When we look at a Mann painting of a single lit window in a dark tower block at 2 a.m., we do not see the occupant. But we immediately begin to invent them: Are they sad? Working late? Unable to sleep? This narrative openness is the source of the work’s universality. Mann does not tell us how to feel; he provides a space—a chapel of quiet—where we are invited to project our own memories, anxieties, and hopes onto the canvas. In this sense, his world is not strictly his own; it becomes a mirror for the viewer’s inner life.