{"id":7964,"date":"2018-02-28T23:48:44","date_gmt":"2018-02-28T23:48:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/?p=7964"},"modified":"2018-02-28T23:48:44","modified_gmt":"2018-02-28T23:48:44","slug":"the-raft-of-the-painter","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/?p=7964","title":{"rendered":"The Raft of the Painter"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_7965\" style=\"width: 480px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7965\" class=\"wp-image-7965\" src=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/02\/Tribute-2-1024x906.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"470\" height=\"416\" srcset=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/02\/Tribute-2-1024x906.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/02\/Tribute-2-300x266.jpg 300w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/02\/Tribute-2-768x680.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 470px) 100vw, 470px\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-7965\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Tribute #2, Tom Insalaco<\/p><\/div>\n<p>Tom Insalaco is a bit of a phantom. After six decades of making art, this award-winning painter continues to create new art every day, but he makes little additional effort to prove that he exists. In a world where social media has become the latest addictive drug and the new hothouse for growing a career, he shuns publicity and refuses to promote himself. A Google search turns up almost nothing about him, except for the samples of his work at Oxford Gallery\u2019s website. He has no website of his own. He has a Gmail address, but insists that he doesn\u2019t know how to use it. At midnight, sometimes, he steals onto the Internet but leaves everything as he found it. He watches art documentaries on YouTube or Netflix, or clicks around to discover another contemporary painter to admire or to see what\u2019s happening at his favorite Manhattan galleries, but he signs off without leaving a public trail. Though he\u2019s as prolific as ever, the Internet has yet to recognize his existence\u2014which means almost no one has access to his five decades of work.<a href=\"#_ftn1\" name=\"_ftnref1\">[1]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>At the age of 75, he rarely enters exhibitions though for decades he has been repeatedly invited into the Memorial Art Gallery\u2019s biennial Rochester\/Finger Lakes Exhibition, widely considered the most prestigious show for visual artists throughout New York State west of the Catskills. More often than not, he wins one of the exhibition\u2019s awards. Not long ago, he contacted that museum and asked how many times he had been included in the Finger Lakes show. (He doesn\u2019t keep count of his honors.) He was put on hold for a bit, and the woman returned with a note of surprise in her voice, telling him that he was the single most exhibited artist in the exhibition\u2019s history. His first inclusion was back when he was in graduate school at Rochester Institute of Technology in 1969. Since that phone call, he hasn\u2019t heard from anyone at MAG suggesting maybe it\u2019s time to offer the public a long-overdue Insalaco retrospective. He remains mostly under the radar because he\u2019s too busy making art to worry about whether or not anyone sees it.<\/p>\n<p>His exhibitions have been few and far between, but they have been distinguished. He achieved modest regional fame throughout the state after he completed his monumental <em>Tribute Triptych<\/em> in the early 90s in reaction to the random murder of his brother. A show was initially organized around it by Finger Lakes Community College, Gallery 1100 in Buffalo and Alfred University. By entering each of these three large paintings serially into different Rochester Finger Lakes exhibitions, he won the top prize three shows in a row. In 1995, the same triptych was the centerpiece of his contribution to a three-artist show along with William Stanley Taft, Jr. and Jerome Witkin. The show featured Witkin\u2019s suite of paintings about Buchenwald alongside Insalaco\u2019s work. In 1996, the triptych made its way into the New York State Biennial at the New York State Museum\u2014participating museums included Albright-Knox, Brooklyn Museum, Memorial Art Gallery, Munson-Williams-Proctor, Queens Museum of Art, and College Art Gallery at SUNY New Paltz. Insalaco\u2019s paintings were shown with work by a small selection of artists from around the state, including Joy Taylor, Stephen Assael, George Wexler, Elizabeth Olbert, and Phil Lonergan. His paintings have also been shown at Everson Museum of Art in Syracuse and the Butler Institute of Art in Ohio, which owns his work. After he retired from a 30-year career of teaching at SUNY\/Finger Lakes Community College, the school named its art gallery after him, along with his fellow professor and close friend, sculptor Wayne Williams, who founded the school\u2019s art program along with Insalaco in 1969.<\/p>\n<p>Yet these honors have been rare, partly because Insalaco shuns the art world. He views it with irascible skepticism, casting a gimlet eye on much of what passes for visual art in the 21<sup>st<\/sup> century. He paints like an Old Master, without any required postmodern irony to make his antiquated methods feel contemporary. Once upon a time, he worked with great skill as a photo-realist in the wake of that movement\u2019s emergence in the 70s. It was directly after this, in his middle period, as it were, that he constructed vivid visions of his own inner life, painstakingly detailed and realistic, both surreal and Baroque, a visual truce between the 20<sup>th<\/sup> and the 17<sup>th<\/sup> century. His <em>Tribute Triptych<\/em>, 104\u201d x 248,\u201d marked this leap forward in his work. At the time, these paintings drew the interest of both curators and critics across the state. Insalaco was poised to become far more widely known. But since then, he withdrew and continued to work mostly out of view. He still paints daily, by artificial light\u2014all windows shuttered or curtained\u2014chasing the glow of Rembrandt, Rubens, and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/commentisfree\/2018\/feb\/03\/caravaggio-killed-a-man-censor-art\">Caravaggio<\/a>, for the most part, still trying to make mysteries visible, but in a less epic way than in the past.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>2<\/p>\n<p>Insalaco isn\u2019t a reactionary. He loves and admires much modern and contemporary art. He regularly books a room in Manhattan and tours both the museums and the galleries, sometimes putting in a week to absorb what he needs to see. In his own idiosyncratic way, he cherry-picks<!