Innovation links

 franklin
Ben Franklin

 NEW
 
Innovation
coverage
online

Innovator tours of museums in Paris

Tips for success in old age

Sol LeWitt,
 finder

Give Ralph Ellison a break

Greatest
women
artists

How Disney Imagineers innovate

Clint Eastwood, seeker
(Feb. 4)

The complex
 case of Fernando Botero
(Jan. 21 and 30)

Innovators
in academia
(Jan. 10)

Orson Welles and John Milton!
(Dec. 14)

Major League Baseball
as experimental innovator
 (Dec. 13)

Walt Disney
as finder
(Dec. 12)

Inventor Stanford Ovshinsky as aging finder
(Dec. 9)

Morris Louis
 as seeker
(Nov. 18)

 

Contents
I. Galenson-related links (immediately below)
II.
Other innovation and creativity links

I. Galenson-related links

David Galenson basics

Galenson’s home page

Galenson in “University of Chicago Experts Guide”

About Galenson, seekers, and finders

“What Kind of Genius Are You?” by Daniel Pink, Wired (July 2006).

“Age Before Beauty,” PDF transcript of lecture on Feb. 21, 2006, by New Yorker writer Malcolm Gladwell. The topic is Galenson’s work, which was the subject of “the most provocative article Malcolm Gladwell has ever written for the New Yorker,” the first article by him that the magazine ever rejected.

"Age and Creativity" by David Galenson, Milken Institute Review (Second quarter 2006) PDF. Free signup required.

"When inspiration and perspiration collide" by Colin Stewart, Orange County Register (April 4, 2006)

“Older folks can learn creative new tricks” by Robert Cooke, Newsday (Oct. 7, 2006)

See also links to these from
Galenson home page:

"Questions for David Galenson," Rotman: The Magazine of the Rotman School of Management (Spring/Summer 2006)

"Measuring artists' creativity," Marketplace Public Radio (March 21, 2006)

"Artists approach creative expression in one of two ways," University of Chicago Chronicle (Jan. 19, 2006)

"In Packed Miller Event, Gladwell Doesn't Blink," Columbia [University] Spectator (Feb. 22, 2006)
 


II. Other innovation and creativity links

For a “selection of the best creativity sites on the Web” from R. Keith Sawyer, author and associate professor of education at Washington University, click on “Creativity links” at his Web page “Explaining Creativity: The Science of Human Innovation.”

For an ever-growing list of blogs related to various types of creativity, see the blog rolls at the “Arts of Innovation” blog. They’re on the lower right of the blog’s home page.

 

Copyright © 2007 by Colin Stewart. All rights reserved.