Fewer Ideas: An Unconventional Approach To Creativity<\/h1>\nEric Olive<\/address>\n 2025-05-15T10:00:00+00:00
\n 2025-05-20T14:32:37+00:00
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What do the Suez Canal, the Roman Goddess Libertas, and ancient Egyptian sculptures have in common? The Statue of Liberty.<\/p>\n
Surprising? Sure, but the connections make sense when you know the story as recounted by Columbia University psychologist Sheena Iyengar on a recent episode of Hidden Brain<\/em>.<\/p>\nThe French artist Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Bartholdi drew inspiration from Egyptian sculptures when he submitted a design for a sculpture that was going to be built at the Suez Canal.<\/p>\n
That plan for the Suez Canal sculpture fell through, leading Bartholdi and a friend to raise money to create a sculpture as a gift to the United States. Bartholdi designed the sculpture after studying the intricacies of the Roman Goddess Libertas, a significant female icon in the late 1800s. He also modeled the statue on Isabelle Boyer, who was 36 years old in 1878. Finally, Bartholdi incorporated his mother\u2019s face into the proposed design. The result? The Statue of Liberty.<\/p>\n
Bartholdi\u2019s unorthodox yet methodical approach yielded one of the most famous sculptures in the world.<\/p>\n
How did he do it? Did he let his mind run wild? Did he generate endless lists or draw hundreds of plans for each sculpture? Was he a 19th-century brainstorming advocate?<\/p>\n
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\n 2025-05-20T14:32:37+00:00
\n <\/header>\n
The French artist Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Bartholdi drew inspiration from Egyptian sculptures when he submitted a design for a sculpture that was going to be built at the Suez Canal.<\/p>\n
That plan for the Suez Canal sculpture fell through, leading Bartholdi and a friend to raise money to create a sculpture as a gift to the United States. Bartholdi designed the sculpture after studying the intricacies of the Roman Goddess Libertas, a significant female icon in the late 1800s. He also modeled the statue on Isabelle Boyer, who was 36 years old in 1878. Finally, Bartholdi incorporated his mother\u2019s face into the proposed design. The result? The Statue of Liberty.<\/p>\n
Bartholdi\u2019s unorthodox yet methodical approach yielded one of the most famous sculptures in the world.<\/p>\n
How did he do it? Did he let his mind run wild? Did he generate endless lists or draw hundreds of plans for each sculpture? Was he a 19th-century brainstorming advocate?<\/p>\n