--moreMORE--> his favorites from the last and current century: Olitski and Thiebaud, Dali and the Futurists, dozens of representational painters like Daniel Sprick, Adam Miller, Odd Nerdrum, Vincent Desiderio, Chuck Close, Jenny Saville, and Francis Bacon all make the cut, to name only a few. But he dismisses vast regions of contemporary art with a sneer and refuses to read most of what\u2019s written about it. Insalaco despises most art-speak. To him, it\u2019s just inside baseball among the initiated who have little interest in reaching anyone outside their coterie\u2014either through the work or the theory that gives rise to it. Camille Paglia has a characteristically impertinent but credible theory that the rise of postmodernism and the French deconstructionists in the 70s was a response to the dying job market for academics: it became the secret handshake among those who ended up employing fellow members of this emerging intellectual orthodoxy. If you were a part of the club, you got one of the rare available jobs. It was an arbitrary way to thin the herd. That\u2019s her scornful take on the origins of the intellectual movement that continues to shape how universities teach the humanities.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever else postmodernism has done, for good or ill, it has shut out most people from a passionate interest in what\u2019s produced under its influence. The problem for a practicing artist is essentially that visual art has distanced itself from ordinary people, so most of what\u2019s written about it survives at that same lofty altitude, addressed to the niche of people who care about the subject, no matter how it\u2019s written. As a consequence, most people don\u2019t find much to identify with in what\u2019s happening up in that rarefied air, where art gets the most attention and is sold for the highest prices. They have a sense that the art world intentionally excludes those who haven\u2019t been initiated into its practices. In parallel, the art market addresses itself mostly to the richest of the rich. As a result, visual art has become less and less central in the lives of most people. Theory and practice have both tended to isolate visual art over the past six or seven decades even more than in the past.<\/p>\n<p>Though it has always been an elite activity, before the advent of modernism painting was accessible to nearly anyone who wanted to enjoy it. You didn\u2019t need a college degree to take immediate pleasure in a Chardin still life or a Franz Hals portrait. In the early days of modernism, this still held true: Impressionism was an outrage at first but quickly became easy to love and thus easy to hate by the intellectuals. Now the international art world seems to thrive as a kind of gated intellectual community, happy to live behind the walls of its moneyed compound, a world indifferent to those who aren\u2019t entering it via the usual MFA tributaries or flying to the Venice Biennial on their own private jet. Most people are more than willing to buy a ticket to another Van Gogh or Vermeer retrospective but remain utterly baffled and annoyed by Matthew Barney.<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s the world as Insalaco sees it. He remains happily insulated from all of this, partly by choice and partly because he hasn\u2019t been invited into the compound. It has no bearing on what he does. He ignores most of what\u2019s happening inside those gates, and it returns the favor. He has given up on everything but the next brushstroke. Insalaco was once turned down for a solo exhibition, and he suspected that it was because, in the application he didn\u2019t elaborate on why his work was <em>\u201csocially relevant.\u201d<\/em> Koons can be made acceptable, in this vein, not because he\u2019s an expert purveyor of amusing and beautiful Pop baubles. It\u2019s permissible to respect him if you see his entire mini-industry as a cynical attempt to embody and lay bare the money-besotted rot of the art world itself. When postmodernism embraced a watered-down Marxist critique of Western culture, it spawned the notion that for art to remain vital it had to be rooted in an anti-establishment political and economic critique\u2014a censorious, bitter version of the anti-establishment, consciousness-expanding politics of the Sixties. As Paglia puts it, blowing one\u2019s mind morphed into: <em>Capitalism bad. Identity politics good.<\/em> Anything that recognizes value in traditional Western culture, now under fire from the entrenched neo-Marxists, is unacceptable.<\/p>\n<p>What does this have to do with Insalaco? His work recurrently draws from Biblical myths for it\u2019s subject matter, sometimes with irony, sometimes not. One of the simplistic offshoots of the current orthodoxy is the view that the notion of God and the myths of religion are embraced mostly by Bible-thumping, simple-minded racists with an arsenal of guns and an opposition to gay marriage. One doesn\u2019t hear nearly as much about how the values embodied in the Torah and the Gospels track across cultures and resonate with the wisdom of the Upanishads, the Koran or the Buddhist sutras. Religion is either superstition or a tool for someone somewhere to exploit and extract obedience and wealth from the opiated masses. That\u2019s the core postmodern critique, applied mostly to the Western canon in order to discredit \u201cthe patriarchy.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Insalaco has no stake in that battle. He wants no part of the postmodern prison that rejects the notion of universal truths rooted in psychological or spiritual mysteries. What was true for the Greeks is true now\u2014beauty and goodness and truth are as \u201crelevant\u201d now as they were then, with or without any signifiers about contemporary society. (The postmodern left has suddenly embraced the notion of objective, incontrovertible truth with a vengeance now that Washington, D.C. seems to have embraced a disregard for factual accuracy. When truth becomes inconvenient, then it will be abandoned again.) What was true for Donatello is just as true now. Painting, for Insalaco, is about the human condition, our mortal predicament, which is now as it was at the dawn of the species. Nothing essential has changed. We live and we die and it torments us that we don\u2019t know why\u2014though now and then we get rare hints of something true and beautiful behind this veil of confusion, an intimation of transcendence and real freedom. That\u2019s Insalaco\u2019s subject: our confusion, as well as those fleeting intimations of inexhaustible beauty.<\/p>\n<p>It should be no surprise that one of Insalaco\u2019s favorite words is <em>bullshit<\/em>. Not long ago, he visited the Whitney and literally shouted an obscenity or two, startling the guards, when he came across a room partly filled with mud. It was in fact almost the perfect visualization, on a massive scale, of his favorite single-word invective when talking about the art world\u2014by shouting it aloud, he was essentially offering a pithy, alternative interpretation for the installation itself. Even a postmodernist might have admired that one-word deconstruction of the work\u2014it was certainly visually descriptive. It was also a declaration of why he refuses to play the game.<\/p>\n<p>Well into his eighth decade, he continues to paint as purposefully and tirelessly as he did in his youth, working as hard as anyone young and eager enough to climb the art status ladder with a studio in Brooklyn. He ignores the fragmentation of art into our current Heinz-like multiplicity of genres and methods and sticks to paint, working every day in his own humble-proud way, with immense energy and focus. He lives in a Depression-era two-story house in the Finger Lakes, in the town of Canandaigua, where he gets up in the morning, brews a cup of espresso, and works on a new drawing\u2014a drawing per day is his target\u2014in the upstairs apartment where he cooks, eats, sleeps, reads and watches an occasional movie. After a few hours, he moves downstairs and spends the rest of his day at his easel.