Which Artist (Living or Dead) Would You Most Like To Spend Time With?

For me, it would be Leonardo Da Vinci because of his insatiable curiosito (curiosity) and his extraordinary diversity.

He was Renaissance before renaissance was cool.

I have read and re-read Michael Gelb’s fascinating book How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci: Seven Steps to Genius Every Dayabout the myriad aspects of Da Vinci’s artistry.

Which Artist (Living or Dead) Would You Most Like To Spend Time With?

40 responses to “Which Artist (Living or Dead) Would You Most Like To Spend Time With?”

  1. Rochelle Avatar
    Rochelle

    Preferably one who spoke English and wasn’t too insane.

  2. Jeff Goins Avatar

    D’oh! Yes, Michelangelo. :)

    My brain wasn’t screwed on right. Can you edit that comment to make me not look like a moron?

  3. McNair Wilson Avatar

    da Vinci, to be sure, but as much for his science and mechanical invention. He was a great problem solver…asking questions that no one else was asking. He wanted to make water run uphill to get it from the source to hilltop communities. No one cared to worry about that problem.
    Just watching him design models (many of which he never built, but were later found to work exactly as he he had imagined.)
    Just following his curiosity around for a day would have been thrilling and inspiring.
    AND, I want Leonardo (a left-handed fellow, as I am) to teach me to write backwards.
    [P.S. Read Gelb’s book “Innovate Like Edison…”, too.]

    Second choice: Gordon MacKenzie (RIP) author of “Orbiting the Giant Hairball.” We had a brief email friendship before he died. A rule breaker, artist, designer, thinker of new thoughts. He left us too soon.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @McNair Wilson, Two incredible choices, McNair! Yes, Da Vinci was truly amazing.

  4. Jeff Goins Avatar

    I would have preferred to watch him sculpt. His sculptures are amazing. In Florence, my friends and I stared at the David for an entire afternoon… no exaggeration.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @Jeff Goins, Michelangelo? Yes, I’ve been there and did the same thing. David is extraordinary!

  5. Jeff Goins Avatar

    Gosh, and music, I forgot music (how COULD I?!)…

    Jimmy Page (no question)

  6. Jeff Goins Avatar

    Goodness. So hard to pick. I think I’d have to pick one per medium. Here are a few:

    Painter: Picasso. Maybe a little trite, but since nobody else went with him, why not? His work was so diverse, and while the cubism stuff he did was interesting, I appreciate more of his earlier work. He really was a master and go tired with being so good (and realistic) that he was “forced” to delve into the more abstract. What an interesting conversation that would be! Plus, he was Spanish, and I could (awkwardly) talk to him in his native tongue.

    Writer: Maybe Hemingway?

    Photographer: Ansel Adams.

    Cartoonist: Jim Davis. (Creator of Garfield, of course)

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @Jeff Goins, Great picks, not trite at all, very interesting!

  7. shannon lewis Avatar

    I want to write a worship song… with David Gilmour. O Ye uh.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @shannon lewis, Then do it!! What a song that would be!

  8. Chris E Avatar

    Walt Disney. He loved & thus animated stories where good triumphs over evil and truth exposes lies. Next would be Beatrix Potter who saw humor and truth in God’s creation and defied traditional womanly roles & pursued her dreams. Both gave our childhood’s so much magic. I’m still intrigued by their magic today at age 49.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      Yes, indeed. His dream never grows old. Magic was never spanked, churched, combed or educated out of him!

  9. Chris Bennett Avatar

    Anthony Trollope.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @Chris Bennett, Nice! Now, I must read the Chronicles of Barsetshire.

      Thanks, Chris!

  10. Audrey Avatar

    I think I’d pick Vermeer. I could sit and stare at his paintings all day, particularly this one.
    http://www.essentialvermeer.com/catalogue/girl_interrupted_in_her_music.html
    I don’t know why, but I feel a connection to her.

    I’d also like to know what he thought of Colin Firth’s portrayal of him. :)

    1. Randy Avatar

      @Audrey, Yes. I can see that. Vermeer is one of my favorites…for a number of reasons. I wonder, What did YOU think of Colin Firth’s portrayal?

  11. Chuck Harris Avatar

    you would think i’d probably pick a musician or a songwriter, but i’m going to throw you a curve ball.

    i would want to have a serious conversation with Alfred Hitchcock. just understanding the ways he chose to shoot and depict things would be a beautiful moment for me. i would also like to discuss themes of faith and redemption in his movies. and for the final two questions i would ask him would be: how did he made “Rope” look like a single camera shot? what inspired him to make my favorite film of his, “The Trouble With Harry”?

    1. Randy Avatar

      @Chuck Harris, Nice. Love a great horror movie, and love me some Hitchcock! Now, I need to see “The Trouble With Harry?” Thanks, Chuck!

      1. Chuck Harris Avatar

        @Randy, “The Trouble With Harry” is actually a black comedy with John Forsythe, Shirley McClain and Jerry Mathers before he was the Beaver.

  12. michelle George Avatar

    I’d choose Da Vinci too…I want to sit and watch him work in his notebooks!

  13. mandythompson Avatar

    Will do! Thanks, Randy

  14. Michelle Avatar

    I don’t think I could pick just one. And based on what I’m reading in the comments, my list keeps getting longer.

