The Art Signal | June
How to Look: Some thoughts on art and attention — or scroll down for this month's listings.
There is a particular kind of blindness that has nothing to do with your eyes.
It sets in slowly, politely, without announcing itself. It happens to cities you’ve lived in too long, to faces you know too well, to the view from a window you’ve looked through a thousand times. The world doesn’t disappear exactly; it just stops registering. Familiarity is the mind’s way of filing things away as already handled, freeing up attention for whatever feels newer, more unresolved.
It’s an efficient system that keeps us alive. It’s also a kind of loss.
Painters have understood this for centuries. The rest of us tend to grasp it only in reverse. You notice the soft square of light on the floor the day you’re moving out of it. You really look at a person’s face the moment you understand you won’t see it again. It may be that attention is a resource we don’t hand over easily. It has to be pried open.
Art is one of the few things that can do the prying.
It takes the thing we thought we had already seen and places it back in front of us, strange again.



