Using deliberate naiveté and comedic logic to discover what serious collectors miss, turning apparent stupidity into a sophisticated collecting practice.
The Hodja's 'foolish' questions and actions often reveal deeper truths than conventional wisdom. Applied to collecting as play, foolishness becomes a method: asking 'why collect this?' without presupposition, following whims rather than taxonomy, gathering things that don't 'belong' together. This challenges the expertise-driven collecting culture where knowledge hierarchies determine value. A child's foolish collection—bottle caps, leaves, bits of string—often demonstrates greater aesthetic and conceptual coherence than curated museum pieces. The Hodja teaches that by embracing our own 'foolishness,' we free ourselves to notice the extraordinary in the ordinary. We collect what delights us rather than what impresses others. This playful naiveté becomes a gateway to genuine discovery, where each collected item sparks questions rather than answers.
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