Art Synectics - Tools for Creative Thinking

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Please use this power point as a guide to help you understand this technique.
Advertisements

INF1090 Special Project Photography.
Introduction to Human- Centered Design: Conceptual Design and Prototyping EPICS High School Workshop Tuesday, July 12, 2011 William Oakes and Carla Zoltowski.
Innovative Design Presented by: M. Y. Wong We easily come across terms such as: o Fashion design o Hair design o Interior design o Garden design. But.
Get Close to your subject Your subject should be the star of your photos, and the one way to make that happen is to be sure you are close enough to the.
INTRODUCTION TO DESIGN SYNECTICS
“Nothing can be invented without reference to something else. Scientists build upon theories based on previous discoveries, as do artists and inventors.
Disguise Camouflage, conceal, deceive or encrypt: Hide, mask or implant your subject into another frame or reference: –In nature, for example, chameleons,
2 DIMENSIONAL DESIGN DESIGN BASICS. Chapter 4: Scale/Proportion “Scale” and “proportion” are related terms in that both basically refer to size. Scale.
Summer Science Vocabulary Review Directions: Use the clues on each slide to complete your vocabulary sheet. Click again to get a hint for the first letter.
SURREALI SM Surrealism is an art movement that started in the late 1910s and early 20s. Came from the Manifesto of Surrealism written by poet Andre Breton.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY 7 TH HONORS. ANALYZE Definition: break something down into its parts Synonyms: examine, study, scrutinize, explore.
 As you watch and listen, write down 3-4 things you notice that characterize the following video and audio clips.
Dig Deeper with Design Thinking A presentation deck for training educators on the Project MASH design thinking process Half-day version.
Disciplines of the Humanities Arts Disciplines Visual art- drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture, photography Performing art- music, theatre, dance,
Literary Terms. 1.Abstract- expressing a quality apart from an object; the opposite of concrete. 2.Aesthetic- appreciative of things that are pleasing.
SCAMPER.
COLLABORATIVE PROJECT FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
The Map Design Process and the Elements of Map Composition SP 240 Cartography Alex Chaucer.
SATIRE AND HUMOR JUST ANOTHER ASPECT OF TONE…BUT EVEN MORE FUN! 1.
Design Project 1 (Part 2): Abstraction Through Repetition Delivered by Mohammad Zikky, M.T Multimedia Creative Department, EEPIS Surabaya Visual Design.
Concepts of Engineering and Technology Copyright © Texas Education Agency, All rights reserved.
As you enter today… In your sketchbook, answer the following: How do you know a drawing / artwork is successful? What is Art? What are the Elements of.
Developing Management Skills
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall3-1 Chapter 3: Solving Problems Analytically and Creatively 1 Developing Management.
3D COMPUTER GRAPHICS IMD Chapter 1: 3D Computer Graphics Chapter 1: 1 Lecturer: Norhayati Mohd Amin.
Basics of Drawing Waverly-Shell Rock Senior High Mr. Adelmund.
Five principles of design (in fast forward) You can find this and other helpful PowerPoints on my teacher web site at Hillsboro R-3 under teacher web sites.
