Perfection in the Mind
When I think of art, I think of beauty. Beauty is the mystery of life. It is not in the eye, it is in the mind. In our minds there is awareness of perfection.
, Beauty Is the Mystery of Life (lecture, collected in Agnes Martin: Writings) (1989) · Excerpt
Agnes Martin’s paintings are some of the quietest objects in modern art: pale grids, soft pencil lines on canvas, washes of color so subtle they barely register in reproduction. You have to stand in front of one to feel what it does. It makes sense, then, that she would locate beauty not in the eye but in the mind. For Martin, beauty isn’t a property an object happens to possess. It is an awareness the viewer already carries, something the mind knows before encountering any particular work.
“In our minds there is awareness of perfection.” This is a startling claim, and it cuts in unexpected directions when we consider the flood of generated imagery and text now surrounding us. If beauty is an inner awareness rather than an outer quality, then a flawlessly composed, algorithmically produced image might be beautiful in the same way a sunset is, or it might not be beautiful at all. The question becomes less about what made something and more about what kind of attention meets it. Martin seems to be suggesting that the encounter matters at least as much as the construction.
But she was also someone who spent years alone in the New Mexico desert, painting the same quiet lines day after day, waiting for the right inner state before she would begin working. She trusted that beauty could not be forced or manufactured, only received. If perfection already exists in the mind, the artist’s work is less about producing it than about clearing away everything that obscures it. This is a slow, almost devotional practice, one that looks nothing like efficiency. Whether that clearing away can be shortened, or whether the slowness is the point, is the kind of question Martin herself would probably have met with silence.