Live Tomorrow Night: Victoria Chang in conversation with Matthew Zapruder.
Join us for the third session in our new six-part series, "Five Things I've Learned about Maintaining a Creative Practice in the Chaos."
Join Us Live and Online Tuesday Night!
Join us Tuesday night for the third of six candid conversations about cultivating and nurturing your creative practice – and about how you can keep the faith, keep going, and stay true in a life filled with relationships, responsibilities and distractions.
This Tuesday, March 25: For Part Three of this great new series, join poet and writer Victoria Chang in her live, two-hour conversation with Matthew and discover the Five Things She’s Learned about the ways that following an unconventional path can be a surprising source of creative inspiration and innovation.
Victoria’s latest poetry collection, With My Back to the World (2024), won the Forward Prize for Best Collection of Poetry and was named a Best Book of the Year by NPR, The Guardian, Lithub, and Electric Literature. Her previous books include The Trees Witness Everything (2022), Dear Memory (2021), and OBIT (2020), which won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Griffin Poetry Prize. A recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Chowdhury Prize in Literature, she is the Bourne Chair in Poetry at Georgia Tech and Director of Poetry@Tech.
In her class, Five Things I’ve Learned About Creativity – by Being an Outsider, Victoria will focus on the the ways that embracing an unconventional path — in life and in creative practice—can open new possibilities for artistic growth. Drawing from her own diverse experiences across disciplines, she’ll share all she’s learned about the ways that curiosity, interdisciplinary thinking, and the deliberate defying of traditional definitions of creativity can lead to creative innovation and originality.
“I used to think that there were all sorts of things wrong with me, my approach, my constant switching of majors, but decades later, I see the benefits of living in the world in a horizontal versus a vertical way,” Victoria writes in her personal invitation to her class. But, she says, “this way of living, thinking, studying, perceiving, has really opened up the possibilities in my mind and in my creative work.”
Find out more, and view Victoria’s personal video invitation to this upcoming class by following the button below.
View an Extended Replay from Last Tuesday Night’s Session with Amber Tamblyn
In the second session of our new series, Five Things I've Learned about Maintaining a Creative Practice in the Chaos, last Tuesday night, poet, author, actress, and director Amber Tamblyn joined Matthew Zapruder to share the Five Things She’s Learned about how to harness our emotions into the full force of our creative work — and how to put all that we’re feeling about the state of the world to good use.
Please check some great, inspiring moments from their conversation, below. And consider yourself invited to every session in this ongoing series. The first two complete, two-hour sessions, each now available anytime, on demand.
Read more about this series – and take advantage of a special series pricing for all six sessions – by following the link below.
Discover more great sessions in this series.
Tuesday, April 8: For Part Four, join writer Ingrid Rojas Contreras in her live, two-hour conversation with Matthew and discover the Five Things She’s Learned about writing and creativity – and about the artistic necessity to write from the emotional landscape of crisis.
Ingrid was born and raised in Bogotá, Colombia. Her memoir, The Man Who Could Move Clouds, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. It tells the story of the author's lineage of curanderos, healers who know plant medicine and talk to ghosts, and her mother, who was the first woman in her family to become a curandera. Her first novel Fruit of the Drunken Tree was the silver medal winner in First Fiction from the California Book Awards, and a New York Times editor’s choice. Her essays and short stories have appeared in the New York Times Magazine, The Cut, and Zyzzyva, among others.
In her class, Five Things I’ve Learned about Creativity – by Writing Through Crisis, Ingrid will offer key insights on the ways in which personal and collective struggles specifically shape artistic expression. Joined by Matthew, she’ll detail her own strategies for writing from an emotional landscape of crisis and talk at length about the ways in which she’s found that even in difficult times creativity is something essential.
“When we discuss writing and creativity, we always seem to be leaving behind the body, which maybe many people can — leave behind the body — and many of us cannot,” Ingrid writes in her personal invitation to her class. “Five Things I’ve Learned about Creativity – by Writing Through Crisis will focus on the strategies I’ve found have worked for me, and on the ways creativity during crisis is not only possible but necessary. It is life saying yes.”
Find out more, and view Ingrid’s personal video invitation to this upcoming class by following the button below.
Tuesday, April 22: For Part Five, join best-selling writer Daniel Handler in his live, two-hour conversation with Matthew and discover the Five Things He’s Learned about Creativity – or the five things he had thought he’d learned, until life and experience suggested otherwise.
Daniel is the author of several novels, including We Are Pirates, The Basic Eight, and the Printz Honor-winning Why We Broke Up. As Lemony Snicket, he wrote A Series of Unfortunate Events and All the Wrong Questions, along with acclaimed picture books like The Dark. His writing appears in The New York Times, The Believer, and other publications. He has worked as a screenwriter, established the Lemony Snicket Prize for Librarians, and collaborates in music, including The Composer Is Dead with the San Francisco Symphony.
In his class, Five Things I’ve Learned About Creativity – That Turn Out to Be Wrong, Daniel will explore the misconceptions about creativity that he’s found most often lead artists astray. Drawing from his eclectic career as a novelist, screenwriter, and musician, he’ll share how embracing being wrong and learning from mistakes has been an essential part of his creative process, insights he thinks essential for anyone navigating the unpredictable journey of artistic growth.
As Daniel writes in his personal invitation to his class, “I’m wrong almost all the time, about all sorts of things, and I’ve learned to enjoy that somewhat, at least most of the time. I like where being wrong leads me, and I keep a notebook and a mind full of scraps of things I can’t stop thinking about. I make my books from these things.”
Find out more, and view Daniel’s personal video invitation to this upcoming class by following the button below.
Tuesday, May 6: In the final session in the series, join best-selling writer and poet Maggie Smith in a live, two-hour conversation with Matthew and discover the Five Things She’s Learned about what it means to prioritize your creative practice in ways that allow you to stay productive and feel most like yourself – no matter what the rest of your life looks like.
Maggie is the author of eight books of poetry and prose, including the memoir You Could Make This Place Beautiful, a New York Times bestseller. Her poem "Good Bones" went viral, was read by Meryl Streep, and was named the Official Poem of 2016 by Public Radio International. Maggie has received a Pushcart Prize, a Creative Writing Fellowship from the NEA, and numerous other awards. Her work has been published in The New York Times, The Paris Review, TIME, and The Atlantic. She writes a bestselling Substack newsletter, For Dear Life, and teaches at the Naslund-Mann Graduate School of Writing in Columbus, Ohio.
In her class, Five Things I’ve Learned About Creativity – During Times of Upheaval, Maggie will share all she knows about how to maintain and even grow your creative practice through personal and professional challenges. Drawing from her own experiences, she’ll focus specifically on the ways that creativity can serve as an anchor and a catalyst for personal growth during turbulent times – one that can help you stay dedicated to your work even when life feels uncertain.
Maggie writes in her personal invitation to her class, “My last four books — Keep Moving, Goldenrod, You Could Make This Place Beautiful, and My Thoughts Have Wings, — came together during a brutal six-year stretch. My marriage ended. The pandemic hit. I became a solo parent. None of these events scream “time for art!” But I learned something about myself during those years, which is that I can and will prioritize my creative practice regardless of what the rest of my life looks like. I feel the most like me when I’m writing, so in times of upheaval, it’s a way of coming home to myself.”
Find out more, and view Maggie’s personal video invitation to this upcoming class by following the button below.
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