TED Talks Daily - How to invite creativity into your life | Rose B. Simpson, Debbie Millman

Episode Date: May 2, 2026

What do you hear when you sit in silence? For artist Rose B. Simpson, that question is the beginning of all art. She comes from a line of ceramic artists stretching back generations and, as part of he...r multidisciplinary work, she also builds custom lowrider cars. (If that sounds like a contradiction, that's kind of the point.) In conversation with "Design Matters" podcast host Debbie Millman, Simpson invites you to find your own aesthetic — not by searching, but by listening.Learn more about our flagship conference happening this April at attend.ted.com/podcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:03 You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hugh. What happens when you grow up in a home where art isn't something you go see, but something you create to survive? Rosby Simpson would know. She comes from a line of clay artists stretching back generations. She also builds custom lowrider cars. And if that sounds like a contradiction, it's kind of the point. I look at a car and I don't see the car.
Starting point is 00:00:32 I see what it could be. I look at a garden and I don't see the garden, I see what it could be, and then I begin. Rose grew up in Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico. Raised by her mother, the sculptor Roxanne Swenzel, in a home where the electricity was sometimes deliberately turned off and art was indistinguishable from life. In this conversation with Design Matters podcast host Debbie Millman, she explores what it means to treat everything,
Starting point is 00:00:58 a ceramic figure, a car, a room, your own body, as a vessel. They talk about what it means to listen to the world around you, and Rose reminds us that we are never as powerless as we think. There wasn't a difference between art and life. Everything was a creative process, and everything was applied, and everything had intention and meaning. The conversation's coming up right after a short break. And now our conversation of the day.
Starting point is 00:01:36 Rose, let's talk a little bit about your origin story. You grew up in Santa Clara Pueblo, surrounded by generations of artists and thinkers. Your mother, Roxanne Swenzel, and your grandmother, both forged paths that united making and meaning. When did you first sense that art could also be a kind of language for survival? Hmm. Going real deep, real fast. Yeah, that's really good. I love that.
Starting point is 00:02:10 So I would like to say, first, that there wasn't a difference between art and life, that everything was a creative process and everything was applied, and everything had intention and meaning. So what we did and how we moved through the world had an invested interest in creating a reality that was aesthetic. So I think that my mother is an incredible sculptor, and she took the ability that she had been given to work in ceramics that came from generations and generations before us, and she used it to communicate in a way that she was needing to.
Starting point is 00:03:00 And it became our livelihood. She supported our family with her sculpture. but it was like the art world was something very strange because she was also making the pottery that we ate out of. She used her ability to craft earth, to build our home, to grow our food. And so that utility and relationship with it was innate in all walks of our life. You've described your childhood home as experimental. And I understand that your mother once turned off the electricity to see how the family could adapt.
Starting point is 00:03:42 Had that go? It was really frustrating when I had to catch the bus at 6.30 in the morning. But I am so grateful. My mom is always still to this day searching for ways to root and to figure out how to apply the innate values of relationship to earth and being in all walks of life. And so part of that was growing all around food and figuring out how we could live completely sustainably. And we have the privilege of living in our ancestral home, having seed and relationship to spirituality
Starting point is 00:04:27 that can foster the farming. So those seeds have been adapted to that environment for a very long time. We have tradition that's passed down for a really long time to be able to support ourselves in the high desert of northern New Mexico. And turning off the electricity was one step towards remembering what it's like to not be dependent on a system. And now, because of the fact that she turned off the electricity, she homeschooled us for a long time. We grew out on food. I can actually hear electricity. Really?
Starting point is 00:05:03 Yeah, I'm really sensitive to, like, yeah, it's all, we adapt to all the things that we add to our lives, and when we take it away, then we start realizing how much we're affected by it, yeah. What did those early experiences teach you about self-reliance or the connection between self-reliance and imagination? I feel like understanding true sustainability means that we always have a choice. because my mom didn't put us into the school system, she intentionally homeschooled me and my brother from early on, and we chose to go to school later, and now we keep going to school.
Starting point is 00:05:46 And I think that was a way of her building a capacity in us to choose. There's always a choice. We're not victims to the world that we live in. We can always, if we're taught how to be sustainable and how to innovate and figure out how to survive in any situation, then we are in our agency when we navigate the world around us, right? That requires self-reliance that is not always something that we're learned to cultivate as children.
Starting point is 00:06:19 Right. How do you sustain that? How do I sustain that? I love to remember that I don't need the things I think I need, right? Like we're told and told and told that we need X, Y, and Z. And every single day I realize it's a choice I'm making. And then I'm in my power in relationship to it. As long as I don't need it, it doesn't rule me, it doesn't own me.
