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Joyce, Emre, and Amy…

I look for hope in stuff around me…

But, for all the natural wonders that we catch glimpses of, I sense there is something much bigger that I struggle to grasp*.

It’s easier said than done, but I think we have chances to embrace humanity daily. If we can only let it breathe –  try to meet humanity, if you get a chance…

Let’s call her Joyce: Joyce is from the Netherlands, retired, and she’s touring Britain in her campervan. We met her on top of Stannage Edge in Derbyshire. We discussed stuff like concrete factories, heather, language, and camping. Joyce was full of life, a joy.

Let’s call him Emre: Emre was born in Turkey but was brought up in Tower Hamlets and has worked as a legal support for the Social Services all his life. We met him in Whitstable at the table next to us on the harbour side. He was eating mussels with his wife. We discussed seafood, dogs, politics, Turkey, and teenagers. Emre and his wife were full of friendly smiles.

Let’s call her Amy: Amy loves doing her job. Amy’s in her early twenties and is maître d’ at a cafe bar in Glossop. We met her as she made us feel at home in her delightful cafe. With dynamic enthusiasm, we discussed steak, dogs, her boyfriend, her cafe, and beer. Amy loves life.

For those contemplatives amongst us, the enchanting natural world often leaves us in awe.

The majesty of the sky. The vastness of the sea. The intricacies of seeds, the depths of the forest, the might of mountains, the energy of rivers. All of this causes us to reflect and share delight.

I often do this: I reflect and try to share little joys we see around us. Perhaps I seek natural highs because our culture so often disappoints.

But what stirs me more than any natural phenomenon is our humanity, in such as those everyday saints mentioned above.

everyday saints – julesprichards

Aspects of our humanity can leave nature in the shade. Indeed, our wonder at nature is a human perception. The world just is, but we often think Wow! It just is. But wow?

The human element is the wonder. It’s hard to replicate and manufacture the joy of genuine humanity. And I find it hard to put into words.

Human wonders happen less frequently because the noise and clutter of culture and tradition confuse our perceptions. Our unique asset, our language, constructs towers that are easily toppled. But at the base of every interaction is our humanity. As an art student, I studied the abstract meaning between words… Humanity is the shared energy beneath the words, between strangers…

Yes, humanity has its failings, sometimes I think the failings are far greater than its virtues, but behind the nasty one-upmanship that our culture celebrates is some amazing potential energy…

It’s hard to tap into because the ugly side of society is so loud. But underneath it all is something…

Whether good or bad, people are people because of other people.


*As mentioned, I sometimes totally struggle to grasp humanity.

Years ago, my Creative Arts degree studies opened my eyes to so much energy, but also deconstructed everything definite.

I am just being naively honest, and perhaps highlighting a failing of mine, but some of us struggle to find belonging in this world. I am trying, but even after 50+ years of age, I struggle to find reliable words.

I recently met up with old friends from my degree studies three decades ago. I guess we briefly revived a tangible belonging.

Although 30 years had passed, we fondly recalled a formative time that gave us quite a buzz. It was phenomenally delightful. Although we’d deconstructed everything definite. Thankfully, our common trusted humanity has not expired. Breathe.

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Creative method…

Creative Art:

putting ‘stuff’ together in a new or another way, to resonate a novel or appropriate difference…
…to illuminate the familiar, to resurrect the lost, to prize grace out of joy, to make firm that that is in flux, to capture, weave or play with, to engage, disturb, entertain, please, refresh, challenge…

To be creative… living more openly, acting more honestly, and being more…

Stopping nonproductive behaviors is usually a first step in becoming more creative.

A lot has been and will be written about creativity, and it would be foolish to attempt to summarise it in a nutshell. Indeed, formula alone is not enough to guarantee results; ideally there might be feeling, emotion, logic, realisation, empathy, pain, belief, etc.
However, the creative’process’ can be a considered thing:
i. Preparation for… change
ii. Concentration and focus on… change
iii. Incubation and brewing of… change
iv. Illumination, Aha! elucidation of change
V. …verification and elaboration, developing change.

SCAMPER
A useful idea developed in the 1970s by Robert Eberle is the acronym SCAMPER.
Eberle worked in education in the US, and studied creativity with children and teachers.
In essence it’s a creative tool that helps move you on when you might reach a blank.
SCAMPER is based on the idea that new creative work, is essentially a remix of something that is already exists.
CHANGE…
S = Substitute (replace things with alternatives, e.g. objects, characters, media, etc.)
C = Combine (combine/blend objects or parts of objects, media, ideas, etc)
A = Adapt (borrow something from another context)
M = Magnify, Minify, Multiply (make some part larger, smaller or repeat it, enhance, distance)
P = Put to Other Uses (change the intended function of an object, a place, a character…)
E = Eliminate (remove elements or parts; cut something out; cut part of something away)
R = Rearrange/Reverse (move objects, characters, time, around. Invert, switch, pace, time etc)

But critically; theory, formula and process might help move things along, but nothing will replace the passion and drive, the wanting, the desire, the searching, the angst, the belief, the love… of the creative artist.

image
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Bowling

 

 

 

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Creativity, performance, art… ?

“Imagination is more important than knowledge.” – Albert Einstein

I recently had an invigorating chat with old university friends about creativity, performance and art…
I was then questioned via twitter; “what do the words ‘creativity performance art’ actually mean in combination? 🙂
Until now I haven’t had time to compose a reply.
Of course Creative Arts is what I studied and thoroughly enjoyed an age ago at uni, before digital dialogue was common place; my notes and essays now slumber in the garage with my Valentinos’ tickets & mortarboard. But, without getting academic and theoretical, is there a utilitarian answer?

Creativity:
putting ‘stuff’ together in a new or another way, to resonate a novel or appropriate difference…
Performance:
To do, to function, to present, to accomplish, to entertain, to interact…
Art:
putting ‘stuff’ together in a new or another way, to resonate a novel or appropriate difference…
…to illuminate the familiar, to resurrect the lost, to prize grace out of joy, to make firm that that is in flux, to capture, weave or play with, to engage, disturb, entertain, please, refresh, challenge…

In our current societies, often the audience, readers or recipients are an integral part of creative work; each reader brings their own experience to an action or thing…
Variables are objective, meaning is subjective…
Science might be objective, imagination might be subjective…
Breath might be objective, love might be subjective…
Death might be objective, hope might be subjective…

I like the popular circus, sequins and saccharine as much as the next person but I fear it’s over-celebrated. I guess it’s individualism, commerce and consumerism that drives our cultures and the appetite for a more wholesome creativity, query and discipline might be obscured and smothered in peanut butter, candy crush and eastenders.

To work-over Wallace Stevens’ reflections in Opus Posthumous:
After one has abandoned a belief in truth, creativity is that essence which takes its place as life’s redemption. But as one attempts to find a fiction to replace the lost truths, one immediately encounters a problem: a direct knowledge of reality is not possible. The world influences us in our everyday perspectives, “were we to place a jar on a hill in Tennessee, we would impose an order onto the landscape”.

I think AN answer to the posed question; “what do the words ‘creativity performance art’ actually mean in combination?; might be living more openly, acting more honestly, and being more…

The interaction between things is what makes them fecund… (Wallace Stevens)