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Your Creative Push

Your Creative Push

Youngman Brown

Arts

Frequency: 1 episode/4d. Total Eps: 390

Libsyn
Your Creative Push is the daily podcast that pushes YOU to pursue your creative passion. Every week, Youngman Brown interviews artists, musicians, writers, photographers, graphic designers, and other inspirational creative individuals in an attempt to get them to inspire you to put aside your excuses and START DOING WORK. Each artist opens up to YOU, revealing the things that hold THEM back on a daily basis, and how they FIGHT THROUGH IT. They then give you one final push, in an attempt to motivate you to start doing work as soon as the episode is over. If you have a full-time job or full-time responsibilities and WISH that you had the COURAGE and MOTIVATION to FINALLY do that thing that has been on your mind, this podcast is for you!
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Apple Podcasts
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - visualArts

    30/05/2025
    #87
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - visualArts

    29/05/2025
    #37
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - visualArts

    27/05/2025
    #60
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts

    15/05/2025
    #100
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts

    14/05/2025
    #69
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts

    13/05/2025
    #42
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts

    26/04/2025
    #78
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts

    25/04/2025
    #42
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - visualArts

    09/03/2025
    #84
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - visualArts

    08/03/2025
    #52
Spotify

    No recent rankings available



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An Important Update

lundi 28 septembre 2020Duration 08:44

This is very difficult for me, but today I give a brief message for you all as to why I decided to slow down the pace of the podcast in a major way.

367: Your Art and The Beholder's Share (w/ Yana Zorina)

lundi 14 septembre 2020Duration 50:59

Yana Zorina, Ph.D. is a neuroscientist with a lifelong passion for the arts.  In her scientific career, Yana has always been attracted to microscopy as a means to take a closer look at the beautiful structures that compose the mammalian brain. 

In her microscopy-inspired artwork, she uses her neuroscientist training to accurately recreate scientific images into 3D-beaded renderings of cellular structures to bring the beauty of scientific research to a wider audience.  In viewing beads as analogs of pixels observed on a screen, Yana turns microscopy on its head by transforming ultra-thin optical sections into 3D structures. 

Beyond being passionate about the breathtaking beauty of microscopy images, Yana uses them to serve a greater purpose of communicating science to a wider audience and initiating conversations on difficult topics, such as neurological conditions.

Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/367

In this episode, Yana discusses:

-How she got into both art and neuroscience.

-Her realization that she needed to bring art back into her life after many years of pursuing neuroscience and raising a family.

-Finding alone time both in art and science.

-Some of the resistances she faced of turning her art into a business.

-Having to be creative in terms of putting out content on social media when her projects take her several months to complete.

-Letting go of the fear of not being 100% scientifically accurate in her art.

-The Beholder’s Share.

-How art can be a bridge to communicate what is going on within the scientific community to those outside of it.

-Finding connection in the SciArt community.

-How she schedules her day and how she chooses which idea to move forward with.

Yana's Final Push will inspire you to go for your ideas no matter how “out there” they may seem!
  Quotes:

“I’d rather be dealing with test tubes than with people.”

“I became a wife, a mother, a scientist, and I had the sense that the true me was somehow missing.”

“I’m not ready to give up the pipette.”

“I enjoy the process of making my art.  It is meditative and it is meticulous work that allows me to escape from daily life.”

“No matter how crazy you think your idea is, no matter how crazy it may seem at first, just go for it.”

Connect with Yana:

Website / Etsy / Instagram / Patreon / Twitter

Join the discussion in the Facebook group!

359: If you don’t DO YOU, who will? (w/ Kasey Golden)

lundi 15 juin 2020Duration 48:11

Kasey Golden is an illustrator and YouTuber with the dream of illustrating children's books. She shares her illustrations, challenges and process as an artist on her YouTube channel where she has over a million subscribers following her journey.

Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/kaseygolden

In this episode, Kasey discusses:

-How her YouTube channel and the schedule she made for it kept her accountable for creating art.

-Why she initially started her 500 Drawing Prompts challenge (and why she decided to tone it back).

-Incorporating her community in her own challenges.

-Her advice for getting past art block.

-Making a schedule and lists.

-The experience of doing challenges such as “how small can you draw” and painting with her own blood.

-What she has learned from her community.

-How she honed in on her style.

-How to get past “same face syndrome.”

-Why you shouldn’t wait until you’re “ready” to put your work out there.

-Pushing yourself out of your comfort zone.

-Her take on nudity in art.

-How to deal with negative comments and criticism.

-Her passion for sewing.

