? Can it be cultivated?
What is the relationship between creativity and consciousness?
Between the creative state and the sacred?
- these questions have fueled my inquiry into the creative state,
and the quotes included here are those I've found thought-provoking
along the way
'Zum Erstaunen bin ich da' - I am here to wonder.
Goethe.
This oceanic feeling of wonder is the common source of religious
mysticism,
of pure science and art for art's sake.
Arthur Koestler
God created the giraffe, the cat, the elephant ...
He has no real style, he just keeps trying things.
Pablo Picasso
Resist the familiar!
Creativity is allowing yourself to
make mistakes.
Art is knowing which ones to keep.
Scott Adams
When nothing is sure, everything is possible.
Margaret Drabble
Unthinking respect for authority is the greatest enemy of truth.
Albert Einstein
My hand is the extension of the thinking process -
the creative process.
Tadao Ando
I paint as a bird sings.
Claude Monet
High is our calling friend!
Creative Art demands the
service of a mind and heart.
William Wordsworth
Reality leaves a lot to the imagination.
John Lennon
The enemy of
art is the absence of limitations.
Orson Welles
Every act
of creation is first of all an act of destruction.
Pablo
Picasso
Creativity is a type of learning process where the
teacher and the student
are located in the same individual.
Arthur Koestler
Sell your cleverness and buy bewilderment.
Rumi
Art enables us to find ourselves
and lose ourselves at the same time.
Thomas Merton
The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new
landscapes
but in having new eyes.
Marcel Proust
Creativity is more than just being different.
Anybody can play weird - that's easy.
What's hard is to be as simple as Bach.
Making the simple complicated is commonplace - making the complicated
simple, awesomely simple - that's creativity.
Charles Mingus
Where the spirit does not work with the hand there is
not art.
Leonardo da Vinci
Each time we creatively discover some element of the vision
that unites us all we co-create our worldview.
That is the meaning of our creativity and its awesome responsibility.
Danah Zohar, The Quantum Self
Art is not about thinking something up.
It is the opposite: getting something down.
Julia Cameron
When I start thinking,
everything's lost.
Paul Cezanne
It would be a mistake to ascribe this creative power to an inborn talent. In
art, the genuine creator is not just a gifted being, but a person who has
succeeded in arranging for their appointed end, a complex of activities, of
which the work is the outcome. The artist begins with a vision a creative
operation requiring an effort. Creativity takes courage.
Henri Matisse
The eye of
desire dirties and distorts.
Only when we desire nothing, only when our gaze becomes pure contemplation,
does the soul of things (which is beauty) open itself to us.
Hermann Hesse
All artists are of necessity in some measure contemplative.
Evelyn Underhill
The noun of self becomes a verb.
This flashpoint of creation in the present moment is where work and play merge.
Stephen Nachmanovitch, Free Play
Man's mind, once stretched by a new idea,
never regains its original dimensions.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The purpose of all true art and science
is to reveal the Creator's design.
Albert Einstein
One eye
sees, the other feels.
Paul
Klee
Books choose their authors; the act of creation is not entirely a rational and conscious one.
Salman Rushdie
The painting has a life of its own, I try to let it come through.
Jackson Pollock
In the brush doing what it's doing, it will stumble on what one couldn't do by oneself.
Robert Motherwell
Creativity is a celebration of life my celebration of life.
It is a bold statement: I am here! I love life! I love me! I can be anything! I
can do anything!
Joseph Zinker
Inspiration may be a form of superconsciousness, or perhaps of subconsciousness I wouldn't know.
But I am sure it is the antithesis of self-consciousness.
Aaron Copeland
The truth of the thing
is not the think of it
but the feel of it.
Stanley Kubrick
Beauty plus pity;
that is the closest we can get to a definition of art.
Vladimir Nabokov
Creativeness is not merely a matter of painting pictures or writing poems, which is good to do,
but is very little in itself.
What is important is to be wholly discontented, for such total discontent is the
beginning of the initiative which becomes creative as it matures; and that is
the only way to find out what is truth, what is God,
because the creative state is God.
... One must be wholly discontented, not complainingly, but with joy, with
gaiety, with love.
J Krishnamurti, This Matter of Culture
Whatever I know how to do, I've already done.
Therefore I do what I do not know how to do.
Chillida
The map is not the
territory.
