Create Web Sites

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, 3 August 2011

Why dumb ideas can be great ideas.

Posted on 07:20 by Unknown
I was having a conversation with a fellow artist this past weekend, and we both brought up this wonderful Ted Talks lecture by Tim Harford, as a fantastic example for why experimentation, and thusly failure, is so important in art.



In this video, Tim discusses an experiment by Unilever to create a hi-fidelity spray nozzle. It may not sound particularly applicable to our field at first, but it really is. When you watch this segment of the lecture (at roughly the 9:00 mark), consider it's correlation to the process of creating thumbnails.







After I watched the video, I was reminded of the fantastic lecture I heard Greg Manchess give on "talent" at this year's Illustration Master Class. Thinking it would interest him, I decided to forward this video to Greg, and here is what he had to say:

For the past two years, I’ve given a lecture about the term ‘talent’ at the Illustration Master Class. It’s really a lecture about failure, why to use it, and why to embrace it. The lecture entails understanding something we all experience, must experience, in our lives, especially involving our artistic skills.



Our great institutions of art are not interested in dealing with this most precious teaching tool as they are all about discovery, and not about the process of finding. In short, they are only interested in the talented, as if this springs forth out of nowhere in only the ‘gifted ones.’



Learning to become an artist is all about training, and training is all about embracing your failures, to learn from them and press on. Generally, my lecture to the IMC students is to implore them to utilize the failures that are inevitable, necessary, in the process.



It’s most certainly not a pep talk. In fact, it’s about how painful the process can be. It isn’t fun, until you’ve been through it. Survive it, and keep going.



I just heard one of my favorite quotes, this one by Irish playwright Samuel Beckett, on the radio again today. I hope you can embrace it:



“Nothing else ever. Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better.”


I know that I, for one, am guilty of relying on a process too much. I have stumbled across a method that consistently reaps good results for me. Thusly, I have very little incentive to experiment. After all, why risk the possibility of failure when you can play it safe and guarantee moderate success? The trouble is, good results are not good enough... I want great results. And to achieve that, failure is necessary.



I am going to challenge myself to take more risks, and fail more often. I challenge you all to do the same.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in Dan dos Santos | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Frank McCarthy
    -by Arnie Fenner While putting together my previous post about movie posters, scratching my head and trying to remember who did what, I a...
  • Art Might - online art museum
    Just a quick post this time around... I’m spending the remaining time trying to track down Spectrum entries! D'oh! Plan on spending a co...
  • How to Draw the Head From Any Angle: Part 2
    Thanks to the great reception his first video received, Stan Prokopenko , has decided to do a follow up to his ' How To Draw the Head fr...
  • Paja Jovanović ( Vršac 1859 – Vienna 1957)
    by Petar Meseldžija Paja Jovanović is one of the greatest Serbian painters. Uroš Predić, another great painter, is perhaps the only artist f...
  • Painting Spider-Man
    By Paolo Rivera Mythos: Spider-Man, Page 22 . 2007. Gouache and acrylic on bristol board, 11 × 17″. Just a quick post today (but with lots o...
  • Sketchbook 2012 Shipping Out!
    by Justin Gerard Sketchbook 2012: Ents & Orcs  ships out today!    The first 50 are individually numbered and have a personal drawing in...
  • Virtual Sistine Chapel
    Virtual Sistine Chapel Tour and others... The Vatican has released virtual tours of their various churches and chapels. Please use the below...
  • Paleo-Illustration Into Creature Design, A Natural Partnership
    -By Terryl Whitlatch I am first and foremost, a paleo illustrator specializing in vertebrate, or back-boned, animal anatomy.  When I observe...
  • The History of Dragons in Art
    -By William O'Connor 'Flight of the Paladin', by William O'Connor, ©2012 The most iconic image in all of fantasy art is the ...
  • Appreciating Rembrandt
    -Justin Sweet Here's a couple of my favorite Rembrandt's. Great pictorially in every way...

Categories

  • Dan dos Santos
  • Justin Gerard
  • Paolo Rivera

Blog Archive

  • ►  2012 (266)
    • ►  September (4)
    • ►  August (36)
    • ►  July (33)
    • ►  June (36)
    • ►  May (36)
    • ►  April (26)
    • ►  March (31)
    • ►  February (30)
    • ►  January (34)
  • ▼  2011 (234)
    • ►  December (25)
    • ►  November (34)
    • ►  October (36)
    • ►  September (27)
    • ▼  August (29)
      • Muddy Faces
      • Printing your work
      • Lists
      • Coolest Trophy Ever?
      • Small Demo
      • Pirate Paintings for National Geographic Pt. 2
      • The Hidden People Sketchbook
      • Great books for under $15
      • FANTASTIC WORLDS EXHIBITION
      • Hugo Awards... Live!
      • New Start
      • Tapping Inspirations -Book Illustration
      • old and new
      • Patrick Jones Tutorials
      • Words of Wisdom
      • Crit-Submit #3, Call for Entries!
      • Fire and Ice
      • The Philosophy of the Illustration Master Class™
      • Tonight!
      • Photo shoot spin-offs
      • St. George Final
      • Spocon
      • Last Embrace
      • San Diego Comic-Con
      • Magroth the undead Wizard
      • Why dumb ideas can be great ideas.
      • Honeyed Words
      • Art Out Loud 7
      • The Brothers Shiflett
    • ►  July (35)
    • ►  June (31)
    • ►  May (17)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile