The Mystery Theater by Eitan Shavit

The Mystery Theater by Eitan Shavit

Atomic shelter, refugees, drug addicts, 5000 buses and a mystery theater, all gathered together in the World’s second largest bus station, located in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Part I – Construction

The new Bus Station (as opposed to the old one, that still exists) was completed in 1993, covering 2,480,000 square feet, and a total area of 10.8 acres. Initially it had six floors, and a seventh one was built ten years ago, causing the lower two levels to close (changing its original purpose, and becoming an atomic shelter suitable for 16,000 people).

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The station was supposed to be one of the largest malls in Tel-Aviv, with thousands of stores, but today there are only around 600 stores, and all the rest are closed.

The station has also been criticized for its complicated design which makes it hard to get around, and for being built in a neighborhood that didn’t fit its character. The nearest train station is a couple of hundred meters away, but there wasn’t any connection made between them.

 

Part II – Crime and the city solution

Walking through the dark hollows of the station can be a frightening experience, especially in the lower levels that are not being used for transportation. As the station is located in the poorest part of the city, numerous drug addicts, prostitutes and homeless people take residence there on occasion.

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One should never walk alone in those areas at any time of the day (or night). There are some 100 security cams, 120 security officers on patrol through out the day, but still, horrid things are happening, as there is no way to cover all the dark corners of the station.

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Part III – Art takeover

Now, half empty, artists are drawn to the station. With its empty spaces, low rent, and exquisite atmosphere, lots of art studios are now covering the fifth floor.
The large space at the center holds an open art gallery with various installments, and there’s even a Yiddish museum, with a large library containing rare books.

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The seventh floor holds a permanent graffiti display all over the walls, only adding up to the overall atmosphere of despair. And this is where all the pieces come together, on A Thursday night, 10PM, on the seventh floor of the second largest bus station in the world.

Part IV – The Mystorin (Hebrew for Mystery) Theater

The Mystorin Theater Group is a Israeli theater group that brings the beauty of ancient Hebrew texts to Israeli and international audiences, creating a unique theatrical poetry.
The original theatrical language of the group is rich in visual images, full of different meanings and interpretations.

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Through video, movement, singing and visual theatre, the performances of the Mystorin group reflect the narrative of ancient texts and communicate with the audience both as a story and as a total mystical experience with a strong emotional impact.
The group specializes in environment dependent performances, adjusting the show to the location where it takes place.

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…We stand at the exact spot where we were told to wait. Then, suddenly, the group appears and takes you on a magical tour throughout all levels of the station, using only the station’s illumination and horror movie spaces. There’s special music written for the show that will suddenly arrive from nowhere, adding an addictive mystery element to it all (Later on we’ll spot a guy hiding in the shadows with a small but powerful speaker…).

Giant puppets, vampires, rubber circles turning into sound playing horns, ancient chanting, amazing acoustics, and the constant smell of urine and decay – all turn the bus station into a tantalizing visual, sensual experience.

04-02

About Eitan:
I’m Eitan Shavit (48), from Israel, going by the name @strongcomet.
I have been taking photographs since my childhood, went to art school to study photography, but never took the next step into making it a profession.
Before joining Instagram towards the end of 2011, I just used the app to capture photos on my 1st generation iPhone, apply some filters and later uploading them to my Facebook account. The first iPhone’s camera was simply horrible, so I was quite disappointed with the results and thought it wasn’t going anywhere. When Facebook purchased Instagram, the buzz reached me, and only at that time I realized it had a real strong social network feature, and dived right back in. From that point on, I’m constantly trying different approaches to photography, using different apps and techniques.
I’m a proud Founder Artist for the New Era Museum, a member of the AMPt Community, and always exploring new ways of sharing my art, as well as being exposed to other artists from all over the world.

 

The Storytellers Vol. 9

The Storytellers Vol. 9

Every Monday we ask our audience to share their stories with us on Instagram. We would love for you to join us and share what each photo says to you. In August we explored images of mystery and our contributors didn’t disappoint. Discover how our talented photographers used their fantastic shots to draw tales from those who dared to look beyond the frame.

