Steve Jobs famously said innovation is "saying no to 1000 things" before you say yes.
For more than a decade, Apple has used Pablo Picasso's Bull to drive home the lesson.
Here's a breakdown đź§µ
In Dec. 1945, Picasso created "The Bull", a series of 11 lithographs (stone prints).
With each successive print, a bull is simplified and abstracted. Picasso's goal was to find "spirit of the beast".
At Apple, employees are taught this philosophy.
Below are the 1st, 4th and last stone print.
The bull progresses from:
◻️a realistic drawing
◻️to a deconstructed image w/ the famous "abstract" style
◻️to lines outlining a shape
Through 11 iterations, Picasso simplified the image until it captured the "essence" of the bull.
Picasso said of the abstraction process:
"Two holes. That’s the symbol for the face, enough to evoke it without representing it. But isn’t it strange that it can be done through such simple means? Whatever is most abstract may perhaps be the summit of reality.”
Enter Apple University.
In 2008, Steve Jobs tapped the dean of Yale School of Management to create an internal training curriculum for Apple.
The program was meant to teach new employees Apple's culture and design philosophy (the teachings are rarely shared with the public).