Presentation on Visual and Creative Thinking. The presentation explores how professional in all fields can apply creative and visual thinking skills to their work as well as why people ignore the talents that made them naturally creative as children. He will discuss the myths that people hold about creativity, why they exist and how you can overcome them.
Visual and Creative Thinking:What We Learned From Peter Pan and Willy Wonka
1. Visual and Creative Thinking
What we learned from Peter Pan and Willy Wonka
Kelsey Ruger, Pop Labs
2. There is no life I know to compare with pure
imagination. Living there, you'll be free if
you truly wish to be.
Willy Wonka
3. creativity: cre·a·tiv·i·ty n. the ability to use
imagination to transcend traditional ideas, rules,
patterns, relationships, or the like, and to create
meaningful new ideas, forms, methods.
4. visual thinking: vis·u·al thin·king adj. the practice of
using pictures to solve problems, think through issues,
and communicate clearly.
5. Life in the fast lane:
In an increasingly fast paced world
we don’t make time for creative activities.
6. Keeping up with the competition:
It’s getting harder to innovate, produce new
ideas and communicate at this pace.
7. What About Creativity?
This can be overwhelming for many professionals
because many of the “standard” we put in place
actually limit creative ability and competitiveness.
8. Wake-up latent childhood abilities
As children our world is dominated
by stories, pictures and imagination
9. Visual and creative thinking techniques can help
reawaken natural visual and creative skills in adults
10. nurturing creative and visual thinking in your organization
• Learning and removing the myths that prevent creativity
• Start using visual and creative thinking
11. First - You Don’t Have To Be An Artist
Visual thinking and creativity aren’t really about drawing.
Drawing isn’t what makes it a creative activity.
22. Beliefs are powerful:
The beliefs we have about how the world works often
have very emotional origins. These emotions can
change how we make decisions, form habits and
develop skills.
23. our need for consistency is stronger than just about
any other intrinsic need we have. People will behave
in a manner that is consistent with their previously
existing self-concept, even when this behavior is
unrewarding to them otherwise.
Prescott Leaky
24. Do you have any sacred cows?
Sometimes an idea loses it’s meaning over time, but isn’t
abandoned because of the investment in it’s past. These
ideals are often so immune to criticism that those who
challenge them are ignored or marginalized.
25. How do you overcome the power of
the creative myths?
File Number: 4471239
27. The chief enemy of creativity is quot;goodquot; sense.”
Pablo Picaso
28. The di erence between Peter and the boys at this time
was that he knew it was make-believe, while to them
make-believe and true were exactly the same thing.
31. • 80% of the brain is dedicated to visual processing
• Visual processing is not new, it’s part of our history
• Written language originated from drawing and sketching
35. Visual Thinking Tip 3:
Create a personal visual library
Text
Text
From “Mapping Inner Space”
by Nancy Margulies, Nusa Maal, and Margaret J. Wheatley
36. Visual Thinking Tip 4:
From “Mapping Inner Space”
by Nancy Margulies, Nusa Maal, and Margaret J. Wheatley
Create a personal metaphor library
40. Visual Thinking Tip 8:
Start a visual thinking school
• Schedule it - Set aside dedicated time
• Be holistic - It’s not just drawing, not just brainstorming
• Set objectives - What do you intend to learn
41. Getting Started:
A Basic Visual Thinking Toolkit
• Diamond (Decision)
• Vertical Lines
• Spiral (Change in Direction)
• Horizontal Lines
• Circle (harmony)
• Circles
• Direction (arrow)
• Spirals
• Straight
• Wavy Lines
• Triangle (Relationship)
• Jagged Lines
• Star (success)