
Artist's commentary
Story of a Wolf
I happened across a bar and stopped in. There, I encountered one of the most mysterious men I've met in my life. With a light, mocking tone, he told me he had just finished a job.
"You're an art dealer, right? I can tell from the way you look at things. You're searching for the most beautiful thing here purely on reflex."
In a strange coincidence, he knew a great deal about paintings. We ended up talking about one painting in particular on display in the city's museum: a Tiziano, or Titian as he's known elsewhere, called "Sacred and Profane Love."
"To tell the truth, I don't know the first thing about art. I can't tell a Dali from dog shit. I can, however, spot the grandiose, the precious, and the well-made, but no more than that. I sense nothing of what society calls 'love.'"
They say beauty is that which provides people with love, or is something they love in turn. Apparently, this man had no way of experiencing that joy or satisfaction for himself.
"Beauty should be found in what is past. Only when something is lost or broken do you realize its importance. It is not a matter of admiration, but of mourning. There is nothing more beautiful than what you cannot ever reclaim."
I couldn't agree with him. After all...
"Yeah. That's right, brother. The moment you damage something so that you can feel love for it, you lose what you've come to love. There's no goddamn point. No salvation, no retribution... Nothing. So then, why love at all?"
Having said his piece, as though it had all been a big joke, the man got up from his seat and left.
...In the distance, I heard the wailing of an ambulance. It made me think of death.