-How drawing and painting traditionally helps her to embrace her art, her mistakes and her confidence.

-Where she finds inspiration.

Kasey's Final Push will ask the question, if you don’t create your art in your own unique style, then who will?
  Quotes:

“I hate quitting and giving up on things.  I will torture myself mentally to finish any art project, it seems.”

“I am not unfamiliar with art block, unfortunately.”

“My art style is definitely a Frankenstein monster of all the influences and things I enjoy in life.”

“If you wait until you’re ready, it’s probably never going to happen.”

“Go for a hike.  Go out and see the world.  I think the biggest inspiration you can get for your art is having experiences.”

“If you’re not going to do you, then who’s going to do you?”

Links mentioned:

500 Drawing Prompts Notebook

Nobody cares that you started.  They care that you finished

Jake Parker on Your Creative Push

Connect with Kasey:

Website / YouTube / Instagram / Twitter / Storenvy / Patreon

On the next episode:

Talia Jackson : Spotify / Instagram

Join the discussion in the Facebook group!

The GOALPOSTS keep moving (Best of YCP: Pascal Campion)

lundi 5 février 2018Duration 39:19

Pascal Campion is a prolific French-American artist, illustrator, concept designer, character designer and animator whose clients include: Dreamworks Animation, Paramount Pictures, Disney Feature, Disney Toons, Cartoon Network, Hulu, and PBS.

Passionately inspired by his wife and kids, he is best known to his tens of thousands of fans and followers for “Sketch of the Day”, a ritual of drawing a new image first thing in the morning from his home studio in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/pascal2

In this episode, Pascal discusses:

-How he started his "Sketch of the Day" project.

-His advice to anyone struggling to do the work every day, to take it one step at a time.

-How if you are impatient with your art, it is something that you can work on with your daily practice.

-The importance of finishing a drawing, because your brain starts to recognize the beginning, middle, and end of  creating a piece of art, and if you don't finish the piece, you don't recognize those landmarks.

-How as you create art and get better, your goals change as you continue to learn more and more.

-How many of his less-favorite pieces end up being more popular than the ones he loves the most.

-How you can compare yourself to other talented artists, but they might be comparing themselves to you as well.

-His advice for people who might be afraid to draw or paint everyday scenes.

-A story about the time he watched a duck for 20 minutes.

-How when you are younger you want to be someone else, but as you get older you grow to accept who you are.

-How hard it is when you are young (or even older) and you are told to “be yourself,” when you don’t know exactly who you are.

-The beauty of being able to recognize that you are changing as an artist and a human being.

-Being able to let go of things you are good at for the sake of progressing, especially if those things found success.

-What it is like for him to get into the “zone,” and how it is like deep-sea diving.

-When he gets into a flow state, how it feels as if he is a conduit for something else, and how he is just there to help it along.

-The importance of staying physically fit and the relationship that it can have with your art and creativity.

Pascal's Final Push will inspire you to start drawing whatever you are thinking a feeling, right now!
Quotes:

"I have a hard time doing an image without telling a story."

"After a few minutes, I have this nervous energy where I just want to get to the end really quickly."

"Patience and the amount of time that you can sit down and draw is something that you can work on.  It's like running.  It's like a muscle.  The more you exercise it, the better you get at it."

"If you don't finish a drawing, you don't get those landmarks in your head."

"If you actually put yourself through the paces of finishing a drawing, your brain is going to create a grid: This is the beginning, this is the middle, and this is the end.  You'll have an idea of the trip that you're going to be taken on."

"Always finish your drawing.  The more you finish, the more you understand the whole process and the easier it is to get it done.  If you keep starting and not finishing your drawings, you will never get the map in your head of the amount of work it takes to get a drawing done."

"I get incredible pleasure from creating images.  Even if they are bad, the actual process of it is fun to me."

"As long as you enjoy it, it's going to show in the drawing."

"When I turned 30, things got a whole lot easier in my life because I wasn't trying to become something else anymore."

“The more you keep saying you’re going to do something when you have time, the less likely you are to do it.”

“There’s no better time than NOW to do what you want to do.”

“The ME of ten years ago would not do the same drawings as me now, even if we were at the same technical level.

“My best days of drawing are often when I’ve done a lot of physical exercise.”

Connect with Pascal:

Website / Shop / Facebook / Instagram / Tumblr / Twitter

On the next episode:

Matt Madden : Website / Facebook

Join the discussion in the Facebook group

276: Become UNSTANDARDIZED! (w/ Amber Kane)

lundi 29 janvier 2018Duration 52:58

Amber Kane is an educator, textile designer, entrepreneur, and stellar day dreamer.  She received her Art Education degree from Messiah College, and earned her masters in Creativity Studies from Union Institute and University.