<\/p>\n<p>He shuns publicity and self-promotion, but he\u2019s no recluse. Sometimes he shares a meal with his partner and fellow painter, Debra Stewart, who lives an hour away in Rochester\u2014and he regularly meets with other regional artists for coffee and conversation. His upstairs living quarters have the square footage of a modest three-room flat, with the largest room divided into living area and kitchen. When he moves downstairs to his small painting studio, he makes his way through a warren of dimly-lit rooms, some turned into storage, choked with finished paintings, lumber, tools, objects of furniture buried under mounds of gear, art supplies, and all the detritus generated by the tunnel-vision intensity of his painting practice. Tucked away in these rooms are amazing, large-scale, decades-old paintings. He finishes a new painting, finds a place to store it and moves on to the next one. He has no time to organize his own past, to make sense of any of it or convince anyone else to exhibit his work. Jim Hall shows his paintings regularly at Oxford Gallery but never sells them, because Insalaco won\u2019t price the work to appease the budget of regional collectors. He will sell a painting only for what he thinks it\u2019s worth. In his view, it isn\u2019t <em>his<\/em> problem that others don\u2019t want to pay that much\u2014though, on his side, Hall might wish for a price point slightly better suited to balance his supply of Insalaco\u2019s paintings with the demand for them. Insalaco doesn\u2019t keep an eye on sales. His job is to make art, not to make it acceptable.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>3<\/p>\n<p>He was born in Buffalo and grew up in a working-class Italian family on the city\u2019s west side. His mother raised her seven boys while his father worked two jobs to support them all, first in construction and then for Allied Chemical, a firm that allowed him to work for 29 years before laying him off, just before the anniversary that would have entitled him to a full pension. Insalaco was raised Catholic. He continues to rely on the universality of Biblical themes for many of his paintings, but he doesn\u2019t think highly of organized religion, or <em>any<\/em> institutions, for that matter. He\u2019s not a joiner. It\u2019s the depth and inexhaustible mystery of the Biblical myths that draw him back again and again\u2014not the organizations built around them.<\/p>\n<p>He began drawing at the age of six and began painting in grammar school. One of his high school teachers recognized the promise in his work and secretly emptied out a storage room at the high school in order to equip it as a studio for Insalaco. It was filled, floor to ceiling, with art supplies, thanks to this teacher. No other student was allowed to use it. There was no dubious<em> quid pro quo<\/em> required by this surreptitious act of patronage. The teacher wanted nothing but the reward of nurturing the young man\u2019s talent. It was a bit of a confederacy\u2014a game to get away with something worthwhile. At the same time, Insalaco was turning into a bit of a player. He told the school\u2019s administration that he had to work every afternoon to help his father support their large family\u2014true enough\u2014but he didn\u2019t tell them that his job started late in the afternoon. So he finagled permission to attend classes only until noon, which gave him multiple luxurious hours in which to paint in his private, improvised studio. He felt like a king. And from that point on, fueled by the generosity of that one teacher\u2019s recognition and support, Insalaco committed himself to painting.<\/p>\n<p>In school, he was reserved, observant, and skeptical of the various cliques that might have been open for membership. He thought about playing football, but realized after a few scrimmages that the sportsmanship of the game seemed to rest on a suppressed urge to actually kill the opposing lineman, or at least disable him. So that particular club wasn\u2019t for him. He saw the hipsters and toughs on the street corner as just another member\u2019s only club, with their own exclusive cool. He watched them from a distance long enough to realize they would likely end up as druggies, drop-outs and failures. Most of his fellow students were from Buffalo\u2019s working class, but in the Sixties, many of them came from wealthier zip codes, wore blazers to class and raised their hands to ask a question. He decided he was going to learn enough to have a chance at being more like one of the blue blazers, not the guys twisting a cigarette butt into the sidewalk under a boot heel. He wanted to make more of himself than many of the kids who came from his own neighborhood. He started taking art seriously, mostly by studying the work of others and getting better on his own time. By the time he graduated from high school, still 17 years old, he locked himself into his parent\u2019s house all summer\u2014while the rest of the family was away in Canada\u2014and he did nothing but paint. He ignored the telephone, never once answered the front door. He tried one thing after another, experimenting, searching for a way to balance his love for both abstraction and representation\u2014as most great painters do, to one degree or another\u2014discovering mostly what didn\u2019t work, but occasionally what did.<\/p>\n<p>Not sure he could afford college, he applied anyway, tentatively hoping to get at least an associate\u2019s degree at Buffalo State Teacher\u2019s College. His academic record was fine, but not stellar, and in order to get in, he had to undergo a portfolio review with a photography professor. The interview didn\u2019t seem promising until the professor asked what Tom happened to be reading that summer. He said <em>Catcher in the Rye<\/em> and Leonard Feather\u2019s <em>History of Jazz.<\/em> With a stunned look, the advisor laughed out loud and said, \u201cI\u2019m reading the same two books.\u201d That little moment of synchronicity got him into the program for a degree in art education. Toward the end of the two years, he was told he had to take a class in basket weaving and another in community planning. \u201cI told them I\u2019m not doing that. What the hell are you talking about? That has nothing to do with art. I\u2019m here to learn painting and drawing.\u201d In anger, he dropped out, just short of earning his two-year degree.<\/p>\n<p>For a couple years he worked as a laborer, loading lumber into boxcars and accepting whatever other work he could get to make money and save a bit, hoping to enroll at SUNY\/University at Buffalo. He was admitted into the school, but because he had dropped out before finishing his degree, he was unable to carry over any of the credits he\u2019d earned. He was demoted back to the rank of freshman. Two months later, in the middle of a class, an administrator came through the door and said, \u201cIs Tom Insalaco here?