Want to Be an Outstanding Leader? Use art as a reflection trigger
Monika Rizovska Tanevska, MBA ??
Top Employer Branding Voice, Strategist & Consultant | Global Community Director at WOMEN IN TECH? | Diversity & Inclusion | Productivity & Time Management | Employee Advocacy | International Speaker & Trainer
Let art ignite your imagination. Art invites leaders to go beyond the frantic busyness of life. Viewing paintings and other forms of art offers possibilities to experiment with new perspectives. If I really focus on a painting, what do I see? If I connect what I’m seeing with my current situation, what new vantage points does the painting reveal?This may seem far-fetched, but the unexpected juxtaposition between a painting and real-world challenges often exposes concealed dynamics and surprising new insights. Yale University, for example, discovered that young physicians became significantly better diagnosticians after taking an art history course. Why? Because looking at art teaches the viewer — whether artist, physician, or CEO — to make sense of a richer palette of complexity. It helps us all to more accurately and creatively make sense of our world. At the same time, it instills the humility to realize that current interpretations are just one of many possible worldviews.
To use art as a reflection trigger, follow the steps below. You can try this exercise now using a painting from my most recent exhibition:Choose a painting (or other work of art). Let your eye rest on a work of art that attracts you for any reason whatsoever (because you love it, you hate it, or for a reason that is unknown to you).
- Observe the painting uninterrupted for at least three minutes. Time yourself! Three minutes may feel like a very long time.
- Strengthen your ability to see. Describe the painting: What did you see? How did it seem to change as you viewed it? What were you able to see at the end of the three minutes that you didn’t notice when you first chose the painting?
- Ask bridging questions. What new perspectives does the painting reveal? For example: How is the current situation in the economy (or in my company or team) like this painting? How does the painting’s complexity reflect the hidden complexity in our recent tri-continental merger? In what ways does the painting reveal opportunities we are missing in transitional economies? Let yourself be surprised by the insights that emerge.
Connect to purpose. All too many leaders have a surfeit of opportunities but suffer a paucity of meaning. Asking questions that bring us back to what is most meaningful to us personally, as well as to what we believe is most important for society and the planet, deepens our sense of purpose. For example, you might ask: What is my daily work? What is my life’s work? Similarly, reflecting in your journal on inspirational words from world leaders or wisdom traditions can act as an antidote to superficiality and parochialism. Here are two of my favorites:
“Listen. The more faithfully you listen to the voice within you, the better you will hear what is sounding outside without fear.” —Dag Hammarskj?ld Economist and Secretary-General of the United Nations, 1953–1961
“We have a responsibility in our time, as others have had in theirs, not to be prisoners of history but to shape history.” — Madeleine Albright U.S. Secretary of State, 1997–2001
Such insights remind us that our leadership needs to be significant, not merely successful — that strategy and tactics remain meaningless without ultimate purpose.No matter what question you start with, let your reflection take you on a journey where you are the passenger, not the conductor. Using a journal regularly will give you the courage to see the world differently, to understand the world differently, and to lead in new and needed ways.
Red Hat Certified Linux System Administrator | Women in Tech? Advocate | Equal Pay Day ?esko Mentor in AI | Speaker ?? | M.Sc. in Project Management
8 年Trying to use art in becoming an outstanding leader... slowly everything starts to make sense :)
Adobe Certified for Visual Effects & Motion Graphic Design | Graphic Design | Scratch Teacher | Event management | Project management | Executive Assistant | Hand engraving glass
8 年as always my inspiration <3 great article