Original Impressionism

Original Impressionism

How to achieve success in your business by thinking more creatively

How to achieve success in your business by thinking more creatively.

 

by Dennis Fisher.

 

Are you as creative as you’d like to be?  Are you able to think creatively and use your imagination to think of original new ideas?  Do you have the ability to recognize opportunities others fail to see? Do you find you’re able find creative, ingenious and innovative ways to solve problems?

Your ability to think creatively can be improved dramatically by making use of certain exercises and techniques.

Here is one way you’ll find very effective indeed.  You’ll experience an immediate improvement in your creative imagination and your creative thinking.

YOUR CREATIVE IMAGINATION.

In order to become more creative you first step is to improve your creative imagination.   Creative imagination is the mental faculty that enables you to create mental images and visualize situations or conditions you have never actually experienced.

What is the best way to exercise  your imagination?

People with highly developed creative imaginations have the ability to extract features of their experience and re-arrange them into new forms.  All new inventions are discoveries; artistic creations – and even new ways of doing business – are based on this form of creative thinking.

By using certain exercises to develop your creative imagination – and giving your imagination a “work-out”- you’ll find you’ll experience a tremendous improvement in your ability to think more creatively.

Even if you have no interest in Art whatsoever, one  useful strategy that will make an enormous difference to your ability to think creatively  is to visit an Art Museum.

If this is not convenient and there is no Art Museum in your area, get a book from the library that features illustrated paintings by impressionist and abstract painters.

Impressionism is a form of art that deals with the effect of an object rather than a photographic representation of the object.

Find a detailed book of modern art that features paintings by artists such as Monet, considered one of the founders of Impressionism.  Also examine the painting of Degas. Renoir and Pissaro.

Instead of a photographic likeness of a scene you will find that the artist has attempted to reflect an emotional reaction to the scene.

For example, when Monet first exhibited his painting entitled, “Impression. Rising Sun”, viewers to the gallery, where the painting was exhibited,  expected to see something that resembled a rising sun.  Instead they were presented with a painting that bore no resemblance whatsoever to sunrise.

Monet’s explanation  was that it was his impression of “the fugitive changes of nature”.

Examine examples of the works of abstract painters like Kandinsky, regarded as one of the initiators of abstract art.  Here again it is difficult to understand what the artist is attempting to depict.  The painting is a form of personal experience rather than an accurate picture of a scene.

In an essay “Concerning Form” describing abstract art Kandinsky wrote:  The art of today embodies the spiritual matured to the point of revelation…”

In examining these painting it is important to remember that this is not an exercise to try and establish what the artist is trying to express.  The purpose of the exercise is to PRACTICE USING YOUR OWN CREATIVE IMAGINATION TO FORM IMAGES IN YOUR MIND OF WHAT THE PAINTING REPRESENTS TO YOU!

The accuracy of the images you create in your mind is not important; neither are the emotions you experience.  

The object of the exercise is NOT TO INDICATE EITHER TO YOURSELF OR TO SOMEONE ELSE THAT YOU ARE A SERIOUS AND A PERCEPTIVE STUDENT OF ART.  It is a valuable exercise in developing your creative imagination.

The same exercise can be carried out with all forms of  music;  beautiful,  harmonious,   melodic  music written for example, by composer like  Chopin and Tchaikovsky, and the modern discordant music by  Stravinsky, Bela-Bartok and Schoenberg.

Even though you may not find the music of Arnold Schoenberg appealing make a point of listening to it as an emotional experience.  His music is regarded as a typical example of what is known as atonality.   It is completely without melody or harmony.

As you listen to the music try and form images in your mind that relate in some way to the sounds you hear and the emotions you experience.

Listen also to the strange rhythms and discordant sounds of music composed by Stravinsky and Bela-Bartok.  Here again attempt to create visual images.  Perhaps you may form images  in your mind of huge waves crashing on to  the rocks or perhaps  a noisy street filled with  the sounds of motor horns  blaring and tires screeching.

Close your eyes and try and form as vivid and as clear images as you can.

Contrast these images with those created when you close your eyes and listen to the gentle, melodious sounds of a cello recital of Sain-Saens “The Swan”. In this case it is easy to imagine a graceful swan floating effortlessly across a placid lake.  It arouses emotions of peace, tranquility and calm.

Discordant music obviously arouses quite different emotions and the images created in your mind are quite different.   But here again, this is not an exercise in musical appreciation, it is a very useful and effective way to develop your ability to use your creative imagination.

The more often you make use of this simple method to improve your ability to think creatively, the greater will be the improvement you’ll notice in your ability to think more creatively.

You will find many many more examples of simple excercises you can use to develop your creative imagination on the following website: http://www.creativemindpowers.com

 

 

About the Author

The author, Dennis Fisher, is managing director of financial and investment companies. In addition to this involvement in business, he he has spent many years in researching and writing about alternative forms of medicine, various schools of psychology with special emphasis on systems of self-help. His special interest is creativity and effective ways to develop the ability to think more creatively.

Details of the various methods he advocates to improve creative power can be found on nis website http://www.creativemindpowers.com

TUSCAN LOVE: Impressionist Landscape – Speed Painting and Original Music by Jorge Lopez-Lorenzana


Les Sources Bleues


Les Sources Bleues



Dreamy, ravishingly beautiful jazz suitable for a lazy summer day in Provence or Santa Barbara without a whiff of New Age or jazz-lite. Features the two Tonys (Coe on saxes and clarinet; Hymas on piano), founders of that legendary Canterbury-style jazz-rock band Lonely Bears. Near perfect in its conception and execution….


Morning Whispers


Morning Whispers


$11.78



Ambleside Days


Ambleside Days



Everyone who has ever been to England’s Lake District cannot help but be overwhelmed by its beauty. The quaint cottages, gold and green meadows, shimmering tarns, and peek-a-boo waterfalls dazzle the senses. John Taylor and John Surman capture in sound a glorious musical portrait of this magical land filled with new vistas at every turn. Brilliantly engineered at the Famous Rainbow Studio, Oslo, b…


French Impressionism at the Musee D'Orsay - Art and Splendor Series


French Impressionism at the Musee D’Orsay – Art and Splendor Series


$10.50


Through its groundbreaking use of light and color, the French Impressionist movement revitalized the art world in the late 19th century. This documentary explores the works of French Impressionists and the history of the Musee D’Orsay in Paris–where a variety of works by Manet, Renoir and other artistic masters are on display. 40 min. Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital stereo; featurettes; photo g…

Degas' Drawings of Dancers


Degas’ Drawings of Dancers


$3.55


Original compilation of 41 full-page and 6 half-page drawings — some finished sketches, others studies — depict dancers on stage, in the classroom, and at rehearsals. Charming, spirited views of dancers pirouetting, executing grand battements and ports de bras, practicing at the barre, adjusting their costumes in moments of repose, and more….

The Pennsylvania School of Landscape Painting: An Original American Impressionism


The Pennsylvania School of Landscape Painting: An Original American Impressionism





Impressionism


Impressionism


$16.42


Impressionism

Impressionism - Belinda Thomson - Paperback


Impressionism – Belinda Thomson – Paperback


$11.52


Impressionism