\u201d His heart skipped. What had he done wrong now? He timidly raised his hand. \u201cYou\u2019re no longer a freshman. You\u2019re a junior. Come see me later and I\u2019ll explain.\u201d Someone had pulled strings and ensured the transfer of his credits from the previous program. Again and again, throughout his life, other people\u2014recognizing his remarkable promise\u2014took it upon themselves to reach out and help him. It\u2019s a good thing, because he\u2019s never promoted himself, almost to a fault.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>4<\/p>\n<p>Insalaco is ambivalent about most of his education. What is often true now was true half a century ago: there was too much intellectualizing and not enough craftsmanship. He had little advice on how to make a painting, what mediums to use, and how much, what supports, how to mix paint properly, and all the other secrets of how to make paint do things few people can make it do. He once asked a professor how to create skin tones and the response: \u201cHow the hell should I know?\u201d In other words, even then art school was more about ideas than execution.<\/p>\n<p>Painting is a physical skill, in which truth emerges through a bodily act rooted in an evolving perception\u2014the ability to see something mysteriously good materializing through the act of painting itself and then struggling to nurture it, like a growing plant, as the painting reaches completion. It\u2019s a continuously frustrating wrestling match between what you see emerging on the canvas and what you <em>want<\/em> to see instead\u2014and it\u2019s rooted in the basics of color, composition, light, and a quality of line. All the ideas that cluster around that emerging vision come afterward, not before\u2014even though the postmodern agenda completely reverses this order: you figure out what you want to \u201csay\u201d and then illustrate it. It\u2019s interesting to compare Insalaco\u2019s paintings to Witkin\u2019s Holocaust paintings, which once hung on adjacent walls: Isalaco\u2019s are impossible to scan and parse, continuously suggesting contradictory things about art and life, as elusive and full of resonance as music, while Witkin\u2019s are unambiguous, forceful depictions of human cruelty. Insalaco was finding subconscious correspondences in completely unrelated things, cherubs and bellhops, masques and murder. Witkin\u2019s paintings are as much about the act of painting as Insalaco\u2019s, but Witkin makes it visible in the energy of his brushstrokes, whereas in Isalaco\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/raftsofthemedusa.tumblr.com\/image\/170795211549\">triptych<\/a> it\u2019s depicted narratively through self-portraiture, showing the artist himself at work surrounded by his influences. Witkin knew what he wanted to say. Insalaco produced work to make visible his own doubts and faith in ways that are impossible to see as a clear, definitive statement about life.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhat did I learn in school? Practically nothing,\u201d he says. \u201cIt sounds arrogant, but I learned this and that but when it came to painting, my main teacher was an abstractionist who didn\u2019t have a degree so we spent a lot of time talking esthetics and theory. He was very perceptive. In retrospect he was trying to make up for his lack of a degree. But he was really good. I just didn\u2019t learn much from him. I learned mostly from my fellow students, in the studio.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>During his senior year, in September of 1967, Insalaco was drafted into the Vietnam War. He hated the fact that America was fighting a war based on the assumption that Communism would spread across the Pacific toppling free societies like dominos. Insalaco didn\u2019t want to kill anyone in order to defend a 17<sup>th<\/sup> parallel thousands of miles away. He went to the draft board with his father and in the first five minutes of his interview, he told the officer that he would rather kill <em>him<\/em> than any Vietnamese citizen. This didn\u2019t sit well with the leatherneck across the desk. Insalaco promptly got up and left, leaving his father to make amends. The next day, he climbed into his TR4 and drove across the continent to San Francisco in three days, with thirteen hours per day on the road. He found a place to crash and looked for a way to make money, intent not just on fleeing the draft, but opening a new chapter in his work. He tracked down Davis Cone and struck up a quick friendship. Cone introduced him to Robert Bechtel and would have done the same with David Park and even Diebenkorn, but two weeks later Insalaco\u2019s father called and said he\u2019d hired an attorney. The lawyer had straightened things out with the draft board, pointing out that his college enrollment exempted him from service. The Selective Service happily forgot about him, after that. So he came home.<\/p>\n<p>By 1968, he was graduated with a B.A. and promptly went back to work as a laborer, driving trucks and loading boxcars again. And again, someone else pointed him toward his future: his younger brother, who was also majoring in art, joined him for dinner. During the meal, he told Insalaco that Rochester Institute of Technology was looking for graduate students. Interviewers were coming to Buffalo to reach out to people interested in getting an MFA. His brother had no interest in continuing with art; he wanted to go into business and make money, which he eventually did. But Tom figured he ought to give RIT a chance. By the time he interviewed, he had been substitute teaching in the Buffalo school system, even while keeping his second and third jobs as a laborer. The young advisor from RIT asked, \u201cYou\u2019re doing all this work while you\u2019re teaching?\u201d Impressed, he recommended Insalaco for a fellowship, so he was able to earn his advanced degree in a year, with a stipend for expenses and a waived tuition. Again, he learned more from his colleagues in the studio than he did from his professors, as they all experimented and explored different ways to paint, sharing discoveries.<\/p>\n<p>He accepted a semester internship at Finger Lakes Community College, and began teaching a class in art history, though he was only a couple weeks ahead of his students in the subject. He devoured the textbook and did supplementary reading, cramming for his lectures a few days ahead of them, the way students did for tests. In the process, he developed a complete set of lesson plans that first year and then settled comfortably into the teaching routine in succeeding years, as an adjunct. Again, someone else stepped in to show him a path forward. One of his students, a young woman who had been especially bright in class, went on to enroll at SUNY Geneseo. When she began another course in art history there, the professor called her aside and asked her how she had become so astute in the subject. She said: \u201cI took a great course from Tom Insalaco at FLCC.\u201d The professor was so impressed by how much she knew that he went to the trouble to write a letter to the FLCC president praising Insalaco\u2019s skills in the classroom. Someone else was turning the key to open a door toward his future: he was hired as a full-time faculty member in 1972 and stayed at the college until his retirement three decades later.