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Please Note: This is the letter that started the ball
rolling. The complete Resource of Art Quotations is at
http://www.painterskeys.com/quotations.htm
Quotations
Sept 22,
2000
Dear Artist;
Stephen
Vizinczeys seventh commandment is
"Thou shalt not let a day pass
without rereading something great."
Im kind of converted. For a while I
kept Bartletts at my elbow as I
painted, flipping randomly while paint
was drying, letting my finger do the
walking for a quick fix between strokes.
Some time back I tried reading the
Britannica, all of it, mostly in bed. Of
late Ive been digging anywhere at
all among the words of artists.
It hasnt
been possible to get on without
"Nature is usually wrong,"
(Whistler) or "Go not to the object;
let the object come to you,"
(Thoreau) or "There is no art
without contemplation," (Henri) or
"Careful planning, and brilliant
improvisation," (Eisenstein) or
"I shut my eyes in order to
see," (Gauguin) or "I paint in
order not to cry," (Klee) or
"Paintings a funny
business," (Turner) or "Mine is
the horny hand of toil." (Sargent)
Sometimes, in
periods of drought, I have stooped to
making up my own: "Keep busy while
youre waiting for something to
happen," or "Drawing is still
the bottom line."
All this by way
of wondering if the habit serves a use.
Correspondents to my letters tell me they
love the quotes. Good quotes on hand are
like pegs on which to hang the
daysome of them clear little bells
to ring the painting hours. Each reader
takes from a quote their own meaning and
values them differently according to
their own experience. Perhaps its
just my problem but in the unkempt
workstation of the studio my quotations
have become boon companions. They seem to
make it all more worthwhile and they
remind me that were of the
sisterhood and brotherhood.
Best regards,
Robert
PS "There
are some among our comrades who imagine
that words are nothing--but on the
contrary, is it not true that saying a
thing well is as interesting and as
difficult as painting?" (Vincent Van
Gogh)
Esoterica: At
age 16, John Bartlett worked at the
check-out at the University Book Store in
Cambridge, Mass. His passionate
book-learning made him a sought-after
source of knowledge among Harvard
students. "Familiar
Quotations," compiled from his
notebooks and first published in 1855,
went through 9 editions in his lifetime.
(RG note) I
realized I was looking at the very
meanings of life. The studio computer
kept on regurgitating them, sometimes
almost choking on them. They came from a
world of studios. Many were quotations
pulled directly from the walls. Some
artists were just announcing they had
files, binders, portfolios of them. Some
quoted their private heroes, living and
dead. Others simply quoted themselves. As
a race, we artists use up a lot of
quotations.
I have the
feeling this is going to be a great
project. For one thing its the
ultimate effective use of the internet.
Our critical mass of subscribers
represents a range of accomplishment and
capability. These quotations tell me that
some of you are wise and seasoned, others
brash and eager. Always you are
thoughtful. I commend everyone for
participating in this exercise in
sharing. Scott Altmann told me he had
trouble finding anything much that
Sargent said or wrote. Same here.
Theres scholarship and research
ahead. We have not scratched the surface.
For this
clickback were holding the response
letters for another time. In their place
we are putting up a miniature version of
the "Resource of Art
Quotations." We are hoping to be
able to let the associate editors get
right into the site itself and post their
collected quotations in the spots they
see fit. In the meantime here is a
selection of some of the quotations that
have come in so far, laid out in the
format they will probably appear. Rather
than credit every contributor by name we
have included your initials at the end of
each quotation.
Please keep
sending. If you need information on how
you can participate, please drop me a
note: rgenn@saraphina.com
This is an ongoing project.
It all seemed to
take on an extra philosophical depth when
Eleanor Blair of Gainesville, Florida,
submitted "Thank you. Thank you very
much." (Elvis Presley)
Resource Sample
of Art Quotations
Amusement
Blessed are
they who can laugh at themselves for they
will never cease to be amused.
(Anonymous) sh
Anticipation
If you think
you can do a thing or think you can't do
a thing, you're right. (Henry Ford) sh
Anxiety
It's all
right to have butterflies in your
stomach. Just get them to fly in
formation. (Dr. Rob Gilbert) sh
Application
With an apple I will astonish Paris.
(Paul Cezanne) tj
Knowing is not
enough; we must apply. Willing is not
enough; we must do. (Johann Wolfgang von
Goethe) sh
Take clear water
with grass waving at the bottom.
Its wonderful to look at, but to
try to paint it is enough to make one
insane. (Claude Monet) dd
Some painters
transform the sun into a yellow spot;
others transform a yellow spot into the
sun. (Pablo Picasso) sh
Appreciation
The Sun will not rise, or set, without my
notice and thanks. (Winslow Homer) sj
Art
Art may make
a suit of clothes; but Nature must
produce a man. (David Hume) lt
There is, in any
art, a tendency to turn ones own
preferences into a monomaniac theory.
(Pauline Kael) ih
Art is the child
of Nature. (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
lt
Art is not
imitation, but illusion. (Charles Reade)
lt
Art is art.