Starting point is 00:06:44 And so if I maintain my relationship with the natural world, my food sources, et cetera, then I am actively engaging in the relationships that I'm making and that includes the art world, that includes car culture, that includes education, that includes all the decisions, the reason, you know, being here today. What intrigues you most about car culture? Like, are you a Fast and Furious fan, or is it more spiritual? At one point, I did like Fast and Furious a lot.
Starting point is 00:07:20 I watched all the movies. Got in 60 seconds is my jam. So you've got rain. I grew up in Española, New Mexico, which is a town that's adjacent. It's actually sandwiched between two reservations, two tribal nations, Santa Clara Pueblo, and O'Keeowinge. So the town is, the youth culture is very mixed between indigenous communities and then the local Hispanic communities. And so we grew up together, so, like, my youth culture was very much, like, low-writers and like what would be like the Cholo Culture Hispanic community there.
Starting point is 00:08:00 And as a little kid, my mom had a 52 wheelie's truck that she built our house with, and there was no room for the kids in the front seat. So we used to sit in the bed of the truck as she drove to town. And I'd be watching all the cars pile up behind us because we went max like 40 miles an hour, right? And I'd be like looking at all the nice cars. And in my head, I was like, when I grew up, I'm going to have a nice car. That was just like, you know, the goal, right? Did that happen?
Starting point is 00:08:25 Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Tell us about what's in your garage. I have two custom cars that I built for myself in order to have an aesthetic experience. What does that mean? Relational aesthetics to me, when I was in graduate school the first time, I wrote my thesis and I studied what indigenous aesthetic means, right? And the closest I found was actually Japanese aesthetics
Starting point is 00:08:58 that I was written about, and aesthetics of the everyday and the intentionality of all that we do and applied aesthetics to our lived environment. And growing up in Española, where the cruise line on Sunday is everybody, you know, get in their nice car and you put on some good tunes and you lean back, and you are present. You're enjoying your community, you're having a sense of self-worth,
Starting point is 00:09:18 you're enjoying the sunset, you have a good drink from Sonic, right? that feeling is actually presence. And that feeling is when aesthetic gets reapplied to our life. And when we make those aesthetic's decisions, that we are in a state of agency, right? We're a state of empowerment in ourselves, right? And so I was building myself to have that moment, to create that aesthetic experience for myself
Starting point is 00:09:48 that I felt was reminiscent of what I knew of applied indigenous aesthetic. where it's not in a white cube, on a white box, in some other building somewhere where you don't necessarily have access to. It's for everyone. Everyone has access to that experience. But your work does move between disciplines, ceramics, metal, automotive restoration, performance, and now includes all of them. Now, did you always imagine those boundaries dissolving,
Starting point is 00:10:17 or did that happen more organically over the work that you've done in your practice? I always wonder if I stop being an artist in the way that the world is arting, I would still be doing stuff. I would still be going from one place to the next and making things constantly. And I feel like I'm always interested in how I'm a dreamer. I constantly am imagining the next best thing.
Starting point is 00:10:45 I'm imagining I'm laying there, like, that window should be over there, and how can I do that? And, like, I look at a car and I don't see the car. I see what it could be, right? Like, I look at a garden, and I don't see the garden, I see what it could be, and then I begin. And I feel like I will always be doing that, no matter what I'm always going to be searching,
Starting point is 00:11:04 and whether that's in the world around me, and how to better that, and how to listen to it, ask how I can be of service of it, and then do work, and the satisfaction of stepping back and seeing how something transformed. That is that applied aesthetic to the world, world around me in all things and I feel like that is also internal so it's also that
Starting point is 00:11:27 internal investigation of our psychological and spiritual spaces you've called cars vessels yeah and many of your figures many of the sculptures you make you've called vessels for transformation What do these vessels hold? Consciousness. Tell us about that. I am a vessel, and I am aware, and I am moving, and I am making decisions intentionally in this world. And I make ceramic vessels that are hollow inside,
Starting point is 00:12:09 and they are watching, and they are doing work, and they are independent, and they make their own decisions, and they move through the world with a job to do. And so do cars. And so do the houses we live in the spaces we inhabit. They're all watching, they're all listening, and they're all making decisions if we are aware.
Starting point is 00:12:29 Tell me how you become aware. I like to ask. And I think the first thing that we can do is begin to ask and then wait for an answer. And I think we have so consistent, built the muscle inside of ourselves, of prioritizing a human interaction, that we've stopped understanding and believing
Starting point is 00:12:58 that we can be in a communication with that, which is beyond human, right? And so I make anthropomorphized vessels in ceramics so that it's a bridge because humans really like to talk to other humans and have interactions with those. And if we can see an anthropomorphize face face and start feeling and listening that we can begin building that muscle of communication with that which we have deemed inanimate.
