Month: October 2012

Happy Birthday Picasso!

How appropriate to be at the Cubist portion of the Digital Imaging class during the birthday of Pablo Picasso born October 25, 1881.
And on top of that there is an exhibition of Picasso’s  work called Picasso Black and White  showing  at the Guggenheim Museum until January 23, 2013.

Picasso Black and White is the first exhibition to explore the remarkable use of black and white throughout the Spanish artist’s prolific career. Claiming that color weakens, Pablo Picasso purged it from his work in order to highlight the formal structure and autonomy of form inherent in his art…..
(quoted from Guggenheim.org)

So to pay homage (and to keep trying to get this concept in my head)
I watched an interesting video on Picasso on Youtube called
Modern Masters: Pablo Picasso.
I found it quite interesting and did learn a little more about my favorite
period of his, The Blue Period. And also learned a little more about his lifestyle etc.

So….Happy Birthday Mr. Pablo Ruiz!

Don’t Be Afraid to Fail

A wonderful website happened to be suggested to me after a very frustrating design week. BoxesandArrows.com It speaks about all aspects of design and user experience and graphic design etc. on a philosophical level, where it is going, how to approach it etc.

At a time where I am trying to approach this Cubism project, something completely foreign to me and a style which, for some reason I still cannot honestly grasp the theory of creating, this article by Brian Sullivan is an encouraging article that speaks to me and maybe to you and basically say, don’t be afraid to fail….and when you fail…..fail BIG!!! The article also gives good tips on how to have a wiser workflow.
Ok! If Leonardo can then maybe I can fail miserably too!
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Leonardo’s Kitchen Nightmare

by Brian Sullivan on 2012/02/15 |

“It’s easier to resist at the beginning than at the end.”

Leonardo Da Vinci

Leonardo lookin suave

Some of Leonardo’s projects failed because of their execution. The strange tale of Leonardo’s “Kitchen Nightmare” plays out like a Shakespearean “comedy of errors” where a visionary designer’s experiments all work perfectly to extremely disastrous results.

In an article for the Big Design blog, I wrote about the Five Sketching Secrets of Leonardo Da Vinci, where it seemed like everything Leonardo did was successful. This, however, is not the case.

Once upon a time, the Duke of Milan asked Leonardo Da Vinci to help his kitchen staff prepare an extravagant meal for a large dinner party [1]. Leonardo was well known for his dietary practices (he was a strict vegetarian) and his many inventions (parachutes, tanks, gliders). So, Leonardo set about to see how he could innovate in the kitchen.

Seeing several opportunities before him, Leonardo created several new innovations:

  • Developed a series of conveyor belts in the kitchen to bring food to cooks faster
  • Created a large oven to cook food at higher temperatures than normal (at the time)
  • Designed a sprinkler system for safety, in case a fire broke out
  • Invited local artists to carve individual entrees into works of art for guests to eat

As you can guess, it was Leonardo’s “kitchen nightmare.”

When Works As Designed Still Fails

Imagine this scene in your own kitchen.

A designer comes over to “help” you cook dinner. He creates a conveyor belt in an already crowded kitchen. You have never seen or used the new oven that cooks faster than what you have been using for years. The designer installs a sprinkler system, which further crowds the kitchen. Finally, the designer invites 50 or so artists to build edible art for the guests. Your kitchen is super crowded. You feel impending doom at the chaos that has invaded your kitchen.

Disaster strikes!

The comedy of errors begins with the conveyor belts running too slow. With a quick adjustment by Leonardo, the belts run faster. Soon, the food piles up. The belt needs another adjustment.

Next, the new oven works as designed, but the cooks burn the food, using this unfamiliar oven. Besides burning the food, the new oven causes a small fire. Naturally, the sprinkler system is used. The sprinklers works perfectly, but it ruins most of the food.

Finally, the artisans carving the food are too slow. The guests, who were promised an extravagant dinner, are starving. Most of the guests go away hungry.

The Duke, of course, was embarrassed and angry. Leonardo was publicly humiliated.