<\/p>\n<p>He was a natural at teaching. Though he could come off as stern and intimidating to many of his students, he worked with them on their terms, and they felt engaged because he listened and actually learned from them. Bill Santelli, a Rochester abstractionist, says he learned how to paint from Insalaco, who had no interest himself in painting that way: \u201cTom has been such a huge influence on me. I might have been a failure if not for his example.\u201d His reputation became so great within the region, more than a dozen people from Rochester, painters with some success already and who had already earned four-year degrees, sought him out at his community college and enrolled in his studio classes. Once the Memorial Art Gallery called him to ask permission to put his house on a tour of regional artist studios. The idea is almost comical considering Insalaco\u2019s craving for privacy and isolation. Tom ended the conversation with a peremptory and curt no, which might be why he hasn\u2019t heard much from the Memorial Art Gallery since then. The reality is that there was no way, logistically, to herd a busload of art lovers through Tom\u2019s home studio. It\u2019s mostly storage for decades of work that hasn\u2019t sold.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>5<\/p>\n<p>If you climb the staircase up to what is essentially a two-bedroom apartment on Insalaco\u2019s his second floor, you come to a landing and a turn into a little hall that leads both to his bedroom and his kitchen. In this little balcony two large canvases from his days as a photo-realist cover most of the walls. They\u2019re perfectly realized with a deep appreciation for the feel of the painted mark\u2014the quality of the surface is as lovingly crafted as the illusions they conjure up. In <a href=\"https:\/\/raftsofthemedusa.tumblr.com\/image\/170795211549\">one<\/a>, a brightly lit scene shows several tourists, from behind, gazing over a guardrail at Niagara Falls. Hanging beside it, in view as you climb the stairs, is a large interior\/still life in a mode reminiscent of early James Valerio without quite Valerio\u2019s level of nano-detail. It\u2019s called <a href=\"https:\/\/raftsofthemedusa.tumblr.com\/image\/170795093429\"><em>Georgia\u2019s Stuff<\/em><\/a><em>,<\/em> and it appears to be a loving glimpse at the jumble of clothing and gear his new girlfriend had piled onto a little table in his apartment when she arrived. Everything is rendered with just enough precision\u2014not the current high definition of contemporary hyperrealism. On one side he shows a large potted philodendron xanadu and back near the wall, the brown plastic dust cover for an old Garrard turntable. Light from a side window casts distinct pools of shadow to the left, and the cascade of random fabric tumbles forward with tactile luxuriance. Aldous Huxley, who studied Western painting while high on mescaline, speculated that painting\u2019s greatest power was to represent infinite variations of clothing. Fabric on fabric. He found the shapes and colors and patterns of clothing full of inexpressible meaning. Huxley would have loved this canvas.<\/p>\n<p>Civilized human beings wear clothes, therefore there can be no portraiture, no mythological or historical story-telling without representation of folded textiles. But though it may account for the origins, mere tailoring can never explain the luxuriant development of drapery as a major theme of the plastic arts. When you paint or carve drapery, <em>you are painting and carving forms, which, for all practical purposes, are non-representational<\/em> . . .<a href=\"#_ftn2\" name=\"_ftnref2\">[2]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Huxley succinctly expressed why Isalaco\u2019s painting is so satisfying. It\u2019s a precise and complex evocation of a single, fleeting moment in Insalaco\u2019s personal life\u2014your eyes can almost feel the texture of the folded corduroys and the plaid flannel sleeves. Yet it\u2019s also a complex, dissonant assembly of shapes and patterns that work as a flat composition, a jazz solo.<\/p>\n<p>Turn the corner into his kitchen and living space, you\u2019ll probably first see his homage to Chuck Close, two enlarged close-up portraits of his aged parents. It\u2019s a diptych he turned into a triptych this year with a self-portrait of exactly the same scale\u2014four feet by four feet\u2014so that when the three paintings are exhibited his face will appear between those of his father and mother. Again, the technique is photo-realistic with every wrinkle and highlight and flaw carefully reproduced in the faces of his <a href=\"https:\/\/raftsofthemedusa.tumblr.com\/image\/170795663654\">mother<\/a> and <a href=\"https:\/\/raftsofthemedusa.tumblr.com\/image\/170795084769\">father<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>These decades-old paintings are the work of a master painter only a decade out of grad school. He could have continued on this path indefinitely, finding new visual realms to explore in this mode, while easily reaching a receptive commercial market in Manhattan at one of the galleries that trade in contemporary realists and photo-realists. But his work took a darker, more introspective and idiosyncratic turn after his brother, Robert, was murdered.<\/p>\n<p>Insalaco remembers the exact moment when his life and his work changed utterly, as W.B. Yeats put it. He recalls:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">I was teaching summer school with fall off, planning on at trip to Italy to study Caravaggio\u2019s work. It was the last day of class, the last ten minutes, actually, and a couple of people came up to invite me for a drink at Lincoln Hill. A phone rings in my office, and picking it up was the last thing I did that day at school. It was my brother, Dennis, telling me Robert had died. That\u2019s when I began to conceptualize the trilogy. Finishing it, in four years of work, was when I really became a painter. It was really quite a revelation to understand what it takes to do something of that scope.<\/p>\n<p>At 2 p.m. Aug. 13, 1987, Erie County Sheriff\u2019s Deputy Robert Insalaco showed up at the front door of a home in North Collins to arrest the man who lived there on a warrant for outstanding felony criminal mischief. Insalaco\u2019s brother rang the bell, but as the suspect opened the door, completely naked, he shot and killed the 43-year-old deputy with a .44 caliber pistol. The tragedy was even more crushing because the killer\u2019s own son had died not long before in the bombing of the U.S. embassy in Beirut\u2014the father had gone mad with grief. Previously, he\u2019d attempted to set his own garage on fire. The death plunged Insalaco into a period of desperate brooding. His had a loving, close family, and the wound of that loss refused to heal.<\/p>\n<p>But after only a short interval, his despondency gave way to a defiant and sustained burst of creative energy. All of his talents seemed to mature at once along with an assurance about what he wanted to achieve. Over the next four years, he worked on the three linked paintings, the largest canvases he\u2019d ever completed\u2014vastly exceeding what he\u2019d been doing up to that point in both imaginative scope. The triptych works as an elegy for his slain brother, an affirmation of the moral struggle inherent in visual art, and a suggestion that painting can serve as a spiritual life raft, an ark, for those who make it as well as those who love it.