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Steal if you want to succeed
- Writing language: Korean
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Summarized by durumis AI
- Picasso and Takashi Saito say that great artists must learn and develop the skills of others and make them their own.
- This is a shortcut to success and a way to reduce trial and error, and it is not simply imitation, but must be made your own by turning it into a habit.
- Observing the methods of experts, stealing the essence and making it your own is a key element of success.
The Sense of Hearing (1744 to 1747)_Philippe Mercier (French, 1689 – 1760)
Good artists copy, great artists steal.
-Picasso
Choosing a role model in the field you want to be and observing that person's actions and stealing their skills to make them your own. Some might say it's dangerous, but the meaning of this saying is quite meaningful. I don't think anyone would consider this plagiarism.
It means to make something unique to a master craftsman that others cannot easily follow, something that will make that craftsman successful, completely your own. Pablo Picasso and Takashi Saito both said to steal and make it your own.
There's a reason successful people say this. It's a way to reduce trial and error, and it's about finding the key to a successful life, picking out the essentials.
May today be the day that we make the great footprints of those who came before us our own.
▶ 'Observing the methods and actions of professionals and stealing their skills to make them your own.' This is the fundamental principle that leads to mastery. It's not just knowing it in your head, but incorporating it into your life and making it a habit.
-Takashi Saito, The Conditions of Excellence