Top Three Summertime Sources for Creative Inspiration
If you’ve read my “Five Simple Steps to Greatly Increasing Your Creativity,” you know that I’m big on “Creating Your Own Inspiration.” In fact, that’s one of my Five Simple Steps. Years spent meeting agency deadlines have taught me that inspiration is usually sparked by hard work, not the other way around. In my personal quest to create more art, I have been striking out in search of things that personally inspire me. Summer is here. Don’t let this season pass you by without exploring how it can uniquely inspire you too. Here are my Top Three Summertime Sources for Creative Inspiration:
1. Send Yourself Back to School
So many courses. So little time. I’m lucky enough to live in an area that is rich with art schools. Every time I receive a course catalog from one of these schools – from the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts to Main Line Art Center – I salivate over the classes that are offered. This semester I actually did something about it and signed up for “Image Transfer Techniques” with Andrea Snyder. Knowing the various techniques to transfer images to artwork will add a new, strong tool to my creative repertoire. Is it convenient to come home from work and head directly to a three hour evening class? Absolutely not – some nights I have to drag myself there. But once I’m there, I find myself re-entering that elusive creative “flow” – the feeling of being fully immersed in what I’m doing. Lots of new ideas are flowing as well. I’m excited by what I’m learning and doing. Busy schedules aside, for me nothing beats an art class to get you inspired.
2. Find a Mentor
Before I embraced this advice, I hated hearing it. How exactly do you go about finding a mentor? And what do you say to them once you track one down? It always seemed phony and unrealistic to me to pursue a mentor in the traditionally advised sense. So I’ve adapted this advice in a way that works for me. I consider my mentor Scott Kelby. He’s a world-renowned author on digital photography and all things Photoshop. He’s also the President of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. I’ve also never spoken to him or met him. So how is it that I’ve never met the guy but I consider Scott Kelby my mentor? He transfers his know-how through multiple accessible channels, including books (more than 35), podcasts, web sites and magazines. He is an expert in my primary areas of creative pursuit and he is able to convey his knowledge in a way that I find both compelling and easy to understand. To me that’s the definition of a mentor. This summer, I’m rereading his “Digital Photography Book” and directly applying what I’m learning from him into my photographs. Spend some time finding somebody who inspires you in your own creative pursuits. Even if you don’t have the opportunity to meet the best in your field, you can still tap into their knowledge.
3. Two Words: Road Trip!
For me, nothing beats a road trip for seeing things in new ways – literally. I’m just back from nearly 900 miles on the road. A trip that took me from Philadelphia to North Carolina and back. Stops along the way included Hatteras, Ocracoke Island, Chincoteague, and Ocean City, Maryland. Everywhere I went I was inspired. From photographing wild ponies in Chincoteague to gathering sand for future projects from the beaches of Hatteras – I didn’t go anywhere without coming away with new ideas. Wherever the road takes you this summer, commit yourself to discovering new ways of being creative along the way.
So here I am, armed with new knowledge of transfer techniques, hundreds of photos, and several bags of sand. Will great art result? Who knows? But I’m definitely inspired to find out.
