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Journal On stillness

One moon, and a quiet wall.

A note on night scenes, and why a single crescent moon above a reading nook does more than a wall of colour.

Surrealist night scene with a crescent moon, framed above a reading nook

Some rooms are for arriving; a reading corner is for staying. It wants art that slows the pulse rather than raises it — and nothing slows a room like a night scene. A crescent moon, a still sea, a figure who is in no hurry either.

The mistake is thinking a dark blue painting will darken the corner. It does the opposite: it gives the eye somewhere to rest, the way a window onto evening does. The lamp beside your chair becomes the moon’s accomplice.

A night scene does not darken a room; it slows it.

Hang it lower than you think — night scenes are for sitting under, not standing before. A slim black or walnut frame keeps the dusk inside the picture; canvas suits them, since the last thing a nocturne needs is reflections.

One is enough. The whole point of a moon is that there is only one of it.

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