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Home » 4 Lessons In Creativity: Julie Burstein (Transcript)

4 Lessons In Creativity: Julie Burstein (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of radio host Julie Burstein’s talk titled “4 Lessons In Creativity” at TED conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

My Journey with Raku Pottery

On my desk in my office, I keep a small clay pot that I made in college. It’s raku, which is a kind of pottery that began in Japan centuries ago as a way of making bowls for the Japanese tea ceremony. This one is more than 400 years old. Each one was pinched or carved out of a ball of clay, and it was the imperfections that people cherished.

Everyday pots like this cup take eight to 10 hours to fire. I just took this out of the kiln last week, and the kiln itself takes another day or two to cool down, but raku is really fast. You do it outside, and you take the kiln up to temperature. In 15 minutes, it goes to 1,500 degrees, and as soon as you see that the glaze has melted inside, you can see that faint sheen, you turn the kiln off.

You reach in with these long metal tongs, you grab the pot, and in Japan, this red-hot pot would be immediately immersed in a solution of green tea, and you can imagine what that steam would smell like. But here in the United States, we ramp up the drama a little bit, and we drop our pots into sawdust, which catches on fire, and you take a garbage pail, and you put it on top, and smoke starts pouring out.

I would come home with my clothes reeking of woodsmoke. I love raku because it allows me to play with the elements. I can shape a pot out of clay and choose a glaze, but then I have to let it go to the fire and the smoke, and what’s wonderful is the surprises that happen, like this crackle pattern, because it’s really stressful on these pots. They go from 1,500 degrees to room temperature in the space of just a minute.

Raku is a wonderful metaphor for the process of creativity. I find in so many things that tension between what I can control and what I have to let go happens all the time, whether I’m creating a new radio show or just at home negotiating with my teenage sons.

The Creative Process

When I sat down to write a book about creativity, I realized that the steps were reversed. I had to let go at the very beginning, and I had to immerse myself in the stories of hundreds of artists and writers and musicians and filmmakers. A and as I listened to these stories, I realized that creativity grows out of everyday experiences more often than you might think, including letting go. “It was supposed to break, but that’s okay.” That’s part of the letting go, is sometimes it happens and sometimes it doesn’t, because creativity also grows from the broken places.

The best way to learn about anything is through stories, and so I want to tell you a story about work and play and about four aspects of life that we need to embrace in order for our own creativity to flourish. The first embrace is something that we think, “Oh, this is very easy,” but it’s actually getting harder, and that’s paying attention to the world around us. So many artists speak about needing to be open, to embrace experience, and that’s hard to do when you have a lighted rectangle in your pocket that takes all of your focus.

Embracing Experience

The filmmaker Mira Nair speaks about growing up in a small town in India. Its name is Bhubaneswar, and here’s a picture of one of the temples in her town.

Mira Nair: “In this little town, there were like 2,000 temples. We played cricket all the time. We kind of grew up in the rubble. The major thing that inspired me, that led me on this path, that made me a filmmaker eventually, was traveling folk theater that would come through the town. And I would go off and see these great battles of good and evil by two people in a school field with no props but with a lot of, you know, passion, and hashish as well, and it was amazing.

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You know, the folk tales of Mahabharata and Ramayana, the two holy books, the epics that everything comes out of in India, they say. After seeing that Jatra, the folk theater, I knew I wanted to get on, you know, and perform.”

Julie Burstein: Isn’t that a wonderful story? You can see the sort of break in the everyday. There they are in the school fields, but it’s good and evil, and passion and hashish. And Mira Nair was a young girl with thousands of other people watching this performance, but she was ready. She was ready to open up to what it sparked in her, and it led her, as she said, down this path to become an award-winning filmmaker.

The Power of Challenges

So being open for that experience that might change you is the first thing we need to embrace. Artists also speak about how some of their most powerful work comes out of the parts of life that are most difficult. The novelist Richard Ford speaks about a childhood challenge that continues to be something he wrestles with today. He’s severely dyslexic.

Richard Ford: “I was slow to learn to read, went all the way through school not really reading more than the minimum, and still to this day can’t read silently much faster than I can read aloud. But there were a lot of benefits to being dyslexic for me because when I finally did reconcile myself to how slow I was going to have to do it. Then I think I came very slowly into an appreciation of all of those qualities of language and of sentences that are not just the cognitive aspects of language: the syncopations, the sounds of words, what words look like, where paragraphs break, where lines break.