no. 005 · painting
The window hiding in a wine glass
A glass of wine on a quiet table, three hundred years old. Lean in and there is a whole room you were not invited to: a leaded window, bent around the curve of the goblet, its panes squeezed into a band of light no wider than a fingernail.
Claesz could have left it a smudge of grey. Instead he painted the studio he was standing in, shrunk and warped and folded into the glass — proof, if you go looking, that someone was really there, on a real afternoon, watching the light do exactly this.
Realism isn’t the apple. It’s the window you never knew was in the room, reflected where no one would think to check.