A Child and Her Art, and the Bigger Picture
di A. O. Scott The New York Times
Just about everyone who has been the parent of a young child has a priceless collection of masterpieces: treasured drawings and paintings taped to a closet door, stuck to the refrigerator with magnets or rolled up in a box somewhere in the basement. The value of these artifacts is personal and sentimental, but they can also have an aesthetic power that goes beyond parental pride. The untaught sense of color and composition that children seem naturally to possess sometimes yields extraordinary results, and the combination of instinct and accident that governs their creative activity can produce astonishing works of art. [...]
di A. O. Scott, articolo completo (4860 caratteri spazi inclusi) su The New York Times 5 ottobre 2007