Three Lessons for Designers

Leonardo’s “Kitchen Nightmare” offers several lessons for designers. I will talk about three lessons here:

  1. Do not be afraid to fail
  2. Use positive judgment to explore the value and benefit of ideas
  3. Do not underestimate the importance of executing your ideas

1. Do not be afraid to fail

First, do not be afraid to fail. Da Vinci was using conveyor belts long before the Industrial Revolution. He was experimenting with higher temperature for cooking, developing his own oven, and using artists to improve the presentation of food. Leonardo developed a sprinkler system, which contains the fundamental design still used today.

When faced with a task of preparing an extravagant meal for the Duke of Milan, Leonardo was inspired to improve the current state of technology in the kitchens of the day. He was not afraid to fail. Leonardo was no “Iron Chef.” And, he failed in a spectacular way. Again, do not be afraid to fail. Leonardo was not.

The fear of failure is a great barrier to creative thinking. You learn from your failures. Leonardo puts it best:

“I have been impressed with the urgency of doing. Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Being willing is not enough; we must do.”

Leonardo Da Vinci

Fear of failure stifles your thinking. Fear of failure keeps you thinking inside the box. You can learn from failures. You can think creatively.

2. Use positive judgement to explore the value and benefit of ideas

Second, use positive judgment to explore the value and benefit of ideas. Consider yourself as the Duke of Milan, who was just publicly humiliated by Leonardo’s “innovations”.

  • Would you take the time to notice the value and benefit of conveyor belts, new ovens, and sprinkler systems?
  • Would you think about the creative concept of using edible art designed by local artisans for your guests?

The answers to both questions is, most likely, no.

When faced with new ideas or failure, we are quick to judge things negatively. We fail to explore lessons learned. We fail to see the benefits and values within new concepts. We do know the Duke publicly humiliated Leonardo for his “kitchen nightmare.” Ironically, the Duke’s own army could have used the same technology (conveyor belts, ovens, and sprinklers) to build more weapons faster. Instead, the Duke scoffed at these new innovations because he was embarrassed.

When you are faced with a new idea in the future, use positive judgment first by asking your “self” a few basic questions.

  1. What are the benefits and values of this new idea?
  2. In what ways can this new idea work?

As designers and UX professionals, you want stakeholders to consider the value, benefits, and novelty of ideas before quickly dismissing them. Using positive judgment first when a new idea is introduced leads you to explore potential ideas and consider alternatives. You do not quickly jump to the most common design solution, newest technology, or known design pattern.

“The greatest deception men suffer is from their own opinions” is a famous quote from Leonardo Da Vinci. In this lesson, Leonardo want us to consider the novelty of new ideas rather than our initial, negative reaction, where we judge all the reasons an idea will fail. When you use positive judgment first, you balance your tendency to quickly react to new ideas.

3. Do not underestimate the importance of execution

Third, do not underestimate the importance of executing your ideas. Leonardo made significant inventions for one dinner party. The inventions did work as designed. The conveyor belts moved the food. The oven cooked at a higher temperature. The sprinklers put out the fire. The cooks (ie users) were not ready to have three different inventions at the same time. When you add 50 or so artisans, the kitchen gets very crowded, very fast.

Execution is critical.

Leonardo’s Kitchen Nightmare was brought upon by Da Vinci not following his own advice:

“Experience does not err. Only your judgments err by expecting from her what is not in her power.”

Leonardo Da Vinci

First, consider how the story of Leonardo’s Kitchen Nightmare might be affected by just following modern UX best practices. Leonardo could have started with the 5Hs and W to get better understanding of his design problem. He could have developed personas for the cooks, artisans, servers, the host, and the dinner party attendees. Leonardo could have done some usability testing with the cooks and artisans, where he could have tested out his assumptions with real users.

Second, consider how Leonardo’s execution was seemingly affected by some poor project management practices. Leonardo introduced three new inventions (conveyor belts, sprinking system, and new ovens), as well as new people (the artisans) doing additional activities (carving food). Leonardo was a poor project manager. He added new features and tweaked existing ones, which only added to scope creep. Clearly, Leonardo had planned on doing too much with his project.

