The Mexican writer Octavio Paz was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1990. A great poet, essayist and critic, he is the author of a work that seems to have everything: literature and linguistics, philosophy and history, politics and geopolitics, psychology and sociology, anthropology and the visual arts. He believes that culture reveals this world and creates other worlds. Paz’s writings about art and artists are abundant and very original. The words in them seek images and the images find words. Juan Manuel Bonet analyses them in this essay written for Electra, conducting an inventory and proving himself to be ‘as precise as a geometrician and as lucid as a poet’. This is how he shows us a less-known side of Paz. Bonet is one of the most prominent Spanish intellectuals: poet, essayist, art critic, curator. He has been the director of Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderna (IVAM), Reina Sofía Museum and Instituto Cervantes. He has published well-known works, including the monumental Diccionario de las vanguardias en España (1907–1936).