Alfred Korzbyski
At the height of laughter, the universe is flung into a kaleidoscope of new possibilities.
Jean Houston
. . . I had discovered in painting a bit of experience that made all other usual occupations
unimportant by comparison.
It was the discovery that when painting something from nature there occurred, at
least sometimes, a fusion into a never-before-known wholeness; not only were the
object and oneself no longer felt to be separate, but neither were thought and
sensation and feeling and action.
All one's visual perceptions of colour, shape, texture, weight, as well as
thought and memory, ideas about the object and action towards it, the movement
of one's hand together with the feeling of delight in the 'thusness' of the
thing, they all seemed fused into a wholeness of being which was different from
anything else that had ever happened to me.
and
And when the bit
of painting was finished, there was before one's eyes a permanent record of the
experience,
giving a constant sense of immense surprise at how it had ever happened:
it did not seem something that oneself had done at all,
certainly not the ordinary everyday self and way of being.
Marion Milner, On Not Being Able to Paint
The creative mind plays with the objects it loves.
C. G. Jung
First thought is
best in art.
William Blake
Nobody sees a flower really it is so small it takes time and to see takes time,
like to have a friend takes time.
Georgia O'Keefe
There is no must in art because art is free.
Wassily Kandinsky
Never was the craftsman's delight
in the making of an object,
or the assembly of its components,
more in evidence.
Everywhere in this handsome exhibition,
we see the plain unadorned truth
of the artist's life any artist's life.
The love, the labor, the solitude
and the ritual precision
of an idea patiently worked
to its eloquent conclusion.
Patricia Anderson on Howard Taylor @ MCA Sydney.
Weekend Australian Oct 4-5 2003
The true mystery of the world is the visible, not the invisible.
Oscar Wilde
I shut my eyes in order to see.
Paul Gauguin
Chance is always powerful. Let your hook always be cast;
in the pool where you least expect it, there will be a fish.
Ovid
Living is a form of not being sure, not knowing what next or how. The moment you know
how, you begin to die a little. The artist never entirely knows. We guess. We
may be wrong, but we take leap after leap in the dark.
Agnes de Mille
Taking a new step, uttering a new word is what people fear most.
Fyodor Dostoyevski
Satisfaction of one's curiosity is one of the greatest sources of happiness in life.
Linus Pauling
Art evokes the mystery without which the world would not exist.
Magritte
You are lost the instant you know what the result will be.
Juan Gris
One does not discover new lands without consenting to lose sight of the shore for a very long time.
Andre Gide
The word 'art' is muddied.
What you need is a word for 'order,' 'health,' 'beauty,' 'balance,'
and 'quality of relationship.'
Drawing is the time-bound activity of seeing. It stills the
brain's noise and gives us a window to a process as independent as the autonomic
nervous system. It seems peculiar that the process should be so elusive.
Art is a specialist's activity in this culture, and is just a symptom of the
process of seeing. That natural process is orderly, constant, available,
dispassionate.
Don Dame
Every creative act involves
a new innocence of perception, liberated from the
cataract of accepted belief.
Arthur Koestler
A. F. Osborne states that creativity is activated by such "stabs" as "What if?
What about
.? What else? and again, What else
.?"
He proposed a 'checklist' of original thinking:
Are there other uses? Modifications? Change in color, motion, smell, form, shape?
What could be magnified? Made stronger? Multiplied?
Made smaller, lower, shorter, stronger, larger, in miniature, in duplicate,
split-up, exaggerated?
A different arrangement, layout, sequence, pace, ingredient, material, power,
place, approach, tone of voice?
What could be reversed, transposed, combined, streamlined?
What are the bottlenecks, intersections, surprises, goals, inefficiencies, vital
needs?
Drawing turns the creative mind to expose its workings. Drawing discloses the heart of visual thought,
coalesces spirit and perception, conjures imagination; drawing is an act of
meditation.
Edward Hill
Creativity, as has been said, consists largely of rearranging what we know in
order to find out what we do not know.
Hence, to think creatively we must be
able to look afresh at what we normally take for granted.
George Kneller
The more you reason,
the less you create.
Raymond Chandler
The purpose of 'looking' is to survive, to cope, to manipulate
this we are trained
to do from our first day. When, on the other hand, I
SEE,
suddenly I am all eyes, I forget this
ME, am liberated from it and dive into the reality that
confronts me.