She taught high school Art for 8 years in the public school system, while running her textile design business on the side.  While teaching she learned that our schools are teaching creativity and dreams right out of our students, while developing an obsession for empty standards.

In 2015, she resigned from her public school position.  She now teaches online AP Art and Art History courses for PA Homeschoolers, works part time at the Pennsylvania College of Art and Design, and creates one-0f-a-kind textiles.

Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/amberkane

In this episode, Amber discusses:

-Her first years working as a teacher, and the pushback that she was getting from the school.

-Her decision to quit her teaching job and move into an abandoned home.

-The early process of getting settled in the new situation that she had “flung herself into.”

-Her realization that she needed a safe space to process the last eight years of her life.

-How her textile design business started.

-The power in being a teacher and a working artist.

-How she is still surprised that she was able to convince her husband to move into their “Freedom House.”

-How she wrote herself termination letters in order to reassure herself that she couldn’t be fired for her ideas.

-How she reestablished her reasons for being an art teacher at the beginning of each school year.

-The power in telling other people your plans, even before you are fully convinced that you are capable of executing those plans.

-How she created The Unstandardized Standard.

Amber's Final Push will remind you that just because it’s not easy, that doesn’t mean you’re not supposed to do it!
  Quotes:

“I think it’s actually been within the last six months that I started to feel comfortable using my voice again.”

“I realized that I could not get my daily actions to line up with my ‘Why’ anymore and that was a clear signal that I needed to get out of there.”

“If it feels really hard but you still want it, then that needs to be the thing that you put all of your focus and energy into getting.”

Links mentioned:

The Unstandardized Standard

Connect with Amber:

Website / Facebook / Instagram / Pinterest / Twitter

 

Join the discussion in the Facebook group!

275: LESS IS MORE (w/ Paul Adshead)

lundi 22 janvier 2018Duration 57:34

Paul Adshead is a Hat Wearer, Beard Owner, Crazy Golf Enthusiast, and Peanut Butter Fan.  On the rare occasions he's not
doing photography, he loves being outdoors, blind drawing, eating carrot cake and people watching.

Paul also uses old, out of date film in even older antique cameras to attempt to capture the past as he attends and photographs World War, Victorian and American Civil War events.

Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/pauladshead

In this episode, Paul discusses:

-How he never studied photography or take creative courses academically

-How he has made his transitions slowly.

-How his work is dark and cinematic, and how most clients don’t want that.

-The different types of “darkness” in his work.

-The thought and planning that goes into his shoots.

-How he likes to leave things to people’s imaginations.

-The power of brevity.

-His love for history and the way that he tries to recreate it in his art.

-Using antique cameras and what that does for his process and mindset.

-How he uses his Instagram descriptions to help to add value to his pieces and to give the viewer additional information.

-The relationship that he has with his own Resistances.

-Having multiple projects going at once.

-Using Parkison’s Law to his advantage.

Paul's Final Push will make you realize that life is just a numbers game so keep putting yourself out there as often as possible!
  Quotes:

“I personally never like to compromise my style.”

“For me, people’s imaginations is better than any creative out there.”

“I just find the past more interesting than the present.”

“The second you set a date, everything falls into line and the job gets done.”

“The more you do anything, the more chance it will have a positive effect on your life.”

Links mentioned:

The Luck Factor: The Scientific Study of the Lucky Mind by Richard Wiseman

Connect with Paul:

Website / Instagram

On the next episode:

Amber Kane : Website / Instagram

Join the discussion in the Facebook group!

274: Cover bands don't change the world (w/ Todd Henry)

lundi 15 janvier 2018Duration 34:52

Todd Henry teaches leaders and organizations how to establish practices that lead to everyday brilliance. He is the author of four books (The Accidental CreativeDie Empty, Louder Than Words, and Herding Tigers) which have been translated into more than a dozen languages, and he speaks and consults across dozens of industries on creativity, leadership, and passion for work.

Todd is also the host of The Accidental Creative Podcast, which has delivered weekly tips and ideas for staying prolific, brilliant, and healthy since 2005.

Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/toddhenry

In this episode, Todd discusses:

-How the pressure to be creative all day at our jobs can wear and tear at us.

-His discovery in The Accidental Creative that successful people all share many of the same habits and qualities.

-His FRESH method for finding and solving your problems quickly, and managing your relationships, energy, stimuli, and hours.

-The importance of saying “no” to things that you know will drain your energy from the more important things that you intend to create.