01

Photo Credit: Jeff
Story Credit: Rose

I am the rule breaker,
sitting in an empty theater,
waiting, smoking and wearing a hat.
No cares, except the wait…
waiting for people to come,
waiting for the stage to be filled,
waiting to be entertained or not and
waiting for her…

 

02

Photo Credit: Michelle
Story Credit: Leslie
 They tried to take her voice. She was to melt into the background of the world with all her gifts and talents hidden. But it was not to be…

 

Photo Credit: Shuko
Story Credit: maahline

I looked out of the train window as the old woman hurried away. Her words echoed in my mind: “You are not who you think you are.”

Photo Credit: Nao
Story Credit: Susan

Sounds of battle from beyond the tree line stopped him in his tracks. One week a deserter, Joshua hoped he’d left the battlefield behind him. The field stretched in all directions to the horizon, and the sky was a clear dome. Behind him was war, ahead of him was war… Joshua longed to be a bird on the wing, to fly away home to his family, last seen so long ago before he was conscripted into the army fighting for the rebel cause. ‘Not my war’ Joshua repeated to himself for the thousandth time. Not my war.

 

i carry your heart: Ephemeral Summer with the Grryo Contributors

i carry your heart: Ephemeral Summer with the Grryo Contributors

[i carry your heart with me(i carry it in]

by E.E. Cummings from Complete Poems: 1904-1962. © Liveright Publishing Corporation

i carry your heart with me(i carry it in
my heart)i am never without it(anywhere
i go you go,my dear;and whatever is done
by only me is your doing,my darling)
                                                      i fear
no fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i want
no world(for beautiful you are my world,my true)
and it’s you are whatever a moon has always meant
and whatever a sun will always sing is you
here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows
higher than soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder that’s keeping the stars apart
i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)

 

 

Valeria @ _soulkitchen_
Valeria @_soulkitchen

 

Tommy @pastorwallace
Tommy @pastorwallace

 

Andre @shutter_se7en
 Andre @shutter_se7en

 

Joe @joe_montoya

Joe @joe_montoya

 

Natalie @natmaddon
Natalie @natmaddon

 

Jeff @postaljeff
Jeff @postaljeff

 

Hector @hnato_nf
Hector @hnato_nf

 

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Andy @mobiography

 

Abe @abori
Abe @abori

 

image
 Giulia @giuliam

 

Rebecca @repinsk
Rebecca @repinsk
The Storytellers Vol. 8

The Storytellers Vol. 8

Every Monday we ask our audience to share their stories with us on Instagram. We would love for you to join us and share what each photo says to you.

 

06June5

Photo Credit: Veronica

Story Credit: Pam

You can’t be a proper Sugar Plum Fairy without the sugar… pixie stix, M&Ms, skittles, pop rocks. It was all so tempting, so blissfully fun. Giddy, not wanting to lose the euphoria, she kept sneaking back to the candy bowl. But it was that last gummy bear that pushed her from sugar rush to belly ache. The hangover was no fun. “Never!” she thought, “I’m never going to over indulge again. Never!” (until the next time…)

07July.13

Photo Credit: Nathalie

Story Credit: Tommy

Jericho may have been the youngest in the family but he felt he was the one who had the biggest heart for exploring. He had listened to momma and his two sisters chatter on the long drive. She was telling Shona and Cindra about how it had been almost 26 years since she had last seen the ocean. As momma described the long sandy beach and the pounding waves of the ocean, Jericho sat quietly in the back but inside he couldn’t wait to run and see this magnificent sight. As soon as the car stopped he was out and off like a shot. “If I can just make it to the other side of those bushes and trees ahead,” he thought, “I will be the first of momma’s kids to explore this great new world.”

Photo Credit: Joe Montoya

Story Credit: Tommy Wallace

It’s day 6 of Jenna’s pet photography project and she has decided that cats are not the most cooperative subjects. Jingles won’t ever look at the camera and King Tut is always putting himself on a pedestal. Why couldn’t mom and dad have had dogs.

