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"
He laughed. “What’s to say?
Great paintings—people flock to see them, they draw crowds, they’re reproduced
endlessly on coffee mugs and mouse pads and anything-you-like. And, I count
myself in the following, you can have a lifetime of perfectly sincere
museum-going where you traipse around enjoying everything and then go out and
have some lunch. But—” crossing back to the table to sit again “—if a painting
really works down in your heart and changes the way you see, and think, and
feel, you don’t
think, ‘oh, I love this
picture because it’s universal.’ ‘I love this painting because it speaks to all
mankind.’ That’s not the reason anyone loves a piece of art.
It’s a secret whisper from an
alleyway. Psst, you. Hey kid. Yes you.”
Fingertip gliding over the faded-out photo—the conservator’s touch, a
touch-without-touching, a communion wafer’s space between the surface and his
forefinger. “An individual heart-shock. Your dream, Welty’s dream, Vermeer’s
dream. You see one painting, I see another, the art book puts it at another
remove still, the lady buying the greeting card at the museum gift shop sees
something else entire, and that’s not even to mention the people separated from
us by time—four hundred years before us, four hundred years after we’re
gone—it’ll never strike anybody the same way.
I’ve been thinking a lot about
what Hobie said: about those images that strike the heart and set it blooming
like a flower, images that open up some much, much larger beauty that you can
spend your whole life looking for and never find. " D. T.
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