Finally, consider how the execution of these kitchen ideas were affected by Leonardo himself. Leonardo was famous for procrastination. For example, it took him many years to complete “The Last Supper”. When you look at the body of his art work, you will discover only a small set of completed masterpieces. From an execution perspective, we see only one resource (Leonardo) for all these ideas. Leonardo was overthinking and underdelivering on his promises, which is a nightmare on any project.

Conclusions

Leonardo Da Vinci did not always succeed. When he failed, it was a spectacular failure. It was a living nightmare. Leonardo may have said it best:

“It has long since come to my attention that people of accomplishment rarely sat back and let things happen to them. They went out and happened to things.”

Leonardo Da Vinci

His failures still show us lessons from Leonardo.

Do not be afraid to fail, as you learn the most from your attempts. Judge new ideas with a positive viewpoint to explore the value and benefit of potential ideas. The execution of a new idea can be as important as thinking it up.

You can design like Da Vinci.

Time…The Ultimate Resource

Josh Long from Treehouse.com writes yet another wonderful blog entry that I so agree with. Time is the one thing that trumps money and everything else and when used well you can work less and accomplish so much more…the motto of the Treehouse.com crew. (they work a four day work week!)

Here is Josh’s article :

In a world full of tools, frameworks, tutorials, articles, code editors, and Github, there is still one resource that is more important to the web professional than any other… time.

Time is the ultimate resource.

The problem with time is that it’s difficult to manage and no one has a way of creating more of it. People usually discuss time management in the context of using techniques, apps and strategies to speed up your work, but that’s where we all get it terribly wrong.

It’s not only about working faster. Sometimes it’s about not working at all.

Time has this controlling dichotomy of uptime versus downtime and distraction versus focus. There is a science to managing time that also means managing energy. In order to get what we need out of our profession, our lives, and our passions, we’ll need to master how we use our time.

Here are the areas I’ve been focusing on lately to better manage my time, downtime, work and energy:

Project Management

To get the most out of your time it is very important to clearly understand exactly how you’re going to use it. Having a project management tool like BasecampFlow, or the new Goes to Work, affords you the opportunity to map out exactly what you need to do so you can get it done. Otherwise, you may find yourself like a ship without a rudder, weaving in and out of ideas and tasks without truly getting anything done.

Understand what needs to get done, reverse engineer it into actionable steps, and get to work. This will make you exponentially more productive by the time you actually sit down to do the work.

RSS Elimination

I love to read. I especially love to read about the latest around the web (It is my job as a writer and editor after all). But I have to say that removing the RSS reader apps from all of my devices was one of the best things I’ve ever done. There are enough distractions in the world as it is. We don’t need software pinging us every time someone releases a new article.

I’ve found that the best information comes from the same few sources and that the really good content will always find me through friends or Twitter.

Designated Time for Work, Email and Twitter

I’ve found that my best work comes from singular focus on the task at hand. When it’s time to work, it’s very difficult to do your best work when you’re only 40% engaged. Multi-tasking was the buzzword of the 90′s but we’ve seen where that got us. Designate separate time to work, to check email, and to check your social networks.

Checking Twitter and Email twice a day and working in solid, focused blocks of two hours has seemed to work for me best.

Work Offline

This seems to be a lot to ask of a web professional, but it’s amazing how much stress can be removed from your life by working offline. As I write this, I’ve turned my wifi off and I’m working strictly in iA writer. If I’m trying to think clearly and deliver a solid message, I don’t need Sparrow dinging for email, Tweetbotswooshing for DMs, or Campfire ringing in the latest animated gif (although those do bring joy to one’s life).

Working in your code editor, or gasp, Photoshop offline will help you focus and will make you feel much lighter as you try to solve the world’s problems with code.

Saying No to Projects

Getting the most out of your time isn’t always about saying what you’re going to do. Many times it means saying what you’re not going to do. I think it’s good to want to help friends or take on all of the projects you can (we need money after all), but saying no to projects actually leads to being open to better projects that are more in your favor.

