The Shadow Side of Greatness
Pablo
Picasso. He is one of the most famous artists of the 20th century and a
household name even among people who, like myself, consider themselves
to be complete novices in the art world.
I
recently went to a Picasso exhibition. What impressed me the most was
not any individual piece of art, but rather his remarkably prolific
output. Researchers have catalogued 26,075 pieces of art created by
Picasso and some people believe the total number is closer to 50,000.
When
I discovered that Picasso lived to be 91 years old, I decided to do the
math. Picasso lived for a total of 33,403 days. With 26,075 published
works, that means Picasso averaged 1 new piece of artwork every day of
his life from age 20 until his death at age 91. He created something
new, every day, for 71 years.
This
unfathomable output not only played a large role in Picasso’s
international fame, but also enabled him to amass a huge net worth of
approximately $500 million by the time of his death in 1973. His work
became so famous and so numerous that, according to the Art Loss
Register, Picasso is the most stolen artist in history with over 550
works currently missing.
What
made Picasso great was not just how much art he produced, but also how
he produced it. He co-founded the movement of Cubism and created the
style of collage. He was the artist his contemporaries copied. Any
discussion of the most well-known artists in history would have to
include his name.
Before
we talk about how to get started, I wanted to let you know I researched
and compiled science-backed ways to stick to good habits and stop
procrastinating. Want to check out my insights?
Falling in Love With Picasso
Falling in love with Picasso was a terrible thing to do.
His
first marriage was to a woman named Olga Khokhlova and they had one
child together. The two separated after she discovered that Picasso was
having an affair with a seventeen-year-old girl named Marie-Therese
Walter. He was 45 years old at the time.
Picasso
fathered a child with Walter, but moved on to other lovers a few years
later. He began dating an art student named Francoise Gilot in 1944. She
was 23 years old. Picasso had just turned 63 at the time.
Gilot
and Picasso had two children together, but their relationship ended
when Picasso began yet another affair, this time with a woman who was 43
years younger than him. After they separated, Gilot published a book
called Life with Picasso, which revealed his long list of sexual flings
and sold over one million copies. Out of revenge, Picasso refused to see
their two children ever again.
Basically,
Picasso’s romantic life was a revolving door of affairs and infidelity.
In the words of our guide at the Picasso exhibit, “There were always
many others.” There must have been something intoxicating about Picasso
because after his death, not one, but two of his lovers committed
suicide due to their grief.
The Shadow Side
Many
of the qualities that make people great have shadow sides as well.
Picasso's singular focus on art meant that everything else in life had
to take a back seat, including his relationships and his children.
Most
humans have a primary relationship with their lover and maintain a
variety of hobbies and interests during different periods. Picasso was
the reverse. His primary relationship was with his art, while his lovers
were like hobbies and passing interests, things he experimented with
for a period here and there.
Some
scholars believe Picasso's many relationships were essential to the
progression of his art. According to art critic Arthur Danto, “Picasso
invented a new style each time he fell in love with a new woman.”
This
was the shadow side of his strength as an artist. The qualities that
made Picasso one of the greatest artists of all-time may very well have
made him a terrible life partner too. They are like two sides of the
same coin. You couldn’t have one without the other.
Shadows Appear in All Fields
I
don’t mean to pick on Picasso here. The idea that strengths have
tradeoffs, especially extreme versions of strengths, holds true in
nearly every field.
For
example, consider Floyd Mayweather Jr. He is widely considered to be
one of the greatest boxers of all-time. His career record is 49-0. He
has earned more than $1.3 billion over the course of his career.
He
also has serious anger management issues. In 2002, he was charged with
two counts of domestic violence. In 2004, two counts of misdemeanor
battery against different women. In 2005, another charge of misdemeanor
battery. In 2010, yet another misdemeanor battery charge. Not to
mention, there have been a number of reported charges that were later
dropped.
The
qualities that make him a once-in-a-lifetime boxer—his unbridled anger
and lack of impulse control—also lead him to be violent in normal
situations. This combination makes him unbeatable in the ring and
unbearable in the rest of life.
Every Strength Has a Tradeoff
Now,
you might be thinking, “Well, you don’t have to cheat on your spouse to
produce great art or beat up others to become a good boxer. Those are
two different things.”
You’re
right. I’m using extreme examples here to make the point, however, it
remains true that every strength has a shadow side. Some shadows are
darker than others, but all paths to success have a cost.
- Maybe you’re a doctor or a nurse who has learned how to remove yourself from the emotion of death. This quality that allows you to do your job well when patients die each day, but also reduces the empathy and connection you feel with friends and family.
- Maybe you’re a scientist who holds themselves to the highest standards. This perfectionism makes you excellent in the lab, but also leads you to show tough love to your children and they grow up believing nothing they do is ever good enough.
- Maybe you’re a smart and enthusiastic friend who wants to help others by always providing value. You’re just trying to be helpful, but you end up providing too much value. Your friends wish you would just listen to their problems and not feel the need to make your mark on everything.
There are an infinite number of ways this can play out, but one singular punchline: every strength comes with tradeoffs.
Is Success Worth the Shadow Side?
Success
is complicated. We love to praise people for becoming famous, for
winning championships, and for making tons of money, but we rarely
discuss the costs of success.
Did
the beauty of Picasso’s art add more joy to the world than the pain he
caused through a series of broken relationships? It’s easy for you and
me to believe his contribution was net positive because we didn’t have
to bear the pain. His ex-wives and mistresses might feel
differently—especially the two who committed suicide.
The
fact that you cannot escape the downsides of your strengths brings us
to an interesting decision point. People often talk about the success
they aspire to in life, but as author Mark Manson writes in his popular
book, The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck, the most important question
to ask yourself is not, “What kind of success do I want?”, but rather,
“What kind of pain do I want?”
Do
you want the shadow that comes with the success? Do you want the
baggage that comes with the bounty? What kind of pain are you willing to
bear in the name of achieving what you want to achieve? Answering this
question honestly often leads to more insight about what you really care
about than thinking of your dreams and aspirations.
It
is easy to want financial independence or the approval of your boss or
to look good in front of the mirror. Everybody wants those things. But
do you want the shadow side that goes with it? Do you want to spend two
extra hours at work each day rather than with your kids? Do you want to
put your career ahead of your marriage? Do you want to wake up early and
go to the gym when you feel like sleeping in? Different people have
different answers and you'll have to decide what is best for you, but
pretending that the shadow isn't there is not a good strategy.
Success in one area is often tied to failure in another area, especially at the extreme end of performance. The more extreme the greatness, the longer the shadow it casts.
Success
in one area is often tied to failure in another area, especially at the
extreme end of performance. The more extreme the greatness, the longer
the shadow it casts.
To
phrase it differently, the more one dimensional your focus, the more
other areas of life suffer. It’s the four burners theory in action. The
more you turn up one burner, the more you risk others burning out. The
things that make people great in one area often make them miserable in
others.
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