Sources of Ideas and Experiences
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| experiences | 经历 | jīng lì |
| observation | 观察 | guān chá |
| documentation | 记录 | jì lù |
Where ideas come from
- Artists' and designers' experiences 经历 inform why, how, and what they make.
- An experience is any event — real surroundings, imagined ideas, or research.
- Reflecting on experience sparks questions and inspires investigation.
According to the AP framework, what mainly informs why and what artists make?
Artists' experiences inform their thinking and making.
Observation and beyond
- Ideas come from observation 观察, memory, other disciplines, and other artists' work.
- Looking closely at the world is one of the richest sources.
- Research — reading, looking, talking — deepens ideas.
A source of ideas or not?
Sort each as a genuine source of ideas or not a source.
Careful observation of the world is a rich source of ideas.
Observation is one of the richest sources of ideas.
Select all genuine sources of artistic ideas.
Observation, memory, and research generate ideas; thoughtless copying does not.
Match each term to its meaning.
Experiences = events; observation = looking; documentation = recording.
Turn experience into a resource
- Experiences can be documented with drawings, photos, notes, or sound.
- That documentation becomes a resource you return to.
- Keeping a rich store of sources fuels a sustained investigation.
Recording experiences with sketches, photos, or notes is called ____.
Documentation turns experiences into a lasting resource.
Do not wait for a "big idea" to strike. Ideas grow from experiences and observation you actively gather and reflect on. Artists who look closely, research widely, and record what they find never run short of material — the source is a habit, not a lucky flash.
An artist curious about cities spends a week observing and photographing shadows on walls, sketching passers-by, and reading about urban light. That gathered experience, all documented, becomes the raw material for a whole sustained investigation.
Ideas come from experiences — real surroundings, imagination, and research — and from observation of the world. Reflecting on experience sparks questions. Documenting experiences turns them into a resource for a sustained investigation.