Daring Creativity
Daring Creativity is your backstage pass to the minds that shape our creative world. A podcast series inspired by the upcoming book by Radim Malinic, helping people start and grow life-changing careers and businesses.
Over the coming episodes, I will sit down with a broad range of guests: artists, musicians, designers, actors, technologists, and entrepreneurs who've discovered something powerful: that creativity isn't about perfection. It's about showing up with all your doubts, insecurities, and imperfections—and making them count.
Are you ready to discover what happens when you dare to create?
More info https://radimmalinic.co.uk/
Daring Creativity
Dare to not know what you are - Rik Oostenbroek
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In this episode, Radim sits down with Rik Oostenbroek — Dutch visual artist, digital pioneer, and restless creative explorer — for a wide-ranging conversation that moves between nostalgia, grief, identity, and the strange beauty of not knowing what comes next.
Rik reflects on two decades of carving his own path through commercial illustration, abstract digital art, the NFT world, and now the physical realm of screenprinting and sculpture, always guided by the same curiosity that drove him as a 14-year-old discovering DeviantArt.
The conversation is also a tribute to their mutual friend and creative force, Rutger Rutger Paulusse, who passed away recently, and whose influence on Rik's move toward physical making is one of the episode's most moving threads.
Key Takeaways
- Staying connected to the version of yourself that first fell in love with the work is not nostalgia — it's a survival strategy for sustaining a long creative career
- The early internet art community thrived precisely because there were no tutorials; being forced to ask another person built deeper connections than any algorithm can replicate
- Commercial success and artistic authenticity require constant, conscious negotiation — comfort can arrive too soon and pull you away from what truly makes your work feel like yours
- The NFT movement gave digital artists something the agency world rarely did: the experience of being seen as artists rather than production tools
- Translating digital work into physical form is an act of surrender and discovery — CMYK will never match RGB, and that limitation can become a new creative constraint worth embracing
- Protecting a separate personal life from creative identity is not avoidance — it is how some artists sustain the passion and playfulness their work depends on
- The people who push you hardest toward your best self leave the deepest mark; honouring their legacy means doing the very things they dared you to do
Daring Creativity. Podcast with Radim Malinic
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Free audiobook (with Audible trial) > https://geni.us/free-audiobook
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