-The power of secret work and private victories.

-His advice for people who are starting to consider turning their side hustle into their “main” hustle.

-His new book, Herding Tigers.

Todd's Final Push will remind you that the work that you do matters and the way that you bring yourself to your work matters!
  Quotes:

“We’re not wired to produce creatively like machines.”

“Which of these good things in my life needs to go away so that something better can be born?”

“What do I need to prune from my life so that I have the energy I need to be able to focus on the more important stuff that I’m tasked with?”

“Cover bands don’t change the world.  You have to find your own unique voice if you want to thrive.”

Links mentioned:

Herding Tigers: Be the Leader That Creative People Need by Todd Henry

The Accidental Creative Podcast

Connect with Todd:

Website / Books / Facebook / Twitter / Podcast

On the next episode:

Paul Adshead : Website / Instagram

Join the discussion in the Facebook group!

273: How excitement translates to quality (w/ Virginie Ropars)

lundi 8 janvier 2018Duration 46:41

Born in Brittany (France) in 1976. Virginie Ropars’s figures are in between sculpture, fashion design and illustration, building up visions full of wonders

Virginie's work is shown throughout Europe in art galleries and art shows and also in United States and Russia.

Her work has been featured in many magazines and publications. Her dimensional interpretation of Brom's main character Jack, in The Plucker novel won the Spectrum 19 Gold Award (in 2012), she also received the Spectrum 20 Gold Award (in 2013) for one of her personal work, Acanthophis III.

Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/virginie

In this episode, Virginie discusses:

-Working in the video game industry and then shifting to make her own personal work.

-How she considers her first doll to be “monstrous.”

-Her process for deciding which sculpture to make.

-How long each of her sculptures takes and the process that goes into making them.

-Where she gets her inspiration.

-The struggle of having to finish a project when you actually want to be working on something else.

-How excitement for a creative pursuit or project typically translates into the quality of the work.

-Her daily routine and the importance of thinking.

-The danger of repeating yourself instead of innovating if you aren’t constantly feeding yourself with other inspirations.

  Quotes:

“It is a lot of experimenting, and I quite like that.”

“It can be very misty how inspiration works.”

“The more excited you are about what you do, the better the work is.”

 

Connect with Virginie:

Website / Facebook / Instagram

On the next episode:

Todd Henry : Website / Accidental Creative Podcast

Join the discussion in the Facebook group!

272: ATTITUDE IS EVERYTHING (w/ Dave Roberts)

lundi 1 janvier 2018Duration 52:04

Dave Roberts is an artist out of Las Vegas, NV who makes fine art using the Etch A Sketch.   He draws landscapes, architecture, portraits and more, preserving all of his work.

Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/daveroberts

In this episode, Dave discusses:

-His artistic history and how he first started using an Etch A Sketch.

-Finding out that other people were using the Etch A Sketch to make art and then learning from them.

-Developing a method for preserving his art.

-Coming up with a goal to be featured in a gallery.

-Entering (and not winning) a Red Robin contest for a gift card.

-Trying to not get lost in your own negative thoughts.

-Creating accountability by telling people about your goals.

-His decision to achieve his goals despite the fact that all of his previous excuses were still a part of his life.

-Building resiliency by getting knocked down and getting back up again.

-The experience of seeing his dream of being in a gallery come to fruition.

Dave's Final Push will remind you that attitude is everything!
  Quotes:

“If things don’t go your way are you going to start tearing yourself down and be your own stumbling block?”

“I hate to say it, but art became this thing that I used to do.”

“Attitude is everything.”

Links mentioned:

Jordan Peterson - The Curse of Creativity

SKYE Gallery

Connect with Dave:

Website / Facebook / Instagram

On the next episode:

Virginie Ropars : Website / Instagram

What's your New Year's Resolution or #Cramuary goal?  Join the discussion in the Facebook group!

271: Capture the memories while you can (w/ Daniel Reyes)

mardi 26 décembre 2017Duration 32:36

Daniel Reyes is an award-winning TV producer with nearly 2-decades of experience. Daniel has worked with NBC, FOX Sports, ESPN, DAYSTAR and SYFY networks in the past. The shows he has created have aired on the local, national and international level. Recently, he was in development on a program for HGTV.

Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/danielreyes

Links mentioned:

Make your own Heirloom Film

Story: Substance, Structure, Style and the Principles of Screenwriting by Robert McKee

The Screenwriter's Bible by David Trottier

Connect with Daniel:

Website / Facebook

On the next episode:

Dave Roberts : Website / Instagram

Join the discussion in the Facebook group!

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