Exploring the ways in which artists, artisans and technicians are intelligently expressing their creativity with a passion for culture, technology, marketing and advertising.
And not just end-of-year but also end-of-decade. Here are some of the most interesting lists I’ve seen, interspersed with some of the best work I’ve discovered this year and some suggestions for creative gifts.
• Pixar’s Up: It delivered what is perhaps the most poignant animated sequence ever created. This heartwarming video shows the evolution of Carl and Ellie’s relationship from the first concept sketches to the final shots of the movie.
• Google Wave continues to confound most everyone. And then you see this:
• GE Plug Into The Smart Grid: This is the first example I encountered of Augmented Reality actually implemented. A whole creative department stood huddled around a computer, mouths open, uttering small cries of disbelief.
• Tarsem’s The Fall: For the visual artist in you. Produced by David Fincher and Spike Jones. Incredibly rich visuals used to tell a simple, universal story. Exquisite.
• I love dance. I watch this on tv and realize that I may be witnessing the evolution of the dance form:
And then I learn there is more.
• The LXD is launching an online, episodic series, with hints of graphic novel myth-making all told through dance. This is a creative endeavor that is practically custom made for me.
• The Top 10 Flash Mobs Of 2009: If we are ever together in a crowded public space and music starts playing, people start dancing, there is a very big possibility I’ll be joining in.
• Paloma Faith is the latest eclectic British singer to do the soul thing. A former magician’s assistant, she delivers a great record that feels a bit like the anti Amy Winehouse’s Rehab. Do You Want the Truth Or Something Beautiful
• Jill Taylor’s My Stroke of Insight recounts a neuroscientist’s experience with a stroke and her recovery. It is an inspiring exploration of human consciousness.
“In Radical Evolution, the journalist Joel Garreau’s 2005 book about new technologies and human enhancement, Garreau visits Michael Goldblatt, a former director of the Defense Sciences Office, a unit of DARPA (the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency). Goldblatt shows Garreau two quotes from his files, from different sources but the same date: October 9, 1903. One, from an article in The New York Times, suggests that a flying machine ‘might be evolved by the combined and continuous efforts of mathematicians in from one million to ten million years.’ The other, from the diary of Orville Wright, says, ‘We started assembly today.’”
- Dan Halpern’s “Are You Ready For The Singularity?” in GQ Magazine.
In his kinetic talk from the 99% Conference, expertise theorist Jason Randal discusses how to use “stretching” to increase memory and focus, the relationship between play and learning, and the transformative power of surrounding yourself with enthusiastic, passionate people.
These 12 things that he believes can lead to quick learning strike me as powerful. You are probably already using some of these techniques. But the best advice continues to be: reduce everything to an action you can do right now and do it.