The beauty one can find in art is one of the pitifully few real and lasting products of human endeavor. J. — Paul Getty

The beauty one can find in art is one of the pitifully few real and lasting products of human endeavor. J.

Author: Paul Getty

Insight: Most of what we chase turns to dust or becomes obsolete. Career achievements fade, wealth shifts, trends reverse, and even the relationships we think are permanent sometimes dissolve. But when you stand in front of a painting that moves you, or read a line of poetry that suddenly makes sense of something you've been feeling—that experience doesn't expire. It's as real the hundredth time you encounter it as it was the first. What's striking about this idea is that we often treat art as a luxury, something nice to add once the "real work" of life is done. Yet Getty's suggesting the opposite: that art might be one of the only things actually worth doing. A building crumbles, a business model becomes irrelevant, but a song written centuries ago can still make you feel less alone. That's not decoration—that's genuine human achievement, something that actually lasts. The non-obvious part? You don't need to be making art for this to matter. Simply paying attention to beauty, letting it affect you, is itself an act of creating something real. It's how we prove that meaning exists and that time spent on what moves us wasn't wasted.

What Actually Lasts Forever

The beauty one can find in art is one of the pitifully few real and lasting products of human endeavor. J.

Most of what we chase turns to dust or becomes obsolete. Career achievements fade, wealth shifts, trends reverse, and even the relationships we think are permanent sometimes dissolve. But when you stand in front of a painting that moves you, or read a line of poetry that suddenly makes sense of something you've been feeling—that experience doesn't expire. It's as real the hundredth time you encounter it as it was the first.

What's striking about this idea is that we often treat art as a luxury, something nice to add once the "real work" of life is done. Yet Getty's suggesting the opposite: that art might be one of the only things actually worth doing. A building crumbles, a business model becomes irrelevant, but a song written centuries ago can still make you feel less alone. That's not decoration—that's genuine human achievement, something that actually lasts.

The non-obvious part? You don't need to be making art for this to matter. Simply paying attention to beauty, letting it affect you, is itself an act of creating something real. It's how we prove that meaning exists and that time spent on what moves us wasn't wasted.

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Paul Getty

Paul Getty was an American industrialist and founder of the Getty oil company, born on December 15, 1892, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He became one of the richest men in the world during his lifetime, known for his influence in the oil industry and his extensive art collection, which later became the Getty Museum in Los Angeles. Getty was also noted for his eccentric lifestyle and his controversial relationships with his family.

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