Stefan Sagmeister: Happiness by design

133,366 views ・ 2007-06-20

TED


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00:25
About 15 years ago, I went to visit a friend in Hong Kong.
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And at the time I was very superstitious.
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So, upon landing -- this was still at the old Hong Kong airport
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that's Kai Tak, when it was smack in the middle of the city --
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I thought, "If I see something good, I'm going to have a great time here in
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my two weeks. And if I see something negative, I'm going to be miserable, indeed."
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So the plane landed in between the buildings
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and got to a full stop in front of this little billboard.
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(Laughter)
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And I actually went to see some of the design companies
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in Hong Kong in my stay there.
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And it turned out that --
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I just went to see, you know, what they are doing in Hong Kong.
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But I actually walked away with a great job offer.
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And I flew back to Austria, packed my bags,
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and, another week later, I was again on my way to Hong Kong
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still superstitions and thinking, "Well, if that 'Winner' billboard is still up,
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I'm going to have a good time working here.
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(Laughter)
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But if it's gone, it's going to be really miserable and stressful."
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So it turned out that not only was the billboard still up
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but they had put this one right next to it.
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(Laughter)
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On the other hand, it also taught me where superstition gets me
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because I really had a terrible time in Hong Kong.
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(Laughter)
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However, I did have a number of real moments of happiness in my life --
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of, you know, I think what the conference brochure refers to
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as "moments that take your breath away."
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And since I'm a big list maker, I actually listed them all.
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(Laughter)
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Now, you don't have to go through the trouble of reading them
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and I won't read them for you.
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I know that it's incredibly boring to hear about other people's happinesses.
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(Laughter)
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What I did do, though is, I actually looked at them from a design standpoint
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and just eliminated all the ones that had nothing to do with design.
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And, very surprisingly, over half of them had, actually, something to do with design.
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So there are, of course, two different possibilities.
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There's one from a consumer's point of view --
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where I was happy while experiencing design.
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And I'll just give you one example. I had gotten my first Walkman.
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This is 1983.
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My brother had this great Yamaha motorcycle
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that he was willing to borrow to me freely.
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And The Police's "Synchronicity"
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cassette had just been released
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and there was no helmet law in my hometown of Bregenz.
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So you could drive up into the mountains
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freely blasting The Police on the new Sony Walkman.
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(Laughter)
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And I remember it as a true moment of happiness.
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You know, of course, they are related to this combination of
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at least two of them being, you know, design objects.
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And, you know, there's a scale of happiness when you talk about in design
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but the motorcycle incident would definitely be, you know,
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situated somewhere here -- right in there between Delight and Bliss.
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Now, there is the other part, from a designer's standpoint --
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if you're happy while actually doing it.
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And one way to see how happy designers are when they're designing could be to
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look at the authors' photos on the back of their monographs?
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(Laughter)
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So, according to this, the Australians and the Japanese
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as well as the Mexicans
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are very happy.
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(Laughter)
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While, somewhat, the Spaniards ...
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and, I think, particularly, the Swiss
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(Laughter),
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don't seem to be doing all that well.
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(Laughter)
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Last November, a museum opened in Tokyo called The Mori Museum,
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in a skyscraper, up on the 56th floor.
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And their inaugural exhibit was called "Happiness."
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And I went, very eagerly, to see it, because --
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well, also, with an eye on this conference.
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And they interestingly sectioned the exhibit off into four different areas.
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Under "Arcadia," they showed things like this, from the Edo period --
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a hundred ways to write "happiness" in different forms.
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Or they had this apple by Yoko Ono -- that, of course, later on
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was, you know, made into the label for The Beatles.
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Under "Nirvana" they showed this Constable painting.
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And there was a little -- an interesting theory about abstraction.
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This is a blue field -- it's actually an Yves Klein painting.
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And the theory was that if you abstract an image, you really, you know
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open as much room for the un-representable --
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and, therefore, you know, are able to involve the viewer more.
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Then, under "Desire," they showed these Shunsho paintings --
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also from the Edo period -- ink on silk.
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And, lastly, under "Harmony," they had this 13th-century mandala from Tibet.
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Now, what I took away from the exhibit was that
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maybe with the exception of the mandala
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most of the pieces in there were actually about the visualization of happiness
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and not about happiness.
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And I felt a little bit cheated, because the visualization --
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that's a really easy thing to do.
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And, you know, my studio -- we've done it all the time.
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This is, you know, a book.
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A happy dog -- and you take it out, it's an aggressive dog.
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It's a happy David Byrne and an angry David Byrne.
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Or a jazz poster with a happy face and a more aggressive face.
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You know, that's not a big deal to accomplish.
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It has gotten to the point where, you know, within advertising
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or within the movie industry, "happy" has gotten such a bad reputation that
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if you actually want to do something with the subject
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and still appear authentic, you almost would have to, you know,
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do it from a cynical point of view.
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This is, you know, the movie poster.
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Or we, a couple of weeks ago, designed a box set for The Talking Heads
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where the happiness visualized on the cover definitely has, very much, a dark side to it.
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Much, much more difficult is this, where the designs actually can evoke happiness --
