MacGyver and the theory that Limitations breed Creativity
Posted: Thursday, November 08, 2007
by Anja Merret
Anja Merret
The inspiration of the Flash on the Beach conference is still coursing through my veins. Re-reading that sentence, it is apparent it’s touched me. And you over there, keep those comments to yourself! Talking about inspiration, the phrase with respect to creativity that popped up several times, and made me consider this could be the ‘design’ Zeitgeist of the moment, was Limitations breed Creativity.
But back to creativity then. The first talk at FotB that I went to was by Chris Orwig, an American and a photographer amongst other professions. He spoke about this concept and it was discussed by several speakers again in various formats during the course of the conference. He said that in order to make your point, or identify your brand, or make a statement, pare the message down to a minimum. Think poetry here rather than a novel.
Once one is left with a few images, words, strokes or whatever other symbols one can think of here, then the imagination has a better chance of coming up with great creativity. It’s something along the lines that the old creative masters will teach young design students, which is, that if it holds up in black and white you have a great design. If it can only live because the designer is throwing lots of colour at it, then there is a problem.
A MacGyver of the design world! Remember those fabulous MacGyver adventures on TV where the hero was always in really difficult situations. In fact mere mortals would have given up. Not MacGyver. He would take a bit of string, some stones, a few drops of some chemical or other, some liquid, a match and voila he would blow up the door and escape. Of course each episode had another collection of ordinary bits and pieces that he could perform miracles with.
This is what Chris Orwig and several other speakers were discussing when they meant that Limitations breed Creativity. They felt that if too many options were available, or the client brief too vague for instance, the creative juices would get stuck milling around. However, if the brief was tight, the instructions limited by whatever factor such as no production budget, then creativity could be a lot more focused.
This theory was certainly borne out by the fact that the presenters who showed amazing work, usually prefixed their best work with, I did this for free, there was no budget for that, I had to make do with… Actually if one thinks even further back and looks at how many world class artists, musicians, writers, philosophers and scientists amongst many other creative disciplines starved and made do with limited resources while they produced amazing work, the principle makes even more sense.
Often when I stroll through the incredible museums, galleries and historic buildings in England, mostly those in London and Southern England where I’m based, I marvel that people produced these amazing pieces during times when the resources were limited, to say the least.
Then I see the entries and winners of the big current art prize in the UK, The Turner Prize. And quite frankly it’s the biggest load of rubbish. It always reminds me of the Emperor and His Clothes. Everybody is blinded by whatever this thing called modern art is. Nobody wants to admit, for instance, that a man-made crack in the concrete floor as an installation in the Tate Modern is actually not worth looking at, never mind making a big noise about.
So is there too much available for the modern creative person? Too many resources, too much money, too much hype, too many drugs, too much - you fill in the blank spaces. As an aside, J K Rowling dreamt up and started her incredible Harry Potter books on government benefits. Come to think of it - what a wise investment! How much tax is she paying back now….
How much truth is in that saying then, Limitations breed Creativity. It certainly is a statement that could do with some further discussion, especially by creative people. Any takers?
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