Wisdom and Creativity in Old Age: Lessons from the Impressionists

Working Paper: NBER ID: w13190

Authors: David W. Galenson

Abstract: Psychologists have not considered wisdom and creativity to be closely associated. This reflects their failure to recognize that creativity is not exclusively the result of bold discoveries by young conceptual innovators. Important advances can equally be made by older, experimental innovators. Yet we have had no examination of why some experimental artists have remained creative much later in their lives than others. Considering the major artists who worked together during the first decade of Impressionism, this paper compares the attitudes and practices of two important experimental innovators who made significant contributions after the age of 50 with two of their colleagues whose creativity failed to persist past 50. Unlike Pissarro and Renoir, who reacted to adversity in mid-career by attempting to emulate the methods of conceptual artists, Cézanne and Monet adopted elements of other artists' approaches while maintaining their own experimental methods and goals. For both Cézanne and Monet, recognizing how they themselves learned was a key to turning experience into wisdom. Their greatness in old age appears to have been a product of their understanding that although the improvement in their art might be painstaking and slow, over long periods its cumulative effect could be very great.

Keywords: creativity; wisdom; impressionists; experimental innovators

JEL Codes: J01


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Cezanne and Monet (E39)sustained creativity into old age (O36)
understanding of gradual nature of artistic improvement (Z11)sustained creativity into old age (O36)
ability to learn from experiences (G53)sustained creativity into old age (O36)
shift towards more conceptual methods (C90)decline in creativity after age 50 (J26)
lack of adaptability (L15)decline in creativity (O39)
individual artist's responses to frustration (Z11)creative longevity (O36)
artistic goals (Z11)creative longevity (O36)

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