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and I'm going to just show you three that actually did this for me.
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This is a campaign done by a young artist in New York, who calls himself "True."
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Everybody who has ridden the New York subway system will be
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familiar with these signs?
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True printed his own version of these signs.
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Met every Wednesday at a subway stop with 20 of his friends.
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They divided up the different subway lines and added their own version.
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(Laughter)
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So this is one.
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(Laughter)
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Now, the way this works in the system is that nobody ever looks at these signs.
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So you're
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(Laughter)
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you're really bored in the subway, and you kind of stare at something.
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And it takes you a while until it actually --
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you realize that this says something different than what it normally says.
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(Laughter)
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I mean, that's, at least, how it made me happy.
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(Laughter)
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Now, True is a real humanitarian.
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He didn't want any of his friends to be arrested,
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so he supplied everybody with this fake volunteer card.
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(Laughter)
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And also gave this fake letter from the MTA to everybody --
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sort of like pretending that it's an art project
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financed by The Metropolitan Transit Authority.
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(Laughter)
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Another New York project.
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This is at P.S. 1 -- a sculpture that's basically a square room
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by James Turrell, that has a retractable ceiling.
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Opens up at dusk and dawn every day.
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You don't see the horizon.
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You're just in there, watching the incredible, subtle changes of color in the sky.
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And the room is truly something to be seen.
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People's demeanor changes when they go in there.
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And, for sure, I haven't looked at the sky in the same way
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after spending an hour in there.
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There are, of course, more than those three projects that I'm showing here.
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I would definitely say that observing Vik Muniz' "Cloud"
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a couple of years ago in Manhattan for sure made me happy, as well.
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But my last project is, again, from a young designer in New York.
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He's from Korea originally.
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And he took it upon himself to print 55,000 speech bubbles --
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empty speech bubbles stickers, large ones and small ones.
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And he goes around New York and just puts them, empty as they are, on posters.
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(Laughter)
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And other people go and fill them in.
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(Laughter)
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This one says, "Please let me die in peace."
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(Laughter)
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I think that was --
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the most surprising to myself was that the writing was actually so good.
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This is on a musician poster, that says:
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"I am concerned that my CD will not sell more than 200,000 units
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and that, as a result, my recoupable advance
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from my label will be taken from me,
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after which, my contract will be cancelled,
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and I'll be back doing Journey covers on Bleecker Street."
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(Laughter)
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I think the reason this works so well is because everybody involved wins.
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Jee gets to have his project;
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the public gets a sweeter environment;
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and different public gets a place to express itself;
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and the advertisers finally get somebody to look at their ads.
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(Laughter)
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Well, there was a question, of course, that was on my mind for a while:
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You know, can I do more of the things that I like doing in design
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and less of the ones that I don't like to be doing?
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Which brought me back to my list making --
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you know, just to see what I actually like about my job.
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You know, one is: just working without pressure.
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Then: working concentrated, without being frazzled.
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Or, as Nancy said before, like really immerse oneself into it.
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Try not to get stuck doing the same thing --
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or try not get stuck behind the computer all day.
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This is, you know, related to it: getting out of the studio.
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Then, of course, trying to, you know, work on things
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where the content is actually important for me.
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And being able to enjoy the end results.
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And then I found another list in one of my diaries that actually contained
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all the things that I thought I learned in my life so far.
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And, just about at that time, an Austrian magazine called and asked
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if we would want to do six spreads -- design six spreads
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that work like dividing pages between the different chapters in the magazine?
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And the whole thing just fell together.
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So I just picked one of the things that I thought I learned --
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in this case, "Everything I do always comes back to me" --
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and we made these spreads right out of this.
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So it was: "Everything
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I do
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always
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comes
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back
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to me."
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A couple of weeks ago, a
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(Laughter)
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French company asked us to design five billboards for them.
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Again, we could supply the content for it.
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So I just picked another one.
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And this was two weeks ago.
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We flew to Arizona -- the designer who works with me, and myself --
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and photographed this one.
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So it's: "Trying
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to look
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good
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limits
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my life."
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And then we did one more of these.
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This is, again, for a magazine, dividing pages.
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This is: "Having" --
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this is the same thing;
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it's just, you know, photographed from the side.
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This is from the front.
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Then it's: "guts."
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Again, it's the same thing -- "guts" is just the same room, reworked.
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Then it's: "always
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works out."
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Then it's "for," with the light on.
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(Laughter)
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And it's "me."
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Thank you so much.
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(Applause)
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