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Essay by S.W. Hayter
How can one describe the prints of Jim Monson?
Color, rhythm, competence of line, composition-why not?
But this explains nothing.
His world, expressed by the abstract is evidently a world of
imagination, nourished more by the experience of life in
general, than by object or temporal incident.
His works appeal more to a resonance in the imagination
of he or she who regards them, than to his or her memory
of things "déjà vues": in a sense they are without arrogance.
They propose to the observer instead of imposing a limited fact:
they propose to the free imagination a field of unknown experience.
S.W. Hayter
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