TREE TRIPTYCH GOALS: 1.Two or more artworks. 2.Each has a tree 3.Trees can connect or not. 4.2 or more materials 5.Shows who you are/ your style 6.Try.
Advertising Processes The creative strategy, presentations and media strategy.
The Principles of Design
Low Depth of Field Abstracting the Everyday Object.
Concepts of Engineering and Technology Copyright © Texas Education Agency, All rights reserved.
© 2007 by Prentice Hall1 Chapter 3: Solving Problems Analytically and Creatively 3 -
Pop Art Once you “got” Pop, you could never see a sign the same way again. And once you thought Pop, you could never see America the same way again. --Andy.
Rules Choose a category Select a price Choose the correct answer.
Fundamentals of Art Final Exam Vocabulary. Vocabulary for Final Exam Objective: You will study and match words with definitions in order to review for.
ART Critique Process Art Critiquing process is about organizing your thoughts about a particular piece of art.
Definition Essay WIT Comp 2. Definition A definition essay is an essay that defines a word, term, or concept. In this essay you should not define a term.
What is it? Why does it matter?
Keith Haring Art of Element Focus: Line, Shape and Color.
Anne Watson Hong Kong  grasp formal structure  think logically in spatial, numerical and symbolic relationships  generalise rapidly and broadly.
LAUNCHING NEW VENTURES – AN ENTREPRENEURIAL APPROACH, 7E Kathleen R. Allen – © 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned,
Beyond the Border. Overview Create a 2D art piece with a composition that has center of interest. Explore the expansions of the main subject matter that.
Photo 1 First Shooting Assignment An Object Study Exploring one object using various points of view and your creativity!
INTRODUCTION TO DESIGN SYNECTICS Based on Design Synectics by Nicholas Roukes.
Masks mask: covering to hide or guard the face. Something that conceals ones identity. One of the earliest examples still around: The mask of Agamemnon.
Art is among the highest expressions of culture, embodying its ideals and aspirations, challenging its assumptions and beliefs, and creating new possibilities.
Surrealism Started in the 1920’s a style of art and literature developed principally in the 20th century, stressing the subconscious or irrational significance.
Pop Art and Related Sculpture Terms on Final Exam.
What is art for?.
Literary Terms. Alliteration The practice of beginning several consecutive or neighboring words with the same sound. “The twisting trout twinkled below.”
Internal Assessment/Idea Recognition 1.  Network of Personal and Business Contacts 2.
The Nature of Art and Creativity
INTRODUCTION TO DESIGN SYNECTICS
Surreal Hand Drawing Surrealism was an art movement that started in Europe in the 1920’s. Surrealist artists believed imagination is closely related to.
Pop Art.
Unit 2: Identifying design elements when preparing graphics
What is a Political Cartoon?
SYMBOL AND FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE
Surrealism & Pop Art.
INTRODUCTION TO DESIGN SYNECTICS
Art Synectics - Tools for Creative Thinking
CREATIVITY TECHNIQUE FOR REDESIGNING PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
INTRODUCTION TO DESIGN SYNECTICS wcboe. k12. md
Problem: My bike has a flat tire.
Formal Features of Literature
Analogize.
Being Brilliant in English
COMPOSITION.
Presentation transcript:

Art Synectics - Tools for Creative Thinking

Synectics Definition The term Synectics is from the Greek word synectikos, which means “bringing forth together,” or “bringing different things into unified connection.” Synectics is about making connections. Visual analogies-http://coe.sdsu.edu/eet/articles/Visanal/start.htm Visual Analogies-A Creative Communication Option Visual Analogies http://graphicdesign.spokanefalls.edu/tutorials/process/visualanalogy/visanalogy.htm#top

It is a way of mentally taking things apart and putting them together to furnish new insight for all types of problems. http://members.optusnet.com.au/charles57/Creative/Techniques/synectics.htm Another person looked at the way leaves fell together in a pile invented Pringles potato chips.

Synectic thinking is the process of discovering the links that unite seemingly disconnected elements. The Synectic Triggers Synectic Trigger mechanisms catalyze or create new thoughts, ideas and inventions. Synectic thinking is the process of discovering the links that unite seemingly disconnected elements. A man was walking through a field and got a burr caught in his sock. He looked at the burr under the microscope and noticed the plant had a hook that looped around the sock fibers. He combined the idea of the hook with a fiber it could capture and invented Velcro. That’s synectic thinking. Two disconnected ideas merge to become a new idea.

The 23 Design Synectic Triggers Subtract Change Scale Prevaricate Repeat Substitute Analogize Combine Fragment Hybridize Add Isolate Metamorphose Transfer Distort Symbolize Empathize Disguise Mythologize Animate Contradict Fantasize Superimpose Parody

Subtract. Simplify. Omit, remove certain parts or elements. Piet Mondrian tree series Subtract. Simplify. Omit, remove certain parts or elements. Take something away from your subject. Compress it or make it smaller. Think: What can be eliminated, reduced, disposed of? What rules can you break? How can you simplify, abstract, stylize or abbreviate? Theo Van Doesburg Composition (the cow)

DO-HO SUH Repeat. Repeat a shape, color, form, image or idea. Reiterate, echo, restate or duplicate your reference subject in some way.

Deborah Butterfield, Palma, 1990, found steel, welded. Combine. Bring things together. Connect, arrange, link, unify, mix, merge, wed, rearrange. Combine ideas. Combine ideas, materials and techniques. Bring together dissimilar things to produce synergistic integrations. What kind of connections can you make from different sensory modes, frames of reference or subject disciplines?

Add. Extend, expand, or otherwise develop your reference subject Add. Extend, expand, or otherwise develop your reference subject. Augment it, supplement, advance or annex it, Magnify it: Make it bigger. Think: What else can be added to your idea, image, object, or material? Man Ray

Transfer. Move your subject into a new situation, environment or context. Adapt, transpose, relocate, dislocate. Adapt the subject to a new and different frame of reference. Move the subject out of its normal environment; transpose it to a different historical, social, geographical or political setting or time. Look at it from a different point of view. Think: How can your subject be converted, translated, or transfigured? Marcel Duchamp

Animate. Boris Artzybasheff Bring life to inanimate subjects by thinking of them as having human qualities.

Romare Bearden, Prevalence of Ritual: Tidings, 1964 Superimpose. Overlap, place over, cover, overlay: Superimpose dissimilar images or ideas. Overlay elements to produce new images, ideas or meanings. Superimpose different elements from different perspectives, disciplines or time periods on your subject. Arturo Herrera, Untitled 2005

Claes Oldenburg Bicycle Wheel Change Scale. Make your subject bigger or smaller. Change proportion, relative size, ratio, dimensions or normal graduated series. Ron Mueck, Spooning couple

Substitute. Exchange, switch or replace: Think: What other idea, image, material or ingredient can you substitute for all or part of your subject? William Wegman

Picasso Fragment. Separate, divide, split: Take your subject or idea apart. Dissect it. Chop it up or otherwise disassemble it. What devices can you use to divide it into smaller increments- or to make it appear discontinuous?

Isolate. Separate, set apart, crop, detach: Use only a part of your subject. In composing a picture, use a viewfinder to crop the image or visual field selectively. "Crop" your ideas, too, with a "mental" viewfinder. Think: What element can you detach or focus on? Georgia O‘Keeffe, The Orchid 1941

Rocky Davies, BraceFace Salvador Dali, Temptation of St. Anthony Distort. Twist your subject out of its true shape, proportion or meaning. Think: What kind of imagined or actual distortions can you effect? How can you misshape it? Can you make it longer, wider, fatter, narrower? Can you melt it, burn it, crush it, spill something on it, bury it, crack it, tear it or subject it to yet other "tortures"?

Donald "Rusty" Rust Disguise. Camouflage, conceal, deceive or encrypt: How can you hide, mask or "implant' your subject into another frame of reference? In nature, for example, chameleons, moths and certain other species conceal themselves by mimicry: Their figure imitates the ground. How can you apply this to your subject?

Hybridize. Cross-fertilize: Wed your subject with an improbable mate Hybridize. Cross-fertilize: Wed your subject with an improbable mate. Think: "What would you get if you crossed a ______ with a_____?" Creative thinking is a form of "mental hybridization" in that ideas are produced by cross-linking subjects from different realms. Transfer the hybridization mechanism to the use of color, form and structure; cross-fertilize organic and inorganic elements, as well as ideas and perceptions.

Meret Oppenheim Contradict. Contradict the subject’s original function. Contravene, disaffirm, deny, reverse: Many great works of art are, in fact, visual and intellectual contradictions. Contradict laws of nature such as gravity, time, etc. Think: How can you visualize your subject in connection with the reversal of laws of nature, gravity, magnetic fields, growth cycles, proportions; mechanical and human functions, procedures, games, rituals or social conventions? Think: How can you use contradiction or reversal to change your subject?

