2700.
 Even today if you visit to the Fiat factory in Milan you might hear a 
foreman say to a laborer, “Please faldoni all the headlight attachment 
screws, and when you are done with that you can faldoni the hood 
ornaments.”
 2701.
 But, you might say, the painting of pictures is very far removed from 
the procedures of assembling cars. Not only that, but it seems that the 
nearly mindless and soul numbing activity of repeating the same small 
chore from morning to night and then the next day, would be anathema to 
artists. We like to think that the creative act is constantly exciting 
and engrossing, and so has no place for  rote, repetition, or monotony. 
 2702.
 But the mass production version of Faldoni’s method is an unfortunate 
corruption of his discovery. In actual fact his procedure resulted in a 
finished painting which was obviously superior to the results of the 
previous method of painting everything to completion, section by section
 as one went along.
2703. At first nobody could figure out why Faldoni’s method should be more successful, but if you have been following this tedious and minute explanation of Faldoni’s development the explanation may have dawned on you. If I were some professor teaching an art history class, which I decidedly am not, I might pose these questions to my students, “What things did Faldoni learn in his cell, painting the faces that would result in his decorative borders being more perfect that previously painted borders?”




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