An Incomplete
Manifesto for Growth: Written in 1998, the
Incomplete Manifesto is an articulation of statements
exemplifying Bruce Mau’s beliefs, strategies and
motivations. Collectively, they are how we approach every
project.
- Allow
events to change you. You have to be willing to grow. Growth
is different from something that happens to you. You
produce it. You live it. The prerequisites for growth:
the openness to experience events and the willingness to
be changed by them.
- Forget
about good. Good is a
known quantity. Good is what we all agree on. Growth is
not necessarily good. Growth is an exploration of unlit
recesses that may or may not yield to our research. As
long as you stick to good you'll never have real
growth.
- Process
is more important than outcome. When the outcome drives the process we
will only ever go to where we've already been. If process
drives outcome we may not know where we’re going, but we
will know we want to be there.
- Love
your experiments (as you would an ugly child).
Joy is the engine of growth.
Exploit the liberty in casting your work as beautiful
experiments, iterations, attempts, trials, and errors.
Take the long view and allow yourself the fun of failure
every day.
- Go
deep. The deeper you
go the more likely you will discover something of
value.
- Capture
accidents. The wrong
answer is the right answer in search of a different
question. Collect wrong answers as part of the process.
Ask different questions.
- Study.
A studio is a place of
study. Use the necessity of production as an excuse to
study. Everyone will benefit.
- Drift.
Allow yourself to wander
aimlessly. Explore adjacencies. Lack judgment. Postpone
criticism.
- Begin
anywhere. John Cage
tells us that not knowing where to begin is a common form
of paralysis. His advice: begin anywhere.
- Everyone is a
leader. Growth
happens. Whenever it does, allow it to emerge. Learn to
follow when it makes sense. Let anyone lead.
- Harvest
ideas. Edit
applications. Ideas need a dynamic, fluid, generous
environment to sustain life. Applications, on the other
hand, benefit from critical rigor. Produce a high ratio
of ideas to applications.
- Keep
moving. The market
and its operations have a tendency to reinforce success.
Resist it. Allow failure and migration to be part of your
practice.
- Slow
down. Desynchronize
from standard time frames and surprising opportunities
may present themselves.
- Don’t
be cool. Cool is
conservative fear dressed in black. Free yourself from
limits of this sort.
- Ask
stupid questions. Growth is fueled by desire and
innocence. Assess the answer, not the question. Imagine
learning throughout your life at the rate of an
infant.
- Collaborate.
The space between people
working together is filled with conflict, friction,
strife, exhilaration, delight, and vast creative
potential.
- ____________________.
Intentionally left blank.
Allow space for the ideas you haven’t had yet, and for
the ideas of others.
- Stay up
late. Strange things
happen when you’ve gone too far, been up too long, worked
too hard, and you're separated from the rest of the
world.
- Work
the metaphor. Every
object has the capacity to stand for something other than
what is apparent. Work on what it stands for.
- Be
careful to take risks. Time is genetic. Today is the child of
yesterday and the parent of tomorrow. The work you
produce today will create your future.
- Repeat
yourself. If you like
it, do it again. If you don’t like it, do it
again.
- Make
your own tools. Hybridize your tools in order to build
unique things. Even simple tools that are your own can
yield entirely new avenues of exploration. Remember,
tools amplify our capacities, so even a small tool can
make a big difference.
- Stand
on someone’s shoulders. You can travel farther carried on the
accomplishments of those who came before you. And the
view is so much better.
- Avoid
software. The problem
with software is that everyone has it.
- Don’t
clean your desk. You
might find something in the morning that you can’t see
tonight.
- Don’t
enter awards competitions. Just don’t. It’s not good for
you.
- Read
only left-hand pages. Marshall McLuhan did this. By decreasing
the amount of information, we leave room for what he
called our "noodle."
- Make
new words. Expand the
lexicon. The new conditions demand a new way of thinking.
The thinking demands new forms of expression. The
expression generates new conditions.
- Think
with your mind. Forget technology. Creativity is not
device-dependent.
- Organization =
Liberty. Real
innovation in design, or any other field, happens in
context. That context is usually some form of
cooperatively managed enterprise. Frank Gehry, for
instance, is only able to realize Bilbao because his
studio can deliver it on budget. The myth of a split
between "creatives" and "suits" is what Leonard Cohen
calls a 'charming artifact of the past.'
- Don’t
borrow money. Once
again, Frank Gehry’s advice. By maintaining financial
control, we maintain creative control. It’s not exactly
rocket science, but it’s surprising how hard it is to
maintain this discipline, and how many have
failed.
- Listen
carefully. Every
collaborator who enters our orbit brings with him or her
a world more strange and complex than any we could ever
hope to imagine. By listening to the details and the
subtlety of their needs, desires, or ambitions, we fold
their world onto our own. Neither party will ever be the
same.
- Take
field trips. The
bandwidth of the world is greater than that of your TV
set, or the Internet, or even a totally immersive,
interactive, dynamically rendered, object-oriented,
real-time, computer graphic–simulated
environment.
- Make
mistakes faster. This
isn’t my idea -- I borrowed it. I think it belongs to
Andy Grove.
- Imitate.
Don’t be shy about it. Try
to get as close as you can. You'll never get all the way,
and the separation might be truly remarkable. We have
only to look to Richard Hamilton and his version of
Marcel Duchamp’s large glass to see how rich,
discredited, and underused imitation is as a
technique.
- Scat.
When you forget the words,
do what Ella did: make up something else ... but not
words.
- Break
it, stretch it, bend it, crush it, crack it, fold
it.
- Explore
the other edge. Great
liberty exists when we avoid trying to run with the
technological pack. We can’t find the leading edge
because it’s trampled underfoot. Try using old-tech
equipment made obsolete by an economic cycle but still
rich with potential.
- Coffee
breaks, cab rides, green rooms. Real growth often happens outside of
where we intend it to, in the interstitial spaces -- what
Dr. Seuss calls "the waiting place." Hans Ulrich Obrist
once organized a science and art conference with all of
the infrastructure of a conference -- the parties, chats,
lunches, airport arrivals — but with no actual
conference. Apparently it was hugely successful and
spawned many ongoing collaborations.
- Avoid
fields. Jump fences.
Disciplinary boundaries and regulatory regimes are
attempts to control the wilding of creative life. They
are often understandable efforts to order what are
manifold, complex, evolutionary processes. Our job is to
jump the fences and cross the fields.
- Laugh.
People visiting the studio
often comment on how much we laugh. Since I've become
aware of this, I use it as a barometer of how comfortably
we are expressing ourselves.
- Remember.
Growth is only possible as a
product of history. Without memory, innovation is merely
novelty. History gives growth a direction. But a memory
is never perfect. Every memory is a degraded or composite
image of a previous moment or event. That’s what makes us
aware of its quality as a past and not a present. It
means that every memory is new, a partial construct
different from its source, and, as such, a potential for
growth itself.
- Power
to the people. Play
can only happen when people feel they have control over
their lives. We can't be free agents if we’re not
free.