The danger of looking for interrelationships is in not knowing what you are looking for, wrote Max Friedlander:
One can find something without having sought it - indeed, every connoisseur knows from experience that one nearly always finds something other than what one seeks. When you go looking for strawberries, you know what a strawberry looks like - but when you go looking for interrelationships, you do not know what they will look like. The ever-present danger is precisely that the desire and the will to find something may, in the mind of the seeker, precociously project a connection - one that does not exist. (From Max J. Friedlander's Die Altniederlandische Malerei.)
For a brief biography of Max Friedlander, click here.
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