letting go of cleverness makes room for true art

 
 

Picture 15

{This lovely little animation of The Golden Mean / Rule of Thirds is breathtaking and descriptive. I felt like my heart rate slowed down while I watched it inner-fold. Click here to view it's movement.}

The best writing advice I ever received was this: "Sometimes you have to let go of the jewels."

You have to cut out the best part.
You have to detach from your brilliance.
You have to trust that the whole piece is better the individual shiny parts that make you seem clever or wise.

So that sexy slogan ... That rapier wit one-liner ... That fancy feature or added customer service ... if those gems are throwing the whole package or project or intention off kilter, then they probably need to be slashed.

Final works of art find harmony. In even vulgar, dramatic, and absurd works of art there can be a high degree of cohesion and that's what accounts for it's impact. That's where skill comes in. You can be as wildly inspired and as daring as you want, but if you don't know the rule of thirds, or a bit of colour theory, or how to help the members of your jazz trio be heard in fusion, then you run the risk of tampering with the objective, which is to create art that conveys.

It's easy to get attached to our inspired moments and what they produce. Those a-ha's are a rush. And the rush is goood, it's essential in fact. Let it move you forward instead of rooting you to one place, or one ray of light. Let your clever bits and genius fuel your courage rather than your ego. Diamonds shine only after they've been cut.

  • I couldn't agree more and, in fact, believe clever kills creativity because ultimately, clever is about being 'cool' and art is about being honest which can be awkward, ugly, beautiful, amazing, etc but is rarely cool . .
  • Love this!!! As others have said, you've nailed it. This line especially resonates:

    "Diamonds shine only after they've been cut."
  • I keep this quote where I paint & write: : " Dare to be naive." (R Buckmister Fuller). Tough to do in this world of being cool, of taking oneself so seriously. Relax, it tells me, play.

    I am so loving this post. (I accidentally typed "living this post." Perhaps I should've let that stand.)
  • love this. devoted detachment!
  • Cut the shiny brilliant bits? If they don't gel in a piece, probably. Bin them? No. One of the things I like about personal blogging is that if you want, you can keep that phrase you loved and make a poem from it or build a song around it. Theose words you loved may not be suitable in a piece that's evolved, but they may contain the seeds of something else.
  • abso-freaking-lutley.
  • Once again - NAILED! Amazing how you continue to do this. Just as I'm having a good soak in my own cleverness - there I am, busted. I know this is timely as it's bouncing off. These days, the important things make me twitch. Right now I'm twitchin' big time. Love those physical manifestations.
    p.s. really like your new Amazon shop
  • We creative types often view our creations akin to offspring, so it IS hard to let our little babies go or evolve or (gasp!) turn into something totally different than we'd planned for them ... or wander through their own netherlands totally separate from our sight. Allowing our artistic endeavors flexibility is a little like parents giving children freedom to be/become who THEY are, not what we preordained or envisioned or even hoped for them.
  • I definitely heard this at the right time. I had a cool one-liner in my head and was trying to fit it into a blog post - but it doesn't fit. Suppose I'll just let it float around for awhile until it turns into something more.
  • This is a terrific idea Danielle: Staying unattached. Let your clever bits and genius fuel your courage rather than your ego. It is a little like needing to change what I say to myself after one of those :damn I'm hot moments' from - "Okay-let's see more of that honey" to " let's see what new place this will propel you to."
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