Part One: Architects, Achilles and Launching a Startup Odyssey
Beyond Legacy
Louis Sullivan was a legendary architect, known as the “father of skyscrapers”. He was among the first to embrace new tech, like steel frames and elevators which changed infrastructure development forever. Despite this, people want to see him as a cautionary tale since he wasn’t financially successful in his later years. Nikola Tesla too, suffered a lack of funds when he died. Even when brilliance doesn’t always equal wealth, let’s not overlook the fact that Sullivan’s buildings still stand strong and kiss the sky. Meanwhile, electric cars today bear Tesla’s name. These men were ahead of their time and noble for it. A testament that bank accounts die and visions live on.
Frank Lloyd Wright was Sullivan’s protege and battled his fair share of demons as well, including scandals, professional criticism and debts until the day of his death. Yet, he was loyal to his mentor’s vision of “form follows function” despite the brutal criticisms of it at the time. Like Sullivan, he refused the status quo of mimicking the ornamental European traditions. Instead, he developed his own “organic architecture” style, integrating the site and surroundings with the building. Using the aesthetic of horizontal lines, it would become known as his signature “Prairie Style”. Wright would go on to produce innovative homes like Falling Water and Taliesin, which now serve as timeless beacons of unique American architecture.
Their memory challenges me: Do I have the cojones to put everything on the line for my startup, as they did for their vision? Although Learning Producers is in the field of learning experience design, we’ve been guided by “form follows function” in a landscape hellbent on mimicking conventional models. Bootstrapping as a first time founder feels like entering battle, armor clanking and shield raised. My enemy, a Goliath of stagnation.
I’m reminded in the scene from the movie Troy, where Achilles is made aware of a large enemy soldier he must combat. A boy commented to him, “The Thessalonian you’re fighting, he’s the biggest man I’ve ever seen. I wouldn’t want to fight him.” To which Achilles savagely replies, “That’s why no one will remember your name.”