Where Art, Life and Leadership Collide
- An Interesting E-Mail
- An Act of Unabashed Family Promotion
I want to share a fascinating e-mail I received this week from a client. I asked the client permission to share his email and he happily agreed.
Some background: The client is the head of a successful wealth management firm. I have worked with him and his team in the areas of strategic planning and leadership development over a number of years. He has been a willing guinea pig for the tools, concepts and techniques which are at the heart of a program I call The Leaders Studio. This has led, on numerous occasions, to several remarkable and rewarding breakthroughs for him and his business. However, this last email takes our work to an entirely different level. The idea he comes up with at the end of the email is entirely his idea.
So here's his E-Mail:
Fred,
Thanks again for your timely Bloutcher. I just got back from NYC and had the opportunity and pleasure to make it to the Guggenheim for an exhibition of Picasso in Black and White. It was an incredible experience. And the museum's space is such a unique way to view a collection.
I was moved and recharged by his work. The range of what he painted from just a few lines of black on white paper to intricate abstracts to classical portraits which looked like ancient Greek sculptures...and so much more. I found myself so open to possibilities and seeing things in the art that I was not sure I would have seen before.
So I made a decision. I have a day blocked off in my calendar for business planning in a couple of weeks and I am going to do it at the MFA (Museum of Fine Arts.) I think a fresh and inspiring environment will help me see things in new and bigger ways.
Thanks for helping me see more. Hope all is well.
From a creativity point of view, this email is interesting for several reason:
- The client sees a parallel between being open to new possibilities in art and new possibilities in business planning
- This insight did not come at work. It came from doing something entirely different from work, but the insight provides direct benefit to his work.
- The client recognizes that being in an environment that at first seems entirely distracting actually stimulates creative insights that support work.
- They implicitly and explicitly reward analytical, judgmental thinking
- They reinforce the idea that you must "get it right."
- They are filled with routine and repetition
- They do not allow the time and space for deep reflection and thinking
- And many more
An Act of Unabashed Family Promotion
I'd like to introduce you to a project by one of my daughters and her husband. They are producing a documentary film that traces the journey of a copy of Mein Kampf from the battle fields of Germany to Brooklyn, New York and Boston, Massachusetts and back to its origins in Lubeck, Germany and the children of its original owner. It's a journey filled with surprises and the unsuspecting and sometimes disturbing lessons of history that remain with us today. They plan to enter the film in film festivals in the United States and Europe this summer.
Take a look at the trailer ( 2 and 1/2 minutes) and if you think it is a worthy project, consider sponsoring it. Click here to link to the trailer and to their Kickstarter.com project.
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