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Cancelled: Creativity Enhancement Workshop with Kimble A. Bromley

  • Minnesota Marine Art Museum 800 Riverview Drive Winona, Minnesota 55987 United States (map)

This workshop has been cancelled.

Saturday, October 28 | 1:30Pm - 3:30Pm | $30

This workshop has been cancelled due to low enrollment.


In this exciting workshop participants will:

  • ​Learn to apply hypnosis to enhance creativity

  • Learn strategies to overcome creativity blocks

  • Learn self-hypnosis

  • See immediate results

Bromley's Creativity Enhancement Workshop offers participants a unique educational experience, strategies to find those creative abilities we all possess and having a lot of fun doing it.

"How can I best assist my students in reaching their maximum creative potential?" As an art educator, this is the question Kimble A. Bromley constantly asks himself. Hypnosis offers a unique path toward developing creativity. Hypnosis, approved by the AMA in 1958, is simply a very natural state of mind, combining deep relaxation and guided imagery.

Dr. James Council of the Psychology Department and Kimble A. Bromley, have researched the significance of hypnosis on creativity. Their research, which has found hypnosis significance in the creative process. “Hypnotic Enhancement of Creative Drawing” has been published in the INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS, October, 2007 issue.

​"Our original creativity eventually yields to routine and habit. Fortunately, we can remove our habitual ways of perceiving and thinking by changing our perspective and learning how to look at our problems in many different ways."
 -Michael Michaloko, Cracking Creativity

This exhibition and event is part of the the Big Catch.

Kimble A. Bromley

Artist Kimble A. Bromley’s (American, b. 1956) paintings are inspired by the true 19th-century account of a large sperm whale that attacked and sank the whaling ship Essex in 1820, and Herman Melville's Moby-Dick (1851), inspired by this remarkable event. Bromley’s revealing, abstract paintings explore many of the common themes present in Melville’s classic novel as the artist relates these themes to experiences in their own life; themes such as alienation, unpredictability, and the nature of existence. Through his paintings, Bromley emotionally connects the audience to these common themes and reminds us how Melville’s work is relevant for a modern audience. Bromley is a Professor Art at North Dakota State University in Fargo, teaching painting, drawing, and art history.


Support for The Big Catch Comes From

Lead sponsor

Media Partner

 

This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a Minnesota State Arts Board Operating Support grant, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts & cultural heritage fund.

 

Big Catch Programming