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The Social Artist - Leadership for the 21st century


Note: This is an excerpt from the article. The complete article is available in the Fall/Winter 2004 issue.

Introduction to Social Artistry

Let us explore the nature and development of our call to service in ways that link inner and outer realities, universal plans and passionate commitment. Let us ask what to do, where to go, how to take initiative and how to understand our role as leader and social artist in this most compelling moment of human history. Let us reflect on the need for a new kind of leader, a social artist who is also artful of the ways of the inner landscape.

Too many of the problems in societies today stem from leadership that is ill prepared to deal with the chaos and complexity of today’s world where too much is happening too quickly. This is not just a matter of inadequate training in the realities of global change, but even more tragically, a lack of human resourcefulness, leaders living out of a field of awareness that is both limited and limiting in their abilities to deal with the world as it is today. Worldwide, societies are crying for assistance in the transformation of their citizens, organizations, and institutions. But sadly leaders who can rise to the challenge are hampered by training that leaves the greatest of the student’s natural resources unexplored and insufficient. The leader, like most of society, emerges as a highly compromised version of what he or she could be. And the state of the world reflects this in a most dangerous way.

The density and intimacy of the global village and the staggering consequences of our new knowledge and technologies make us directors of a world that has, up to now, mostly directed us. What is alarming is the absence of social artists (i.e., skilled facilitators, entrepreneurs and leaders) to advise and lead the shift to new values and practices. The usual formulas and stopgap solutions born of an earlier era will not help us.

Let us consider then the art and science of transformation leadership, leadership that is one of the mysteries of the human as he or she lives a life of alignment, refinement and contact to the divine purposes and patterns of evolutionary possibilities. This is the art of world making, spirit catching, mind growing, soul quaking leadership.


Introducing Jean Houston

“Jean Houston dominates the room with her larger-than-life presence and crackling wit. She is a walking encyclopedia, reciting poems, passages from great works of literature, historical facts and scientific data all in the same breath,” says Senator Hillary Clinton. Scholar, philosopher and researcher in human capacities, Jean has worked in 40 cultures helping to deepen their own uniqueness as they become part of the global community. Recipient of numerous global awards for her service to humanity, she is one of the foremost visionary thinkers and doers of our time. Author of 18 books she works on the frontiers of the new global society training paradigm pioneers in social artistry. She is a consultant to UNDP and Advisor to UNICEF in human and cultural development – implementing education and health programs in such places as Myanmar (Burma) and Bangladesh as well as with numerous indigenous peoples. She has been advisor to Eleanor Roosevelt, President and Senator Clinton. and works with a small group associated with the Dalai Lama. Her PBS Special, A Passion for the Possible conveys her ability to inspire and invigorate people with her vision – the finest possible achievement of the individual and cultural potential in a global society.

She continues to work closely with the United Nations Development Program, particularly in retraining leadership in social artistry in the arena of decentralized governance in order to accomplish the Millennium Development Goals. In 2004 she will train leaders in Albania, Barbados, Panama, Brazil, the Philippines and China. Participants in these programs are invited to influence political and economic institutions that effect their lives as well as to meet their individual needs and potential.

In Jean’s own words, “Today, community participation and the empowering of grass roots development are essential to transforming the quality of life in societies everywhere. It is through work at these local levels that hope is generated for new and effective ways of shared governance. As Kofi A. Annan has said, ‘Good governance is perhaps the single most important factor in eradicating poverty and promoting development.’ It has been my experience that working in Social Artistry at both local and individual levels lays the foundation for good governance.”

(Updated Nov 12, 2009)