Street artist unknown Parody. Ridicule, mimic, mock, burlesque or caricature: Make fun of your subject. "Roast' it, lampoon it. Transform it into a visual joke or pun. Exploit the humor factor, Make zany, ludicrous or comic references. Create a visual oxymoron or conundrum. Marcel Duchamp , L.H.O.O.Q.

Prevaricate. Equivocate Prevaricate. Equivocate. Fictionalize, "bend" the truth, falsify, fantasize. Although telling fibs is not considered acceptable social conduct, it is the stuff that legends and myths are made of. Duane Hanson, Drug Addict ,sculpture 1975

Analogize. Compare. Draw associations: Seek similarities between things that are different. Make comparisons of your subject to elements from different domains, disciplines and realms of thought. Think: What can I compare my subject to? What logical and illogical associations can I make? Remember, stretching analogies is a way of generating creative outcomes, new perceptions and potent metaphors.

Empathize. Sympathize. Relate to your subject; put yourself in its "shoes." If the subject is inorganic or inanimate, think of it as having human qualities. How can you relate to it emotionally or subjectively? Transpose yourself into your subject. Edward Weston, pepper 1930

M.C. Escher magic mirror 1946 Metamorphose. Transform, convert, transmutate: Depict your subject in a state of change. It can be a simple transformation (an object changing its color, for example) or a more radical change in which the subject changes its configuration. Think of "cocoon-to-butterfly" types of transformations, aging, structural progressions, as well as radical and surreal metamorphosis such as "Jekyll and Hyde" transmutations. How can you apply metamorphosis or mutation to your subject?

Symbolize. How can your subject be imbued with symbolic qualities? Shepard Fairey, OBEY series The Toasters Symbolize. How can your subject be imbued with symbolic qualities? A visual symbol is a graphic device which stands for something other than what it is. (For example, a red cross stands for first aid, a striped pole for a barber shop, a dove bearing an olive branch for peace, etc.) Public symbols are clichés insofar as they are well-known and widely understood, while private symbols are cryptic and have special meaning only to their originator. Works of art are often integrations of both public and private symbols. Think: What can you do to turn your subject into a symbolic image? What can you do to make it a public symbol? A private metaphor?

Mythologize. Build a myth around your subject. Andy Warhol, Marilyn Diptych Mythologize. Build a myth around your subject. In the 60's, Pop artists "mythologized" common objects. The Coca-Cola bottle, Brillo Pads, comic strip characters, movie stars, mass media images, corporate logos and other subjects became the visual icons of twentieth century art. Think: How can you transform your subject into an iconic object?

Fantasize. Fantasize your subject Fantasize. Fantasize your subject. Use it to trigger surreal, preposterous, outlandish, outrageous, bizarre thoughts. Think: "What-if" thoughts: What if automobiles were made of brick? What if alligators played pool? What if insects grew larger than humans? To invent, one must be contrary and go against established conventions and stereotypes. Remember, inventors create great inventions only by breaking the "rules". Ryohei Hase, The last thing we do

Take Creative Action! Ideas are not born in a vacuum. Use the 23 synectic triggers to transform your ideas into something new. The triggers are tools for transformational thinking and may lead you to some great discoveries. http://members.optusnet.com.au/charles57/Creative/Techniques/synectics.htm

Art-Think: Ways of Working… Identity: Set the problem or task, identify the subject. 2. Analyze: Examine the subject; break it down, classify it. 3. Ideate: Think, fantasize, produce ideas. Generate options towards a creative solution. Relate, rearrange, reconstruct. 4. Select: Choose your best option. 5. Implement: Put your ideas into action. Realize it. Transform imagination and fantasy into tangible form. 6. Evaluate: Judge the result. Think about new options and possibilities that have emerged. Go back to Step #1.