Sunday, June 26, 2016

The Perfect Summer Activity: Steal Like an Artist

This summer in my house we are all working on creativity.  After reading Austin Kleon's book Steal Like an Artist, I bought three copies of his Steal Like an Artist Journal for us to fill out. Each day we choose one entry to do then we may or may not share what we have written or drawn.

The tasks Kleon includes in the journal ask the reader to take mundane objects and look at them in a new way. He encourages the reader to draw, listen, see, speak and feel using items or ideas such as: find an old receipt and try to recall as much as possible from that day. Ask someone to coffee and afterwards write everything that was discussed. Write your favorite quote and then say it in 5 different ways. I also love "Stare at this dot until you get an idea." One of my favorites is "Climb Up Your Own Creative Family Tree"  where you identify who inspires you and then who influenced them, followed by who inspired the people who inspired the person who inspired you and so on. This exercise could take the entire summer, or an entire lifetime.

My first entry was from the page "10 Things I Want to Learn"

They are:
  1.  Fishing
  2.  3D printing programs
  3. Steps showing how people learn
  4. juggling
  5. Guitar
  6. principles of drawing
  7. design process
  8. investing
  9. Spanish
  10. video editing
It is not all that often where adults encounter a list like this. In a way it may be a "bucket list" for me since many of these topics are those that even experts may continue to learn their whole lives.  Maybe that means it is a good list.  It would be interesting to fill out this list every few years and compare with previous lists to check on progress and/or changes.

As I peruse the book, especially at the entries I have already made, it seems that each entry has unstated steps which must be done to fully make it a creative endeavor, rather than something to do to check boxes to indicate completeness. One example is "10 Things Lying Around that No One is Using." The follow up is where the creativity comes into play.  Should they be put together in a poem, picture,  or story, taken somewhere and donated followed with a description of the next phase in their lives?   When looked at in terms of being creative, there is no end to the book. 




No comments:

Post a Comment