Seeing
If people could see properly, and see whole, they would all be painters. — Pierre Bonnard Since childhood, I have longed to see the way the Tonalists saw; the way the Impressionists saw; the way the Ashcan and London and Pop painters saw. Maybe it has something to do with the fact that I suffer high myopia . By painting, I’m learning how hard it is to “see like a painter;” to see “properly and whole,” as Bonnard described it. It’s really hard. But not to see like a painter would disappoint me—and not to see at all would be insufferable. That last fate befell the late painter Lennart Anderson , subject of Lennart Anderson: A Retrospective , now at the New York Studio School. Anderson suffered macular degeneration, which left him virtually and legally blind in his seventies. But blindness didn’t deter the painter one bit. As sight failed him, Anderson began to paint “fictions,” as art critic John Yau describes the artist’s later pieces. A...