olmec: One of the greatest painters of the late 1800s was a Frenchman named Paul Gauguin. At 35, he was a successful stockbroker in Paris, but he wasn't enjoying himself. "Zoot, my life is so dull. I do the same thing day in and day out." Then one day, he went to an exhibit of a new kind of art called expressionism. It was abstract and completely different from all the art he'd ever seen. "These paintings are so wild, so free! I must learn to paint like that." He began painting at night. And soon, he quit his job so he can paint full time. He moved to Tahiti, a French colony in the South Pacific where he lived in a grass hut with a grassened hut floor and painted the native Polynesians in their bright, primitive colors of their land. Legend has it, he gave a portrait to the girl who posed for it, and it stayed in her family for generations. Your quest is defined the priceless portrait of the Polynesian girl and bring it back here.
Kirk: Thanks, Olmec. But where is the portrait?
olmec: The priceless portrait of the Polynesian girl can be found in the Laser Light Room.