Is art, given its indisputable value, accessible to us? How can we learn to perceive art? This is what I want to talk about. In the 1890s, Leo Tolstoy wrote "What is Art?" where he came to conclusion that it is extremely important to make art accessible to the broad masses. He exchanged letters with Stasov, his friend and an art critic. Stasov wrote: “So many people say great and clever things about art. But put them before a painting and they won't be able to articulate two words." He was referring to an inability to grasp a particular work of art. There is no doubt that knowledge of history and culture is important for understanding art. But that isn’t everything. You might know the history of Florence in depth, the life of Cosimo de’ Medici, read Machiavelli, you might know by heart whole passages from Vasari, about the Italian painters. But that’s not enough. Artistic image is something concrete, expressed in a specific work. This is the meaning of art. When you stand before the Florentine church of Santa Maria Novella, here and now, something should touch your heart and turn your soul over. The skill of perception augments our consciousness, the feelings we experience. It changes personality. A person becomes multidimensional and develops empathy: sensing and understanding another person, connecting to another person's feelings. Every time a person stands before a new work of art, it seems different, unique, not seen before. A person hones this sense of empathy. Perceiving a work of art develops one’s creative abilities. Our world faces many problems that require unusual approaches, require creativity. Our world needs creative individuals. Art is something important for every person. Society today is convinced that art is secluded, that it's elitist. But art is a product of all humanity. It is fundamentally open to anyone. You just need to learn how to perceive art. Learn it just like we learn to write. How can we teach ourselves and others to perceive art? I had to answer this question after graduating from university, when I started to teach. My students would readily learn facts about history and culture. They could name every element in the classical order: architrave, frieze, cornice, entablement. But they were lost when confronted with a specific work. Its meaning eluded them. An image in art always arises from an emotional jolt. An artist experiences a vivid feeling. This feeling won’t release him for a long time. He wants to share it with other people. That's when he looks for a means to express it. Each form of art has its particular means. For music, it’s sound and rhythm. In dance, it's flexibility of the body. In visual arts, it is lines, color spots, texture, proportions. Feelings can really be expressed. Take, for example, the feeling of tenderness and the feeling of passion. The feeling of tenderness is expressed in bright, light tones - pink-salmon, light blue, grass green. Those tones convey a sense of understatement, because tenderness contains as an understatement, even timidness. Passion, though, is something different: contrasts, both hot and cold tones. A dark space is broken by bright flashes of lightning. One’s blood boils. Feelings can be expressed. In art, feelings aren’t expressed in just one way, but in a number of expressive mediums. It’s a structure where all means of expression are bound in a single knot. I knew well that I had to teach how to see features, the differences between various means of expressions and structures. I knew how to teach that. One had to develop a keen sense of sight and the eye of an artist. I had to teach people to see, to grasp the difference between five shades of blue. To see the difference between different structures. Making comparisons, that's the solution. But to grasp art, it is essential for a person to feel. And how do you teach people to feel? That a line is not simply broken, it is nervous. That a line is not only solid, but also peaceful and calm. How do you teach people to feel? I didn’t know. I didn’t know how to teach people to feel. Then I asked myself, how did it happen for you? That was my breakthrough! I realized that for me, it happens through the body. When I stand before a Rublev icon, the golden tones ... immediately ... release all tension in my body. I breathe more easily. A sense of peace, even safety, fills my soul. But if recall Picasso’s Guernica, my whole being seizes up. My muscles are strained, I can hardly breathe, a feeling of horror sets within me. That is the feeling Picasso wanted to convey. That's how I formed a method that I call “Deep Perception”. What are the most important skills here? First of all, it is seeing and grasping structures. Not simply seeing disparate features but structural patterns. In this, my method is similar to Rudolf Arnheim’s views. But if he thought that the eye plays the main role in perception, my teaching practice showed that it is a multifaceted process in which a person and his entire body are involved. That's where I faced great difficulties. With every new group of students, we struggle for half a year. We have to bring their bodies back to life. Their bodies are static, or cold. Scary to say, sometimes their bodies are simply dead. This is very difficult. When people live within a dead body, they live with a closed ego. They do not escape the bounds of the ego. They cannot appreciate art or even the whole world around them. They react, but they cannot perceive it. And thus you get these aggressive judgements, “That's the way I see it. I love this! I don’t like that! I don’t like Kandinsky. I don’t like the work of Natalya Goncharova! Of course, I don’t like mature Picasso, and I obviously don’t like Dali. Ah, I forgot! I don’t like Rubens and his 'big' ladies. I don’t like him.” You should ask yourself, perhaps you just don't know how. Maybe you need to learn how to see and try to appreciate Rubens for who he is? If we only try to do it, the history of art will open up to us. Not just as a set of historical facts, semantics, iconography, but as a history of feeling. A history of feeling. I also made a very important discovery. Deep perception could develop one’s creativity. After lessons, my students would come up to me and say their lives had changed. That was moving, but only to be expected, because perception is the flip side of the creation of an image. An artist experiences a vivid feeling and incarnates it in a structure. A viewer standing before the canvas should grasp the structure, respond with his body and feel inside the same feeling that inspired the artist. In fact, by perceiving a work of art we give the image a new birth. We possess the same creative capabilities that the artist needs. Ancient Japan has a marvellous saying about the nature of art. They say, “When the soul of an artist is filled to the brim with inspiration, what overflows from the soul is a work of art." A filled soul is a requirement for making a piece of art. And a filled soul is a requirement for perception, deep perception of an image. If you live walled off inside the limits of your own ego, the world will be your enemy. You don't understand it, you’ll be scared by it and try to defend yourself from it. Art will teach you to overcome these boundaries, perceive another person and try to understand him. And then another person with different character, different background, customs, culture will open up to you. A point will come when you feel that he is your own kin, and you will love him. That other person, initially a stranger to you, is now here in your heart. This is so important in our world, with so many wars and conflicts, where there are nuclear weapons. It’s so important for us, women, as we’re always thinking about children. Art teaches us to be human beings. Mature, responsible human beings. Creative beings, the ones that know and love the world. Art is waiting for you. Get started right away. (Applause)