Todd Siler is an American multimedia artist, author, educator, and inventor, equally well known for his art and for his work in creativity research. A graduate of Bowdoin College, he became the first visual artist to be granted a PhD from MIT. Siler began advocating the full integration of the arts and sciences in the 1970s and is the founder of the ArtScience Program and movement.
Creativity research
In the early 1980s, Siler made an extensive study of genius across numerous disciplines to see what, if anything, such highly creative people as Albert Einstein and Sergei Rachmaninoff have, or more importantly do, in common. Although such inquiries are standard, Siler's work went further than any work before or since in examining how methods used by highly creative people might work on the neurological and cellular level. "Creativity is any unconditioned response," is typical of Siler's approach, which both validates and challenges the work of luminaries in the field such as Howard Gardner, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi and Robert Root-Bernstein. These theories were elaborated in two books, Breaking The Mind Barrier: The ArtScience of Neurocosmology, which is largely intended for scholars, and Think Like A Genius written for the general reader. Siler has developed these theories into proprietary programs which are used extensively in schools and corporations.
In 2006, Siler used a multimedia exhibition at New York's Ronald Feldman Gallery to present his proposal for the nature-inspired "Fractal Reactor," which offers an environmental-friendly, alternative method of using controlled nuclear fusion for energy purposes. While the actual processes used by the fractal reactor, rely on highly sophisticated physical and mathematical formulations, its principles re-examine the hypotheses behind nuclear fusion in novel ways. This proposal has been taken up by the International Atomic Energy Agency for further study.
Education and invention
As an artist who has championed the study of science, Siler worked with the Cherry Creek School District to pioneer experiential learning methodologies based on the understanding and creation of systems of metaphor. Siler was instrumental in developing the interdisciplinary curriculum for The Israel Arts and Science Academy in Jerusalem. These programs have become popular with Fortune 500 companies as a way of promoting out-of-the-box thinking. In addition to being an artist and scholar, Siler holds a number of patents on a wide range of inventions, including a widely used computer-graphics input device and textile printing machinery.
Awards
In 2011, Siler received the Leonardo da Vinci World Award of Arts in recognition of his contributions to contemporary and visual arts, for stimulating creativity, inspiring innovation, and uniting art and science to enrich the experience of creative learning.