Frederick Franck
It seems, then, to be one of the paradoxes of creativity that in order to think
originally, we must familiarize ourselves with the ideas of others.
George Kneller
I live on the edge of time.
My knowing never precedes my need to know by one superfluous second.
My life's steps are a quick flash of insight following eons of dark sightless waiting.
emellesse
Sometimes it is actually easier to draw the spaces and let the objects take care
of themselves.
Arthur L. Guptill
There is more to seeing than meets the eyeball.
N. R. Hanson
We now appreciate that most brain hypotheses are largely at variance with the
realities of physics.
Perceptions are, in any case, only approximations;
there is always some error, which usually goes unnoticed.
R. L. Gregory
In order to paint [this] as it is, I have to forget all I have seen, and even these things as they have
been painted by others.
Jean-Simeon Chardin
It begins to appear that we have, in Keith Gunderson's phrase, "under-privileged access"to the goings-on in our own minds. We make mistakes even about what we
are thinking.
Daniel Dennet in dialogue with Jonathon Miller
At some stage in the process of creation the creative product whether painting,
poem, or scientific theory takes on a life of its own and transmits its own
needs to its creator. It stands apart from him and summons material from his
subconscious. The creator, then, must know when to cease directing his work and
when to allow it to direct him. He must know, in short, when his work is likely
to be wiser than he.
George Kneller
Clarity, insight or understanding are only possible when thought is in abeyance,
when the mind is still. Then only can you see very clearly, then you can say you
have really understood
then you have direct perception, because your mind is
no longer confused.
To be clear, the mind must be completely quiet, completely still, then there is
real understanding and therefore that understanding is action. It isn't the
other way around.
J Krishnamurti,
You are the World
Einstein's son, speaking about his father:
"
he had a character more like that of an artist than of a scientist as we
usually think of them. For instance, the highest praise for a good theory or
a good piece of work was not that it was correct nor that it was exact but
that it was beautiful."
Hans Albert Einstein
The movement/dynamic/process from incoherence to coherence, is creativity. Neither
incoherence nor coherence are static entities, but are constantly fluxing and
needing new movements, adjustments, solutions. Problems are never solved
once-and-for-all, yet we seek the ultimate panacea, the resolution for all time.
This notion is in total contradiction to the nature of the universe, and is
another example of incoherence.
David Bohm, notes from a staff dialogue at Brockwood Park School
Evolution is an effect, not a cause.
emellesse
The point is: education is not about curriculum, for almost any curriculum will do, given sufficient
numbers of competent teachers.
Education has to do with teaching students to think carefully, critically,
reflectively, and creatively about everything and anything that comes their way
in and out of school. Subject-matter, be it language, mathematics, biology,
whatever, is a vehicle to this end. (It is worth noticing that the world is not
divided into disciplines as schools and universities are.) Education is not
something that happens in schools, at any level, then finishes.
As Dewey said, it is not merely preparation for life. It is part of life itself.
Eric Braithwaite,NZ Listener, Dec 2, 1991
Courage = conviction + doubt.
Imagination is the reaching out of the mind, the capacity to see dreams and
visions, to consider diverse possibilities, to endure the tension in holding
these possibilities to attention.
As imagination gives vitality to form, form keeps imagination from driving us
into psychosis. This is the ultimate necessity of limits.
There is a curiously sharp sense of joy or mild ecstasy that comes when you find
the particular form required for your creation:
the experience of "This is the
way things are meant to be." We participate for a moment in the myth of
creation, and at the same time know more vividly our own limitations.
What if imagination and art are the fountainhead of human experience?
Imagination seems to be a principle in human life underlying even reason, for
the rational functions, according to our definitions, can lead to understanding,
can participate in the constituting of reality only as they are creative.
Rollo May, The Courage to Create
It is necessary to act and create in freedom, to break with formulas and enlarge the
concept of art to encompass everyday existence, designing non-hostile spaces
according to the integrational model Art-Nature, Nature-Art.
Cesar Manrique
. . . to render beauty accessible to all, by putting order into things and thought.
Raoul Dufy
He to whom Nature begins to reveal her open secret will feel an irresistible yearning for her most worthy
interpreter, ART.
Goethe
A work of man is only the long journeying to find again through the labyrinth of art the two or three
great images upon which, the heart first opened.
