Author:  Paul Auster
Viewed: 77 - Published at: 6 years ago

But gradually, as he tried to inhabit the room presented on the canvas {Van Gogh - The Bedroom}, he began to experience it as a prison, an impossible space, an image, not so much of a place to live, but of the mind that has been forced to live there. Observe carefully. The bed blocks one door, a chair blocks the other door, the shutters are closed: you can't get in, and once you are in, you can't get out. Stifled among the furniture and everyday objects of the room, you begin to hear a cry of suffering in this painting, and once you hear it, it does not stop. 'I cried by reason of mine affliction...' But there is no answer to this cry. The man in this painting {and this is a self-portrait, no different from a picture of a man's face, with eyes, nose, lips, and jaw} has been alone too much, has struggled too much in the depthts of solitude. The world ends at that barricaded door. For the room is not a representation of solitude, it is the substance of solitude itself. And it is a thing so heavy, so unbreatheable, that it cannot be shown in any terms other than what it is.

( Paul Auster )
[ The Invention of Solitude ]
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