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  If anything exists; it is inprehensible。
  If anything was prehensible;
  it would be inmunicable。
  
  … Gorgias
  
  
  
   PART ONE
   NOTHING EXISTS
  
  
  1
  
  Two hours ago the Railway Expressman delivered the crated; newly published International Encyclopedia of Fine Arts to my Palm Beach apartment。 I signed for the set; turned the thermostat of the air…conditioner up three degrees; found a clawhammer in the kitchen; and broke open the crate。 Twenty…four beautiful buckram…bound volumes; eggshell paper; decide edged。 Six laborious years in preparation; more than twenty…five hundred illustrations… 436 in full…color plates…and each thoroughly researched article written and signed by a noted authority in his specific field of art history。
  Two articles were mine。 And my name; James Figueras; was also referred to by other critics in three more articles。 By quoting me; they gained authoritative support for their own opinions。
  In my limited visionary world; the world of art criticism; where there are fewer than twenty…five men…and no women…earning their bread as full…time art critics (art reviewers for newspapers don't count); my name as an authority in this definitive encydopedia means Success with an uppercase S。 I thought about it for a moment。 Only twenty…five full…time art critics in America; out of a population of more than two hundred million! This is a small number; indeed; of men who are able to look at art and understand it; and then interpret it in writing in such a way that those who care can share the aesthetic experience。
  Clive Bell claimed that art was 〃significant form' I have no quarrel with that; but he never carried his thesis out to its obvious conclusion。 It is the critic who makes the form(s) significant to the viewer! In seven more months I will reach my thirty…fifth birthday。 I am the youngest authority with signed articles in the new Encyclopedia; and; I realized at that moment; if I lived long enough I had every opportunity of being the greatest art critic in America… and perhaps the world。 With tenderness; I removed the heavy volumes from the crate and lined them up on my desk。
  The plete set; if ordered by subscribers in advance of the announced publication date…and most universities; colleges; and larger public libraries would take advantage of the prepublication offer…sold for 350; plus shipping charges。 After publication date; the Encyclopedia would sell for 500; with the option of buying an annual volume on the art of that year for only 10 (same good paper; same attractive binding)。
  It goes without saying; inasmuch as my field is contemporary art; that my name will appear in all of those yearbooks。
  I had read the page proofs months before; of course; but I slowly reread my 1;600…word piece on art and the preschool child with the kind of satisfaction that any well…done professional job provides a reader。 It was a tightly summarized condensation of my book; Art and the Preschool Child; which; in turn; was a rewritten revision of my Columbia Master's thesis。 This book had launched me as an art critic; and; at the same time; the book was a failure。 I say that the book was a failure because two colleges of education in two major universities adopted the book as a text for courses in child psychology; thereby indicating a failure on the part of the educators concerned to understand the thesis of the book; children; and psychology。 Nevertheless; the book had enabled me to escape from the teaching of art history and had put me into full…time writing as an art critic。
  Thomas Wyatt Russell; managing editor; Fine Arts: The Americas; who had read and understood the book; offered me a position on the magazine as a columnist and contributing editor; with a stipend of four hundred dollars a month。 And Fine Arts: The Americas; which loses more than fifty thousand dollars a year for the foundation that supports it; is easily the most successful art magazine published in America…or anywhere else; for that matter。 Admittedly; four hundred dollars a month is a niggardly sum; but my name on the masthead of this prestigious magazine was the wedge I needed at the time to sell free…lance articles to other art magazines。 My ine from the latter source was uneven; of course; but with my assured monthly pittance it was enough…so long as I remained single; which was my avowed intention…to avoid teaching; which I despised; and enough to avoid the chffly confinement of museum work…the only other alternative open to those who selected art history as graduate degrees。 There is always advertising; of course; but one does not deliberately devote one's time to the in…depth study of art history needed for a graduate degree to enter advertising; regardless of the money to be made in that field。
  I closed the book; pushed it to one side; and then reached for Volume III。 My fingers trembled…a little…as I lit a cigarette。 I knew why I had lingered so long over the preschool child piece; even though I hated to admit it to myself。 For a long time (I said to myself that I was only waiting to finish my cigarette first); I was physically unable to open the book to my article on Jacques Debierue。 Every evil thing Dorian Gray did appeared on the face of his closeted portrait; but in my case; I wonder sometimes if there is a movie projector in a closet somewhere whirring away; showing the events of those two days of my life over and over。 Evil; like everything else; should keep pace with the times; and I'm not a turn…of…the…century dilettante like Dorian Gray。 I'm a professional; and as contemporary as the glaring Florida sun outside my window。
  Despite the air…conditioning I perspired so heavily that my thick sideburns were matted and damp。 Here; in this beautiful volume; was the bitter truth about myself at last。 Did I owe my present reputation and success to Debierue; or did Debierue owe his success and reputation to me?
  〃Wherever you find ache;〃 John Heywood wrote; 〃thou shalt not like him。〃 The thought of Debierue made me ache all right…and I did not like the ache; nor did I like myself。 But nothing; nothing in this world; could prevent me from reading my article on Jacques Debierue 。 。 。
  
  
  2
  
  Gloria Bentham didn't know a damned thing about art; but that singularity did not prevent her from being a successful dealer and gallery owner in Palm Beach。 To hold her own; and a little more; where there were thirty full…time galleries open during the 〃season;〃 was more than a minor achievement; although the burgeoning art movement in recent years has made it possible to sell almost any artifact for some kind of sum。 Nevertheless; it is more important for a dealer to understand people than it is to understand art。 And Gloria; skinny; self…effacing; plain; had the patient ability to listen to people…a characteristic that often passes for understanding。
  As I drove north toward Palm Beach on A1A from Miami; I thought about Gloria to avoid thinking about other things; but without much satisfaction。 I had taken the longer; slower route instead of the Sunshine Parkway because I had wanted the extra hour or so it would take to sort out my thoughts about what I would write about Miami art; and to avoid; for an additional hour; the problem…if it was still a problem…of Berenice Hollis。 Nothing is simple; and the reason I am a good critic is that I have learned the deep; dark secret of criticism。 Thinking; the process of thinking; and the man thinking are all one and the same。 And if this is true; and I live as though it is; then the man painting; the painting; and the process of painting are also one and the same。 No one; and nothing; is ever simple; and Gloria had been anxious; too anxious; for me to get back to Palm Beach to attend the preview of her new show。 The show was not important; nor was the idea unique。 It was merely logical。
  She was having a tandem showing of naive Haitian art and the work of a young Cleveland painter named Herb Westcott; who had spent a couple of months in Pétionville; Haiti; painting the local scene。 The contrast would make Westcott look bad; because he was a professional; and it would make the primitives look good; because they were naively unprofessional。 She would sell the primitives for a 600 percent markup over what she paid for them and; although most of the buyers would bring them back after a week or so (not many people can live with Haitian primitives); she would still make a profit。 And; for those collectors who could not stand naive art; Westcott's craftsmanship would look so superior to the Haitians that he would undoubtedly sell a few more pictures in a tandem exhibit than he would in a one…man show without the advantage of the parison。
  By thinking about Gloria I had avoided; for a short while; thinking about Berenice Hollis。 My solution to the problem of Berenice was one of mild overkill; and I half…hoped it had worked and half…hoped that it had not。 She was a high school English teacher (eleventh grade) from Duluth; Minnesota; who had flown down to Palm Beach for a few weeks of sun…shiny convalescence after having a cyst removed from the base of her spine。 Not a serious operation; but she ha

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