Albert Camus
In penetrating into a wave of perception as energy, extraordinary things go on.
There is a sense of soaring ecstasy; a feeling of limitless space; a vast movement of color. Color is god.
Not the gods we worship, but the color of the earth, the sky, the extraordinary
color of a flower
color is aroma.
Attention is complete harmony
.
Attention is a movement to eternity
.
The mind is full of thought because the senses are not fully flowering. The
senses create thought, senses create experience, which is knowledge, memory thought.
When the senses are fully flowering, what happens?
There is no center as desire.
You are not 'aware' of the senses you are the senses.
Be absolutely alert and make no effort.
A selection from J Krishnamurti
I am not a creator. I'm a swimmer and a dismisser of irrelevancies.
R. Buckminster Fuller
The only real experiences in life [are] those lived with a virgin sensibility so that we only
hear a tone once, only see a color once, see, hear, touch, taste and smell
everything but once, the first time. All life is but an echo of our first
sensations, and we build up our consciousness, our whole mental life by
variations and combinations of these elementary sensations.
Herbert Read,
The Innocent Eye
Order itself creates harmony out of chaos.
Color is part of order, it has its own logic and something beyond our thinking
responds to it, knows how to orchestrate it.
emellesse
By health I mean the power to live a full, adult, living, breathing life in close
contact with what I see. I want to lose all that is superficial and acquired in
me and to become a conscious, direct human being.
I want, by understanding myself, to understand others.
I want to be all that I am capable of becoming. So that I may be a child in the
sun warm, eager, living life. To be rooted in life, to learn, to desire, to
know, to feel, to think, to act.
Katherine Mansfield
The reach of your compassion is the reach of your art.
When you distinguish between good and evil, you've lost the art.
An art object, by definition, is divinely superfluous beauty.
Joseph Campbell
My religion is wonder: wonder at it all and my place in it.
emellesse
Man is not a circle with a single center; he is an ellipse with two foci.
Facts are one, ideas are the other.
Victor Hugo,
Les Miserables
You have to remain a child your whole life long.
Color is a means of expressing
LIGHT, though not so much the light as a
physical phenomenon as the Light that exists in reality in the artist's head.
Henri Matisse
An artist must be free, or he is not an artist.
Paul Gauguin
Color is the medium of the painter. It links the outer moods of nature with the inner moods of the soul. It
is upon the bridge of color that the artist finds an alternate field of action
between the mere copying of the outer world and the often over-indulgent
expression of the self. Color is not one-sided but both objective and
subjective. It is the master and teacher of the artist in our time.
Color, in fact perceptibly precedes form and can determine form out of its own
inner movement. This qualitative inner gesture of color instructs and
trains the artist in the formation and build-up of his picture, just as the
life-forces of the plant create and mold its leaves, stem and blossom.
Van James
The practice of art is not directed towards producing artists who can paint or
sculpt with real ability, nor towards producing more works to fill our homes and galleries.
It is directed towards producing human beings with a sense of wonder at
life and that precious ability to inquire into its outward manifestations.
Klee and Miro
urge us to paint like little children. Perhaps they mean we
should try to
rediscover that lost attitude to art in which the actual
creative act, the experiment, the solving of problems, are more important than
the result or solution.
By virtue of being human we are all artists.
our whole vision, our interpretation of reality, is a complex structure built
on the understanding of artists long dead or still living. Every artist who ever
lived and worked lives in us. We, or rather our vision and our understanding,
are the products of twenty thousand years of art, the temporary crystallization
of an ever-changing interpretation of the nature of reality.
By participating in this ever-changing way of seeing, we are learning about
ourselves and about the external world. By learning how to see and how to live
we are being artists. We have to be artists to survive.
Fred Gettings, You are an Artist: a practical approach to art.
The lines and forms are visible signs of divine gestures.
Learn to understand them and you will comprehend how God created the world.
Brunelleschi
'Tis by the light of exploding assumptions I see my way.
emellesse
Ten thousand images assemble
One thousand needles gather
Ten fingers toil
One heart is lifted.
From an inscription on the Silk Road Tapestries, British Museum, London
an abstract art of pure form and color, if it is serious and
not merely decorative, mocks the pretensions of secular power because it
transcends the limits of this world and attempts to penetrate a hidden world of
universal law.