07July.27

Photo Credit: Montse

Story Credit: Susan

The Box Trolls have, if nothing else, a deeply genuine love for the human children, and do everything they can to amuse and entertain the kids with their whimsical inventions.

My Small Way

My Small Way

Actopan is one of the communities near the city of Pachuca which is the capital of the State of Hidalgo, in Mexico. The name ‘Actopan’ comes from the Otomí: Man’uts’i and means my small way. On the 13 July 2015, they held the 469th anniversary of the founding of the town, a tradition which they continue every year. This is where my story begins of how Don Juan Erbinio Pérez López worked for more than 40 years in the very heart of this fair.

Don Juan talks to us about the traditions of the fair, which was created to celebrate the anniversary of the Actopan district. This place is full of culture and amazing food, and is home to a unique style of grill cooking.

A competition exists specifically on the subject of barbecue and at each event there are three places, first place takes the title of being the best barbacoyero of the country. For the winner this is a huge honour, since Actopan is known as the place where the best barbecue exists in all of Mexico.

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Don Juan who now works the streets of the fair, shows us photos of back when he was a truck driver. Even after his accident where he lost both of his legs, he continued working as a trailer driver.

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After a time he was already very tired from so many years of being on the road and driving, it was then that he chose to continue his life as a bolero or shoe shiner.

In the words of Don Juan he says “there is no better way to describe this fabulous fair than with photography”.

It is here while he works that Don Juan sees all walks of life on the streets of Actopan, and creates his pathway, in his own small way.

 

Sorry Dad, You’ve Been Chopped

Sorry Dad, You’ve Been Chopped

Do your kids love to watch reality TV cooking shows? Mine do. I thought it was a good thing — though lately, I’m not so sure.

My wife and I both like to cook, and honestly, it’s one of the few common interests we have. So when our children began to take interest in a variety of these shows, we were excited. Here it was, a fun family activity we could all enjoy together! Little did we know what path we were about to embark upon. Here — along with photos taken by some Instagram friends — are a few things to watch out for.

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photo credit: Meredith Rilley

It starts out innocently…

They begin speaking in a British accent at dinner time.

Usually this is manifested in phrases like ‘needs a bit more seasoning,’ and ‘I don’t think mine has quite enough sauce.’ It’s endearing. The first time.

They ask why you don’t own an assortment of specialty kitchen equipment.

It may start with the color-coordinated stand mixer. But soon it’ll be the kitchen torch, the mandoline and maybe even a sous vide machine. (Go ahead, google it)

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photo credit: Richard Hill

Then, things start to get worse…

You’re out at the local family diner and they order ‘frites’ instead of french fries.

You cover by translating for the waitress, after you finish telling her that it’s OK that the chicken nuggets aren’t panko-crusted.

They request a birthday cake that requires fondant and, upon completion, four grown men to move it.

Never mind that they even know what fondant is now. In addition, they expect you to sculpt it into 1/20th scale models of their favorite pop culture icons.

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photo credit: Darren Johnson

Then, this happens…

You get a call from the school because they brought in a ‘mystery basket’ and challenged the cafeteria cook to create a dish for them.

The contents are dandelion greens, quail and kumquats. Admittedly, it might taste better than a corn dog and canned fruit.

They comment on your “plating technique,” and critically smell/examine a carefully assembled forkful before tasting it.

It’s just a grilled cheese, kid. And no, I didn’t use gruyère, sorry.

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photo credit: Leah Minium

And then, finally, the day comes…

They taste your meal, and resolutely declare “I’m sorry Dad, but you’ve been chopped.”

Hopefully, this is followed by them taking over dinner preparations and fixing gourmet meals for you. I’d happily take over dish duty, were that the case. Although I wouldn’t count on it. Perhaps they need to watch a few more seasons of MasterChef Jr. first.

