Creativity: The Perfect Crime

Creativity: The Perfect Crime

by Philippe Petit
Creativity: The Perfect Crime

Creativity: The Perfect Crime

by Philippe Petit

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Overview

In the vein of The Creative Habit and The Artist’s Way, a new manifesto on the creative process from a master of the impossible.
 
Since well before his epic 1974 walk between the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center, Philippe Petit had become an artist who answered first and foremost to the demands of his craft—not only on the high wire, but also as a magician, street juggler, visual artist, builder, and writer. A born rebel like many creative people, he was from an early age a voracious learner who taught himself, cultivating the attitudes, resources, and techniques to tackle even seemingly impossible feats. His outlaw sensibility spawned a unique approach to the creative process—an approach he shares, with characteristic enthusiasm, irreverence, and originality in Creativity: The Perfect Crime.
            Making the reader his accomplice, Petit reveals new and unconventional ways of going about the artistic endeavor, from generating and shaping ideas to practicing and problem-solving to pulling off the “coup” itself—executing a finished work. The strategies and insights he shares will resonate with performers of every stripe (actors, musicians, dancers) and practitioners of the non-performing arts (painters, writers, sculptors), and also with ordinary mortals in search of fresh ways of tackling the challenges and possibilities of everyday existence.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781101620076
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication date: 05/15/2014
Sold by: Penguin Group
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 9 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Philippe Petit has performed on the high wire more than eighty times around the world; he is also a magician, street juggler, visual artist, builder, lecturer, and writer. A frequent contributor to TED and other national venues, he is the author and illustrator of several books, including To Reach the Clouds, the basis of the 2009 Academy Award–winning documentary Man on Wire. He lives in upstate New York.

Read an Excerpt

Make no mistake.
I frown upon books about creativity.
Too often they gather only formulas, point at Einstein and the Beatles but
rarely at the author, propose exercises that mistake the mind for a gym machine
and conclude each chapter with a recap worthy of fifth-graders. In
aiming at the universal—to satisfy the commonest denominator of human
thinking and behavior—most of these books miss all of the originality, the
humor, the serendipity, the grace, the exceptions to the rule, the idiosyncrasies
that mold the way of art.
 
So if I don’t believe in books about creativity, why am I writing one?
Although the original idea for this book was not mine—it came from the
outside—its entire content comes directly from inside, from a life I have
spent creating. I hope that my unconventional, insubordinate process of
creativity will offer insight for anyone struggling to achieve his or her
dreams.
 
Born into the confines of rigid parenting, repressive schooling and the
 narrow-mindedness of a country busy manufacturing 365 types of cheeses,
quite early I started to rebel against authority. I was not very good at following.
I had to distance myself from the norm, to venture along solitary paths,
to teach myself.
At six, I taught myself magic; at fourteen, juggling; at sixteen, wire-walking.
In the process, I was thrown out of five different schools. Regardless, I would
never have let my schooling get in the way of my education.
 
Observation was my conduit to knowledge, intuition my source of power.
I spent my days taking things apart and rebuilding them; not asking how to
do something, but finding out; hiding from people in order to stare at them,
noting how they dress, talk, act, and noticing their mistakes . . .
As a teenager I spent considerable time at the circus and vaudeville theater,
witnessing the best acts in the world—thereby setting my artistic standards
at an unusually high level. I would compare the overall effect different performances
had on me and decide who was the best dancer, the best ventriloquist,
the best stand-up comic. I would try on their styles and attempt their
routines. Ha-ha! Yet trial and error provided results.
 
All of this trying and failing and watching and trying again bred in me an
arrogant, proud and aggressive determination. Each discovery, no matter how
naive, had to be jealously hidden from the rest of the world. Each victory felt
like a stolen jewel. I fell into a natural state of intellectual self-defense. Let
me explain.
Always trying my best, I became guilty of pursuing perfection—imagine
that!
Always working relentlessly, I became obstinate—and almost felt guilty
about it.
To protect what triggered my creativity, I became secretive.
Anxious about being discovered, fearful of being caught, I ended up always
on the lookout.
At the outset of most projects, busy battling against overwhelming odds, I
came to believe the entire world was against me.
This was a reflection of reality as well as the frame of mind I needed to
be at my most creative. It coated my character with an outlaw sheen. And
I’m sure that with my constant sneaking, my tiptoeing, my way of approaching
people inconspicuously from behind to spy on them or surprise them, I
must have looked like a criminal, and certainly others must have felt I was
one. And so I was not surprised the world around me reacted with suspicion
and mistrust!
 
Before I had reached eighteen, I had rewritten the Book of Ethics that had
been forced on me earlier, and before I knew it, I had acquired the mind of
a criminal.
My attitude as an artist grew out of the realization I’d arrived at from an
early age: that my intellectual engagement, my imaginative freedom, had a
price, that of the forbidden. Whatever I decided to do, it was not allowed!
“Creativity is illegal” became my byword.
The creator must be an outlaw.
Not a criminal outlaw, but rather a poet who cultivates intellectual rebellion.
The difference between a bank job and an illegal high-wire walk is paramount:
the aerial crossing does not steal anything; it offers an ephemeral gift,
one that delights and inspires.
 
