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    creative mornings

    Explore "creative mornings" with insightful episodes like "Rob Lee: The Truth In This Art Story on Creative Mornings", "Tina Roth Eisenberg on the Deep Value of Heart-Centered Leadership", "S2E4: The Dog Guide & The Dog Guide San Antonio - Amy Lynn Johnson, Founder & CEO", "Creative Mornings Vienna" and "Mark Busse, On the Underlying Confidence That We Can Design for Community" from podcasts like ""The Truth In This Art", "Time Sensitive", "Birds Up Podcast", "Mondi Print and Paper" and "Viewpoint Vancouver"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    Rob Lee: The Truth In This Art Story on Creative Mornings

    Rob Lee: The Truth In This Art Story on Creative Mornings

    Step into the inspiring world of Maryland Art Place as Rob Lee, the naturally curious and talented storyteller, takes the stage for his Creative Mornings talk on the theme of 'Truth.' In this captivating presentation, Rob explores the concept of truth through three famous quotes, sharing his unique perspective as the host of "The Truth In This Art" podcast.


    With over 400 interviews featuring a diverse guest list of artists, entrepreneurs, and tastemakers, Rob has become a prominent voice in Baltimore and beyond. Motivated by a desire to challenge negative narratives and false perceptions about his beloved hometown, Rob created "The Truth In This Art" podcast in 2019. In recognition of his impactful work, the podcast was awarded the title of Best Podcast in Baltimore by Baltimore Magazine's esteemed editors in 2022.


    Beyond his podcast, Rob's commitment to the arts and community shines through his active involvement on the boards of the Baltimore Improv Group and Creative Nomads. These organizations provide platforms for live comedy shows, adult and youth workshops, podcasting, and foster the professional and craft development of arts entrepreneurs. Rob's dedication to providing access to arts, music, and cultural programming to all youth and families is a testament to his belief in the transformative power of creativity.

    Join Rob Lee as he takes you on a thought-provoking journey through his Creative Mornings talk at Maryland Art Place. Experience the wisdom and insights he uncovers through three powerful quotes, and gain a deeper understanding of truth in the context of art, storytelling, and community.


    Photo by Schaun Champion


    🎨🎙️ Immerse yourself in the exploration of truth with Rob Lee, the creative force behind "The Truth In This Art" podcast, as he delivers a captivating Creative Mornings talk at Maryland Art Place! 🌟🗣️


    The Truth In This Art is not just about exploring art, culture, and community—it's a platform that actively engages with them. Whether you're discovering the vibrant arts scene in and around your community or tasting the local flavors at Foraged, you're immersed in the heartbeat of Baltimore. Located in the Station North Arts & Entertainment District, foraged. a hyper-seasonal eatery where Chef Chris Amendola serves farm-fresh seasonal plates alongside beer & wine, all in an atmosphere as warm and inviting as our podcast conversations. The space, adorned with greenery, mirrors the eatery's commitment to local and seasonal ingredients, a philosophy that's deeply rooted in the natural world—just like the authentic stories we explore on the podcast. It's a full-circle community experience, even featuring a signature cocktail named after Rob Lee. With Chef Amendola being a frequent guest on our show, the partnership illuminates the rich intersections of arts, culture, and community that we both celebrate. Discover more at foragedeatery.com.

    ★ Support this podcast ★

    Tina Roth Eisenberg on the Deep Value of Heart-Centered Leadership

    Tina Roth Eisenberg on the Deep Value of Heart-Centered Leadership

    The Swiss-born, Brooklyn-based designer Tina Roth Eisenberg has, over the past 15 years or so, built a cult following of creatives around the world who, like her, constantly seek to connect, reflect, and grow together—and who view her as an inspirational curator and guide. In 2008, Eisenberg founded Creative Mornings, an egalitarian platform that hosts free talks and events, with chapters currently in 225 cities and 67 countries. A serial entrepreneur and the creator of the widely followed Swissmiss design blog, Eisenberg also founded that same year Studiomates in Brooklyn’s Dumbo neighborhood; a predecessor to WeWork, it was the borough’s first co-working space. (Eisenberg now operates the co-working space Friends Work Here in Brooklyn’s Cobble Hill neighborhood.) Also over the past decade-plus, she has founded and launched the aptly named to-do list app Teux Deux and the temporary tattoo company Tattly, the latter of which she sold to Bic Group earlier this year.

    On this episode, Eisenberg talks with Spencer about why she views the idea of time as a farce, her spiritual belief that everything is vibration and energy, and her mantra of leading with a sense of gentleness and what she calls “an extra layer of love.”

    Special thanks to our Season 6 sponsor, L’ÉCOLE, School of Jewelry Arts.

    Creative Mornings Vienna

    Creative Mornings Vienna
    Hinweis: Wir haben das Interview vor der Coronakrise aufgezeichnet. Die Treffen finden derzeit online statt! In Hunderten Städten weltweit finden einmal im Monat Treffen für Kreative statt: Creative Mornings. Das Wiener Chapter gestaltet nun ein Magazin über seine ersten fünf Jahre. Sandra Ulrich und Andrea Zehetner von Creative Mornings Vienna über ihr Netzwerk, Kreativität und die Rolle von Haptik in einer digitalen Welt.

    Mark Busse, On the Underlying Confidence That We Can Design for Community

    Mark Busse, On the Underlying Confidence That We Can Design for Community

    Can we create community out of diversity? If so, will it require changing the scale and character of urban forms within our communities…the very change some Lower Mainlanders have recently become notorious for rejecting?

    It’s one of many thorny questions tossed around, grappled over, and occasionally outshouted by our venerable host and his subject Mark Busse, Director of TILT Curiosity Labs at HCMA Architecture + Design, and host of the Creative Mornings Vancouver breakfast lecture series. There’s a give-and-go to this conversation that Price Talks has not yet witnessed, or had to edit around…

    It begins with a game of Podcast Ping Pong (you don’t know it because Gord just invented it), and ends with a discussion of the possibility that, not only have we not seen the end of Gen X, we may yet have the opportunity to witness their best and brightest contributions to society.

    In the middle is a wide-ranging debate about the role of designers — not planners mind you, but a broader creative class — in contributing to the directions our cities and communities take. Often bespoke approaches to prescribing how relationships are facilitated and move in space, and what we could call the ‘special sauce of serendipity’ that has come to mark social interactions in the new communities of the future, today. In places like downtown Vancouver, and Surrey, for example.

    And by the way, what is community? Says Busse: “There’s data that says people living in close proximity, sharing and touching skin on skin produces happier, and healthier human beings.” And if that means breaking the bargain we’ve made with previous generations who have come to counted on having homes that the kindergarten class have depicted for generations — detached house, pitched roof, chimney, backyard, and generous garden — then so be it. “Sorry, grandpa.”

    And when Gord asks if Gen X has blown it, Busse suggests that, perhaps with the support of a little Millennial tailwind, the best of this generation may be just over the horizon.

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