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photo credit: Jeff Kelley

A Day in the Life of Storytellers Circle

A Day in the Life of Storytellers Circle

Storytellers Circle is a wonderful place where lines flow from the creative imaginations of followers in Gryyo’s Instagram group. All of this is spurred on by the inspiring images gleaned from the #wearegrryo and #grryo tags. Join us to experience or contribute to some magical moments.

 

07July.06

 

“Metamorphosis”

The Photo Team

Photo: Tony Nahra

Edit: Valeria Cammareri

Now beginning its ninth month, Storytellers Circle on Grryo’s Instagram account has become a weekly feature many anticipate. The formula is simple. An inspiring photo says something to the heart of our followers and those interpretations find their way into the comment section. Some storytellers swoop in for a season and then move on to tell their stories elsewhere. Occasionally some magic happens when a follower threads short lines, only to have someone else add to it. Soon a beautiful tale is woven together to accompany the inspiring image. This happened a few weeks ago so we are featuring the excellent photo/story collaboration that took place then, plus the added treat of Valeria’s inspiration behind the photo.

The Story Team

Jeff Kelley

Rose Sherwood

Nancy Dimock

The Story

A passerby had just told him his shadow had magically taken on an avian form. Did he dare turn around and look? Or would that just prove he was gullible? That one persistent gull followed him back to his home, but something was different. He began to develop a craving for fish. Any kind of fish! It freaked him out because he is allergic to seafood!

The Backstory – Valeria Cammareri

Just a few words about the making of this shot. I have always been impressed by the impact Tony Nahra’s images have on me. What I have often felt is a sense of impending catastrophe, where the only one unaware is the protagonist of the image while the observer perceives the ominous atmosphere. This vague sense of persecution of an innocent is the leading theme of Franz Kafka’s many novels. Kafka, a Jewish writer born in Prague in 1883, in his “Metamorphosis” tells us the story of a traveling salesman who wakes up in his bed to find himself transformed into a large insect. Looking for an edit of one of Tony’s images, my attention was captured by this little man, the innocent, and the proud seagull . So I imagined the transition between what he was going to lose, his human body, and his new condition as an animal with a human soul. That’s what I represent here, and that’s why I called this image “Metamorphosis.”

1000 Words, Instagram Showcase : July

1000 Words, Instagram Showcase : July

 

Grryo believes that mobile photographers/artists tell stories through the photographs/images and art that represents their families, their environment, themselves. This is important because of the level of communication that is portrayed in imaging today. We want to support the mobile arts community having a place for artists to share, discuss, and critique (if requested by individual). These dialogues help the individuals and the community to grow. We look forward to you and your art. We thank you for your contribution to the mobile photography/arts community. Join us by tagging your images #wearegrryo or #grryo. We hope to see you there!

 

Emma Amar

Blue Hotel

Blue Hotel

Through my pictures I try to communicate a sensation, my different states of mind. I’m an unconditional lover of David Lynch and for this image I watched Blue Velvet. I shot this palm tree on the road and after I blended this together with my self portrait, et voilà!

I have quickly become passionate about iphoneography and the power of differents apps, with my pictures I use several softwares. For this one I used Paintfx and Icolorama. Generally, I take my picture and make it really by feeling, depending on the mood of the day. I almost always do self portraits.

instagram  |  eyeem  |  facebook

 

Cedric Blanchon

We Can Be Heroes

We can be heroes

Why this title? Right now I am listening to David Bowie a lot, and when I created this picture I was listening to his song We Can Be Heroes. The title goes well, you can imagine a lot of things, a photo, a reference title and we can use our imagination to make a story. This is a photo exhibition created with the dual Union app, Mextures, and Cameramatic. I love this kind of photo double exposure, it is not new but it’s always beautiful.

You can see more of my images on my website cedricblanchon.com.

instagram  |  flickr  |  website

 

Mimi Svanberg

The mother of most if not all

•The Mother Of Most, If Not All•

She is the queen-bee she holds all the answers and she is our protector, she is the root of all and everything.

