The Genius Of Design

Ousman Diallo

The place where creatives/builders find inspiration, discover tools, and develop the mental models they need to thrive in a digital world.

  1. 3d ago

    $147 Million for a Painting… Doug Woodham on Why Nobody Bought Basquiat (Until Everyone Did)

    What if the most iconic outsider in modern art was never really an outsider at all? Doug Woodham holds a PhD in economics from the University of Michigan, spent years as a partner at McKinsey, and served as President of the Americas at Christie's auction house — where he once watched $147 million change hands for a single Francis Bacon painting. But his latest book isn't about the market. It's about a person. Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Making of an Icon is the first major Basquiat biography in over 25 years. Built on more than 100 interviews — including family members on the maternal side who had never spoken publicly — it dismantles the myth of the untrained street artist and reveals something far more interesting: a wickedly intelligent kid who was reading the New York Times in first grade, studying Da Vinci at eight, and reverse-engineering the power structure of the art world by nineteen. In this conversation, Doug and I go deep on why most biographies get Basquiat wrong by ending the story at his death, when the real economics — how markets form, how reputations get built or destroyed posthumously — only begin there. We talk about MoMA turning down donated Basquiat paintings for nearly two decades while collectors were quietly buying everything they could get their hands on. We unpack the neo-expressionist lineage that actually shaped his visual language — not graffiti, not Cy Twombly, but the Cobra movement and artists like Karel Appel. And we get into the quiet skill that may have mattered more than any painting: Basquiat's ability to walk into a room of twenty strangers and immediately identify the three people he needed to know. We also talk about art and commerce — why the two have been inseparable since the Medici's, why auction houses reflect taste rather than form it, and why buying art is usually a terrible financial investment but an extraordinary human one. Doug brings the rare combination of an economist's precision and a lifelong art obsessive's intuition to every answer — and he doesn't let the romantic myths go unchallenged. If you're a creative trying to understand how reputations are actually built, or if you've ever wondered what really happens inside the rooms where $100 million decisions get made, this one's for you.

    1h 50m
  2. Jun 4

    NYU Scientist Who Started in Art… Karolina Sulich on Why You Were Never Meant to Pick One Field

    Karolina collaborates with living organisms. At NYU's Laboratory of Living Interfaces, she works with microbes — reading their DNA to detect heavy-metal contamination in soil and water, building computational pipelines that turn a cocktail of unknown bacteria into a readable signal. But her first training wasn't in science. It was in art. In this episode, we follow the thread between those two worlds — and why Karolina insists they were never separate. We get into why she sees math and code as a form of poetry, why identity is something you do and not something you are, and why the educational system's habit of labeling kids early ("you're an arts person," "you're a math person") quietly held her back for years. The heart of the conversation is about how to think. Karolina makes the case that there are no shortcuts to mastery — that the brain is biological jelly with its own modus operandi, and no AI tool changes the fact that real understanding takes time, repetition, and being willing to be a beginner again. We talk about the equation Ousman scribbled mid-conversation — curiosity greater than ego — and why that single inequality might be the whole game. We also get into the Gowanus Canal: how an atmospheric art installation made of contaminated water and sludge accidentally produced a legitimate scientific question, and what that says about where good questions actually come from. Plus DNA you can print, the biosecurity stakes of writing the language of life, de-extincting mammoths, and a rescued park parakeet that may be her next research subject. If you've ever felt boxed in by your own label, or wondered how to ask a question worth chasing — this one's for you.

    1h 38m
4.9
out of 5
41 Ratings

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The place where creatives/builders find inspiration, discover tools, and develop the mental models they need to thrive in a digital world.

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