"If you view life through the eyes of an artist, then life is no longer a work of art; rather, it becomes a series of goals to achieve and contests to win. You are happy when things go 'right' and upset when they go 'wrong.' Viewing life this way can make for a very difficult experience." The Toltecs
I used to look at art - Art - with a bored and skeptical eye. I thought it was something that needed to be "understood" to be appreciated. I would go to a big art museum believing that I had to look at every piece of art and read everything posted about every piece of art that I looked at. It was frustrating, exhausting, and boring, to be honest about it, standing in front of a painting, vaguely aware that the gallery had dozens more paintings to be "gotten through." Like I can't look at the sun setting over the ocean without knowing "why" the scene was so moving. It's lovely! It's beautiful! It's calming! It's a wonderful experience! I don't need to read up on why the colors are pleasing to the eye or why nature can be so centering. I like it; I look at it; I go home and eat dinner, better for the experience, happier for the experience.
I have some art books on my desk and I try to spend a few minutes looking at art each day. I'm trying to balance actually following through on picking up the book and not beating my obsessive-compulsive TypeA ass up when I don't pick one up - it's meant to be fun and illuminating, not a chore like picking weeds in the hots sun. I've learned a lot about art but not as much as I've forgotten. I was kind of agitated this morning, the prayer and meditation barely making a dent in my agita, so I picked up one of the books, looked at three pictures - Three! Just Three! - and immediately calmed down. I read the short blurbs on each of the pictures which cued me into some stuff I wouldn't have noted before and stuff I'll probably forget about but who cares? These were masterful works and I enjoyed all of them, aware that sometimes a painting will leave me uninvolved. Today, when SuperK and I go to a museum we spend an hour in a gallery, sit down and rest our feet with a cup of coffee, and then dip back in for another half hour and that's it. We're full. We're done. And I've found that some of the joy comes in the reflective reaction that comes later. I feel better after the fact than I do while I'm doing the actual looking. The beauty has seeped in and affected me but it takes some time for that emotion to be realized. It's akin to watching my breath as I meditate - even though my mind flits about, here and there, near and anon, I end up with a calmer, more focused day. What's better - anticipating a roller coaster ride, dropping down that first drop, or howling about the excitement with your friends as you exit the ride? I never want to go to an art museum; I enjoy-ish the experience when I'm there, and I'm a bigger, better, badder dude for having experienced the experience.
Try this: pick out an incredibly famous piece of art, pull it up on your computer, and then look at it for ten minutes. That's a long, long time. You'll get bored and antsy but hang in there. I bet you'll notice something in minute seven that you missed at the outset. I read about a guy who went to a museum and spent an hour in front of a painting for 100 days. I could not do that but I enjoyed reading about it. He became kind of a minor celebrity at the museum. He noticed things that eluded him on the first few viewings. He hung in there.
Hang in there!