Harnessing the polarities of movement and stillness, Le Bon Method is a catalytic tool for the provocation and development for artists, writers, dancers and actors. The method integrates Le Bon Ontological Framework into a series of analyses and applies interdisciplinary lenses to deepen and lengthen, through Thinking, Feeling, Sensing and Intuiting (as per Carl Jung).
Within the creative process, ‘plateaus’ or ‘creative blocks’ are often perceived as inevitable afflictions, however Le Bon Method considers the ‘plateau’ a function of creation itself. According to the method, banal or vacuous works are symptoms of ‘the unconsidered plateau’. Plateaus are a signal for reflection and a prompt to actively deepen and lengthen and Le Bon Method is the tool to do so. If plateaus are overlooked, or reactionary-solutions are applied instead of the required holistic-expedition, results can be subpar or unsustainable. Le Bon Method offers a holistic ontological framework that induces movement beyond the limitations of ‘the plateau’ pertaining to Thinking, Feeling, Sensing or Intuiting (TFSI).
Le Bon Method identifies plateaus and defines a composition based on TFSI (albeit written word, spoken word, movement, visual language or other artistic expression), which is then placed under a series of interdisciplinary lenses. It is through Le Bon Method that ‘the expedition beyond’ and a burgeoning metamorphosis begins.