Bruce Chatwin, What am I Doing Here?
I should like to write as I paint my pictures that is to say,
following my fancy, following the moon, and finding the title long afterwards.
Gauguin, The Intimate Journals of Gaugin
broadly, what the painter
conceptualize[s] in non-verbal symbols is the astounding experience of
how it feels to be alive, the experience known from inside, of being a moving,
living body in space, with capacities to relate oneself to other objects in
space. And included in this experience of being alive is the very experiencing
of the creative process itself.
Marion Milner, On Not Being Able to Paint
the Islamic artist was
not only versed in mathematics in the geometrical sense,
mathematics was
integral to his art as it was a 'universal' structure supporting the intuitive
insights that characterize all true art.
Keith Critchlow, Islamic Art
You can never think a painting, you can only do it.
It really doesn't come from the head.
I would hate to make a painting already formed in my head, and in a sense, just reproduce that image on canvas.
The work is a discovery of something that finally feels authentic.
And there must be absolutely no 'fiddling'
because then you begin to construct the painting in a known way.
I want to construct a painting in an unknown way, unknown to me.
I don't want to design a painting.
Edwina Leapman
When our eyes see our hands doing the work of our hearts, a circle of creation is
completed inside us. The doors of our souls fly open and love steps forth to
heal everything in sight.
Vyvyan Mari
Today, like other days, we wake up empty and frightened. Don't open the door to the study and begin
reading. Take down a musical instrument.
Let the beauty we love be what we do.
There are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground.
Rumi
I can do very well without God, both in my life and my painting, but I cannot, ill as
I am, do without something which is greater than I, which is my life the power
to create.
Vincent Van Gogh
The inexpressible is the only thing worth expressing.
Frederick Franck
Why do we do art?
There may be multiple and serious motivations, such as opening people's eyes to
injustice or saving the world; but if the activity to save the world doesn't
give us joy, what's the point of having a world and how will we have the
wholeness and energy to carry on? This whole adventure of creativity is about joy and love.
We live for the pure joy of being and out of that joy unfolds the ten thousand
art forms and all the branches of learning and compassionate activity.
Stephen Nachmanovitch, Free Play
Paint as you like and die happy.
Henry Miller
to those who can appreciate the force and vitality of this
movement in
art ['tachisme': blot or stain pure psychic automatism rejection of all pictorial imagery
unformed thoughts dynamic 'inner necessity being expressed] it will seem but
proof of the indestructible nature of that will to form
which has always been
the biological justification of the aesthetic activity.
Herbert Read, The Meaning of Art
the wild freedom that is the privilege of the disciplined artist.
Jeanette Winterson, Art Objects
Awe is what moves us forward.
Joseph Campbell
Color defies literal and mathematical definition; it has its own syntax.
The complete significance of any great work of art is contained within itself,
and is projected on us before we take note of any subject matter. True aesthetic
judgment is never calculated it is immediate and involuntary.
Frank Hodgkinson, Kakadu and the Arnhem Landers
Every stroke of my brush is the overflow of my inmost heart.
Sengai
I'm really only interested in finding more and more ways of saying what I feel about
the extraordinariness of the world
and of being alive in it.
and
But I do know that to find the language, gestural, verbal or pictorial, one has
recurrently to let everything go, all thoughts of what one loves, all images,
and attend to the nothingness, seemingly nothing there silence.
Marion Milner, Eternity's Sunrise
The artist Hokusai, at the end of a long life, joyously exclaimed:
"At last I do not know how to draw!"
In the form and function of play,
man's consciousness that he is embedded in a sacred order of things
finds its first, highest and holiest expression.
Johan Huizinga, Homo Ludens
In your work you first have to forget that you don't know how to paint.
Then you have to forget that you do know how to paint . . .
Namgyal Rinpoche, Unfolding through Art
The mightiest lever known to the moral world
imagination.
The creating mind is
creator and receiver both, working but in alliance with
the works which it beholds.
William Wordsworth
It is in working within limits that the craftsman reveals himself.
Goethe
The discoveries of science [and] art are explorations more, are explorations of a
hidden likeness.
The discoverer or artist presents in them two aspects of nature
and fuses them into one.
This is the act of creation, in which an original
thought is born, and it is the same act in original science and original art.
