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Visions & Revisions
Creative Accounting
06/01/2007

The MacDowell Colony, the nation’s first and most celebrated artist residency program, is marking its 100th anniversary this year. For a century, the Peterborough, N.H., institution has provided a working retreat for more than 6,000 artists. While there, James Baldwin toiled on Notes of a Native Son, Aaron Copland conjured Appalachian Spring and Thornton Wilder wrote Our Town. Tom Putnam, chairman of Markem, a Keene, N.H.–based manufacturer of specialized printing machinery with $300 million in annual sales, sits on MacDowell’s board. He talked with features editor Emily DeNitto about the model MacDowell can offer businesses and the importance of fostering creativity in the workplace.

What makes MacDowell so special?
There are two things that stand out in my mind. One is the physical environment and the other is the community, the interdisciplinary nature of the group that’s there and the energy that’s created around sharing the work.

The physical environment is unusual in that each artist has a separate building as a studio. It isn’t just a room in a building, it’s a whole separate building that is off in the woods. You can’t see any other buildings from any given studio. The artists don’t live in their studios; they have rooms in an old farmhouse. They eat at the dining facility, and then they walk or bike through the woods to their very own space that is there for them to use in whatever way they see fit.

So that’s all that goes on there: creating.
Yes. For instance, the visual arts studios for the painters and the sculptors are freshly painted for each new occupant. You can tack things to the wall, you can paint on it. Each artist uses the walls to do something. We have 14 or 15 freshly tuned pianos in the composers’ studios for each composer, and there are 32 studios in all. The environment is very focused on providing the best creative setting.

These folks then get together every day, and there’s invariably a sharing of what they have done. The tradition at MacDowell, though it’s not required, is that the artists, at some time in their residency, will have an open studio and invite the others to come see and talk about what they’re doing. There’s a lot of interchange.

What kind of lesson can this model provide businesses?
Today’s business world needs creative people—people who come to work with their brain switched on. Those thinking beyond the boundaries and making contributions to the success of the business are the most valuable.

At Markem we’ve gone to considerable lengths to encourage creative thinking. We’ve run a poetry slam among our 1,400 employees worldwide, and we do all kinds of things to get people to think creatively. One of the lessons I took back from MacDowell is that it’s important to provide an environment that is conducive to creative work, whether it’s in a finance office or a manufacturing floor or in R&D.

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