Monday, January 17, 2022

Beauty Is An Expression Of Ourselves

 Brightscapes: The Way To Beauty


Beauty Is An Expression Of Ourselves
Creativity is the act of making beauty.   It’s a personality trait of combining ideas to create something new through a process.  It’s using that productivity to make a change.  It is a discipline that can take many forms.  Sometimes described as meditation, flow, openness, brainstorming, etc.  It’s the ability to see that the current unsatisfactory situation is not permanent and the skill to develop and implement a possible solution.

Art is an understanding of nature.  Knowing that life is a progression of birth, growth, peak, decline, and death.  That there’s a cycle to the seasons and a balance to all things.  Beauty teaches us that harmony is truth.

What do you find unacceptable?  How do you know complete reality?  And what actions can we take to make the world a better place?


Mike Kraus was born on the industrial shoreline of Muskegon, Michigan. After earning his Fine Arts Degree from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, he attended Grand Valley State University for his graduate degree. From there, he gained varied experiences from the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Art Institute of Chicago, Hauenstein Center For Presidential Studies, Lollypop Farm Humane Society, and the Children's Memorial Foundation. And every place he worked, he had his sketchbook with him and found ways to be actively creative. In 2014, Kraus became a full-time artist by establishing Mike Kraus Art. Since then, he has sold thousands of paintings that are displayed in nearly every state and dozens of countries. Currently, Kraus lives in Rochester, New York with his beautiful wife and goofy dog.

For more information or custom order, please visit:

Friday, January 14, 2022

Creativity

 Brightscapes: The Way To Beauty


Creativity
Transitioning from fruit foraging to meat hunters, humans were forced to be more social and cooperative.  And eating that flesh combined with physiological evolution lead to extremely quick growth of the human frontal lobe of the brain.  This allowed humans to develop imagination.  A “superpower” that allows the understanding of time, distance, and potential outcomes from actions.  Gathering around a campfire to cook meat developed our social skills.  It was a place for storytelling, gossip, and bonding myths.  A place to learn your role in society and the status of others.

Creativity is using the imagination to produce a work.   An innovation of style, empathy, and metaphor.  Art provides a way of remembering, hope, grieving, understanding, growth, and appreciation.   It’s a contrasting drive for broad diversity and unique niches for survival.  A tool that enables us to be better people.

What do you do to be creative?  Do you enjoy playing a musical instrument?  Maybe you're more reflective and search yourself for poetry and song?  Expression can come from your body in the form of dance, yoga, and athleticism.  What inspires you?


Mike Kraus was born on the industrial shoreline of Muskegon, Michigan. After earning his Fine Arts Degree from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, he attended Grand Valley State University for his graduate degree. From there, he gained varied experiences from the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Art Institute of Chicago, Hauenstein Center For Presidential Studies, Lollypop Farm Humane Society, and the Children's Memorial Foundation. And every place he worked, he had his sketchbook with him and found ways to be actively creative. In 2014, Kraus became a full-time artist by establishing Mike Kraus Art. Since then, he has sold thousands of paintings that are displayed in nearly every state and dozens of countries. Currently, Kraus lives in Rochester, New York with his beautiful wife and goofy dog.

For more information or custom order, please visit:

Wednesday, January 12, 2022

Beauty Is a Survival Tool

Brightscapes: The Way To Beauty


Beauty Is a Survival Tool
It engages our brain with curiosity, wonder, emotions, play, experiments, relationships, and makes learning fun. Psychologically, it is a socially accepted way to express our unsatisfied desires. Biologically, beauty stimulates our immune systems, increasing Glucocortoid Receptors in the Hippocampus to protect from depression. It helps us appreciate life and find happiness. Also, seeing a lush green meadow with a myriad of flowers and puffy white clouds as beautiful isn’t just a random, pointless, subjective judgment. Our ancestors passed on those preferences to us genetically because it indicates this is a region of plentiful food and easy living. All of this adds to our longevity.

No wonder patients staying in well-designed hospitals have shorter recovery times, use less painkillers, and are more satisfied with their care. Patients with attractive landscape paintings in their rooms had lower blood pressure, slower heartbeats, and used less anesthetics than patients with no art or abstract pieces. Art has the ability to promote rest, silence, and space for “just being yourself.” Adding beauty to life can help prevent and cure our sicknesses. True beauty heals, unites, empowers, provides happiness, and educates messages to those who are sensitive enough to receive them. Perhaps because rivers in their courses offer romantic parallels to human life, people are inclined to attribute to them influences that strongly affect their lives.

