While I think he did get something of a feel for the psychology of various species and individuals from examining their art, I think most of that was smoke and mirrors to impress people with how good he was.Darth Yan wrote:I liked it but Thrawn's art reading was a little pushing it.
Thrawn reminds me of a villainous Sherlock Holmes, actually. Holmes deduced things from little details nobody else noticed, and kept dismissing their amazement at his abilities (while feeling continually annoyed/amazed others didn't pick up on the things he did), whereas Thrawn deliberately cultivated a mystique around his deductive/psychological abilities.
Such as, say, he was enjoying some nice art one time when some officer walked in and asked what he was doing. Feeling like a smartass, Thrawn said he was figuring out the psychology of the enemy by studying their art. Officer walked out amazed at Thrawn's genius, and Thrawn decided to run with it because it gave him an excuse to keep looking at pretty things while looking like even more of a genius than he really was. And, hey, it probably did give him some insight as to the character of certain people, just like rummaging through the images you save onto your computer give an insight into your personality.



