Linds Redding died of cancer of the esophagus.
He was an ad man for large companies like BBDO. Chiat/Day and so forth. When I was in my early 20's I wouldn't have mind having his career. His last words to us "creative types" in regards to our perception of the creative world versus what is truly important, an excerpt from his blog:
"The scam works like this:
1. The creative industry operates largely by holding ‘creative’
people ransom to their own self-image, precarious sense of self-worth,
and fragile – if occasionally out of control ego. We tend to set
ourselves impossibly high standards, and are invariably our own toughest
critics. Satisfying our own lofty demands is usually a lot harder than
appeasing any client, who in my experience tend to have disappointingly
low expectations. Most artists and designers I know would rather work
all night than turn in a sub-standard job. It is a universal truth that
all artists think they a frauds and charlatans, and live in constant
fear of being exposed. We believe by working harder than anyone else we
can evaded detection. The bean-counters rumbled this centuries ago and
have been profitably exploiting this weakness ever since. You don’t have
to drive creative folk like most workers. They drive themselves. Just
wind ’em up and let ’em go.
2. Truly creative people tend not to be motivated by money. That’s
why so few of us have any. The riches we crave are acknowledgment and
appreciation of the ideas that we have and the things that we make. A
simple but sincere “That’s quite good.” from someone who’s opinion we
respect (usually a fellow artisan) is worth infinitely more than any
pay-rise or bonus. Again, our industry masters cleverly exploit this
insecurity and vanity by offering glamorous but worthless trinkets and
elaborately staged award schemes to keep the artists focused and
motivated. Like so many demented magpies we flock around the shiny
things and would peck each others eyes out to have more than anyone
else. Handing out the odd gold statuette is a whole lot cheaper than
dishing out stock certificates or board seats.
3. The compulsion to create is unstoppable. It’s a need that has to
be filled. I’ve barely ‘worked’ in any meaningful way for half a year,
but every day I find myself driven to ‘make’ something. Take
photographs. Draw. Write. Make bad music. It’s just an itch than needs
to be scratched. Apart from the occasional severed ear or descent into
fecal-eating dementia the creative impulse is mostly little more than a
quaint eccentricity. But introduce this mostly benign neurosis into a
commercial context.. well that way, my friends lies misery and madness.
This hybridisation of the arts and business is nothing new of course –
it’s been going on for centuries – but they have always been
uncomfortable bed-fellows. But even artists have to eat, and the fuel of
commerce and industry is innovation and novelty. Hey! Let’s trade.
“Will work for food!” as the street-beggars sign says.
This Faustian pact has been the undoing of many great artists, many
more journeymen and more than a few of my good friends. Add to this
volatile mixture the powerful accelerant of emerging digital technology
and all hell breaks loose. What I have witnessed happening in the last
twenty years is the aesthetic equivalent of the Industrial Revolution in
the 19th century. The wholesale industrialization and mechanistation of
the creative process. Our ad agencies, design groups, film and music
studios have gone from being cottage industries and guilds of craftsmen
and women, essentially unchanged from the middle-ages, to dark sattanic
mills of mass production. Ideas themselves have become just another
disposable commodity to be supplied to order by the lowest bidder. As
soon as they figure out a way of outsourcing thinking to China they
won’t think twice. Believe me.
So where does that leave the artists and artisans? Well, up a
watercolour of shit creek without a painbrush. That one thing that we
prize and value above all else – the idea – turns out to be just
another plastic gizmo or widget to be touted and traded. And to add
insult to injury we now have to create them not in our own tine, but
according to the quota and the production schedule. “We need six
concepts to show the client first thing in the morning, he’s going on
holiday. Don’t waste too much time on them though, it’s only
meeting-fodder. He’s only paying for one so they don’t all have to be
good, just knock something up. You know the drill. Oh, and one more
thing. His favourite color is green. Rightho! See you in the morning
then… I’m off to the Groucho Club.”
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