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Artful Work
 
 

Artful Work [Paperback]

Dick Richards
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Understanding the connection between work and art is a sure way to infuse passion into any job, writes graphic artist-turned-business-consultant Dick Richards. In Artful Work: Awakening Joy, Meaning, and Commitment in the Workplace, he ties both together in a way that shows each in a refreshing new light. This book is not for everyone, but its ideas and suggestions will prove inspirational to those seeking an alternative to traditional workplace thinking.

Book Description

Explaining that work and art are not mutually exclusive, a corporate consultant shows that we should not limit our appreciation of the arts to leisure time, and in fact must incorporate it into the workplace for maximum joy and productivity. Reprint."

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In the fable, The Little Prince, Antoine de Saint-Exupery wrote of a lamplighter who lived and worked on a tiny planet that turned more rapidly from year to year until the time came when a day lasted only a minute. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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5.0 out of 5 stars Renews hope that we can all find meaningful work, July 27 1996
By A Customer
This book recently won the Ben Franklin Award from the National Booksellers Association for content, design and production in the business book category. It is as beautiful on the inside as it is on the outside. The stories are touching and the message gives hope that each of us can find meaningful work and the the search is worth it
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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Great information for ANY kind of work, Nov 20 2006
By MrTwistoff "hobbesclarity" - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Artful Work (Paperback)
This book does an excellent job of capturing the differences between work done mundanely, and work done artfully (the latter being craftsmanship). Any work can be performed in an artful way.

The premise is that anything worth doing is worth doing well. Being completely present benefits us in many ways, and adds more to our lives than the tedium of just performing tasks would.

Artful work, seen as a contribution to the individual, is an exceptional thing to integrate into your life. Working without meaning definitely detracts from the individual. Dick Richards clearly argues the distinction between the two poles.

A great quote from the book is "It takes courage to grow up and be who we are." Being artful, and expressing ourselves in the world, is being respectful to us - to who we are, and what we can contribute. No matter what you do, doing it with your whole self could be greater therapy than anything else you might be able to buy.

Although the topic is serious (heavy to many), it is well written and easy to consume. The author does a great job of interpreting deep serious topics to manageable ideas that won't scare readers away.

He also discusses not just an artful individual, but what an artful organization might look like. How can you be artful, how can your organization encourage artfulness, how can leadership foster it. Very much worth the read.

5.0 out of 5 stars This book inspired me!, Mar 16 2012
By Cathy Raymond - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Artful Work: Awakening Joy, Meaning, and Commitment in the Workplace (Hardcover)
As an HR Director, this book set me on a mission to make sure that every employee in my organization be placed in a job that brings them joy! It was one of three books I read that lead me to develop Trust Based Leadership, a workplace cultural change initiative that encourages employee self-confidence and creates a management environment built on trust.

I was drawn to this book because I am an artist. It spoke my language and it's approach spoke to my heart. Thank you for this gift! I sure hope my own book inspires others as yours has inspired me.Reclaiming the Soul of Human Resources: How to Recover the Purpose of HR to Nurture and Protect the Human Spirit

5.0 out of 5 stars Work - that for which you can bring everything, Aug 9 2008
By Jack Bender "Author of Disregarded, mediator,... - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Artful Work: Awakening Joy, Meaning, and Commitment in the Workplace (Hardcover)
Books that I consider "beautiful" invariably have beautiful ideas. Artful Work is one such book. If we took Richards' thoughts to heart, we would redefine work. Work worth doing was something a master craftsman did long ago. The movement to mass production of goods put artisans at a disadvantage, so much so as to force them to find "jobs." Work became something necessary for survival and the rewards for working proved to be unrelated to the work.

One of the more powerful concepts presented in Artful Work is sculptor Henry Moore's answer to, "What's the secret of life?" "The secret of life is to have a task, something you do your entire life, something you bring everything to, every minute of the day for your whole life. And the most important thing is--it must be something you cannot possibly do!"

Part of what holds us back from creating great workplaces is that we may change a great deal, but rarely the bedrock of the workplace--our beliefs about what work is. Without awareness and an examination of our constricting beliefs, we will continue to experience frustration in creating better workplaces. One fundamental failure of ours is the unwillingness to match employees with the work that gives them joy.

Many leaders are so concerned with controlling workers, that they elaborately encourage the need for approval. The thinly veiled belief that management hides or denies (and workers fail to notice) is the gross lack of trust in the human spirit--without strong direction, people will be destructive.

"The artist's perspective on work is:
· All work can be artful
· The reward for artful work is in the doing
· The ambition of artful work is joy
· All work is spiritual work
· Artful work demands that the artist owns the work process
· Artful work requires consistent and conscious use of the self
· As the artist creates the work, the work creates the artist."

"Management involves allocating organizational energy: managers historically have decided who works on what tasks. Leadership, on the other hand, involves raising the level of available energy."

The above only exposes the tip of the iceberg. Any reader of Artful Work will be rewarded.
--Jack Bender, author of Disregarded: Transforming the School and Workplace through Deep Respect and Courage
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