Mathew Chow, Design Lead at IDEO, will be speaking at CreativeMornings/Vancouver on Mar. 4, 2016.

@MarkBusse hijacking our account to give a shout out to the volunteers who made our events happen every month! Thanks team! (at SFU Woodwardâs)

Where do you find your best creative inspiration?
I flip through at least a few pages of Jane Fulton Siriâs Thoughtless Acts nearly every day and remind myself to see the world through an inspirable lens. The rest is up to serendipity.
Whatâs the one creative advice or tip you wish youâd known as a young person?
Designing your path through life can be its own creative endeavour.
Who would you like to hear speak at CreativeMornings?
David Suzuki
What fact about you would surprise people?
I once wore a suit to work every day.
What was the best advice you were ever given?
âJust nerd out on whatever weird things interest you.â
Whatâs the most recent thing you learned (big or small)?
The âlikeâ button on Facebook is clicked over 6 billion times per day. Thatâs more than the amount of Google searches in a day.
Where is your favourite place to escape?
The Liwa Desert, United Arab Emirates
What books made a difference in your life and why?
Change by Design. It taught me that anything can be designed. Even change.
Meet other members of the community at @BrainStationYVR on Feb 26th - a night of socializing & art discussion!

Mathew Chow is a Design Lead at IDEO San Francisco. Throughout his career, he has designed the conditions to provoke positive, large-scale change in complex human networks.
He currently focuses on seeing organizations through a human-centered lens to help them build the capabilities required to foster creativity and innovation.
But Mathewâs life and career are perhaps best summarized in an email that his dad wrote after his MBA graduation. It was the day before his first day at IDEO.
Weâre so grateful to have our spporting partner LynneUX, a boutique user research and interaction design firm based in Vancouver, BC.

Jordan Tannahill is a playwright, theatre director and filmmaker. The Globe and Mail recently called Jordan ââŠthe poster child of a new generation of (theatre? film? dance?) artists for whom âinterdisciplinaryâ is not a buzzword, but a way of lifeâ. In collaboration with William Ellis, Jordan runs the alternative art space Videofag, out of a defunct barbershop in Torontoâs Kensington Market. His plays have been presented across Canada, and his films have been exhibited at venues such as the Toronto International Film Festival, the Art Gallery of Ontario, and the British Film Institute. Jordan received the 2014 Governor Generals Award for Drama for his book Age of Minority: Three Solo Plays, the 2014 John Hirsch Prize for directing, and Dora Awards for his plays rihannaboi95 in 2013 and Concord Floral in 2015. He has upcoming productions at the National Arts Centre of Canada and Canadian Stage. Earlier this year, his production of Sheila Hetiâs All Our Happy Days Are Stupid, which he directed with frequent collaborator Erin Brubacher, enjoyed sold out runs at Harbourfront Centreâs World Stage and The Kitchen in New York City. His book Theatre of the Unimpressed: In Search of Vital Drama was published by Coach House Press in April 2015 and was called ââŠ"essential reading for anybody interested in the state of contemporary theatre and performance" by The Globe and Mail. Jordan is PuSh Festivalâs curator-in-residence for Club PuSh (2016 & 2017).
Where do you find your best creative inspiration? From my friends; from the artwork they make, the stories they tell me, and the lives they lead.
Whatâs the one creative advice or tip you wish youâd known as a young person? You can always push it further.
Who would you like to hear speak at CreativeMornings? I would love to hear Canadian poet Anne Carson speak. I am a huge fan boy of hers, and Iâve heard sheâs incredible live. Her verse novel Autobiography of Red is my favourite book.
Whatâs your one guilty creative indulgence? I watch a lot of YouTube. Most of the time itâs a wormhole of distraction but often I find it spurs exciting and unexpected associations when Iâm writing.
What are you reading these days? Iâm currently reading Svetlana Alexievichâs Voices from Chernobyl; a harrowing oral history of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. Itâs actually very applicable to my talk âThe Ethics of Real Storiesâ. Alexievitch interviewed hundreds of individuals affected by the disaster, and crafted dozens of verbatim monologues from the transcripts.
How does your life and career compare to what you envisioned for your future when you were a sixth grader? Iâm doing pretty much exactly what I dreamed I would be doing when I was in grade six: some kind of combination of being a writer, theatre maker and filmmaker. It was never particularly clear to me then which one I would prioritize, and then at some point I realized I could just do all three. I feel quite fortunate to have known from a young age that a job in the arts is what I wanted, and to have had a family that supported that. I suppose the biggest difference is that I didnât really know I was gay in grade 6, nor that I would have such a smoking hot boyfriend.
How would you describe what you do in a single sentence to a stranger? I tell stories onstage, in books, and onscreen.
What keeps you awake at night? Impetuous emails Iâve sent.
Where was the last place you travelled? Iâm currently writing these answers in the Ottawa airport, on my way to Istanbul with my boyfriend. Istanbul has always been a city that has fascinated me. It sits at the intersection of so many cultures, histories, and ideologies. I will be meeting a theatre director there who is translating my play Concord Floral into Turkish, and will be mounting a production of it there in 2017. Iâm very curious to see how this play â which is so much about the North American suburban experience of adolescence â translates to contemporary Istanbul.
What music are you listening to these days? The three albums on most constant rotation at the moment are Joanna Newsomâs Divers, Jenny Hvalâs Apocalypse Girl, and Julia Holterâs Have You in My Wilderness.

Our theme for February: ethics. What ethical dilemma do you normally struggle with?
