Every creative professional can relate to spending lots
of time in their head, certainly an isolating experience. Stefan G.
Bucher has a better idea. He works at the award-winning firm 344
Design (www.344design.com), a Los
Angeles-based design firm specializing in work for creatively ambitious clients
Bucher believes that for an all-around creative mind, it
would be better to have - in his words -
"support group safety net
inspiration choir confessional think tank bowling team of the soul".
Sounds good to me!
Stefan is the author of All Access: The Making of Thirty Extraordinary Graphic Designers, 100 Days
of Monsters and
his new book You Deserve A
Medal: Honors on the Path to True Love.
You would recognize his work with clients such as Ogilvy & Mather New York,
Modernista!, Capitol Records, Atlantic Records, Warner Bros. Records and Interscope
Records but who is Stefan Bucher and why does he think we need to create a
creative community? Born in Hannover,
Germany, both his parents
were very interested in the arts, and Stefan has been drawing since childhood.
When his first drawing was published at age 12, he was won over and over the
next three years slowly took over a lot of the graphics in that same magazine.
From there, he moved onto ads for local retailers and sold the first of those
ads for 50 Deutsche Mark in 1989 and went from there. He came to Los Angeles in 1993 and
was accepted at the Art Center College of Design. Stefan describes what happens
next, “I wanted to go into illustration, but was too intimidated by the work in
the catalogue, so I stuck with advertising. It seemed like it would suit my
wide ranging interests. In the final weeks of my final term I was recruited by
Wieden & Kennedy's Portland
office and spent the next year doing Microsoft ads in the rain. Not a fun thing
to do in city for which I was ill-suited. Luckily I got fired a year later and
got to come back to Pasadena.
I've been at 344 ever since.”
The seed for his ideas, book, and workshops on creative
community was planted early, “I wasn't the most popular kid growing up, so I
retreated into my own world a lot, because the voices in my head were much more
fun than the actual local communities available to me. A lot of times I
actually felt LESS lonely being by myself.”
Of course, this all changed at art school. Surrounded by
other loner-types, Stefan found himself turning outwards and towards others, “Life
changed in art school, where I was finally in the company of other people who
shared many of my passions. I found inspiration, entertainment, support, and
solace in the company of teachers and students and later co-workers. I was
happy to submerge myself in the prefab communities offered by school and the ad
agency. At first, I was a little bit spooked to give up the ‘moody loner’ role
I had created for myself as a teen. It seemed like a bit of a
compromise---having to hold myself back a little to be liked, but being liked
was awfully nice, so it wasn't too big of a sacrifice.”
As many of us have found, the workplace is not like school
with its infrastructure of community. Stefan’s next move was a step towards
community and he had to find the people to create infrastructure. He says, “After
spending a lot of time working solo, it just got to be too hard to be alone
with myself all the time. I got too depressed and depleted. So I made a
conscious choice to build a community for myself. On the advice of a teacher, I joined the AIGA
and becoming active in the Los Angeles
chapter leadership. It was more networking than community building but it was a
good career move.”
His first real conscious step towards building a creative
community was in 1999 on a trip to New
York, “I visited designers and studios I admired. I
called them up and said ‘Hey, I love what you do and I'd like to come visit
you. I don't want a job from you. All I want to do is meet and talk about
life.’ A lot of my design friendships started out that way and have grown over the
years. I still make those trips today. Wherever I travel, I try to meet a few
new designers. Once people actually believe that I'm not angling for anything,
it's always great.” Stefan adds, “Of course, a lot of creative community
already existed before I made the decision to start building. Friends from
home, friends from school and jobs... they form the nucleus. But even those
relationships develop new facets when you set out to form something bigger.
It's made me a kinder human and a better friend to those I already knew.”
I asked him next about how one could consciously move
toward community, what concrete steps could he offer? He says, “Make a decision
to be community-minded. Open yourself up to people. Meet others that have a
passion that matches yours and start there. Meet them as people, as fellow
travelers, not as potential contacts. Be a friend to people. Be kind! Offer
help and accept help when it's offered. In other words, be human! Being human
enriches your solution, so that at some point all you have to do is drop in a
seed crystal and structures will emerge very rapidly. Again, the key is to do
this to lead a kinder life and bring good vibes to the people you meet. If
you're out to gather business contacts, it will give you only that. The deeper
rewards of being part of a bigger mind will be lost to you. I know it's
starting to sound very touchy feely, but I don't know how else to talk about
it.”
As for the physical aspects of community, web sites and
email have opened up many doors, “In recent years the internet has brought
interesting new friends who responded to the 344 site. After making the first
incarnation look very corporate and respectable, it is now reborn as something
much more personal. I know that it has confused or even turned off some people,
but it really seems to resonate with others. Some of those people write to me
and some really interesting relationships have formed as a result. It's been
really wonderful, actually. It's nice to know that I'm not working in a vacuum,
that people see the stuff and like it in the way that I had hoped they would.”
Stefan also does not limit the concept of community to
just designers. In his conference workshop he talks about, “Other graphic
designers, art directors, fine artists, photographers, painters, sculptors,
product designers, musicians, producers, many, many wonderful writers... Oh, I
love them all but it goes beyond that. I'm happy to meet anybody who has a deep
love for what they do. Dedication and energy are what counts more than anything.
I seem to make the strongest connections with other designers, but I've met
some great custom car mechanics and painters recently and we've bonded. I would
certainly include my CPA, who just lights up when he goes over my numbers. Passion
is the key! “
Is
this creative community a business necessity for today’s freelance professional? He admits
the work would get done anyway and you probably won’t get paid more but it is a
very attractive proposition. Stefan says, “You'll have like minds to ask for
help or advice or support or discussion or diversion or just for a laugh. You
don't need to be alone. And that's a big deal on a rainy night, when you've
been in your head for days, trying to coax new thoughts into the light. Knowing that there are people out there, who
think like you do, that see the world the same way you do---it means one
thing: You might be crazy, but you're
not the only one! That thought certainly gives me strength to continue my work
when I feel overwhelmed and it gives me confidence to follow my artistic bliss
on the days when it would be easier to look for more conventional gigs.”