On Simon Dinnerstein's new blog, Counterpoint: A Blog on the Visual Arts, he writes about a car ride to the Palmer Museum of Art: to visit his painting, The Fulbright Triptych.
On
December 9, Virginia Bonito, an art historian and former curator of the
Seavest Collection, Marshall Price, curator at the National Academy
Museum of Art, and Jhumpa Lahiri, a wise and gifted writer, accompanied
me on the four and a half hour car ride to the Palmer Museum of Art at
Pennsylvania State University. These three, along with about twenty
other contributors including the composer George Crumb, the actors John
Turturro and Alvin Epstein, and the art historian, Colin Eisler, will
be taking part in a really exciting project. (Also participating in
this upcoming publication are Anthony Doerr, author of The Shell Collector and the psychoanalyst/novelist Phillipe Grimbert, whose book, Memory, was recently made into the haunting film, A Secret.)
For
the last few months, Milkweed Editions, an independent publisher
located in Minneapolis, has been putting together an anthology of
writing based on my painting, The Fulbright Triptych. In
the book, this major, fourteen foot painting will be seen and written
about from a variety of points of view: through the lens of an art
historian, a novelist, a composer, a pianist, a critic, a psychologist,
etc. Some essays that were previously published, including works by Guy
Davenport, Rudolf Arnheim, John Russell, George Tooker, Tom Messer and
Albert Boime will also be a part of this publication.