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>6<\/p>\n<p>If you read the <em>Tribute Trilogy<\/em> from left to right, the paintings seem to have been completed in reverse order. They are all named <em>Dedication<\/em>, and appropriately enough, each comes with its own short epigraph: <em>To all those who have lost their lives at the hands of madmen and fools. Somewhere in the world the sun is always shining. Man\u2019s final resting place is in the hearts and minds of other men. <\/em><\/p>\n<p>The <a href=\"https:\/\/raftsofthemedusa.tumblr.com\/image\/170795195064\">last<\/a> to be completed is the most dramatic and arresting: it shows a group of men and women lifting the lifeless body of Insalaco\u2019s up toward a pair of Baroque angels emerging from a vortex in the sky. Everything is only partly revealed by a spotlight from above, the circle of human figures like a mosh pit strenuously holding Robert\u2019s limp figure aloft. A blood-red sunset serves as backdrop. Insalaco himself sits in the foreground gazing toward the ground, in almost the same pose and mood as Durer\u2019s angel in <em>Melancholy<\/em>. His parents stand to one side, not able to look at the offering of their son\u2014which seems more pagan human sacrifice than some sort of physical ascension into heaven. Insalaco\u2019s surviving brother, Dennis, stands behind the parents, and behind him, Peter Berg, a brilliant Rochester realist painter and teacher who also died prematurely. As you look at it, though, the whole thing appears to be presented as a performance, a stage play: though the backdrop could be an actual seascape, at the edge of a calm ocean, the bloody sky almost seems to be painted on a canvas hanging behind the figures, which makes the lighting look even more theatrical. At the bottom edge of the image, a skeletal hand reaches up toward an hourglass\u2014a very Renaissance symbolic gesture.<\/p>\n<p>The painting makes a stunning impression, not only because of its content, but in the simple way the painter structured the diverse figures into one unit, building a composition in which everything in the picture pivots around the head of his brother, which is nearly hidden from view. It\u2019s slightly reminiscent of David\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Oath_of_the_Horatii#\/media\/File:Jacques-Louis_David,_Le_Serment_des_Horaces.jpg\"><em>Oath of the Horatii<\/em>,<\/a> in which all of the raised arms unite into one purpose, soldiers in the middle and mourners off to the right. But in a counter-intuitive way, much of the power in this painting is entirely sensuous. The way he captures, once again, the folds and textures and feel of the casual clothing, the t-shirts and jeans, as well as the wonderfully rendered arms and hands, helps convey the weight and burden of the collective struggle\u2014it makes the entire image immediate, palpable and oddly familiar. The painting also suggests Sisyphean defiance in the midst of hopelessness\u2014raising the body up only to find that a mere angel can\u2019t do anything but cast the orange shadow of his splayed fingers on Robert\u2019s face. Everything is poised at that uncertain moment of truth when the dead brother will be lifted up supernaturally or else become too heavy for human arms and drop back to earth. Despite the darkness of the scene, no one here is succumbing to despair, though the immediate family is immobilized by the death.<\/p>\n<p>In the next, <a href=\"https:\/\/raftsofthemedusa.tumblr.com\/image\/170795201549\">the central painting<\/a>, Insalaco broke through some internal barrier and created the most fascinating and inscrutable painting of his career. It\u2019s a menagerie of diverse, seemingly unrelated figures and objects, assembled as they might be in a lyric by a surrealist poet. He had personal reasons for putting every detail into this painting, but the painting exceeds the intentions that drove him to cobble these figures together. It has the hallucinatory intensity of a lucid dream, disorienting and disquieting, yet it\u2019s the most satisfying painting out of everything Insalaco has done. For all its weirdness, it\u2019s almost placid and serene, and <em>orderly<\/em>, lit by natural light flooding into the scene from a huge portico on the left that discloses a vertical strip of lovely blue sky, streaked with cirrus clouds. The painter sits as an instructor or admirer of a female painter working at her easel, while to the right of the couple stands a macabre reveler, naked, with tan lines above and below the pale stripe of flesh at his exposed crotch, presumably skin once shaded by discarded swim trunks. He wears a dunce cap that has been modified into a mask. Though it\u2019s a portrait of Robert\u2019s naked killer, transposed into the reverie of the picture, he looks like a dazed refugee from a debauched Venetian masquerade, a precursor some bit player in <em>Eyes Wide Shut<\/em>. Opposite, departing the canvas on the left, is a wonderfully realized bellhop, in pale blue with his own cylindrical blue hat, full of crisp energy and purpose, carrying a tan leather valise. In the background, looming over Insalaco and his student, a tall Romanesque statue gazes down on the room, her hand raised up beneath her robe. And behind the painter, on a second easel, a beveled mirror reflects a glimpse of the infernal fire that seems to light up the sky in the triptych\u2019s flanking paintings\u2014the killer\u2019s burning garage, or a glimpse of hell, or both. At the top floats a perfectly rendered pink cherub, a Renaissance putto with a doll-like face. He bobs like a helium balloon in soft, enveloping billows of smoke rather than clouds.<\/p>\n<p>The painting somehow makes all of this phantasmagoria look commonplace and casual as if a nudist Mardi Gras is always happening next door, and Ritz-Carlton bellhops with white gloves from the fifties are ready to hump your bags out to your parked Subaru. Off stage, there are those hellish cinders blossoming in a column of red, throbbing in view of the seated Insalaco, just outside the left edge of the painting, but you only notice them in the reflection behind him. They\u2019re far enough away to have little impact on the art lesson in view. Behind them all, Caravaggio himself gazes down, benignly, approvingly, pleased.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s a perfect balance of the light and the dark, the precision of everything, down to the jars full of brushes and solvent, and it makes you want to dwell on the painting again and again, no matter how familiar it gets.<\/p>\n<p>The <a href=\"https:\/\/raftsofthemedusa.tumblr.com\/image\/170795211549\">third painting, on the right<\/a> and the first one to be complete, is built around the suggestion that art can serve as a life-preserver for its practitioner and maybe its viewer. In the foreground, gazing directly at the viewer with a brush in his hand and a small palette, Insalaco stands before an easel bearing a blank canvas. Beside him is a small table, with a still life arranged around a human skull, an article about his brother\u2019s death, a framed photograph of his brother and a crucifix. The crucifix hung on the wall of Tom\u2019s childhood bedroom, where he and Robert slept in the same bed\u2014small house, large family\u2014because they were born only sixteen months apart.