The WÆRK Questionnaire | Roseann Warren

Photo: Alaric Campbell

Photo: Alaric Campbell

Our advisory board member, Roseann Warren, recently sat for The WÆRK Questionnaire.  We're thrilled to share her illuminating responses - on everything from STEM's current dominance to Wakanda -  with you.

1. Describe what you do, in five words or less.

Purveyor of words and music.

2. What is your favorite artistic genre (and why and how does it influence your daily work)?

Music and books. Both grow from nothing and turn into something. As a music writer, I’m always listening to music, but when editing a book or writing about something non-music related, my choice of music is the instrumental, or I’ll start focusing on the vocals (the lyrics).

3. What's the best (creative or business) advice you've received?

I’ve always been impatient with the process and oftentimes just want things done. To ground myself while in the spin, I recall a conversation I had with my mother during a time of disappointment. She advised, “Take your time, it’s not a race. Everything happens in its time.” I hold that close to the chest. Whatever the time is, is always the right time.

4. What question do you wish we'd ask (please answer as well)?

What’s your plan?

I plan to expand my editorial consultancy to include other mediums (screenwriting particularly). I’ve always had a penchant for documentaries and dramas, and working with various writers will expose me to another style of writing I thoroughly enjoy consuming. I’ve grappled with the idea of being involved in education, initially at the college level, teaching courses in digital marketing. However, the more I think about it, the question of what would have a lasting impact is a stronger motivator. I plan to develop a program to assist children in building critical skills from an early age, by introducing them to literature or expanding upon what they’re already learning in school. Not to sound all Whitney Houston, but “the children are the future; treat them well and let them lead the way.” STEM is not the complete answer. We need to find ways to better incorporate the arts. And lastly, on a personal aspiration of mine. There’s a whole world out there I’ve barely scratched the surface on seeing. I’m focused on travel to faraway places and have submitted my application for Wakandan citizenship.

5. Which forces do you wish would be more influential, in the business world?  

Due to having a liberal education and a career largely in the arts, the creative sector in business has always been of interest to me. What we have seen over the last 20 years is how technology has taken precedence over all, disrupting and even destroying industries, with the effect of dismantling livelihoods. The arts have been hit the hardest. Corporate companies target Business School graduates and ignore humanities and liberal candidates. We’ve witnessed a plethora of tone-deaf campaigns because marketing teams lack diversity. We’ve seen print media forced into unprofitable web entities to survive. We’ve seen the music industry become a non-tangible medium where the very content creators needed for these streaming services to work, are not being compensated fairly or even at all. We’ve seen social media distort perception of once caring about what is out there in the world to turn the camera on oneself, subverting the once ‘us’ into the ‘i’. I would like to see the merging of the arts and technology working together to create solutions that are emphatic, where profits are not rooted in sacrifice but leading a world towards compassion for others. Imagine that world!

The WÆRK Questionnaire | David-Georges Renaud

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Introducing The WÆRK Questionnaire, a regular feature in which innovators in culture and technology reveal what makes them tick.

Our first installment features David-Georges Renaud, a co-founder of Lingoji - an app that "injects culture into the characters" we use daily in digital conversations.

What do you do (please describe your work in five words or less)?

Creative solutions to current problems.

What is your favorite artistic genre (and why and how does it influence your daily work)?

I really enjoy my cinematic adventures, what influences me, specifically, are the frames used by Wes Anderson in his movies. The storytelling abilities of Steven Spielberg. The modern editing techniques of Edgar Wright. Christopher Nolan's plots development. The comedy of Will Ferrell... These are the details I look for when watching movies, details that stimulates my mind into thinking that anything is possible, that anything  in my imagination can be brought to life.

What's the best (creative or business) advice you've received?

Wake up early and always persevere. By following this simple method, displaying passion and being persistent, success is achievable. Gotta tirelessly work everyday to better oneself. 

What question do you wish we'd ask (please answer as well)?

I wish we'd touch on aspirations. As for future plans, I want to display my creativity by working for an award-winning agency, collaborate with other creative minds to really be different and disruptive.

What do you wish could be more influential, in the business world? 

I would like platforms like TEDx to be trending like celebrity news. This would require more interesting lectures which would lead to more discussions, more ideas and some of these ideas might flourish into the next big thing. Intelligence should be cultivated, our imaginations must be reminded that they have no limits.

 

STEAM Links Tuesday: With Food in Mind

"With Food in Mind develops art-based approaches to food education and food injustice. Collectively, our programs explore the potential of visual art and artists to affect change in childhood obesity and nutrition disparities in low-income neighborhoods and communities of color."

Image via withfoodinmind.org

Game Changer/STEAM Thursday: Brain Pickings - Innovative Examinations of Creativity and Intimate Life

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We’re inspired by Maria Popova’s Brain Pickings blog.  It’s a fount of ideas that atypically examines the work of iconic minds and illuminates the work of lesser-known lights.  Brain Pickings joins the arts, sciences and humanities in ways that broaden our perspectives on life and (its most important element) love.

Image via brainpickings.org

STEAM Links Tuesday: The Netherlands' Rijksmuseum Rijksstudio

"We invite you to get inspired by the Rijksmuseum's collection and create your own design using Rijksstudio."

Image via the Rijksmuseum website

STEAM Links Tuesday: New York Hall of Science's "Connected Worlds" Exhibit

"Connected Worlds immerses visitors in a fantastical animated world where your actions — gestures, movements, and decisions — impact how well the world is kept in balance."

Image via the New York Hall of Science website.

STEAM Links Tuesday: Stanford School of Medicine's Compassion Journal

"The first publication of its kind, Compassion Journal offers a comprehensive view of compassion in its many forms — including how compassion is expressed in the arts and literature, the latest in the science of compassion, and the gift of compassion in the daily lives of people all over the world."

STEAM Links Tuesday: Van Aken's Trees of 40 Fruit

"How an artist developed an unbelievable tree that grows 40 varieties of fruit."

Via Upworthy

Image via Sam Van Aken's website

STEAM Links Tuesday: Math + Baking at The Bakery on Bergen

A bakery in Brooklyn's Prospect Heights neighborhood takes a delicious approach to math tutoring.   Math + Baking classes challenge kids to approach both disciplines in enjoyable new ways.