See, I told you it was all true!
/Over at Open Culture, there’s a nice link and summary to a TED-style talk given by Andrew Price at a software conference. The title? “The Seven Road-Tested Habits of Effective Artists.”
Of course I had to check it out. Here are the seven habits:
Practice daily.
Quantity over perfectionism masquerading as quality
Steal without ripping off
Educate yourself
Give yourself a break
Seek feedback
Create what you want to
These are certainly cromulent, aren’t they? As I say in the introduction to the book, none of Lichtenbergianism is new or groundbreaking. Everyone who works in any creative field—Andrew Price is a 3D software jockey—knows these things.
The value of Lichtenbergianism is that it seems to be helpful to those who don’t already think of themselves as “creative.” Let’s look at how it maps onto Price’s seven habits:
Practice daily.
This is RITUAL, isn’t it? Find a time a place where you do the work, then protect that time and place.
Quantity over perfectionism masquerading as quality
ABORTIVE ATTEMPTS: Just do it, preferably a lot of it. See also: the pottery parable from Art & Fear
Steal without ripping off
STEAL FROM THE BEST
Educate yourself
STEAL FROM THE BEST, and AUDIENCE #2 (Those People Right Here)
Give yourself a break
TASK AVOIDANCE, GESTALT, ABANDONMENT (gestation, etc.)
Seek feedback
AUDIENCE #2
Create what you want to
AUDIENCE #3 (yourself), but also ABORTIVE ATTEMPTS/GESTALT/SUCCESSIVE APPROXIMATION. Also also, AUDIENCE #1, Those People Out There, as long as you understand who they are.
Other than WASTE BOOKS, he seems to have it covered.
So there: yet another person telling you how to improve your creativity—and it’s something you already know how to do!