Conjuring the Creative is an act of recognizing intelligence in the object of one's attention, or else imbuing one's attention upon an object, or even an abstraction of potential in terms of an unknown probability one puts into a contextual field (of process), set up for staging effects by experimentation.
The Creative is not a concept nor is is a conceptual property; the staging effect is a net set up to witness the Creative itself.
Twenty years ago, before abandoning film (still and motion-picture photography), I would stage effects for experimentation that would result in atmospheric anomalies using 35mm chromes (transparencies). People would refer to them as works in color-field, or else surrealism. I never bracketed the exposures (where's the adventure in that?).
At any rate, that's what I would set-up for when "hunting for intelligence." The series was in a gallery for a few years on Canyon Road in Santa Fe, in what used to be Gormley's old store in the 40s and 50s.
The only other experience I have in occult practice in terms of "performance" (technical) artistry is in motion-picture photography when I was a focus-puller, most notably when the camera was mounted on a dolly on a set with chiaroscuro lighting, with both 16 and 35mm cameras and super-speed telephotos (separate feature productions). What was so uncanny is that (besides being magical experiences in the moment), the camera operator was always so sure that the shot came out perfect on the first take (back before the 1st AC had access to a camera-mounted video monitor). I remember that on those occasions, besides getting that magical feeling, I was never sure that I had nailed the pull (focus adjustment while camera was moving), but the operator was nevertheless absolutely certain. Oh, I loved film so.