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> Get Articles > Creativity and Ideas > A Dead End? Trust the Creative Process

A Dead End? Trust the Creative Process


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Rolf Gompertz
rolfgompertzyahoo.com

iUniverse.com
http://www.iUniverse.com


Book cover and author photo/s available by e-mail as

jpg.file on request, from the author (Rolf Gompertz :

rolfgompertzyahoo.com



word count: head/by-line/article/copyright : 1018 words;

"about the author" : 111 words



Guidelines: You have permission to publish this article

electronically or in print, free of charge, as long as the

bylines are included. A courtesy copy of your publication,

or date of web site posting and address, would be

appreciated.





A DEAD END? TRUST THE CREATIVE PROCESS

By Rolf Gompertz



A creative dead end can produce wonders.



That was proved to me once again in a most dramatic way. It

involved the cover design of my new book, a provocative

biblical novel, titled, "Abraham, The Dreamer / An Erotic

and Sacred Love Story."



I had submitted my thoughts for the cover design to the

publisher (iUniverse.com). I explained that the story is

about a love triangle, involving Abraham, his wife Sarah,

and her handmaid, Hagar, "the other woman." I suggested that

the cover capture that relationship.



Of course, there's much more to the story, and I filled in

the details at some length. After all, this is not a

contemporary novel in a contemporary setting. We are talking

about life 4000 years ago, with its many gods and goddesses,

its child sacrifices and erotic Sacred Marriage Rites.

Abraham's wife, Sarah, could very well have been, what I

portray her to be, a high priestess serving Inanna, the

great goddess of Love and War. We have Abraham, who turned

against his society to follow a new and different God. What

made him do that, I wondered, as I tried to recreate his

life and tell his story. Furthermore, what made him transfer

his love from Sarah to Hagar?



I tried to give the designer a sense of the individuals and

of the story that lay hidden in the laconic biblical

account.



When the cover design came back to me I knew I was in

trouble. The artwork suggested a knightly romance set in

England during the Middle Ages. But the story is about

Sumer, Canaan and Egypt, and nomadic, biblical characters

who lived some three thousand years before the Middle Ages.

How could the designers have been so far off the mark? I

learned, what I had not known before, that the design

department was not set up to provide original artwork. The

designers could only work with existing stock art and clip

art. Though plentiful, this art could not produce the "look"

that I was looking for.



I was now faced with two problems. First, a deadline. I had

about two weeks to come up with an idea that could be made

to work. Otherwise, the book would be canceled and I would

have to start with it all over again as a "new" project.



Second, I didn't know if I could come up with a

satisfactory, workable cover idea. I considered hiring an

outside graphic artist. A quick check indicated that there

would not be enough time for this and that it would be

costly, if not prohibitive.



So I did what was only proper under such circumstances: I

freaked out! Or, to be perfectly honest, I freaked out —

some more! I was desperate. I knew I had to stop thinking

about the original cover concept. I had to stop my circular

thinking, or, to put it another way, I had to start thinking

outside the box. In short, I had to think creatively.



The creative process itself is elusive. It works in a most

mysterious way. It usually consists of stating the problem,

defining it and turning it over to your mind to think about

and solve. I have often found that the answer, the solution

comes to me when the mind is relaxed and at rest.

Invariably, I wake up at two or three in the morning. At

first I'm annoyed. I wonder why I woke up. Then I lie

quietly. Presently, I become conscious of some answer or

solution to a "problem" floating into view.



The first thought that came this way was "lapis lazuli." I

had used lapis lazuli jewelry in the book on several

significant occasions. The gold-speckled, deep-blue gemstone

was highly prized in those times. In the book, it is

presented as a gift to Sarah, the high priestess, during the

Sacred Marriage Rite. Elsewhere, I have Abraham giving Hagar

a lapis lazuli necklace and matching earrings upon

consummating their love. A lapis lazuli-colored scarf also

figures meaningfully in the story.



"Yes," I thought to myself. "That's it! That's my cover. A

lapis lazuli necklace and earrings and a lapis lazuli scarf.

A perfect metaphor for the full story."



I was elated, exhilarated. I loved the simplicity of the

idea, the richness of the deep-blue color, the poetic

symbolism.



But there was only one problem: I could not locate images of

the scarf and jewelry. I even had trouble locating an image

of a lapis lazuli gemstone. Though I still had a couple of

days left to find the right image, I now feared that my book

would be canceled since I had nothing for the cover.



I paced nervously through the house that evening, going back

and forth between bedroom and study. I paused before my

nature pictures which cover the walls, photographs that I

had taken of sunrises and sunsets, lakes and oceans, trees,

flowers and clouds. I don't know why I turned to these

images -- perhaps to relax me, to comfort me, to inspire me,

which they have always done. Suddenly, my eyes fixed on a

blazing red sunrise, with a white cloud spiraling into the

sky, hovering over a dark lake.



Whenever I looked at that spectacular image, in the past, it

always left me awed and breathless. This time, however, the

sunrise addressed me in a new way — its blazing colors spoke

to me of erotic passions, its cloud spiraling upwards spoke

to me of the sacred and the heavenly, of dreams and

dreamers, the fiery pillar emerging out of the darkness

spoke to me of the immanent and transcendent God, the great

Mystery, the awesome Mystery, the holy Mystery, the loving

Mystery in which we move and live and have our being.



Yes, this was the cover! This was my cover! It had emerged

from the wondrous mystery of the creative process. It

reminded me, once more, to stay loose, remain flexible and

trust that process, that Mystery, in all its creative

variations.



Copyright 2002 Rolf Gompertz. All rights reserved.



About the Author

Rolf Gompertz is the author of eight books, including,

"Abraham, The Dreamer/An Erotic and Sacred Love Story," a

biblical paperback novel about the turbulent relationship

between Abraham, his wife, Sarah, and "the other woman,"

Hagar. It may be browsed and ordered online (

http://www.iuniverse.com or http://www.amazon.com ) or

ordered from any bookstore.










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