Vincent van Gogh’s journey as a largely self-taught artist shows the true power of absorbing influences to create something original. He studied Impressionist light and brushwork from Monet, the structured still lifes of Cézanne, and the bold, vibrant colors of Gauguin. He even drew inspiration from the flat, graphic beauty of Japanese printmakers. But Van Gogh didn’t simply copy. He blended, adapted, and refined these influences until his style became unmistakably his own.
This echoes the sentiment of a line widely attributed to Picasso: “Good artists copy, great artists steal.” True innovation isn’t about duplication. It’s about deep study, bold experimentation, and personal transformation. Van Gogh internalized what he learned, reshaped it through his own vision, and evolved it into a raw, expressive language unique to him.
Idea for Impact: Study. Imitate. Adapt. Create. Learn from masters in any craft. Absorb their techniques through practice. Keep what resonates. Discard what doesn’t. Let influence fuel originality.
The critical mind
Luck isn’t merely chance—it’s about 
Taco Bell sparks fierce debates—critics love to challenge its ingredients and nutrition, yet somehow find themselves
Creativity is hardwired in us. Watch a four-year-old for an hour, and you’ll see a mind brimming with inventions—imaginary friends, wild stories, makeshift gadgets. Without fear or judgment, she’ll explore, question, and reimagine the world.
Last quarter, Starbucks
Whenever someone uses that insidious phrase, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” I hear a message of 
In 1981, Rangaswamy Srinivasan, a chemist at IBM Research, and his colleagues embarked on