Our four year-old grandson, Tyler, is an aficianado of fine art and classical music.
Seriously. He’s been like this for half of his life, since he was a mere child enthralled by the cartoon series Little Einsteins on the Disney Channel.
This painting may be familiar to you but in case you don’t know the title and artist, you could just ask Tyler. It’s the renowned Starry Night by Dutch impressionist Vincent Van Gogh. Tyler has it hanging in his bedroom. Oh, not the original, of course. Just a poster. It’s there, right next to many others including one his Nana and I considered a startling discovery in the bedroom of a very little boy.
There, among the Thomas the Train tracks and electronic piano is Edvard Munch’s alien nightmare, The Scream.
I don’t get it. Art, I mean.
Oh, I recognize the craftsmanship involved in combining all those tiny brush or pen strokes to create a picture which is recognizable as an image from life or imagination. Even impressionists leave an impression on me. (Though, don’t get me started on the chaos of abstract, or modern, art.)
No, what I don’t get is the marvelous functioning of minds that perceive with dazzling clarity worlds I cannot fathom. The ability of genius to sense beyond my senses is a divine gift which challenges the concept of normal and allows me an occasional glimpse into a greater reality.
I find it enormously comforting.
Sometimes a child so young that he struggles to express himself verbally may also be dancing in the heavens while picking out the classic melodies of Mozart and Chopin on a toy keyboard with nothing but a cartoon and an undiscouraged potential to guide him.
The gifted frolic like otters in many realities at once while the vast rest of us cling to “normal.”
Ah to spend more time with Tyler. That’d be my goal if I lived as close to him as you do. But then you already do – spend time I mean. So – please keep us posted on what he’s teaching you next.