Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Earnest Meanings

Dominicus Custos after Franz Aspruck
Archangel Raphael
before 1612
engraving
Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum, Braunschweig


Daniel Nikolaus Chodowiecki
Macduff joining Malcolm
(illustration to Shakespeare's Macbeth)
1784
etching
Herzog August Bibliothek, Wulfenbüttel

Rhoda Cook
The Favorite Rabbit
ca. 1800
watercolor on paper
Huntington Museum of Art, Huntington, West Virginia

Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg
Aqueduct at Arcueil near Paris
1812
oil on canvas
David Collection, Copenhagen

Karl Blechen
Tiberius Rocks at Capri
ca. 1828-29
oil on paper, mounted on canvas
Landesmuseum, Hannover

Ignatz Marcel Gaugengigl
And Drive Dull Care Away
1883
etching
New Britain Museum of American Art, Connecticut

Rudolf Konopa
Portrait of art collector Hugo Reisinger
ca. 1895
watercolor on paper
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Frank Hurley
Penguins on the Beach at The Nuggets and the remains of The Gratitude
1911
carbon print
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Martin Munkácsi
Aldous Huxley in California
ca. 1940
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Sanford Low
Polish Peddler (The Vegetable Man)
ca. 1940
watercolor on paper
New Britain Museum of American Art, Connecticut

Ralph Eugene Meatyard
Untitled (Child with Mask)
ca. 1959
gelatin silver print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Pedro Guerrero
Alexander Calder's Mailbox
1963
gelatin silver print
Archives of American Art, Washington DC

Jim Sharpe
Patty Hearst
1975
oil and lacquer on board
(commissioned by Time magazine)
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

Pravoslav Sovák
Small Museum Sheet - Degas
ca. 1985
color aquatint
Kunsthalle Mannheim

Jennifer Bartlett
Air: 24 Hours, Eleven A.M.
ca. 1991-92
oil on canvas
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Sigmar Polke
The Three Lies of Painting
1995
lithograph
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis

Reinier Lucassen
The Last Smoker
2017
found painting with modifications
Kunstmuseum, The Hague

    Hamsun writes, toward the end of the book, that in a hundred years, all of this – what he did during the war, his trial, the verdict – will be forgotten.  I would guess that already now, after nearly eighty years, it is forgotten by most people, as the older generations who did care have died and the younger ones hardly know what a Nazi was.  And I'm sure he is right that in 2048, one hundred years after, given all that the people of this imperiled earth will have to contend with just to survive, surely almost no one will give a thought to Knut Hamsun – maybe no one will ever think of him again.  I read somewhere – where? – that at the very end of the human era, our entire civilization – all of it, towering monuments and historic ruins – will be compressed down to the thickness, on the surface of the earth, of a piece of cigarette paper. 

– Lydia Davis, from Into the Weeds (Yale University Press, 2025)