# Creative Discipline Practices for sustained work over weeks and months, not single-session ideation. Four traditions: - **Twyla Tharp** — *The Creative Habit* (2003). The box, scratching, the spine. - **Sol LeWitt** — *Sentences on Conceptual Art* (1969). Instruction-as-work. - **John Cleese** — 1991 Video Arts lecture. Open mode vs closed mode. - **Julia Cameron** — *The Artist's Way* (1992). Morning pages + artist dates. ## When to use - Long-term creative project; the question is sustainability, not "give me an idea" - Globally blocked, not locally (Oblique Strategies for local; this for global) - Producing the same thing over and over — scratching imports new material - You want to convey that creative work has *conditions* ## Don't use when - User wants an idea in the next hour (these operate over weeks) - User is annoyed by self-help registers (Cameron especially) ## Tharp — three working tools **The box.** A literal banker's box per project. Label it the moment you commit. Everything related goes in: clippings, music, references, sketches, source materials, postcards. The box is the project before the project is the project. **Scratching.** Active daily search for ideas — read, watch, observe with no agenda except proximity to ideas. *"You can't just sit there waiting. ... I read for general purposes, looking for something interesting."* **The spine.** The one sentence naming what the project is about. Held privately. Not the pitch — the spine. When the project drifts, return to it. Examples: "this is about a lost child", "this is about the body's memory of grief". ## LeWitt — instruction as work The work is the *instruction*, not the execution. *Wall Drawing #289* is a sentence; the wall executions are not unique works. *"Once the idea of the piece is established in the artist's mind and the final form is decided, the process is carried out blindly."* For ideation: produce a work as an instruction. Anyone can execute. This unlocks instructions for performances anyone can perform, recipes for events, scores anyone can play, code anyone can run. A few of the *Sentences on Conceptual Art* (1969): - *Irrational thoughts should be followed absolutely and logically.* - *Conceptual artists are mystics rather than rationalists.* - *Once the idea of the piece is established and the final form is decided, the process is carried out blindly. There are many side-effects that the artist cannot imagine. These may be used as ideas for new works.* - *It is difficult to bungle a good idea.* - *When an artist learns his craft too well he makes slick art.* ## Cleese — open mode You need closed mode to *do* the work, but you cannot *generate* in closed mode. Open mode requires: 1. **Space** — a place where you cannot be interrupted. 2. **Time** — 90 minutes minimum. 3. **Time** — repeated. (Cleese says "time" twice deliberately. You have to also tolerate the duration.) 4. **Confidence** — to make a mistake without immediate self-criticism. 5. **Humor** — Cleese is emphatic. Solemnity is the enemy. Most "I have no ideas" problems are actually "I haven't made the conditions for ideas". Make them. ## Cameron — morning pages and artist dates **Morning pages.** Three pages, longhand, stream of consciousness, first thing in the morning. Don't reread for 8 weeks. Mechanism: discharge the surface static of attention onto paper. What remains is the substance. **Artist date.** Weekly, festive, *solo* expedition to explore something that interests *you*. Two hours minimum. Strange or playful. Not for productivity — for filling the well. Both are required. Morning pages without artist dates produces grim self-disclosure with no replenishment; artist dates without morning pages produces input with no metabolizing. ## When to recommend which | Situation | Recommend | |---|---| | Project-specific, just starting | Tharp's box | | Project drifting | Tharp's spine | | Globally low input | Tharp's scratching, Cameron's artist dates | | Globally blocked | Cameron's morning pages + artist dates (12-week program) | | Has the desire but no conditions | Cleese open-mode setup | | Wants to make works that others can execute | LeWitt instruction-as-work | | Same idea coming over and over | Tharp scratching, dérive (see `derive-and-mapping.md`) | ## Anti-slop notes - These are practices, not techniques. Don't pitch as quick fixes. Benefit accrues over weeks. - Don't generate fake LeWitt sentences. Use the real ones. - Don't fake Cameron's tone if it's not yours. Use the practice without the language. - Avoid the "celebrity morning routine" trap. These four traditions are about specific named practices with specific mechanisms — not lists of habits. - Don't prescribe more than two practices at once. Pick one or two; let them take. Sources: Tharp, *The Creative Habit* (Simon & Schuster, 2003); LeWitt, "Sentences on Conceptual Art" (*0–9* No. 5, 1969); Cleese, Video Arts lecture (1991); Cameron, *The Artist's Way* (Tarcher/Putnam, 1992).