Bronowski, Science and Human Values
The whole question of questions and not answers is very interesting.
Suppose no one asked a question. What would the answer be?
J.W. Getzels
In 1880 the great French mathematician Henri Poincare was struggling to find a proof for a theorem
Day
after day he would engage in a few hours of futile calculation then give up.
Then one evening, the answer came. "Contrary to my custom, I drank black coffee
and could not sleep," he recalled. "Ideas rose in crowds. I felt them collide
until pairs interlocked, so to speak, making stable combinations." By the next
morning, he could see his way to the proof all he had to do was write down the
results.
Robert Matthews, New Scientist, Dec 1994
We can never neatly separate what we see from what we know.
A person who was born blind and who gains his eyesight later on, must learn to see.
and
The artist who wants to "represent" a real (or imagined) thing does not start by opening his eyes and
looking about him but by taking colors and forms and building up the required image.
and
When Picasso says, "I do not seek, I find," he means
that he has come to take as a matter of course
that creation itself is exploration. He does not plan, he watches the weirdest
beings rise under his hands. The films which show him at work, and his more
playful creations,
show that here is a man who has succumbed to the spell of
making, unrestrained and unrestrainable by the mere descriptive functions of the
image.
and
The Greeks said that to marvel is the beginning of knowledge and where we cease to marvel we may be in
danger of ceasing to know.
and
I know of no better description to teach us the art of wonder again
to restore a sense of wonder
at man's capacity to conjure up forms, lines, shades or colors those
mysterious phantoms of visual reality we call 'pictures.'
E H Gombrich, Art and Illusion
For me, creation first starts by contemplation, and I need long, idle hours of meditation. It is then
that I work most. I look at flies, at flowers, at leaves and trees around me. I
let my mind drift at ease, just like a boat in the current. Sooner or later, it
is caught by something. It gets precise. It takes shape
my next painting motif
is decided.
Pablo Picasso
For someone who is conscious only of the material world, power is limited to
material resources; but at a more profound level there is a creative power
shaping mind and body the power of evolution, or dharma.
To get in touch with the core of life, you have to get in touch with the creative power of the universe.
That power expresses itself through your personal creativity.
When you are in the field of creativity, you lose track of time. Only the flow exists.
and
As long as creation dominates your existence, you will keep growing and evolving.
Evolution thwarts entropy, decay and aging.
Deepak Chopra, Ageless Body, Timeless Mind
I shall become a master in this art only after a great deal
of practice, until eventually the results of my theoretical knowledge and the
results of my practice are blended into one my intuition, the essence of the
mastery of any art. But aside from learning the theory and practice, there is a
third factor necessary to becoming a master in any art the mastery of the art
must be a matter of ultimate concern; there must be nothing else in the world
more important than the art. This holds true for music, for medicine, for
carpentry and for love.
Erich Fromm, The Art of Loving
To break away from that which is may be a step in the direction of what may be
and it is precisely here that the creative act begins.
Jean Dubuffet
The energies of the artwork cross-current into us.
It is a transfusion of a kind, and if this has religious overtones, it doesn't matter.
Nobody need be nervous about a connection between art and religion.
All of life is connected and our deepest experiences, whether of faith or love
or art will share similar qualities.
Jeanette Winterson
Whereas most of us can name and therefore distinguish perhaps twelve or
fifteen different colors, there are professional dyers and painters who have a
color vocabulary of several thousand shades. This range of vision causes them to
see a colored universe which is as different from the average man's as a
fifteen-word language is different in its scope and dimension from one of two
thousand words. With depth of vision come the dimensions of quality and mood.
Laurence Blair, Rhythms of Vision
There is painting but no one painting.
and
When I paint I am color.
Namgyal Rinpoche
If the doors of perception were cleansed every
thing would appear to man as it is, infinite. For man has closed himself up,
till he sees all things through narrow chinks of his cavern.
William Blake
To live, to err, to fall, to triumph, to recreate life out of life!
and
Welcome, o life!
I go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience
and to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race.
James Joyce, Portrait of the Artist
Once we discount the seductive red herring of inexplicable genius and recognize the
immensely creative nature of normal, everyday thinking, we begin to appreciate
not a rare handful of 'gifted' individuals but each and every person around us.
We become aware that the precious quality of creativity is in truth common currency;
that aspects of character, personality and above all motivation are what convert
a base metal to pure gold.