Starting point is 00:13:24 One of the things that I've noticed about your work, particularly see the installation that was in two spaces in New York City, was that the sculptures that you make, these vessels, the eyes are always open. Sometimes the mouths are open as well, but most of them are closed. I'm assuming that these are very deliberate. deliberate conscious decisions. Can you talk about that? Because though they're anthropomorphized, they feel very real. They don't feel there's a step between real humanity, anthropomorphized humanity. So can you talk a little bit about that? Yeah. When I make my figurative work,
Starting point is 00:14:05 I don't always include things that I don't think are necessarily important, like arms or hair, but they do have the senses. So they have ears, nose, mouth, eyes. Because I want them to have what they need to soak in the world around them and to create a relationship with that. And that we see that in that, we will also build a relationship understanding
Starting point is 00:14:32 that they are sensing us, right? And so that is why I choose to do that. And, you know, when I cut the eyes into the clay the first time, I always say hello. Welcome. There's been a lot of writing in the last couple of years about how artists of any discipline are vessels for creative communication. Rick Rubin talked about that in his book The Creative Act. Elizabeth Gilbert talked about that in her TED talk about how.
Starting point is 00:15:07 we have to be open to the idea of creativity coming through us, that we are the muse for creativity and allow that creativity to be born through our work. Do you feel that way as well? Totally. How do you feel like that happens? I'm so, I'm waiting. You know, I'm like, come on, come on.
Starting point is 00:15:29 Come through. How do you, how does that feel? For instance, when I'm doing a public art piece, I have to go to the place. I have to sit there. And I ask, and I wait for an answer. I say, what needs to be here, what needs to be told, what story needs to be, you know, manifested here to make change.
Starting point is 00:15:50 And how can I be of service? And then I wait and I listen, and it comes. Always? Real fast. Yeah? It's like truth. There's only truth. And when you're in alignment with it, it's like you just tuned into it and boom, you found it.
Starting point is 00:16:03 And then you're like, okay, time to get started. And so when I enter into the studio and I, you know, I get into that place, it's like, okay, what needs to be done, what needs to be said, how can I be of service? When I first met my 1985 Chevy El Camino, is that Maria? Maria. Yeah. She, you know, when I first painted her, the first day I painted her, she was a satin black with a glass clear made to look like our traditional pottery. I brought her home and I was sitting on the porch with a folding chair and I was looking at her and I was like, I didn't do this.
Starting point is 00:16:40 This wasn't me. She used me to make her into what she was always meant to be, and I just listened. And it's incredible to see and give the power back and say, thank you for choosing me to be a part of this process of your becoming. How involved do you feel you are, in determining the aesthetic.
Starting point is 00:17:07 If there's something that you're making, are you in the process while making also evaluating the making? I love the subject of aesthetic. I like teaching aesthetics as students, et cetera, because have you ever heard the term, don't yuck my yam? So to me, aesthetic is when we let go of our thoughts and find our yum.
Starting point is 00:17:34 And sometimes what we thought was our yum isn't, if we sit with it long enough, right? So it's like, how do you refine and refine and refine your yum until it's just mm, right? What is that? And how do we live in that long enough to where it's like, no, it's actually just to the left. And if you close your eyes, you feel it, click.
Starting point is 00:17:59 And that's where it is, right? That is the finding of it. It's tuning. Yeah. It's tuning to it. I think also having that self-reliance, going all the way back to your origin story, to know that you can trust your sense and your judgment.
Starting point is 00:18:17 Yeah, and it's a muscle. Yeah. I think it's a muscle, and we have to build it. You've talked about animacy, the soul of things, and you blur the line between, making and being, and a lot of that, as you said, is about listening. What kind of silence do you hope your work leaves behind? The silence I hope my work leaves behind is the one that is full of information.
Starting point is 00:18:52 Because there's so much to learn when we shut up. There's so much. And my pieces, unless they're 410 horsepower 350 going really fast, are very quiet. And in that silence, there's connection. Thank you, Rose Simpson. Thank you for having me. That was Roseby Simpson in conversation with Debbie Millman at TED Next 2025. If you're curious about Ted's curation, find out more at ted.com slash curation guidelines.
Starting point is 00:19:32 And that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team and produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonica, Song Marnivong. This episode was mixed by Christopher Faisi Bogan. Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Balerozzo.
Starting point is 00:19:54 I'm Elise Hu, I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed. Thanks for listening.

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