art_about
cat gleitzeit
Robert looked at his watch to notice how time in the studio fled unnoticed. “I can’t express enough my awe and I don’t know how you take it but you are the first artist that profoundly touched me.”
The artist enjoyed the praise.
Robert left the studio thinking that he could be going crazy but it didn’t matter at all. He knew what he wanted.
Today Stern had a special client – the man behind the art.
He anticipated seeing the man with having a blurred idea of his image, an absent-minded artist with a lived-in face of an addict forever plagued with a virus of creation.
Stern took his time studying the paintings at nights. As if he was analyzing his patient’s unique psychological puzzles he, the expert was expected to solve.
It worked in a similar way with the paintings, as with people, only he didn’t have to worry about making a medical mistake.
He could soon disentangle a complicated line of the layered images that couldn’t be scanned by a momentary observation.
Each day Stern returned to the conference room to see the paintings again just as he studied his patients, one hint at a time to unite all of the components.
Looking at the painting he didn’t have to announce a diagnosis in the end. He could use his logic machine but not obliged of being always right. He liked to see that every day there was something new in the picture. Depending on the mood Stern could see the same picture differently. The title of the painting was Euphoria and to Stern this painting was a virtualization of what he could only see in his patient’s eyes. Never before did he think that this fleeing condition could be transformed into a visual image.
The artwork didn’t cease to surprise him with the amount of color variations, well harmonized and refined, without a slight hint of overstatement of bad taste.
The images looked spontaneous yet united by direction of a flowing line that moved the images in a way of waves moving ocean grass flowing with the drifting water.
The discovered images helped to find others, which could be purely accidental or cerebral.
cat gleitzeit
Robert looked at his watch to notice how time in the studio fled unnoticed. “I can’t express enough my awe and I don’t know how you take it but you are the first artist that profoundly touched me.”
The artist enjoyed the praise.
Robert left the studio thinking that he could be going crazy but it didn’t matter at all. He knew what he wanted.
Today Stern had a special client – the man behind the art.
He anticipated seeing the man with having a blurred idea of his image, an absent-minded artist with a lived-in face of an addict forever plagued with a virus of creation.
Stern took his time studying the paintings at nights. As if he was analyzing his patient’s unique psychological puzzles he, the expert was expected to solve.
It worked in a similar way with the paintings, as with people, only he didn’t have to worry about making a medical mistake.
He could soon disentangle a complicated line of the layered images that couldn’t be scanned by a momentary observation.
Each day Stern returned to the conference room to see the paintings again just as he studied his patients, one hint at a time to unite all of the components.
Looking at the painting he didn’t have to announce a diagnosis in the end. He could use his logic machine but not obliged of being always right. He liked to see that every day there was something new in the picture. Depending on the mood Stern could see the same picture differently. The title of the painting was Euphoria and to Stern this painting was a virtualization of what he could only see in his patient’s eyes. Never before did he think that this fleeing condition could be transformed into a visual image.
The artwork didn’t cease to surprise him with the amount of color variations, well harmonized and refined, without a slight hint of overstatement of bad taste.
The images looked spontaneous yet united by direction of a flowing line that moved the images in a way of waves moving ocean grass flowing with the drifting water.
The discovered images helped to find others, which could be purely accidental or cerebral.