<\/p>\n<p>Behind this ordinary studio scene looms a much larger canvas on which is painted a detail from <a href=\"https:\/\/www.artsy.net\/artwork\/theodore-gericault-the-raft-of-the-medusa\"><em>The Raft of the Medusa<\/em><\/a>, including the two figures waving articles of clothing\u2014more fabric\u2014to catch the attention of the ship on the horizon, which is not in view. An angel in the upper left corner reclines on a cloud cushion to get a look at the Gericault study. Finally behind that second painting you can glimpse another surviving Insalaco brother with folded arms and bowed head, next to an American flag, presumably from Robert\u2019s funeral, and a dark, barely visible likeness of Robert himself behind that, standing at attention, wearing his campaign hat. The clouds in the distance, behind everything, are again red. Aside from the complicated themes of personal loss, mortality, spiritual torment, and the hope for salvation, the series is almost as much about Tom and the history of painting, how talent and understanding get handed down from one artist to the next, from Gericaux to Insalaco and from Insalaco to his student. The three paintings are unified by a simplified color scheme, dominated by red, blue yellow, black and various browns. The individual paintings are distinguished by smaller areas of the three complementary colors, one for each painting, from left to right, purple, green and orange.<\/p>\n<p>What makes the third painting so straightforwardly significant is how it stands as an emblem of Insalaco\u2019s place\u2014and any lone, independent artist\u2019s place\u2014in the art world. It\u2019s essentially the perfect symbol for a painter who has found no home in what\u2019s happening now, and who chooses to use traditional methods to illuminate contemporary life.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s clear at first glance why Insalaco would have chosen <em>Raft of the Medusa<\/em> for the third and final painting in the series. It\u2019s self-referentially about the perilous, dicey chances for survival of genuine human values in life and especially now in art. Castaways on a life raft are waving rags to catch the attention of their only means of survival, a tiny and distant ship on the horizon. The raft embodies their hope. In the case of Gericault, it represents the art of painting itself, as ark that preserves fundamental human values. It\u2019s self-referential in this general sense, but a more personal one as well, as Tom tells it:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Gericault was riding into Paris on his horse, which reared and threw him off. He fractured his spine and died in his mid-30s. He once said, \u201cIf I had done only one important painting in my life I would die happy.\u201d He\u2019s already done <em>Medusa<\/em>. He didn\u2019t even think it was important. But it\u2019s hanging in the Louvre. He succeeded, but didn\u2019t know it.<\/p>\n<p>The painting created an international sensation, generating both massive praise and condemnation. As Gericault\u2019s own metaphorical life raft, it did it\u2019s job perfectly: it established his reputation for generations but also because it was in defiance of the economic order that surrounded him. He\u2019d built it to free himself from commissioned work, the system itself. In the process he chose to depict people doing virtually the same thing in a more savage context.<\/p>\n<p>Here is how Insalaco describes the historical event:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">The French Revolution was in 1789. By the beginning of the 1800s, there was a restoration of the monarchy. The new king promoted all of his cronies to be upper echelon leaders in the armed forces and some jerk who had hardly ever been to sea was promoted to admiral and put in charge of the ship called the Medusa. Everybody knew the navigation routes to stay off the West Coast of Africa, to avoid a huge sandbar, but this arrogant jerk goes over the sandbar, and the ship gets grounded, and there are only enough lifeboats for him and his cronies. So the rest had to build a raft for themselves to survive on the water.<\/p>\n<p><em>Raft of the Medusa<\/em> is the perfect metaphor for Insalaco\u2019s own work and the self-banishment of his career, which has given him the freedom Gericault wanted. Gericault\u2019s symbol for the freedom he craved was a DIY raft, built by those left for dead when the first-class community on ship saved themselves in the lifeboats. Insalaco has built his own raft, and he continues to survive, both literally and artistically.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>7<\/p>\n<p><em>Tribute Triptych<\/em> depicts an artist floating in the delta of art history, acknowledging predecessors and influences but more importantly finding his own means of expression. His work is an assertion of an individual artist\u2019s ability now to adopt techniques and methods from earlier periods, not for the purpose of commenting in a political way on that work, but in a sincere adoption of those methods because they continue to illuminate the human condition in the same way that they did when they were painted. Postmodernism asserts that we\u2019re all late-comers to art history, but this is liberation rather than a curse. Insalaco assumes correctly that history has finally freed artists to do anything they like without having to think about history at all. The end of art history isn\u2019t the end of painting, but a freedom from the obligations of history\u2014the need to fit in with the times. Artists no longer have to serve the idea of history as forward progress toward better or more \u201crelevant\u201d ways to make art. All art is contemporary now, no matter how it\u2019s made.<\/p>\n<p>No one is a latecomer to anything anymore. Arthur Danto pointed out what was hidden in plain sight, that the notion of forward progress in art history ended with Pop Art and Kuspit announced the \u201cend of art\u201d in recognition that the idea of an avant garde has died and taken with it an easy way to create a new buzz or open up new possibilities. Everything is already possible. All frontiers have been opened up already. Discovering what\u2019s necessary now, individually, is the hard part. The old notion of \u201cnew\u201d has changed in that it has receded as a way of determining what\u2019s worthy of attention\u2014newness is personal now, not historical, and therefore much harder to discern. Danto pointed out that advances in art became impossible after Warhol\u2019s Brillo boxes demonstrated, once and for all, that anything could be considered art. Whether this is a good or bad thing, it\u2019s at least a once-and-for-all declaration of independence for individuals. Danto doesn\u2019t take this insight to the irksome conclusion that even art created exactly as it had been in the past can be just as relevant and powerful now. This last pill is the hardest to swallow, because it forces everyone involved in the enterprise of art to root down deeply enough to discover what matters most\u2014the unpredictable reality that what\u2019s good for each individual artist, without regard for the vagaries of history or the dictates of cultural guardians who\u2019ve lost sight of the profound commonalities in all human values. When Danto says that all art has to come with its own built-in philosophy of art now, it\u2019s a thinker\u2019s way of saying what no genuine painter needs to put into words. A painter does what he can\u2019t help doing, and the critic is free to run alongside, building a philosophy to justify it. Or not. A great painting will be just as good either way.