Despite my outlaw approach—or because of it—a network of personal creative
principles imperceptibly emerged. Lawlessness doesn’t mean lack of
method: in fact, the outlaw I became needed method all the more, because
I was swimming alone to the island of my dreams.
With the urgency of those who believe life is short, I found multiple ways of
getting things done, I solved problems intuitively, and by refusing failure, I
was able to achieve the impossible.
I dedicated myself to my arts, bringing to bear a fanatic attention to detail and
little respect for the established values of competition, money or social status.
For my first major high-wire walks—at Notre Dame, the Sydney Harbor
Bridge and the World Trade Center—Oops!—I forgot to ask permission. And
after, I certainly did not seek forgiveness.
Over the years, I went on refining a highly personal creative process. I kept
drawing on my autodidactic elasticity, all the time knowing that I was never
alone in my progress: mentors, friends and illustrious artists in a wide range
of creative fields guided me and opened doors. They were masters of one
craft, however, and I was . . . a defiant Renaissance Boy wanting to do it all!
 
One day I was asked to share my creative process with others in the form of a
lecture. I concocted a lively mixture of physical demonstrations, experiments
with props, audience participation, storytelling, live drawings, quizzes and even
magic tricks; and I took pleasure in revealing some of my creative secrets.
Word of my lectures spread and I was encouraged to do more.
My audience grew to be quite diverse: aspiring wire-walkers, Nobel Prize
winners, clergymen; millionaires whose focus lacked focus and businessmen
striving to become millionaires; young entrepreneurs, people seeking a direction
in life, curious souls, and students of all sorts of subjects.
 
My audiences seemed to identify with my outlaw attitude, to be inspired by
my propensity for venturing far off the beaten path. They asked me to elaborate
on my “grammar of creativity,” and even the tech geeks I spoke to were
hungry for more of this self-confessed Luddite’s primer on self-teaching and
self-discovery.
 
Eventually I distilled my audience’s favorite topics into a one-man show,
WIRELESS! Philippe Petit Down to Earth. And I began to see that despite my
aversion to guides to the creative process, I really did have the makings of a
book.
But not a book about creativity.
A book about my creativity.
 
So think of this book as a conspiracy—or, if you will, a manifesto. And
think of yourself, dear reader, as an accomplice who is invited to explore your
own field of intellectual or artistic “crime.”
 
See this book not as a blueprint for any specific crime but as a series of postcards
from the labyrinths I build (to confuse those chasing me), the tunnels I
dig (to escape), the dams I erect (to delay the invasion of the elements). Accept
my invitation to become my student, my partner, in crime. Together
we’ll take chances and yet leave nothing to chance. We’ll question the questions,
yet arrive at definitive principles. We’ll be stubbornly focused, yet curious
about everything.
 
I hope this book will provide guidance for your imagination. That it will
help you to recognize all sorts of obstacles, in order to circumvent them, or—
if need be—make them vanish. That it will reveal to you the surest way to
bring your “criminal intentions” from inspiration to full-fledged execution—
to “coup.” And that along the way, it imparts what I have discovered about
the benefits of passion, tenacity, intuition, misdirection, daily practice, secrets,
mistakes, surprises and believing in miracles.
 
Most of all, I fervently wish it will remind you of the qualities hidden inside
all of us, that we are rarely encouraged to recognize but that are essential to
make our dreams come true, to plan, design and construct a wondrous life.
 
I wish you the most adventurous journey, epic pursuit and successful escape.
 
Vehemently yours,
Philippe Petit
10 Rue Laplace, Paris
October 6, 2012*

Table of Contents

A Forethought: Confession of an Outlaw 1

1 The Blank Page 8

2 Chaos & Order 19

3 The Safe House 37

4 Subversive Elements 51

5 Criminal Practice 79

6 The Plot Thickens 105

7 A Murder of Problems 139

8 The Coup 165

9 Aftermath 187

An Afterthought: Conquistador of the Useless 203

What People are Saying About This

Francesco Clemente

If life itself is a walk on a wire, suspended between birth and death, in Creativity: The Perfect Crime Philippe Petit reminds us that the humble precision of every little step can lead to greatness. --Francesco Clemente

David Duchovny

A book as unique, open and inspiring as one would expect from its fundamentally revolutionary creator, a true original who does not accept accepted wisdom or take no for an answer. As I read, I kept underlining and thinking of friends I wanted to share it with---actors, writers, directors, anyone really. This book could be as powerful for kids as adults; I put a copy of it on each of my kids' nightstands and recommend you do the same. --David Duchovny

From the Publisher

Praise for Creativity: The Perfect Crime

“Gleeful . . . [A] kaleidoscopic manifesto . . . as richly insightful as it is vaingloriously irreverent. Read it. Use it to cross whatever tightropes you happen to be perched on.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune
 
“Anyone curious about Petit’s life and art, or hoping to draw inspiration for their own creative coup, will find ideas and insights in Creativity: The Perfect Crime.” —BookPage

Mikhail Baryshnikov

Like all extraordinary artists, Philippe Petit's practice is founded in rigor, scrutiny, and dedication. What sets Philippe in a class all his own is his restless quest to conquer the greatest physical heights, achieving a precise balance of chaos and creativity. He is an inspiration to all who dare to dream of the seemingly impossible. --Mikhail Baryshnikov

Julie Taymor

I enjoyed the organization of chaos, the boldness of ideas, the insanity of Philippe's visions, the extreme discipline of planning, and the passion of the feat. It inspires to create not only on a sound concept, but also on a whim or a spark. I was thoroughly able to identify with his highs and lows and it was a great pleasure to have one so freewheeling put his methods down in a completely personal way. --Julie Taymor

Jonathan Safran Foer

Philippe Petit created one of the greatest works of art of the twentieth century. He is also a most intelligent and original thinker (not to mention terrific company). How lucky we are to have him as a guide into the elusive and all-important subject of creativity. --Jonathan Safran Foer

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