To be creative ultimately is to be nothing more than human.
To be human is of necessity to be creative.
Peter Evans and Geoff Deehan, The Keys to Creativity
John Dewey and Alfred North Whitehead, along with Henri Bergson would enlighten by their adeptness at
finding new ways of seeking. For Bergson, who found his meaning in the
seeking, evolution had become God's "undertaking to create creators."
Daniel J. Boorstin in TIME special issue on Discovery, summer '97, '98
Every one of us is able to reproduce the phenomena of creation from inside out. It is not simply a question
of the subject matter, the iconography of genesis appropriate to each culture:
it is a question of processes which are the basis of representation, which are
primary (even in the Freudian sense of unconscious and unfiltered material).
Artistic ability is connected not only with 'technical skill' but with the
capacity to appreciate chaos, to 'make something out of it.' Often it is those
who have no art education who can best let go imaginatively. Children, before
they learn better, show the roots of this visionary play: leaving the initial
traces unrefined, letting them be many things at once a head, an egg, a boat,
or a house. Later on, it takes an effort or a crisis for these moments of
metaphoric osmosis to be recovered.
As Marion Milner writes: "Moments when the original poet in each of us created
the outside world for us, by finding the familiar in the unfamiliar, are perhaps
forgotten by most people; or else they are guarded in some secret place of
memory because they were too much like visitations of the gods to be
mixed with everyday thinking.
David Maclagan,
Creation Myths
To glance with an eye or show a bean in its pod confounds the learning of all times.
Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass
Color doesn't depict, it EVOKES.
emellesse
We forget that the world is always more and stranger than we guess. Or can guess.
Instead, we search for simple answers, simple laws of nature, in a sleight of
mind that makes us uniquely human. Just as we're addicted to rules, home-truths
and slogans, we're addicted to certain ways of explaining things. There's bound
to be a simple answer to everything, we insist. Maybe not. Maybe complexity
frightens us. Maybe we fear becoming as plural as all we survey.
and
The word 'discovery' literally means: uncovering something that's hidden from view. But what really
happens is a change in the viewer. The familiar offers a comfort few can resist,
and fewer still want to disturb.
and
Some of the richest moments in people's lives have come from playing with a mental box full of
numbers or ideas, rotating it, shaking it, while the hours slip by, until at
last the box begins to rattle and a revelation spills out.
From Diane Ackerman, Discoveries on your Doorstep, in TIME Discovery issue
'97-'98
Painters should only meditate brush in hand.
Balzac
Can I make a painting about human experience without having to depict appearances?
Can I paint the human spirit rather than noses and feet?
Can I reveal the splendours and agonies of life through space, colour, light,
shape, line, confrontation, rhythm and inflections in the paint?
Albert Irvin
Creativity is always founded on the sensitive perception of what is new and different from what is
inferred from previous knowledge.
and
When a learning state of mind operates, there's undivided and total interest in what one is doing.
and
What is characteristic about the results of creative action?
One perceives a new fundamental set of similar differences, that constitutes
a genuinely new order and structure in the world that is seen.
and
just as the health of the body demands that we breathe properly, so,
whether we like it or not,
the health of the mind requires that we be creative.
and
in the long run, no really subtle, deep and far-reaching problems can be solved in any field
whatsoever, except by people who are able to respond in an original and creative
way, to the ever changing and developing fact by which they are confronted.
David Bohm, On Creativity
Contemporary creativity consists in activating, expressing, and fulfilling the universe process, the
earth process, the life process, and the human process within the possibilities
of our historical moment.
Thomas Berry
Creativity requires the ability to think through problems afresh, to discover common
threads amongst seemingly disparate influences, to be willing to experiment, to
rewrite rules, to visualize and to have the courage to act upon those visions.
Stevie McKinless
The greatest formal talent is worthless
if it does not serve a creativity which is capable of shaping a cosmos.
The greatness of an artist lies in the building of an inner world,
and in the ability to reconcile this inner world with the outer.
Albert Einstein
Whatever I want to express in its truest meaning must emerge from within me and
pass through an inner form.
It cannot come from outside to the inside but must emerge from within.
Meister Eckhart
If you do not express your own original ideas, if you do not listen to your own being, you will have
betrayed yourself.
