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波波小说>我的名字是小红英语 > 第63部分(第1页)

第63部分(第1页)

They  were  the  darlings  I’d  lovingly  trained  since  their  apprenticeships;  my

three beloved talents: Olive; Butterfly and Stork。

Discussing their talents; mastery and temperaments to the end of finding

the clue we were looking for inevitably led to a discussion of my own life as

well:

The Attributes of Olive

His  given  name  was  Velijan。  If  he  had  a  nickname  besides  the  one  I’d  given

him; I don’t know it; because I never saw him sign any of his work。 When he

was an apprentice; he’d e get me from my home on Tuesday mornings。 He

was very proud; and so if he ever lowered himself to sign his work; he’d want

this  signature  to  be  plain  and  recognizable;  he  wouldn’t  try  to  conceal  it

anywhere。  Allah  had  quite  generously  endowed  him  with  excess  ability。  He

could readily and easily do anything from gilding to ruling and his work was

279

superb。 He was the workshop’s most brilliant creator of trees; animals and the

human  face。  Velijan’s  father;  who  brought  him  to  Istanbul  when  he  was;  I

believe;  ten  years  old;  was  trained  by  Siyavush;  the  famous  illustrator

specializing  in  faces  in  the  Persian  Shah’s  Tabriz  workshop。  He  hails  from  a

long line of masters whose genealogy goes back to the Mongols; and just like

the  elderly  masters  who  bore  a  Mongol…Chinese  influence  and  settled  in

Samarkand; Bukhara and Herat 150 years ago; he rendered moon…faced young

lovers  as  if  they  were  Chinese。  Neither  during  his  apprenticeship  nor  during

his time as a master was I able to lead this stubborn artist to other styles。 How

I  would’ve  liked  him  to  transcend  the  styles  and  models  of  the  Mongol;

Chinese and Herat masters billeted deep in his soul; or even for him to forget

about  them  entirely。  When  I  told  him  this;  he  replied  that  like  many

miniaturists  who’d  moved  from  workshop  to  workshop  and  country  to

country;  he’d  forgotten  these  old  styles;  if  he’d  ever  actually  learned  them。

Though the value of many miniaturists resides precisely in the splendid models

of form they’ve mitted to memory; had Velijan truly forgotten them; he’d

have bee an even greater illustrator。 Still; there were two benefits; of which

he wasn’t even aware; to harboring the teachings of his mentors in the depths

of  his  soul  like  a  pair  of  unconfessed  sins:  1。  For  such  a  gifted  miniaturist;

clinging  to  old  forms  inevitably  stirred  feelings  of  guilt  and  alienation  that

would  spur  his  talent  to  maturity。  2。  In  a  moment  of  difficulty;  he  could

always   recall   what   he   claimed   to   have   forgotten;   and   thus;   he   could

successfully plete any new subject; history or scene by recourse to one of

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