![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0z9YNDWmaKOYyatazqA_OyXlAHyi1-WznQNaUa5p4J143mvKNGLxsdB92bblThEIOhQlgSu-8GvC-usO-8FRf4saZXVIHRCLrqzDx8v6zlB7G-_GwEFKeg5Pvk2zj5OUEww6sq3xXIsM/s400/10.jpg)
What if there was nothing to discover? No story, no thousand words, no answer to a non-riddle? What if it was really, really, just a game of forms and colors?
Would it be a sin?
Does this lady need a past?
Is it really so bad for something to be "just" a pretty picture?
We know of the danger of beauty, we know the seductive spectacle means flirting with submission, yet is it really so immoral?
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhR2gX_o81OZ8AE17MMdANiaon9OZTI-UYcOT9EiP6MnSTJzJzq-Zm0070jsahIroALIE9TIhp7OmdI44XTqQnvrTogwZIlwc-qxd-md7k1rrncOhexCP-oRKQuroL_FsfAv7tkMQNZ00E/s400/18.jpg)
But, to continue on my doubt - does having a story constitute a challenge? Or is it just because we like the indolence of layered thinking, the safety net of there being "something else", so as to let our imagination ride a little further...? But haven't we turned it into a rule for (a lot of) contemporary art? This story-telling capacity? (Can someone say a good story about this? If so, the author of the story and the author of the work get a bonus.)
What if it's a pretty picture? What if it's pretty, pretty, pretty, a thousand times pretty? What if it's so damned pretty you don't want it to be a story, to go beyond it being pretty?
Of course, I have the right to omit the depth. And then also, every good story is many stories deep. But some of the best works I know present a fascinating resistance to storytelling. They are like a stone, at once attractive and opaque. They make me want to read within the lines.
And here, somewhat related, is a summer holiday bonus:
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