I’m inspired by the mystery of nature, the human body and our psyche and especially insects and the process of the metamorphosis. The mystery of life itself the hidden parts of our psyche, secrets within that we can sense but not see with complete transparency.

My images are never planned from the start, it’s a process where the image takes a life of it’s own, it’s a journey for me. A journey where I search for questions and that feeling of mystery, where the answers are almost in reach but still always hidden. I wish for the viewer to find their own mystery in my photos, their own questions and answers.

instagram  |  flickr  |  facebook

 

Natali Prosvetova

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Who knows?

This is my sweetest personal model, who is my niece =) Her name is Nicky, she is 12, and is one of my favorite and graceful subjects for shooting. I would not say that all other children are my favorite subject for shooting. No! I find it [photographing children] a pretty complex process, requiring serious psychological knowledge. However, I loved Nicky, at first sight. You know, with this child who is already 12 years old, it is quite difficult to control the balance; to not cross the line when the photograph becomes too provocative. However, I really like to work with her.

One day I was fortunate to work with a russian director, who is one of the best at working with children in the russian movie industry (which is my main profession, I’m an actress). I chatted with him, asking him a lot of questions and watched him work finally making a lot of conclusions and discovering a few secrets about how to work well with children. Since then my shooting with Nicki has been great fun, filled with new discoveries and positive emotions.

And now we are just happily playing around and get great enjoyment from this process! Every new photo session with Nicky is like a new play with some rules which are agreed beforehand, each has its own story and circumstance behind it (like a screenplay). Then, forgetting about real life we immerse ourselves in a fictional story. We just have fun and I shoot it!

Apps used : Native camera iPhone5S, Retouch, Relook, Provoke (for b&w)

instagram  |  facebook  |  website

 

Manuel Rodriguez Hermoso

And the party started, summer already arrived

And the party started, summer already arrived

This image was taken in the Nautic Club of Tenerife (Canary Islands), I don’t know this person, she was a stranger, but when I saw her, I knew I had to take a picture. I followed her and took four or five photos very nearby with my iphone 6. I like street photography very much and although on my main instagram account I have not developed this style too much, it is with my other account @shotandmore where I started with the real street photos.

To edit this image I used the apps Skrwt, Oggl, Snapped and PSexpress.

instagram

 

Namrita Bachchan

namritabachchan_3ringcircus

Why the mind is a three ring circus….

I’m a trained painter, and I’ve always in my paintings had a tendency to layer.. So transparencies, double exposure, and the like, come naturally to me in my photographic compositions. This particular image is a three-part portrait of the dynamics concerning the ego, the superego, and the id… and how in a given situation they will all three react in a different way which is what creates confusion and push-and-pull in the individual, because each of those psychological constructs is built to protect varying interests of the psyche, from values to image… 

I used colour as a tool to divide the portraits whilst also uniting the whole space by its overlapping, which is probably also a visual device connected to my being a painter.

instagram

 

Lumenaire and the Celebration of Youth

Lumenaire and the Celebration of Youth

I was more or less a novice on Instagram two years ago, and I can still remember that jaw-dropping feeling when I came across @lumenaire’s account: a guy was sitting as a king on a purple sofa, with a girl lying on another sofa in the background, with her legs artfully saying “Hi!”. Viewing the scene and its elegant composition, the gorgeous staging and the vibrant colours– I was in awe.

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I’ll never get over this place.

Instagram is full of users taking shots of their kids, so why is her work so different and impressive?

The answer is in how powerful her characters are; when framed they stop being her children and their friends, and become something important to the observer. Through a superb editing process she turns them into icons of youth: they are there, but far away. Not common human beings, but rather, deities living in another dimension.

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I don’t want to hold her down, don’t want to break her crown.

What she does is this: she takes something strictly personal, and gives us rather a timeless sense of youth’s myth. The power of this period of life explodes in her images, through vibrant colours and their bodies’ sensual details.

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I’ll be waiting in my trunk, with the engine of your car.

