2010 Number 3 | < Back to NEA home page
Magazine Cover, Art Works: Arts Capital, ART IN THE DC METROPOLITAN AREA
In this Issue
 Cartography for the Land of Ideas: Talking Creativity with Maria Popova
 Child's Play: Making New Worlds with Director Mary Zimmerman
 Traditionally Innovative:
Pat Courtney Gold Reflects Contemporary Wasco Life in Baskets
 Holding a Mirror to the World: The Art of Playing Games
 Creativity in Collaboration:
The Kronos Quartet Breaking Artistic Boundaries
 No One Can See Like I See:
A Conversation with Kerry James Marshall and Cheryl Lynn Bruce
 Fertile Ground: David Edwards and the Intersection between Art and Science
What is Creativity? The Folger Mike Weber Lorna Jordan James Franco Pink Line

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About the cover

Cover by illustrator, photographer, and video maker Jorge Colombo, finger-painted on an iPhone, using the app Brushes. "Creativity happens in the mind," suggested Colombo about the cover, "but there are so many little tools to keep things going. I treat them as a floral arrangement: each ‘flower' glows and dances and explodes in a different way." A book on Colombo's iPhone finger paintings, entitled New York, is due out next year.

Read a brief interview with the artist on our Art Works blog here.

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About this Issue

How art is made is cloaked in mystery, not just to the audience but also, in many cases, even to the artist. How does creativity work? How do you know when the artwork is finished? What is "productive failure" and how is it important to the creative process? How do you become creative?

Creativity, however, isn't only restricted to making art. In everyday life, we also use creativity in our workplace and our leisure time. Whether playing a video game or sport, solving a complex logistical problem, or trying out a recipe, creativity -- that is, aesthetic and scientific problemsolving -- is at work. In this issue we've asked several practicing artists about their creative process in various art disciplines, from music to theater, from visual arts to folk arts. We're also talking with other creative practitioners -- a scientist, a game designer -- about how creativity relates to learning and thinking creatively in other disciplines.

 

Jazz Masters Onstage