How do you find happiness and comfort?  Is it making cocktails after a long day?  Reading a new book by your favorite author?  Maybe it's rearranging a room when a new piece is delivered.  How does beauty make you feel better?


Mike Kraus was born on the industrial shoreline of Muskegon, Michigan. After earning his Fine Arts Degree from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, he attended Grand Valley State University for his graduate degree. From there, he gained varied experiences from the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Art Institute of Chicago, Hauenstein Center For Presidential Studies, Lollypop Farm Humane Society, and the Children's Memorial Foundation. And every place he worked, he had his sketchbook with him and found ways to be actively creative. In 2014, Kraus became a full-time artist by establishing Mike Kraus Art. Since then, he has sold thousands of paintings that are displayed in nearly every state and dozens of countries. Currently, Kraus lives in Rochester, New York with his beautiful wife and goofy dog.

For more information or custom order, please visit:

Monday, January 10, 2022

Humanity, Symbols, and Landscapes

Brightscapes: The Way To Beauty


Humanity, Symbols, and Landscapes
What does it mean to be a human being? What is human nature? Are our thoughts, feelings and actions unique? If so, why? The humanities are a search of everything conceivable in the human mind. This search is the cultural evolution of human history, but it also includes the science of our genetic evolution.

Language is humanity. It’s the act of converting words into symbols. While language is instinctual, vocabulary is cultural. Yet, emotions and moods are near universally understood without a common language.

Metaphors are creative descriptors used to express the imagination. It’s the building blocks of language.  And they are used in archetypal stories: heroes, tragedies, monsters, quests, bonding, and fantasy. These archetypes culturally and genetically combine to teach the next generation how to survive.

Landscapes have an outsized influence on those who inhabit it - not merely in economic ways, as wheat farming or housing developments, but in spiritual and psychic ways. Landscapes are direct manifestations to the source of the universe. It is shaped by nature giving it high meaning. A “good” image can provide a “praiseworthy moral effect.” It must be recorded and use poetic artistry. The look and feel of a landscape communicate not easily described feelings to those sensitive enough to listen.

As a person, what kind of culture do you want to live in?  What values do you embody?  How would you and others be happy in our community?  Are there activities and habits that can bring us joy through participation?


Mike Kraus was born on the industrial shoreline of Muskegon, Michigan. After earning his Fine Arts Degree from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, he attended Grand Valley State University for his graduate degree. From there, he gained varied experiences from the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Art Institute of Chicago, Hauenstein Center For Presidential Studies, Lollypop Farm Humane Society, and the Children's Memorial Foundation. And every place he worked, he had his sketchbook with him and found ways to be actively creative. In 2014, Kraus became a full-time artist by establishing Mike Kraus Art. Since then, he has sold thousands of paintings that are displayed in nearly every state and dozens of countries. Currently, Kraus lives in Rochester, New York with his beautiful wife and goofy dog.

For more information or custom order, please visit:

Friday, January 7, 2022

Beauty Is Universal

 Brightscapes: The Way To Beauty


Beauty Is Universal
Beauty has embedded its concepts into our brains for more than 80,000 generations.  So strong that it is immediately identified by newborn infants. Biologically, it aides our relationships, sense of community, understanding of the world, ability to create meaning, and the displaying of our talents.  In short, it’s how we make decisions. Sexually, it signals who is a strong, healthy, young, and talented mate. Something large, colorful, and symmetrical is naturally assumed to be the best in our minds. This sexual ornament is used to pass on genes by signaling a wealth of available resources.  Socially, beauty communicates stories to train our minds for survival. Artistic imagination allows us to expand from our concrete experiences to include others, generate different outcomes, and various scenarios. It gives us real lessons for life. It allows us into other human’s minds to provides social empathy.  This gives us a template for controlling our emotions, shaping beliefs, and regulating behavior. Beauty is a guide to morality. It reveals truth, fairness, and kindness. To deny beauty is to deny morals. 

What are three things you find to be beautiful? Is it a particular type of music? Maybe it's the taste of a delicious meal after a lot of labor? Is there a piece of artwork that you discover something new every time you look at it? We can find pleasure in almost anything. What can we do to be happier?


Mike Kraus was born on the industrial shoreline of Muskegon, Michigan. After earning his Fine Arts Degree from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, he attended Grand Valley State University for his graduate degree. From there, he gained varied experiences from the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Art Institute of Chicago, Hauenstein Center For Presidential Studies, Lollypop Farm Humane Society, and the Children's Memorial Foundation. And every place he worked, he had his sketchbook with him and found ways to be actively creative. In 2014, Kraus became a full-time artist by establishing Mike Kraus Art. Since then, he has sold thousands of paintings that are displayed in nearly every state and dozens of countries. Currently, Kraus lives in Rochester, New York with his beautiful wife and goofy dog.

