"The dazzling presentation of modern abstract graphics continued all through the night, Paul Klee giving way to Marc Chagall and Chagall to Kandinsky and Kandinsky to an artist whose style I did not recognize. There were literally tens of thousansds of graphics by each master artist in turn... Which caused a peculiar thought to enter my mind after two hours had passed. These great artists had never produced so many works. It was patently impossible for them to have done so. Of the Klees alone I had now seen more then fiftythousand, although admitedly they had gone so rapidly that I had not been able to glimpse any detail, but rather only the general impression of fluctuating balance points in the various pictures, changing proportions of dark and light colors, adroit black strokes of the brush that gave harmony to what would otherwise have been less than high art." Philip K. Dick, Radio Free Albemuth, p. 100