dilettante
"There are lots of people, well-offish, who have been to good schools, who can afford to travel about and see the Louvre, etc., and who knows a lot about and can talk fluently about dozens of painters. There is another person who has seen very few paintings, but who looks intensely at one or two paintings which make a profound impression on him. Another person who is broad, neither deep nor wide. Another person who is very narrow, concentrated and circumscribed. Are these different kinds of appreciation? They may all be called 'appreciation'".
Wittgenstein
via Jacob
Jacob as I suspect is becoming more and more of a Kant aesthetics devotee. Though to acquire taste some hard cash is needed, oddly enough; but a poor person should not resolve into bitterness. Hum, am neither 'well-offish' nor able to 'look intensely at paintings'.