For more information or custom order, please visit:

Wednesday, January 5, 2022

The Opposite of Beauty

Brightscapes: The Way To Beauty


The Opposite of Beauty
To know beauty, we must understand the misery of ugliness.  What is the cost of boring suburbs, ugly strip malls, and a hideous highway?  Science tells us the price of unpleasantness. A dull office environment leads to absenteeism and higher turnover.  Traffic noise raises blood pressure and heartbeats; impacting related diseases. A lack of access to nature decreases a person’s attention span and an increase in local crime.  A school curriculum lacking arts decreases grades in all subjects along with a higher dropout rate.  Unattractive surroundings have a direct correlation to depression, obesity, depersonalization, alienation, detached feelings, sexual abuse, drug use, violence, and hate.  This is the opposite of beauty.

We are overstimulated by smartphones, excessive work hours, social media, and the inability to disconnect.  And having too much has made everything meaningless. We are “too busy” for beauty because we have prioritized “efficiency,” “profit,” and other lesser values.  While the internet is good for research and distribution, it can also make us shallow human beings. There is no search for difficult answers. No in-depth conversations.  It’s all about the results of instant gratification. And all answers are not equal. We need to remove extravagance, convenience, and speed so that we don’t view beauty as a frivolous subject.  Just another elitist hobby only understood by those with fancy educations. That we’re not entitled to beauty. That beauty somehow makes us ineffectual. These are lies.

What do you find unpleasant? What are a few things your life would be better without? Is it a hideous room, the revolting smell of a dumpster, or the constant noise of the neighbor's lawn equipment? What are some ways we can make our lives more appealing?

We've been on manicured sidewalks connecting elegant buildings and charming parks. And almost anything can be made more appealing. It can be as simple as picking up litter or a fresh coat of paint. What is something we can change to bring us more joy?


Mike Kraus was born on the industrial shoreline of Muskegon, Michigan. After earning his Fine Arts Degree from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, he attended Grand Valley State University for his graduate degree. From there, he gained varied experiences from the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Art Institute of Chicago, Hauenstein Center For Presidential Studies, Lollypop Farm Humane Society, and the Children's Memorial Foundation. And every place he worked, he had his sketchbook with him and found ways to be actively creative. In 2014, Kraus became a full-time artist by establishing Mike Kraus Art. Since then, he has sold thousands of paintings that are displayed in nearly every state and dozens of countries. Currently, Kraus lives in Rochester, New York with his beautiful wife and goofy dog.

For more information or custom order, please visit:

Monday, January 3, 2022

What Is Beauty and Where Does It Come From?

Brightscapes: The Way To Beauty


What Is Beauty and Where Does It Come From?
By definition, beauty is “the quality or aggregate of qualities in a person or thing that gives pleasure to the senses or pleasurably exalts the mind or spirit.” For me, this answer only raises more questions. What are those qualities and can they be quantified? Why is it pleasurable? What are those impacts on the logical mind and/or the emotional spirit? Is it a part of nature or a human invention? Understanding beauty seems to require a knowledge or a specific set of skills. These skills have been called inspiration, imagination, and creativity.

How do you experience beauty?  What are some of the things that you enjoy?   Is it a cozy living room, a sleek automobile, or the quiet of nature?  How are some ways we can make our lives more appealing?

We've experienced a dismal highway lined with abandoned factories surrounded by cheap plastic junk.  But, I've learned to see the possibility of even the most horrible objects.  And the act of transforming the hideous into the delightful.  Now we can explore that together.


Mike Kraus was born on the industrial shoreline of Muskegon, Michigan. After earning his Fine Arts Degree from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, he attended Grand Valley State University for his graduate degree. From there, he gained varied experiences from the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Art Institute of Chicago, Hauenstein Center For Presidential Studies, Lollypop Farm Humane Society, and the Children's Memorial Foundation. And every place he worked, he had his sketchbook with him and found ways to be actively creative. In 2014, Kraus became a full-time artist by establishing Mike Kraus Art. Since then, he has sold thousands of paintings that are displayed in nearly every state and dozens of countries. Currently, Kraus lives in Rochester, New York with his beautiful wife and goofy dog.

For more information or custom order, please visit:

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