    As an aside – I had the opportunity to visit the Getty museum in LA this summer. They had a Da Vinci exhibit that included someone dressed as the master interacting with the visitors. The great thing about it was his interaction with the kids. Before he would let them take a picture, they must ask him a question and allow him to answer completely. The kids asked great questions and I learned so much just sitting there listening. I don’t know if they are still doing this, but if you have the opportunity I highly recommend a visit.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @Michelle, I know. It is tough to name just one. I LOVE the Getty and I would love to see this interaction.

      thanks, Michelle!!

  15. Jay Avatar

    As a photographer, I would go with Herb Ritts.

    This may sound strange, but the man knew how to ‘sculpt’ with light. For an example of what I am talking about, look at this image of Sean Connery:

    http://www.areaofdesign.com/americanicons/ritts/010.jpg

    In addition to that, there was a simplicity about his photographs. Here’s another. This is one of Johnny Depp:

    http://www.vanityfair.com/images/culture/2009/07/johnny-depp-0907-ps01.jpg

    So in looking at his work, it was always more about vision than gear, setups or location. It would just be great to kind of get into what he thinks about when coming up with a concept for an image.

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @Jay, Good to have a photographer listed. The shot of Sean Connery is incredible!!! Thanks so much, Jay.

  16. mandythompson Avatar

    Yes please!!! I’m hoping to make a Pre-cREate trip to Nashville (my best friend lives there)… Maybe we can work something out.

    1. Randy Avatar

      @mandythompson, Let’s work on that. Let me know when you are coming.

  17. James Castellano Avatar

    Mine would be Jim Morrison formerly of the Doors. I would like to ask him, “What were you thinking?” Genius gone awry.

    1. Randy Avatar

      @James Castellano, Yes indeed, Jim Morrison, another genius gone awry for me would be Quentin Tarantino.

  18. Mark Bovee Avatar
    Mark Bovee

    Tim, I love that Nouwen book. So much so, that I have the Prodigal Son painting as my wallpaper on my phone and look for Rembrandt in any art museum I step into.

    If I didn’t think about it, my gut reaction would be Van Gogh. I feel like I’m right there in his paintings. Like they are alive and constantly moving. I am also drawn to the unhindered passion in his works/life, his lifelong desire for community, and I must admit, I’m a tad bit drawn to (or, better yet, intrigued by) the darkness vs. light struggle that eventually drove him insane and killed him. I would love to live my life with his passion, yet keeping both ears and maintaining my sanity.

    1. Randy Avatar

      @Mark Bovee, Yes, the book, Lust for Life by Irving Stone provides an extraordinary peek at what Van Gogh might have been like…

  19. mandythompson Avatar

    gah.
    Do we have to pick just one? For me, it’d have to be a songwriter, but I’m not sure which. Ok ok. I’m going to go with Leonard Cohen (wrote the famous “Hallelujah”)…

    Which reminds me: Randy, I want a songwriting mentor. Bad. Do you know where I can find one?

    1. Randy Avatar

      @mandythompson, I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE that song, especially as performed by by Jeff Buckley.

      Hmmmm…We need to hook you up with Maggie B.

  20. James Cohen Avatar

    Randy I love Gelb’s book. Inspirational.

    The artist I would most like to spend time with (present blog author aside) would have to be Walter Russell. Listen to this from the book The Man Who Tapped the Secrets of the Universe by Glenn Clark:

    “Most sculptors make the mistake,” he said, “of thinking of eyes as form and they therefore make them as spherical surfaces. Eyes are not forms, they are transparent, and what one really sees is the light of the soul in them — and that is what I try to give them. Until a sculptor is able to see the soul through the eyes his portrait is merely a portrait of flesh and blood.

    His work and life are a testament of a pure genius. Born into extreme poverty in 1871 he was forced to leave school at the age of eight (after just a couple of years of schooling). He went on to become a n accomplished musician, illustrator, portrait painter, architectural designer, sculptor, extremely successful and wealthy businessman, advisor to the President of IBM and other businesses, a motivational speaker, champion figure skater, natural scientist, philosopher and the author of scientific work used in mainstream chemistry.

    His sculptures are simply magnificent and what he had to teach about the unity with God would be a joy to listen to.

    1. Randy Avatar

      @James Cohen, Wow! Just simply wow!!

      “Most sculptors make the mistake,” he said, “of thinking of eyes as form and they therefore make them as spherical surfaces. Eyes are not forms, they are transparent, and what one really sees is the light of the soul in them — and that is what I try to give them. Until a sculptor is able to see the soul through the eyes his portrait is merely a portrait of flesh and blood.

      Thanks, James. You provide me so much thrilling research.

  21. Tim Schraeder Avatar

    Rembrandt. His painting of the prodigal son is one of my favorites. I LOVED Heni Nowen’s book on the Return of the Prodigal Son that paralleled the journey of the prodigal son with Rembrandt’s own life, artistry, and faith in God. t

    1. Randy Elrod Avatar

      @Tim Schraeder, Yes, Tim. I’m currently reading “The Rembrandt Affair” by Daniel Silva — he is a fascinating artist!! Thanks!