Did you know that Milton Glaser designed the I ♥ NY logo on a scrap of paper while stuck in the back of a taxi cab? I've been tearing through Jonah Lehrer's excellent new book, Imagine: How Creativity Works, over the past week, and Glaser's "a-ha!" moment is just one of the many insightful stories contained therein.We'll admit to being avid RTers of most anything Lehrer writes over @the99percent, and our enthusiasm for the new book is no exception. In a very digestible 253 pages, Lehrer digs into the stories (and the brain chemistry) behind incredible creative achievements.
He explains how Dan Wieden came up with Nike's "just do it" slogan, why Bob Dylan had to give up on music to write "Rolling Stone," and how a uniquely critical culture has made Pixar one of the most successful film production houses of all-time.
With Glaser, Lehrer captures a wonderful moment on the importance of paying attention. Not just looking at the world around us, but seeing it.
Here's Lehrer:
When Milton Glaser was sixteen, he decided to draw a portrait of his mother. "I was just sitting in front of her one night and I thought it would be fun to sketch her face," he says. "So I got out a piece of paper and charcoal pencil. And you know what I realized? I realized I hadn't the faintest idea what she looked like. Her image had become fixed in my mind at the age of one or two, and it really hadn't changed since. I was drawing a picture of a woman who no longer existed."
But as Glaser stared at her face and then compared what he saw to the black marks on the paper, her appearance slowly came into view. He was able to draw her as she was, and not as he expected her to be. "That sketch taught me something interesting about the mind," he says. "We're always looking, but we never really see." Although Glaser had looked at his mother every single day of his life, he didn't see her until he tried to draw her. "When you draw an object, the mind becomes deeply, intensely attentive," Glaser says. "And it's that act of attention that allows you to really grasp something, to become fully conscious of it. That's what I learned from my mother's face, that drawing is really a kind of thinking."...
Glaser is eighty years old, but he still works in a small studio on East Thirty-second Street in Manhattan. It's a cluttered space, the white walls hidden by old art books stacked ten high. Above the front door, chiseled into the glass, is the slogan of the studio: ART IS WORK.
For Glaser, the quote summarizes his creative philosophy. "There's no such thing as a creative type," he says. "As if creativity is a verb, a very time-consuming verb. It's about taking an idea in your head, and transforming that idea into something real. And that's always going to be a long and difficult process. If you're doing it right, it's going to feel like work." --
For those of you attending the 99% Conference on May 3-4, 2012, you can look forward to seeing Jonah Lehrer speak in person. Afterwards, we'll share the video right here at The99percent.com. In the meantime, check out "Imagine: How Creativity Works." via the99percent.com
Want to increase growth and avoid losses? Want to out compete your competitors? Want to bring new products and services to market faster? Want to be more agile? Contact Innovation and Growth Speaker Jim Woods. Jim works confidentially with start ups, governments as well as profit and for profit enterprises.
Visit our website:www.innothinkgroup.com Executive and Business Coaching: http://ow.ly/anBpK
Jim Woods is president and founder of InnoThink Group. A global management consulting firms specialized solely in helping organizations of all sizes in all industries catalyzing top line growth through strategic innovation and hypercompetition. Jim has over 25 years consulting experience in working with small, mid size and Fortune 1000 companies. He is a former U.S. Navy Seabee and grandfather of five. To arrange for Jim to speak at your next event or devise an effective growth strategy email or call us at 719-649-4118 for availability.james@innothinkgroup.com
Follow us on Twitter: http://ow.ly/anyCg
Follow us on LinkedIn: http://ow.ly/anyJu
Fan us on Facebook: http://ow.ly/anyQ7
No comments:
Post a Comment