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| Richard Mayhew Equinox ca. 1968 oil on canvas National Gallery of Art, Washington DC |
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| Doris Ulmann Corn Shocks and Sky ca. 1925 platinum print Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC |
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| Antonio Frasconi The Iced Sound 1958 color woodblock print Art Institute of Chicago |
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| Philips Koninck Group of Buildings with a Tower among Trees 1671 watercolor on paper British Museum |
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| Hall Thorpe Home 1921 color woodblock print National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa |
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| Eugène Boudin Beach Scene at Trouville 1863 oil on panel National Gallery of Art, Washington DC |
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| Richard Benson Stones of Newport 1977-78 palladium print Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC |
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| Harry Callahan Eleanor, Chicago 1949 gelatin silver print Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
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| attributed to Luigi Pesce Cemetery in Meshed ca. 1860 albumen silver print Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
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| William Turner of Oxford Stonehenge: Stormy Day 1846 watercolor on paper Ashmolean Museum, Oxford |
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| Heinrich Kühn Mary Warner and Edeltrude on the Brow of a Hill ca. 1908 autochrome Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
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| Vincent van Gogh La Crau from Montmajour 1888 drawing British Museum |
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| John Constable Hampstead Heath 1830 watercolor on paper British Museum |
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| Judy Dater Self Portrait at Craters of the Moon 1981 gelatin silver print Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
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| Jan van Goyen Dune Landscape ca. 1630-35 oil on panel Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna |
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| Stephen Shore Giverny (plate VII) 1981 dye imbibition print National Gallery of Art, Washington DC |
Today there is the constant clatter of a backhoe or steam shovel coming from the hillside across the road and down a bit, where they are doing something to the dirt around the new house they have been putting up. It is a hot day. Another noise is the hum of a fan in the room. The little cat is asleep, stretched out on her side, pressed up against me. A dog, not my dog, is asleep outdoors, stretch out on his side in the shade.
Since I am being asked why, in general, I write, I can ask specifically what, exactly, was the purpose of writing that last paragraph, including the backhoe and the small cat?
Maybe I wanted to write that because I wanted to evoke this moment of this day – clatter of backhoe, hum of fan, cat lying here, dog lying outside – so that I could make it permanent. Maybe I wanted to take that reality I perceived with my senses and filter it through my brain and onto the page and let it stick there. I thought of saying that I wrote it so that I could remember this moment later when I read it, but that is not true, since I don't think in such pragmatic terms about writing, unless I am writing in a diary specifically to remember what happened that day.
Also plausible might be that I write it so that I can present this picture or moment to someone else, share my immediate present, not be alone in my immediate present. But I think that's not exactly it either. It is really so that I can have the pleasure of writing parallel sentences about parallel animals, describing on the page in parallel terms how I see two animals in parallel postures – indoors, outdoors – because this can be seen on the page whereas it can't be seen in reality, since one can't see both animals at once, lying prostrate in the heat, both appearing to be tired, even exhausted, unable to move, though we know from experience that they are not, they could spring to their feet immediately and run off, full of energy, if they chose to.
I want to write this, and have written this, but whether I will include it in this essay I don't know. It is one thing to want to write something, and go ahead and write it, and it is sometimes another thing to want to show it, and in what form.
– Lydia Davis, from Into the Weeds (Yale University Press, 2025)







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