Three Rules of Work:
Out of clutter find simplicity; From discord find harmony; In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity.
–Albert Einstein
This Einstein fellow is a pretty smart guy.
Simplification, harmony and opportunity could be ingredients for any recipe to success in any field, but I think they apply particularly well to the creative arts. I know that I can easily apply these three rules to my own work.
For me, its strength lies in its ability to transmit through simplification and harmony. The forms are often simplified versions of reality, shedding details that don’t factor into what it is trying to express.
There is often an underlying texture in the work that is chaotic and discordant. The harmonies in color and form painted over these create a tension, a feeling of wholeness in the work. A feeling of finding a pattern in the chaos that makes it all seem sensible.
And the final rule–opportunity lying in the midst of difficulty– is perhaps the easiest to apply. The best work always seems to rise from the greatest depths, those times when the mind has to move from its normal trench of thought. Times when one has to expand beyond the known ways of doing things and find new solutions and methods to move the message ahead.
The difficulties of life are often great but there is almost always an opportunity or lesson to be found within them if only we are able to take a deep breath and see them. These lessons always find their way into the work in some way.
Thanks for the thought, Mr. Einstein. I hear good things about the work you’re doing.
I run theses Three Rules from Einstein every couple of years and it felt like the right time since I think we are all looking for simplicity, harmony, and opportunity in our own lives. Plus, I am short on time this morning. I am going to embellish a bit with two other favorite quotes from Mr. Einstein and a newer version of the wizened wisdom of Oh What a Beautiful World from the ageless Willie Nelson and Rodney Crowell, who wrote and first recorded the song in 2014.
Here are those words from Einstein:
The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing our thinking.
———–
“People like you and I, though mortal of course like everyone else, do not grow old no matter how long we live. What I mean is we never cease to stand like curious children before the great Mystery into which we were born.”
–Albert Einstein, Letter to Otto Juliusburger, September 29, 1942
And what a mystery it is…

I’ve known that first quotation from Einstein for years, but the other two were new, and valuable as can be. I had to listen to the Willie and Rodney song to get “Oh, What a Beautiful Morning” out of my mind!
I didn’t have “Oh, What a Beautiful Morning” in my head– though I do now– when I first saw this title. The song that first came to mind was “What a Wonderful World” by Louis Armstrong. But, you know, any one of those three work pretty darn well for me.