All of this is an incentive to steer away from the grandiose, the bland, the over-generalised: to com- mission artworks which do not hide human frailties and imperfections. One study of over a hundred CEOs in the tech industry, for example, showed that the more an individual CEO was referred to in place of the company, in annual reports or press releases, for example, the greater the volatility of the company’s performance on the stock market. In this sense, we might look to Oliver Cromwell as an unlikely hero of the corporate art of the future—a leader who, though reluctant to have his portrait painted at all, insisted that, if it had to be done, it should not flatter but show him entirely as he was—“warts and all”.