Everything else is everything else. (Ad
Reinhardt) eb
All the arts we
practice are apprenticeship. The big art
is our life. (M.C. Richards) sl
Making money is
art and working is art and good business
is the best art. (Andy Warhol) pd
Art flourishes
where there is a sense of adventure.
(Alfred North Whitehead) ms
The course of
Nature is the art of God. (Edward Young)
lt
Audience
To have
great poets, there must be great
audiences. (Walt Whitman) sh
Beauty
We live in a
rainbow of chaos. (Paul Cezanne) dd
Though we travel
the world over to find the beautiful, we
must carry it with us or we find it not.
(Ralph Waldo Emerson) sh
A man should
hear a little music, read a little
poetry, and see a fine picture every day
of his life, in order that worldly cares
may not obliterate the sense of the
beautiful which God has implanted in the
human soul. (Goethe) sh
Those persons
who have perceptive eyes enjoy beauty
everywhere. (Paramahansa Yogananda) sl
Subtle astral
colors... are hidden in everything around
you. Could you but see, you would be
amazed at their beauty. (Paramahansa
Yogananda) sl
Belief
The liar's
punishment is not in the least that he is
not believed, but that he cannot believe
anyone else. (George Bernard Shaw) sh
Burning
Avarice,
envy, pride, / Three fatal sparks, have
set the hearts of all / On Fire. (Dante
Alighieri) sh
Business
Dear, never
forget one little point: Its my
business. You just work here. (Elizabeth
Arden, to her husband) ih
Business Art is
the step that comes after Art. (Andy
Warhol) ih
Change
A wish
changes nothing. A decision changes
everything. (Anonymous) i
Clubs
Never join
an organization. (Georges Braque) eb
Clutter
The opposite
of simplicity, as I understand it, is not
complexity but clutter. (Scott Russell
Sanders) sl
Comeback
It's hard to
make a comeback when you haven't been
anywhere. (Written in the dust on the
back of a bus, Wickenburg, Arizona) sh
Confession
The
'refined', the 'rich, the professional do
nothing', the 'distiller of quintessence'
desire only the peculiar, and
sensational, the eccentric, the
scandalous is today's art. And I myself,
since the advent of cubism, have fed
these fellows what they wanted and
satisfied these critics with all the
ridiculous ideas that have passed through
my head. The less they understood, the
more they have admired me! ... Today, as
you know, I am celebrated, I am rich. But
when I am alone, I do not have the
effrontery to consider myself an artist
at all, not in the grand meaning of the
word. ...I am only a public clown, a
mountebank. I have understood my time and
exploited the imbecility, the vanity, the
greed of my contemporaries. It is a
bitter confession, this confession of
mine, more painful than it may seem. But,
at least, and at last, it does have the
merit of being honest. (Pablo Picasso) sh
Consideration
An
inconvenience is only an adventure
wrongly considered; an adventure is only
an inconvenience rightly considered.
(G.K. Chesterton) sh
When you want to
test the depths of a stream, don't use
both feet. (Chinese Proverb) sh
You cannot step
in the same stream twice. (Proverb) sh
Contentment
Contentment
is a pearl of great price, and whoever
procures it at the expense of ten
thousand desires makes a wise and a happy
purchase. (John Balguy) sh
Cool
The world belongs to the enthusiast who
keeps cool. (William McFee) sl
Creativity
We are what
we think. All that we are arises with our
thoughts. With our thoughts we create the
world. (Buddha) pd
Straight-away
the ideas flow in upon me, directly from
God, and not only do I see distinct
themes in my mind's eye, but they are
clothed in the right forms, harmonies,
and orchestration. (Johannes Brahms) pd
As artists, we
must learn to be self nourishing. We must
become alert enough to consciously
replenish our creative resources as we
draw on them to restock the trout
pond, so to speak. (Julia Cameron) pd
The creation of
a thousand forests is in one acorn.
(Ralph Waldo Emerson) pd
Creative minds
have always been known to survive any
kind of bad training. (Anna Freud) ih
An essential
aspect of creativity is not being afraid
to fail. (Dr. Edwin Land) pd
The world speaks
to me in colours, my soul answers in
music. (Rabindranath Tagore) pd
Use what talent
you possess: the woods would be very
silent if no birds sang except those that
sang best. (Henry Van Dyke) pd
Criticism
They never
raised a statue to a critic (Martha
Graham) ih
Cubism
If my
husband ever met a woman on the street
who looked like one of his paintings he
would faint. (Jacqueline Roque, wife of
Pablo Picasso) sl
Deception
A great deal
of intelligence can be invested in
ignorance when the need for illusion is
deep. (Saul Belloc) sh
Desperation
The mass of
men lead lives of quiet desperation and
go to the grave with the song still in
them. (Henry David Thoreau) sh
Difficulty
Difficulties
increase the nearer we approach our goal.
(Goethe) sh
Life is short,
the Art is long, opportunity fleeting,
experience treacherous, judgement
difficult. The physician must be ready,
not only to do his duty himself, but also
to secure cooperation of the patient, of
the attendants, and of externals.
