Why make art? What do you find by doing it? What does it get you? I always wanted an alternative existence, and by that I mean I wanted to do something where I could study my own sentiments and experiences. And I found that I could do that in relation to making things and making art in particular. And I did it since I was a kid, and it was a place that I always could go to, that I could concentrate and deal with problems that I thought were of interest to me. And, if I was clear enough about what it was that I was probing and stayed with the premise of what I was probing, it was possible that it could also be clear to someone else. And it was important that it not be something that somebody else had done. I think one of the things art does is it asks you to perceive what it is on its own level. And it can come up and grab you at any time. It can be reassuring. It could be exactly the opposite. It could agitate you. It could be something you dismiss. It could be something that engages you. It could be something you recall. It could be something that leads to things that have nothing to do with what you're looking at. So, I think, works of art engage, possibly, an internal memory bank that isn't linear, and it can make you see the outside reality in that way, also. Like, you probably see the world in ways that you would not have seen it if those artists had not existed. And do I think that Cézanne changed how people saw a landscape in France in the last century, for sure. Do I think Warhol changed how we see contemporary society through painting, through the media-ization of, the commodification of objects? For sure. And you can just go through the history of art that way, and immediately you conjure up something that you, yourself, could not have expressed, and it fulfills in each of us something we lack.