Kintsugi: The Art Of Recreating, Of Improvement

Kintsugi: The Art Of Recreating, Of Improvement

Kintsugi Art Of Recreating Of Improving

Yes, creating new problems is a rich method of learning about art. Likewise, though, it is beneficial to study, mend, and learn from the already-broken. Rather than creating new problems, which has its perks, we find what’s broken, what once worked, and give it the necessary aid.

Performing the Japanese tradition of kintsugi, which means “to patch with gold,” is to live beyond the life of simple repair, easy fixing, and auto-correct. To understand art, to follow the kintsugi rule, one must make something better than its original form.

Becoming a creator of art doesn’t mean you have to create something no one has imagined before, it doesn’t mean you have to start from nothing or from scratch; it merely takes determination to find room for improvement in something that is broken and to fill the cracks with imagination.

Artists don’t use band aids, duck tape or caulk, they patch with gold, with heart, with newness.

 

Stay Positive & Kintsugi: Make Something “Better Than New”

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If Quality Is A Given, Where Does That Leave Us?

If Quality Is A Given, Where Does That Leave Us?

Bike Design Quality

It’s harder to differentiate our product or service by saying “we’re better than this other product because our product is bigger/stronger/smaller/faster/etc,.”

Now different styles of a phone are parallel in terms of quality.

We’ve come to realize the facts that a bike with thin tires isn’t too different from a bike with fat tires. Both get you to where you want to go. One tire is a half-inch wide and the other is two inches wide. Neither makes one much better than the other… except in the story they are telling the customer.

If quality is a given, we’re left with the story the product or service tells.

In the past, good design meant better quality. Now good design is about telling a story. It’s that story that stops potential consumers from even thinking about your competition.

 

Stay Positive & What Does Your Design Say?

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Why Try To Get Out Of Your Box

…when you can use what’s in it?

You’ve got the potential, you’ve got the skill, the talent, the drive, the passion, the tenacity, the fire in your belly.

How do I know you’ve got everything it takes inside your box?

Because you make the box you’re in.

If you’re letting others set up your box, your letting others hold you back.

You can play it safe by following orders, staying under the ceilings others have built, and churning mediocre work. You can live in the box someone else has made. But why?

You need to make your own box and stay in it.

Your life. Your plan. Your worldview. Your choice. Your living with that choice.

When you think outside the box, you’re bound by the borders others have made.

Make your own box. Name it. It’s yours.

 

Stay Positive & JohnBox, KarthikBox, EllieBox, MichelleBox, GiovannaBox . . .

10 Principles For Creating Remarkable Work

10 Principles For Creating Remarkable Work

Creating Remarkable Work

 

1) You’ve got to give yourself time. For some that means working a job they don’t love because it affords them a few hours at night they can work and not worry about paying the bills. For others this may mean living in an area that is cheap, quiet, far from distractions. It may mean a hiatus from family and friends or it might just mean waking up an extra hour earlier. Without time, you won’t be able to do work that matters.

2) Get funded in odd ways. You’re fortunate enough to be creating in an age where crowdfunding is a popular method of supporting your art, your project. But don’t neglect the opportunities that don’t require a healthy network of supporters. A simple grant here, a one-day-a-week job there can do the trick. And remember, you don’t need a mass of supporters, you only need a few people who already value your work, who are your core tribe.

3) Write out your story. If you have to force it to be interesting, then change your story. Go restart your pursuit in a way that is whole-heatedly interesting. You can own a motto and a personal statement, but keep it to yourself. Let it inspire you and only you. People want to hear your interesting story, not the four word motto that only breaths life for you or the promise you made yourself at the start of the new year.

4) Declutter. Destroy. Decrease your inventory. Purge your inbox, your Evernote, your journals. When going through your collections, either find a way to use what you’ve planned, written, drawn immediately or toss it. Don’t think of incomplete projects and musings you see as failures to launch, see them as ideas that never had life in them to begin with. It’s okay. Let them go. It will be weight off your shoulders now and save you time later.

5) You don’t need regular input and feedback when you’re in the creating phase. Create in privacy. Fail in privacy. Closing your door means you shut out criticism that cripples your momentum, it means shunning the naysayers that drain your motivation, it means giving nothing for others to judge you by.

6) This tip and what prompted me to write this list comes from Teresita Fernandez’s commencement address: when someone compliments your work, don’t believe them unless they can convince you why they believe it’s good. “If they can’t convince you (and most people can’t) dismiss it as superficial and recognize that most bad consensus is made by people simply repeating that they ‘like’ something.”

7) Other than bad habits, you don’t have to give up anything you love or want to do in life in order to create remarkable work. You can travel to all the countries you want, have as many babies as you want or go to school for five more degrees. You can create remarkable work all the while. You don’t have to forfeit your dreams to do work that matters.

8) Don’t believe you need a mass following to fuel your work. A few people who support you, who care about you, who believe in you is all you need. Don’t tell yourself otherwise.

9) Be nice to everyone. Be gracious. Be thankful. Be sincere. Be personal. Be human. Be likable rather than interesting.

10) When you face fear, troubles, setbacks in life–be it with your fitness, family, finances, faith, friends–fall back on your work, your art to hold you up, not drugs, not alcohol, not other miserable people. Remember that the work you create to help others, can also help you.

 

Stay Positive & Any Other Principles You Think Are Essential? Tweet at me: @thegarthbox

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Expanding Tasks

Expanding Tasks

Parkinson's Law

 

Tasks expand to the time allowed. That’s Parkinson’s law.

It certainly explains why deadlines are essential? Right? Partly.

Deadlines trigger you to thrash – that energy boost, that scramble to finish and ship something before it’s too late.

When you’re coming up with new year resolutions, consider shorter time frames and leverage your knowledge of Parkinson’s law and thrashing. Do you really want to take an entire year to complete something?

Thanks for reading and I hope to be part of your 2015.

 

Stay Positive & Cheers

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2014 Books Read

In no particular order.

1) Wine Bar Theory: Great short book that keeps you on your toes.

2) Jab Jab Jab Right Hook: It’s one thing to read a book about marketing that gives examples, in this book Vaynerchuk shows examples.

3) All Marketers Are Liars: One of Godin’s signature books

4) Zen And The Art Of Motorcycle Maintenance: This will make your brain hurt. Consider just reading about gumption. I wrote a bit on it and the book.

5) David and Goliath: Gladwell, again, knocking it out of the park. A good read.

6) The Gift: It’s a brilliant story of a woman whose life is in shambles, comes around and becomes a successful motivational speaker. The flip is: the President is on her side.

7) Another Roadside Attraction: Robbins doesn’t give anything unique to this book or his other…

8) Half Asleep In Frog Pajamas: but he doesn’t need to. His wit and imagery is remarkable enough.

9) Breakfast Of Champions: Not what I expected, but you might get an inspirational line or two from it.

10) Slaughterhouse Five: Out there. Not sure if I enjoyed it or not.

11) Fahrenheit 451: Out there too. Not sure if I enjoyed it or not.

12) The Master And Margarita: Daniell Radcliffe said it was his favorite book. It takes you on a pretty wild ride, leaves you lonely, but it’s a true magic show.

13) The Craft Beer Revolution: Everything about the craft beer industry summarized and simplified for you.

14) The Terrible And Wonderful Reasons Why I Run Long Distance: It’s a hoot, full of truth, and applicable to more than just running. Web version for you.

 

A lot more books to come this year now that I’ve graduated from UW Madison.

 

Stay Positive & Read On