Rollo May
but why the men who believe in electrons should regard themselves as less
credulous than the men who believed in angels is not apparent to me.
George Bernard Shaw
Color is my day-long obsession, joy and torment.
Claude Monet
Color has taken hold of me; no longer do I have to chase after it. I know that it has
hold of me for ever.
That is the significance of this blessed moment.
Color and I are one. I am a painter.
Paul Klee, on his return from Tunis, 1914
The purest and most thoughtful minds are those which love color the most.
John Ruskin, The Stones of Venice
The day is coming when a single carrot, freshly observed, will set off a revolution.
Paul Cezanne
If we study Japanese art, we see a man who is undoubtedly wise, philosophic and
intelligent, who spends his time doing what? In studying the distance between
the earth and the moon? No. In studying Bismarck's policy?
No. He studies a single blade of grass.
Vincent Van Gogh
The faculty of creating is never given to us all by itself. It always goes hand in
hand with the gift of observation. And the true creator may be recognized
by his ability to find about him, in the commonest and humblest thing, items
worthy of note.
Igor Stravinsky
Art happens. No hovel is safe from it, no prince may depend upon it, the vastest
intelligence cannot bring it about.
James McNeill Whistler
You come to nature with all your theories, and she knocks them all flat.
Pierre Auguste Renoir
In art, every generation
must start again afresh.
Maurice de Vlamink
People don't realize what they have when they own a picture by me.
Each picture is a phial with my blood. That is what has gone into it.
Pablo Picasso
When I begin painting I am in a state of unconsciousness;
I suddenly forget that I am holding a brush in my hand.
Wu Chen (1280 1354)
The true work of art continues to unfold and create within the personality of the spectator.
It is a continuous coming into being.
Martin Levy
I think the experiential test of whether this art is great or good, or minor or abysmal
is the effect it has on your own sense of the world and yourself.
Great art changes you.
Sister Wendy Beckett
It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes importance
and I know of no substitute whatever for the force and beauty of its process.
Henry James
Abstract Art has come into being as a necessary expression of the feelings and
thoughts of our age; it has added new dimensions to creative painting; it is
part of the constant change and vital searching that energizes every true art.
Leonard Brooks
Art's a staple. Like bread or wine or a warm coat in winter. Those who think it is a luxury have
only a fragment of a mind. Man's spirit grows hungry for art in the same way his
stomach growls for food.
Irving Stone
Art is a staple of mankind
So urgent, so utterly linked with the pulse of feeling that it
becomes the singular sign of life when every other aspect of civilization fails.
Jamake Highwater
I believe in Michelangelo, Velazquez, and Rembrandt; in the might of design, the mystery of color,
the redemption of all things by Beauty everlasting,
and the message of Art that has made these hands blessed: Amen. Amen.
George Bernard Shaw
I hope with all my heart that there will be painting in heaven.
Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot his dying words.
..one of the remarkable things about the important thresholds in the biography of life was that they
were explorations, innovations. The 'enemy' was the challenge of a new
physiology, no cryptic Minotaur.
The implication is: no change without
challenge. This may be the stuff of regular evolutionary change,
but when
thresholds were crossed life gloriously broke free of combat, at least for a
while, and lost itself in creative innovation
and
the final threshold is consciousness, freeing the mind from the confines of mere cells, allowing
imagination to probe situations not yet encountered: a sense of self and
reason are those properties we like to consider uniquely human.
and
... although Nature is full of camouflage, we are the first animal ever to deceive ourselves.
and
Cro-Magnon man
..Man the Artist.
In the dark corners of caves Cro-Magnons drew exquisite icons of
the animals they held sacred, or those that they hunted. These outline drawings,
in ochre, in charcoal, or in natural pigment portray mammoths, antelopes, bison,
oxen, horses. Man himself appears as an emblem, rather than a portrait, a
spindly figure, a dark, attenuated sprite, less characterized than the animals
around him. In some caves, handprints, also in ochre, have been added later, as
if to assert individual identity. The drawings combine economy of means with
precision of characteristics in a way that leaves no doubt that there was joy
or reverence in the skill of their rendition. The spirits would not be placated
by a botched job. These are not the jagged approximations of early childhood
sketches. They are deft. If they recall anything later in art history it is the
masterly likenesses that Picasso could achieve with a few pencil lines.
Richard Fortey, Life
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