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The Globe and Mail
November 14, 2000
A Portrait of an Artist
as a Young Businessman
BY LOLA RASMINSKY
Have I missed something?
Every provincial government but Quebec
has cut back on arts education, apparently deciding that the work
force of the future will be better served by graduates with more
computer know-how and less training in the arts. At the same time,
however, cutting-edge businesses and schools are employing artists
and actors to train senior executives in how to think creatively
and find new ways of collaborating with colleagues.
I know this, because enlightened companies,
such as Bell Canada and Nortel, and the Rotman School of Management
have employed the services of art and drama teachers from the
Avenue Road Arts School. At the same time, premiers such as Ontario's
Mike Harris find arts specialists entirely dispensable in the
public school system. There is an unsettling disconnect here,
one that could have a devastating impact in the long term.
In the New Economy, people must think
quickly and creatively to have any kind of competitive edge. Apple's
marketing campaign urges us to "think different." Roger Martin,
Dean of the Rotman School, says New Economy businesses will count
on employees to embrace complexity and welcome surprise, and use
it to innovate and create.
How does instruction in the arts foster
these qualities? Think of it as a form of cross-training. The
arts warm up the same muscles that are most useful to surviving
in our new world.
In any creative drama class, there are
improv exercises that require participants to respond to each
other with lightning speed, and role-playing scenarios to get
the players into the skin of another person. After a while, this
way of working becomes a habit.
Every time an artist creates a work,
they are doing something different something that has never
before been done in quite the same way.
Musicians must attend to each note of
a musical passage and tune in to the subtle nuances of dynamics.
Their training makes them more observant and sensitive and teaches
them to offer constructive critiques.
Innovative business schools, such as
Rotman, are committed to turning out integrative thinkers who
can transcend traditional silos of marketing, human resources
and finance. They must be open to working with and understanding
colleagues in other disciplines who may speak a different language
and operate from a different kind of culture. We need to become
adept at forming partnerships, building networks and working in
teams. It's therefore important to be able to establish rapport
with other people.
So what does the ability to connect with
others have to do with learning the arts? Everything. An artist's
expression has to come from a deep and real place if it is to
be authentic and convincing. Creating a work of art entails connecting
with one's true voice, and communicating clearly and dynamically.
We can be trained to notice, to think
with imagination, to "think different" and to be open, responsive
members of our team.
As a society, it is critical for us to
understand that young people who've had training in the arts will
be the best equipped to survive in the e-commerce economy. It
is our duty to prepare our children for this exciting new world
in the best ways possible.
Have I missed something? No. But short-sighted
provincial education ministries certainly have.
Lola Rasminsky is the director of
the Avenue Road Arts School in Toronto, and Beyond
the Box, a corporate arts training program.
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