Saturday, May 28, 2011

Art


A Child's Artwork
Some children are happiest when they have a marker in their hand and a large blank sheet of paper on which to explore whatever is in their imagination. Why would we as analysts wish to abandon the creativity of our children? We should have the ability to finger paint, if we so desire. We should have the ability to use play dough to sculpt a fictional creature, or have the entire ceiling of the Sistine Chapel to paint our masterpiece. In addition to neglecting the science, the artistic side of analysis is often forgotten.

We have heard in our office many times that analysis is part science and part art. The science part is most often mistaken for the engineering. But the art side is also not what they are thinking and is a catchall phrase used to explain soft things that are not well understood. Art as it is commonly expressed is more like black art. Something mystical that can’t be defined that emerges as a result of a “not quite” understanding of the black boxes containing algorithms or procedures to which a problem was committed in order to obtain a calculated solution. Presto a result appears.

We are not talking about this black art, mysticism, or even the fog of war as expressed in analysis. We are talking about true artistic freedom of expression to explore a blank sheet of paper. But unlike science that is methodically seeking answers, the artist is trying to generate questions. And of course, these essays do not take the place of “Finger Painting 101” and are not intended to get you to think like a Thomas Edison. We can, however, establish a few rules to follow which you should consider adding to you tool box.

First dispense with any boundaries. This is the blank sheet of paper and should cut across parochial boundaries and fiefdoms you know already exist. Take their budget; take their programs, what would you do with a million dollars. There are many ways to skin this cat, you can call it brainstorming if you want, but there are rules to brainstorming. Use the ones that work for you and get it done.

Inspiration comes from many places. But unless you seek it, you will never find it. Find your source and cultivate it. Just like putting on your lab coat for your science experiment, you should find inspirational moments to be highly satisfying. For us they have never occurred at the office. They occur bolt right up in the middle of the night, during long runs or soccer games. They just might be the single most satisfying moment of our profession short of proving a Zealot wrong and having him removed from his job.

Along with inspiration be creative. Change the medium in which you work. Change the people whom which you work. If you have a brain you can be creative – that’s the funny thing about our brains – it’s up to you to unlock your creative side.

Now, unlike engineering, which could be executed in larger teams, and science, which should be done with small teams, art should be reduced to the smallest or even single individual. Michelangelo worked alone. You cannot have even two people painting on the same canvas. This will be the hardest thing to do. If it is your art it will be a part of you and you will want to show it off and be as proud as your children are to hang their painting on the refrigerator. However, unfortunately, just as a parent is proud of their child’s artwork, hanging in the refrigerator may be the right place for it. Just because it was your creation and you are attached to it does not make it the Mona Lisa. Some self-control is warranted here. But you will not necessarily know until you host an exhibit. Get your artwork out there. This could be dangerous to your pride – and perhaps why many of us lose the creative child in us. If our drawing of a lion, which our grandmother mistook for a raccoon, embarrassed us perhaps we stopped drawing. If we were embarrassed by our voice, perhaps we stopped singing. Nothing ventured nothing gained here though, so put on a thick skin and hang your ideas on the refrigerator at work. You don’t have to sign your name, but you should allow them to make comments.

But how do you really know if you have created something that can be described as art. How do you know you have created something that resembles the truth or something that will be appreciated by more than just your mom? Here to we believe we can help.

The truth will be self-evident. The Golden Gate Bridge is self-evident to most. Most great works of art indeed are self-evident to many. Why is this the case? Because during the creative and inspired times of an artist, based on all the experience and hard work they had done up until that point, a moment of clarity on the solution shines through. This is the 1% inspiration moment followed by the subsequent 99% perspiration that can be handled by the engineers who will build the project.

Another way you will know if your product has achieved the status of art will be if the senior decision maker to whom your analysis was aimed sees something in the solution that filled in a missing hole in their intuition. They might not have even recognized that there was something missing, perhaps just a feeling. But bang, if you nailed it, they will know it and let you know as well.

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