On Experience

From the Inspirational Thought Unit

"Some people get 20 years of experience, while others get one year of experience...twenty times in a row." from Angela Duckworth's book GRIT

I've been working professionally since 1998. October marks my 22 year anniversary of my first big-boy job at an animation studio. I have learned A TON over the years. However, I have seen my work stagnate in the last decade. I feel like I got to a level of proficiency in craft where I could make things happen on a schedule, but the huge leaps in ability were few and far apart. I feel like I've been running on a treadmill. Getting a workout, but not moving anywhere. I have grown a lot in time management, organizational skills, marketing, and business practices. But my craft has suffered in the process.

I decided to take up the practice of Kaizen. This is the Japanese practice of resisting the plateau of arrested development. The literal translation is "continuous improvement." One who practices kaizen isn't satisfied with taking on a new art piece or a project that they've done before, but is consistently putting themselves in uncomfortable situations where they must learn something new in order to get out of it.

Kaizen is "a positive state of mind, not a negative one. It's not looking backward with dissatisfaction. It's looking forward, wanting to grow." - Hester Lacey from GRIT

As we enter the last few months of 2020 it might be a good time to reflect on the last few years and evaluate whether you're getting years of experience, or the same experience over and over and over again.

For me I reviewed my work and decided to learn a 3D software. To figure out how to incorporate it into my illustration/concept art workflow. I feel like a baby learning this stuff, but each time I sit down with the software I have those wonderful A HA moments. Makes me excited to level up once I fight through this learning curve.

-Jake

Mysterious Drone

From the Department of Creative Bank Accounting, Office of Aerial Design

A drone washed ashore Taketomi Island . It's a US training drone called the Beechcraft MQM-107 Streaker. They launch these things from the ground, then it deploys a target that it tows behind it. Jet fighters catch up to it and practice shooting the target with missiles. Then the drone drops to the ground to be retrieved, outfitted with a new target and launched again.

I feel like this could be the first scene in a story. Some strange technology washes ashore a tiny island in the pacific. They're able to reverse engineer it, and create a weapon to help them defend themselves from some outside threat (kaiju maybe? or pirating raiders?)

Anyway, I thought it looked cool upside down.

-Jake

On Magic

From the Inspirational Thought Unit

I like this quote by Yeats. It reminds me of this quote by Jean Guraud aka Moebius:

“I am a nexus of universes. I belong to a class of people--I’m not alone in this--whose hand and eye are antennae, sensitive to a certain type of reality”

Every once and a while my antennae pick up something magical and I’m able to translate it into something others can understand. My goals in life lately haven’t been to have more experiences like that, and I’m realizing that mistake.

I get an email from Seth Godin every day. I don’t read them all, and half the ones I do read are just ok. But I really like what he sent last week:

“Most of the time, the phrase is, “it’s time to get back to work.” This means it’s time to stop being creative, stop dancing with possibility, stop acquiring new insights and inspiration–and go back to the measurable grind instead. Maybe we’d be better off saying, “I need to get back to making magic.” Because that’s what we’d actually like to be getting paid to create.”

Now if you'll excuse me, I need to get back to making magic. Perhaps you do too.

-Jake

David Roberts (1796–1864)

From the Department of Creative Bank Accounting, Office of Environment Design

I've been a huge fan of David Roberts since I stumbled on his work in an old book I found at the Greenwich Library one morning about 13 years ago. Since then I've collected a few books of his work, but I recently found some more art of his I hadn't seen. These street scenes of 1800s Europe...maybe Spain?

This is the level of ability I aspire to. Maybe in another 10 years? More images here: LINK

-Jake

Insane Maneuvers by Firefighter Pilots

From the Department of Interestingness:

This plane has a utilitarian coolness about it. It's not sleek at all, but there's an appeal to it's chunky squared off edges. And the things they are doing to get those fires out are incredible. Do you know how hard it is to fly that close to a mountain without crashing into it? Shout out to these cowboys!

Video 1: LINK

Video 2: LINK

Here's a shot from the ground: LINK

Apparently they do crash from time to time. If you scroll down you'll see one that didn't make it.

-Jake

On Attention

From the Inspirational Thought Unit

"Your attention is your soul spending itself" - Patricia Lockwood

I think about this quote a lot. Your attention, like time, is valuable and finite. What are you giving this precious resource away to? What gets only half your attention that should get all of it? And do those things feed your soul or destroy it? Also, when you are enjoying something "free" (especially online) the commodity being exchanged is usually your attention. Make sure what you are spending it on is worth it. Just something to think about as we dive into this next weekend.

-Jake

Cardboard Robots!

From the Incredible Projects Division in cooperation with the Office of Robots

Melbourne based cardboard modeler Greg Olijnyk is currently hard at work BLOWING MY MIND. There's something going on down under because not even a few weeks ago I shared the cardboard airships of Daniel Agdag, also in Australia (LINK).

Olijnyk's work is more focused on a future that could be instead of the past that never was vibe I get from Agdag's pieces. He designs articulated robots, bug vehicles, and sophisticated devices complete with LED lights and glass for emphasis.

More images on his Instagram: LINK

And on Colossal: LINK

This one was submitted by friend of the newsletter Matt Connery. Thanks for the tip Matt!

Home Alone is surprisingly deep

From the Story Department

Christmas Season is nearly upon us, and that means CHRISTMAS MOVIES! Surely Home Alone will be in everyone's queue. It's a solid film, with heart, humor, and surprising depth. Check this out via @JamaalBradley LINK:

"Something I used to use in my class for 'visual storytelling'. Xmas movies are coming on TV & I shared a fun lesson with my kids from "HOME ALONE". My wife got a kick out of it as well. (I love storytelling without words) *Soul in Pain... *Soul is Healing... *Soul is Healed"

-Jake