When is someone else’s good idea just too good to resist?

Bad artists borrow, good artists steal. Or is it the other way around? Or are the best artists the ones who use the right tools or learn to make better ones?

Corvids are great. And great metaphors for how we approach our work.

Where I work, the office is part of a farm complex and so has plenty of wildlife.

Part of the environment here is that it features both Magpies and Jackdaws (as well as Crows, Rooks, Jays – but enough of all them) and the difference between them is marked. The Magpies are, frankly, a bit of a nuisance. They’ll quite happily wreak havoc, stealing fledglings from other birds nests and generally throwing their weight around (we have them nesting in our garden as well, which is not good for the rest of the bird life here.)

The Magpie has a reputation of a raider. A bit of a predator. It’s a cruel characterisation and one that cats should share more often (but that’s another story.)

Jackdaws however, seem to be remarkably social animals. Even towards us.

They have reputation (well earned) for indulging us. People and Jackdaws get on. It’s in the eyes apparently:
“These corvids communicate via their eyes, just as human eye contact plays a major role, and a bird confident with its mentor can ‘read’ that person’s eye motions and will follow them…”

They live in large congregations, so they learn to rub along.
And they love a shiny thing (much as we do.)
They’re methodical, neat, tidy.
They like to live where we live (and at the office, that’s inside the walls of the barn) so they’re good socialisers.
I’d bet they’d make for great design teams.
And great clients.

Meeting a Jackdaw was considered a good omen in the East of England. Having a team of Jackdaws would make for good meetings I’d venture.

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About Richard Hill

Creative director, writer, designer, illustrator based in the UK with global project experience and consulting skills across sectors.

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