<\/p>\n<p>John Currin can paint as a belated Mannerist, though maybe with a slightly ironic smirk, but few are willing to admit the smirk isn\u2019t required. Anyone is free to be another El Greco if he or she is equal to the task. Anyone who now could paint exactly as Vermeer did would be a very great painter indeed\u2014and would deserve the crowds he or she would draw\u2014for precisely the same reasons Vermeer has been beloved. This latter-day Vermeer\u2019s subjects might be wearing Chuck Taylors and Warby Parker glasses, but otherwise, everything that holds true for a painting by the Dutch master could hold true for anyone now with the same genius. A contemporary \u201cVermeer\u201d would work exactly for the same reasons the Old Master\u2019s paintings worked. Old methods become new when they are used to enable the viewer to see through the contemporary world toward something enduring, and the old methods are <em>automatically<\/em> new when they are filtered through a unique, individual sensibility. Spend a little time studying Piero\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgallery.org.uk\/paintings\/piero-della-francesca-the-nativity\"><em>The<\/em> <em>Nativity<\/em><\/a> every day for a few weeks, or <a href=\"https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/art\/collection\/search\/470304\">Robert Campin\u2019s <em>Merode Alterpiece<\/em><\/a>, and you\u2019ll realize that if someone had painted them last year, exactly as they were painted centuries ago, the work might easily be greeted with critical praise for their idiosyncratic, technical brilliant. They worked as religious icons in their time, yet they could work just as powerfully now as ambiguous, heightened visions of the spiritual depth in everyday life\u2014full of humor and surprise and utter deadpan weirdness. They\u2019re uncanny and yet utterly alive, filled with both a stylized feel of daily experience and yet as numinous as a still frame from a Tarkovsky film. Painted a year ago, they could have emerged from the vision of a defiant contemporary artist bent on asserting that the values of the past, both spiritual and visual, remain as true now as they were then. And they would work, because those values <em>still work<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>The rediscovery and embrace of Piero by so many diverse 20<sup>th<\/sup> century artists testifies to the fact that there is no longer a right and wrong way to make art. Nevertheless, even if as a postmodernist you accept the cultural relativity of all values, the core values of the Western canon remain as pertinent as ever now. Even if those values were randomly assembled together for no other reason than to make an exploitive civilization possible, and to strengthen the power of the few, they\u2019re still one of the most enduring and practical set of codes for improving human lives. The postmodernists ask for nothing more from any other cultural norms. But the values that undergird Western culture are more than human improvisations. What was beautiful three millennia ago is beautiful still\u2014not because we choose to think it\u2019s beautiful, but because in an absolute sense it just <em>is<\/em>. The core truth of human life hasn\u2019t changed, and in reality truth isn\u2019t simply a matter of cultural practices\u2014truth isn\u2019t up for grabs by whatever force claims power over it. Maybe it\u2019s the last revolution in art to assert that nothing in art is, nor ever was, revolutionary\u2014it was just a series of partial realizations that everything in art is permitted, on the path toward the realization that we\u2019re free to do anything we damn well please. The footnote to that is: it\u2019s a terrible freedom, as the existentialists recognized. Sorting the wheat from the chaff in art isn\u2019t about art history\u2014art history is over\u2014but about individual idiosyncrasy, and the intricacies of personal vision, as Kuspit insists from many different angles in his writing.<\/p>\n<p>Now the hard part begins. It remains true that only <em>certain<\/em> things are actually worthwhile. The ultimate challenge now is to figure out how to make something genuinely worthwhile in a world where everything is permitted. A place to start is for an artist to quit thinking of career, and money, and any other motive and simply do what he or she loves to do most, in near-total privacy, if that\u2019s required\u2014in the end, quality trumps every other intellectualized justification for a work of art. Love is the parent of what\u2019s good.<\/p>\n<p>Insalaco loves his life and his work. He doesn\u2019t fret much about any of these considerations other than to put himself safely beyond the reach of the art world\u2019s machinations. He\u2019s happy on his raft. He knows what\u2019s good when he sees it emerge from under his brush, and even if he couldn\u2019t tell the good from the bad, he would still get up every day to paint. What he mentioned to me about Chuck Close applies equally well to the phantom of Canandaigua: \u201cHe said he had to keep painting or he\u2019d die. So he kept painting.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\">[1]<\/a> (I created a Tumblr account and posted images of the paintings I refer to in this essay. Aside from what Oxford Gallery has on its website, I believe these are almost the only images of Insalaco\u2019s paintings accessible by brower at this point .)<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref2\" name=\"_ftn2\">[2]<\/a> Pp. 30-31, The Doors of Perception, Aldous Huxley, Harper &amp; Row, 1990.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Tom Insalaco is a bit of a phantom. After six decades of making art, this award-winning painter continues to create new art every day, but he makes little additional effort to prove that he exists. In a world where social media has become the latest addictive drug and the new hothouse for growing a career, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-7964","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>The Raft of the Painter - represent<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/?p=7964\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Raft of the Painter - represent\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Tom Insalaco is a bit of a phantom. After six decades of making art, this award-winning painter continues to create new art every day, but he makes little additional effort to prove that he exists. 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