There are many ways of looking at her work, depending on the observer’s eyes. Adolescents may feel a sense of pride and identification.  If the observer is a parent, then tenderness,  or perhaps a nostalgic sense of the lost golden era of youth for those who are young no longer.

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Van Gogh’s favourite swimming hole

Going back to that initial purple sofa, and to the shameless beauty of the scene, I remember the feeling of being a dwarf facing a giant. It wasn’t just an aesthetic result due to a cascade of colours, as compared to my first steps in the black and white world of photography. It was the deep emotion the images conveyed as these shots give us a joyful sensation of the eternity of our dreams.

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Right before you forgot about me

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There ain’t no other language I know how to speak

Some like their water shallow and I like mine deep so very deep

Tied to the bottom with a noose around my feet …

The Storytellers Vol. 7

The Storytellers Vol. 7

Every Monday we ask our audience to share their stories with us on Instagram. We would love for you to join us and share what each photo says to you.

06June1

Photo Credit: Manuel Rguez Hermoso

Story Credit: Susan Peck

The evening had begun to cool off as a breeze from the inlet moved slowly up the streets toward the top of the hill where the mansion sat. “I was just a young man when I came to this island. Now, I am old,” Luther said aloud. There was no one near to hear his lament. He smoked his cigarette in the gathering dusk. The bus, usually a timely presence, was late tonight, and it gave him time to cast his mind back beyond today’s work to a time when he was young and strong, and he could stride straight up the hill to the big House without a loss of breath. Luther coughed after his last draw, and stubbed out his smoke with annoyance. Annoyed to be old. Poor. Tired. As the old bus rumbled around the corner and came to a noisy stop in front of him Luther pulled himself up to face another long night, the kind that only visits the old and tired.

Processed with VSCOcam

 

Photo Credit: Clara Torrents Canals

Story Credit: Joe Montoya

Vanessa hovered over her youngest as he stubbornly refused to go inside for his afternoon naps. “I’m big like daddy,” Little Nate reasoned.” “Stubborn like daddy too,” Vanessa mumbled under her breath.

06June3

Photo Credit: Nige Ollis

Story Credit: David Calvin

John Goodman being pushed by his assistant, was convinced he could be the lead role in Mrs Doubtfire Part II.

06june4

Photo Credit: Xaverius Endro

Story Credit: Susan Peck

Finding Your Lost Creativity

Finding Your Lost Creativity

{Previously published on www.transmissionsfromthewastelands.com, June 10, 2015. Additional content added.}

“Every child is an artist, the problem is staying an artist when you grow up.” ~ Pablo Picasso

andrehermann-2Are we all born with the sense of creativity? Or is it truly a gift that is bestowed upon only a lucky few at birth? This question has recently commanded my attention. Teaching various levels of digital photography at a community college to a broad spectrum of ages, races, and economic statuses, I often hear people say, “I don’t have a creative bone in my body.” Or, “I’m not creative.” “I can’t think of ideas. I’m not artsy. I can’t see things in a creative light.”

Recently, I was talking with a student about a project. The person asked how I might solve a particular visual problem. I responded with my solution. The student commented, “you see! Look how easy that was for you. I could never do that. I’m just not creative like that.” This person’s comment really irked me. I was so sick of hearing this ridiculous statement, especially from students. What came next—this person received the brunt of a long-winded rant that went some thing like this:

You, me, your friend, lover, wife, husband’s uncle’s kid, we are all born with creativity. Yes! We are. All of us. Seriously. Creativity is what makes us uniquely human. But I bet you’re wondering, “So why the hell are some people really good at being creative, it appears that even their pinky toe has talent, while others swear to have never been introduced to the meaning of the word?”