The key here is being able to identify the best projects and setting the best constraints up front. Leverage your time by doing the best projects, that create the most benefit, and in the least amount of time. Talk about a win/win/win.

Spend Time with People

Many times the best thing a web professional can do is to get away from the web. Time spent with friends and family is time well spent because it increases your capacity to do more work by renewing your energy. The hardest thing for web professionals to remember is that we’re human first. There is absolutely no replacement for human love and interaction. Don’t ignore the ones you love that are all around you, to build foundation-less relationships in the virtual world.

I’ve had the great pleasure to interview and become friends with some of the best web professionals in the world. Every one of them said that their career took off when they identified what was really important and started spending more time with the ones they loved.

Spend Time Completely Free of Work

It seems counter-intuitive to say that being more productive means spending more time away from work, but working at 100% for 3 hours a day has been proven to out-produce 40% over a 9 hour workday. Our bodies and minds need to be renewed and that is nearly impossible if we’re always online and always working.

Conclusion

I don’t claim to have all of the answers. I don’t even claim to have more than five. But over the course of my thirty-three years I’ve been productive and I’ve wasted years of precious time. These strategies are what I’ve tested and that are currently working for me. Your ability to preserve your own greatest resource of time may differ, but I hope that this article has at least made you stop and consider your options.

What are some of the strategies you use to be more productive?

Read more: The Ultimate Resource – Treehouse Blog http://blog.teamtreehouse.com/the-ultimate-resource#ixzz29YlOZLLR

Nice site for sharing your Portfolio…and more

I just discovered this site and although you can already do this on wordpress I know…..there is a very nice site called Behance.net where you can post graphic design, typography, logos, web design, animation, and a myriad of projects for people to see. People can also see works in progress, etc.
People are able to hire you, you can follow other creatives, people can follow you, comment on your portfolio, like you on social sites etc. You can find people by location…by discipline… It’s also a good way to be able to communicate with other people who do what you do or who do something that will complement what you do etc.
Worth checking out.

Behance.net

The Next Move-Cubism

Mann im Cafe

Juan Gris: Mann im Café, 1914

 

So now we move to Cubism. Mr. Picasso & Mr. Braque and many of the contemporaries. I’m just going to be honest. I’ve tried and tried stood in museums over the years and tried. Cubism doesn’t speak to me. It doesn’t move me. It never has…probably never will….but I’m open…and I like finding that I was wrong…that’s when I learn something.  Nothing against Picasso. My actual favorite painting from Picasso and one of my favorite paintings of all times I’ve stood and regarded for long periods of time both in real life and online is “The Old Guitarist”. Probably, one of the most touching paintings in the world…..to me. It’s immediately the piece that comes into my head when someone says Picasso, and then I get a sinking sad feeling as I think of that painting and the emotion it evoked. And the story behind it very compelling as well and the poetry that later went along with it…..
However, I am now embarking on at least understanding and getting an eye for  Cubism. Definitely more of a challenge when the interest level is lower but that’s how some projects are in the job market as well, you may not like it but you still have to wrap your head around it and Make it Work!
Read the recommended links from the professor, the article from the NY Times & looked at the link from the Centre Pompidou, a place I used to live near and loved when I lived in Paris. I loved the architecture of the building alone and the atmoshpere around the area there was fun and invigorating. I also found another link which helped enlighten me and broadened my horizons a bit beyond Cezanne, Picasso, & Braque on TheArtStory.org. It is definitely an interesting time for the painters in art and I can definitely imagine Parisiens getting bored and wanting something new and different which to me is a typical and cool part of their nature even to this day. And I can imagine their different styles as the put their own stamp on Cubism…Robert Delaunay, Sonia Delaunay, Jean Metzinger and Raymond Duchamp-Villon. And I can picture them all in Montmartre which just has an air of art when you are there with the small area and the little pubs and some of the most beautiful light and landscape in Paris. People still stood outdoors and painted when I was there….
So here we go! We’ll see what turns out from this. Could be a big mess… but one can only try!