Would I de-access? Anything in the collection that became worth  a large amount of money?  
          Absolutely.  
          Because I need money—to pay  off the mortgage, for instance. And if I had to move to the poorhouse, I really  couldn’t take care of the paintings anyway.  
          I think I have accepted, for  myself, as a painter, that paintings are material objects.  
            A funny kind of material object  that can be worthless one day, worth a fortune the next, and even go down in  value. Or worthless in one person’s eyes, priceless in another’s.   
          This is an article that presents  both points of view about whether a museum should sell anything: 
            Whose Rules Are These, Anyway?  
  I like Toran’s work—though it  is dashed off. He is a decorative painter (as I have been) and uses the same  motifs, touches, and compositions repeatedly—still, he has charm  and his work has a meditative stillness. 
          A contemporary Brooklyn  painter whose work is a delight to look at and whose work also projects an  exquisite quietude is Amy Lincoln:  |