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What are the things you’ve studied, explored, or even built a body of work around, but ultimately moved away from? As creative professionals, we are wanderers and explorers, constantly searching and striving for new experiences and techniques. But what do we do when we feel the call to return to past areas of study? We are different than before, so why would we even think of doing this, let alone grapple with the feelings that we’re selling out or short-changing our evolution? The creative process is like the tide, it comes in, it goes out. We stay and go. Not everyone chooses to return, but if we do, we must honor the past with who we’ve become, and have a vision for something beyond what we could ever do before. It’s not about nostalgia or taking shortcuts, it’s about transformation. That’s the creative return.

“Writing an introduction to the tenth anniversary edition of Weaveworld last year I remarked on much of the same thing: The man who’d written that book was no longer around. He’d died in me, was buried in me. We are all our own graveyards I believe; we squat amongst the tombs of the people we were.” – Books of Blood: Volumes One to Three by Clive Barker


8 Reasons Why We Would Return to Earlier Forms of Creative Expression:

  1. Control
  2. Ability
  3. Patience
  4. Focus
  5. Process
  6. Evolution
  7. Revolution
  8. Vision

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