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Art and Leadership with Nancy Adler

Published: 1 August 2011

However, perhaps the most imaginative advocate of the use of art in developing future business leaders is Nancy Adler, at the Desautels Faculty of Management of Ï㽶ÊÓƵ in Canada. By day, Dr. Adler teaches M.B.A. students and advises major international corporations on cross-cultural management issues, but she is also one of the country's most highly respected watercolorists. "For quite a while I didn't flag my second career to students or clients, because of the longstanding antipathy between art and commerce," she admits. "Artists view business people as Philistines, and they in turn think of artists as a bit flaky. But if you look at the two sides objectively you will realize that creating a great work or creating a great business call for very similar qualities."

Adler's exhibition, "Reality in Translation," was last year a cornerstone of the Academy of Management's annual conference. It invited visitors to capture on canvas an image of what it is to lead beautifully. "With only five minutes to draw, business executives and students alike quickly untangle their brains and just get going," she explains. "By going beyond the dehydrated language of management, you tap into far more creative expression and diversity." Not that Adler is advocating that a company's next quarterly call to analysts be done with crayons. Perhaps creative accounting has already done enough. 

She believes, though, that 21st-century leadership should be based more on hope, aspiration, innovation and beauty than on the replication of historical patterns. "For the first time in history," she contends, "leaders can work backward from their aspirations and imagination rather than forward from the past. The gap between what people can imagine and what they can accomplish has never been smaller."

McGill-Desautels is already home to the "Reflective Process," an integral component of the school's executive training and M.B.A. programs inspired by the learning philosophy of Desautels professor Henry Mintzberg. Weekly sessions encourage students to reflect on their own learning experiences and develop their own perspectives on leadership, using periods of reflection to ensure that their decisions are made mindfully, responsibly and ultimately successfully.

A commitment to artistic creation has generally been more the province of artists than of businessmen, but Adler believes that effective business leaders and successful artists have three skill sets in common: abilities to see reality as it is, to imagine possibilities on the basis of that straight seeing and to inspire others to see both reality and possibility.

She argues that following the example of artists can help inspire commercial leaders to achieve their full potential. "Painters approach a blank canvas with the desire to produce something of high quality, but all too often in the commercial world people will settle for just good enough. I don't see why the artist's focus on achieving the very best can't be replicated in business."

So how does she put this into practice? She gets to work with some of the world's best known companies, thanks to her professional credentials and track record, and she believes that her second career as a painter allows her to use art as a catalyst for more effective thinking among those clients.

She gives the example of a multinational corporation faced with the problem of integrating acquisitions across Asia and the Americas into a global strategy. She encouraged the senior management team there to develop a new approach by taking them to an exhibition of Cubist paintings, a style of art that forces the viewer to look at the world from a very different perspective. "Of course art doesn't serve up answers to specific business problems on a plate," she says. "But what it can do is get you to step back, reflect and come up with your own solutions, solutions that are often beyond the constraints of accepted practice."

Perhaps Peter Drucker, Michael Porter and Tom Peters should be nervously looking over their shoulders. When it comes to the management guru business, the likes of Picasso, Monet and da Vinci could be the faces of the future.

Read full article (in Chinese): , August 1, 2011

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