Read Picasso’s quote again, “Every child is an artist, the problem is staying an artist when you grow up.” We are all born with the gift of creativity. But, somewhere along the way, as we get older, someone and/or something tells us: “That’s not what that is suppose to look like.” “That’s not the right way to do that.” “You’ll never make a living doing that.” “Horses aren’t blue!” “Unicorns? Shitting rainbows? Baahhh.” Our artistic innocence is forever stolen from us. I bet if you think about it you can recall the exact moment, and the exact person who took it from you.

andrehermann-1For one small moment we all stand as equals at a crossroad faced with a decision. Do I continue down the path to exploring and developing an artistically creative mind, or do I follow the other path? A note here about the crossroad analogy: We don’t always have a choice. People and life events sometime play a vital role in choosing which path we travel. But that’s life. Those that continue to listen to their creative voice, or who are nurtured, learn to surround themselves with art, like-minded people, learn to be curious; always asking questions, taking risks, fucking everything up, making mistakes, all the while looking for answers and learning. Others? Well, they listen to that fucked up voice of ‘reason’ and find themselves chasing someone else’s dreams.

There’s a story I like to share with my photography students. Art and creativity has always been a major part of my life. But there was a time when I questioned it. Not by my own choice. Someone in my life was always telling me I would never make a living as an artist. “Become an engineer so you can make a real living,” he would tell me. The idea set in my mind, I went off to University of Missouri, Rolla to study Geologic engineering. Why? I like rocks, and fossils and plate tectonics. Anyways, while I was at school I found myself doing more painting, drawing, and daydreaming than my chemistry and calculus. The final clue came when I was sitting in a Calculus II class. I was taking a major test, failing. An extra credit question asked me to illustrate the previous question. I drew an elaborate picture. The next day the instructor called me to his office where he voiced his concern, “the only question you got right on my test is the extra credit question in which I asked you to draw picture. I think you’re at the wrong school.” I told him he was absolutely right. I quit. Came home and started studying graphic design. I never looked back. I started back down a new path to creativity; to what would become a well-paid creative career. I would never let someone tell me otherwise ever again.

The point I’m getting to is, when I hear someone say, “I’m not creative, or I can’t draw, or paint, or design well, or make amazing photographs.” It’s not really them saying it. It’s someone else. It’s a force, a barrier that you allowed someone else to put in place, keeping you from your true artistic vision.

andrehermann-3For some, it’s a long journey back to that fork in the road. Retracing your steps isn’t always easy, or pretty. Please. Whatever you do, don’t do it only for the sake of doing it. Do it because you want it, need it, because you want to make a difference in your life. Those first steps to defining your personal creative revolution are critical. The magic of learning to think creatively again truly happens when the eight tips listed below are religiously practiced.

  1. Stop saying you are not creative. You are. Remind yourself everyday. “I am creative.”
  2. Carry a sketchbook or a journal everywhere.
  3. Doodle, cut-and-paste, draw, or write your ideas down as soon as they come to mind. This is very important. Don’t think you can wait until later. You’ll forget. Believe me. Again, I said it wouldn’t be a pretty process at first. Don’t expect perfection. The important part is to get it all down on paper no matter how ugly the drawings are or how horrible your writing is.
  4. Keeping a visual journal is practice. The more you practice the better you become.
  5. Seek inspiration from the world around you. It can be found everywhere.
  6. Stop and smell the flowers. Literally. Slow down and embrace life.
  7. Be curious. Ask questions. Seek answers.
  8. Surround yourself with creative, like-minded folk.
  9. Consume. No. Ravenously devour visual creative content of all forms.
  10. Build a library of books about your favorite artists. This is a source of inspiration. If you don’t like collecting books use, Pinterest.
  11. Embrace your creative fuck-ups. Failure is essential for success.
  12. Have many mentors. Ask for feedback constantly.

andrehermann-4You will find your way back to the fork in the road eventually. You’ll notice by the time you reach that point you’ve already begun watering the seeds of the imagination, and cultivating the fruits that blossom.

I’ll leave you with this final thought: Stop saying you’re not fucking creative. Just hearing those words gives me hives. You ARE creative. It’s just that at some point in your life something got in the way, and you forgot how to be. Now it’s your job to remind yourself. Picasso once said that it took him 80 years to paint like a child again. So stop, turn around and march your ass back to that creative crossroad. It’s never too late. So get to it.