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Monday, April 6, 2026

Why a trumpet?

 I was sitting in the audience at the theatre, the play was about to begin, when from the wings a trumpet player walked out, stopped at center stage, and played a few notes. That was the signal. I told myself: I want to do that too. Luck had it that right in front of the theatre there was a music school — but by then it was evening… The next day I enrolled immediately. I never again found a classroom like that one: I could walk in and out as I pleased, and everyone else could too. No one ever disturbed the music — it was all fun and joy. Jimi Hendrix was a guide for me: the guitar gives back exactly what you put into it, and like a good kid I dedicated one hour of my days to my trumpet. The sound of the trumpet is penetrating, wide, and enveloping, so on my mother’s advice I asked for a place where I could play my three little valves. My teacher at the school, seeing me worried because everything hurt, kept telling me not to worry: “The trumpet is played with your lips and your diaphragm.” He encouraged me to stay in tune, and so I did (even though at the time I wanted to smash the thing).

**I started thinking about travelling, leafing through photography books, knowing I wasn’t the only one doing so. Around that time, in the town where I lived, there was a huge snowfall, and the rehearsal room was about two kilometers from my house. Thinking of the ordeal, I armed myself with a shovel and, passing through the town square, I went to play after carving out a small path to get inside.

The art world is full of drugs because that’s how it is — Morrison called them doors. They’re certainly not necessary, and certainly best avoided. But what’s the result while you’re alive? A crisis, a dysfunction of the body, including the mind. I believe it’s not an issue for art curators, but for healthcare — for harm reduction, for doctors, hospitals, and friends.

Life is wonderful.**


Where breath becomes light and the trumpet tells what words cannot say.

 Andy Warhol’s exhibition grounded me; before that, everything felt unreal to me, almost illogical — in its consumption as much as in its perspectives. It’s astonishing how one of his bean cans or the silkscreen of Liza Minnelli transported me into a sensitive, tangible present. My idea of Pop Art is the raster image, the pixel, a single pixel.



Saturday, April 4, 2026

Andy million pips

  Andy Warhol’s artworks are truly remarkable — each one similar to the others, yet different in its own content. I liked them so much that I even pulled a measuring tape out of my backpack to measure one, and wow, what pop art. The dimensions are pretty much the same across all his screen prints. Someone so distant managed to give me such joy. Well done, Andy Warhol.
I didn’t really think it would happen; in the last room they displayed the most beautiful pieces possible.