(Hippocrates) d
Doubt
Doubt comes
in at the window when inquiry is denied
at the door. (Benjamin
Jowett) sh
Drawing
Can't draw,
won't draw no painting. (Chris Dennis) cd
To draw, you
must close your eyes and sing. (Pablo
Picasso) sl
Drunkeness
The greater
the fool in the pencil more blest, and
when they are drunk they always paint
best. (William Blake) dd
Earth
I have one
share in corporate Earth, and I am
nervous about the management. (E.B.
White) sh
Editing
I have only
made this letter longer because I have
not had the time to make it shorter.
(Blaise Pascal) sh
Every good
artist has a good eraser. (Skip Van
Lenten) svl
Ego
At the feast
of ego, everyone leaves hungry (Bentley's
House of Coffee and Tea,Tucson, Arizona)
sh
Encouragement
Flatter me,
and I may not believe you. Criticize me,
and I may not like you. Ignore me, and I
may not forgive you. Encourage me, and I
will not forget you. (William Arthur
Ward) sh
Enthusiasm
We act as
though comfort and luxury were the chief
requirements of life, when all we need to
make us really happy is something to be
enthusiastic about. (Charles Kingsley) d
Excellence
We are what
we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is
not an act, but a habit. (Aristotle) sh
All labor that uplifts humanity has
dignity and importance and should be
undertaken with painstaking excellence.
(Martin Luther King, Jr.) sh
The quality of a
man's life is in direct proportion to his
commitment to excellence, regardless of
his chosen field of endeavor. (Vince
Lombardi) d
We succeed in
enterprises which demand the positive
qualities we possess, but we excel in
those which can also make use of our
defects. (Alexis de Tocqueville) sh
Fear
Sufficient
to today are the duties of today. Don't
waste life in doubts and fears; spend
yourself on the work before you; well
assured that the right performance of
this hour's duties will be the best
preparation for the hours or ages that
follow it. (Ralph Waldo Emerson) d
Today I am more
than ever frightened. I wish it would
dawn upon engineers that, in order to be
an engineer, it is not enough to be an
engineer. (Jose Ortega y Gasset) sh
Courage is
resistance to fear, mastery of fear - not
absence of fear. (Mark Twain) sh
Freedom
Freedom is
not worth having if it does not include
the freedom to make mistakes. (Mahatma
Gandhi) sh
Who is more to
be pitied, a writer bound and gagged by
policemen or one living in perfect
freedom who has nothing more to say?
(Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.) sh
Fun
Getting
there is not half the fun - it is ALL the
fun. (Robert Townsend) sh
Future
The future
is not a scenario written, which we only
have to act out; it is a work which we
have to create. (Roger Garaudy) sj
Goodness
The mark of
a good action is that it appears
inevitable in retrospect. (Robert Louis
Stevenson) sh
Gratitude
Gratitude is
not only the greatest of virtues, but the
parent of all others. (Cicero) sh
The essence of
all beautiful art, all great art, is
gratitude. (Friedrich Nietzsche) pd
Thank-you.
Thank-you very much. (Elvis Presley) eb
Growth
I think that
ones art is a growth inside one. I
do not think one can explain growth. It
is silent and subtle. One does not keep
digging up a plant to see how it grows.
(Emily Carr) ih
The growth of
the spirit is a volcano that cannot be
capped. Try to plug it at your peril.
(John McEnulty) sh
The primary
benefit of practicing any art, whether
well or badly, is that it enables one's
soul to grow. (Kurt Vonnegut Jr.) pd
Guidance
When the
effective leader is finished with his
work, the people say it happened
naturally. (Lao-Tzu) sh
Humility
Few men
speak humbly of humility, chastely of
chastity, skeptically of skepticism.
(Blaise Pascal) sh
Imagination
The world of
reality has its limits; the world of
imagination is boundless. (Jean Jacques
Rousseau) ms
Incentive
If you want
something really important to be done you
must not merely satisfy the reason, you
must move the heart also. (Mahatma
Gandhi) sh
The way you see
people is the way you treat them and the
way you treat them is the way they
become. (Goethe) sh
Inexperience
Inexperience
is a quality of the human condition. We
are born one time only; we can never
start a new life equipped with the
experience we've gained from a previous
one. We leave childhood without knowing
what youth is; we marry without knowing
what it is to be married; and even when
we enter old age, we don't know what it
is we're heading for: The old are
innocent children of their old age. In
that sense, man's world is the planet of
inexperience. (Milan Kundera) d
Innocence
Every child
comes with the message that God is not
yet tired of the man. (Rabindranath
Tagore) sh
Innovation
The vast
majority of human beings dislike and even
dread all notions with which they are not
familiar. Hence it comes about that at
their first appearance innovators have
always been derided as fools and madmen.
(Aldous Huxley) sh
Interest
To
appreciate nonsense requires a serious
interest in life. (Gelett Burgess,
1866-1951) sh
It is difficult
to begin without borrowing, but perhaps
it is the most generous course thus to
permit your fellow-men to have an
interest in your enterprise. (Henry David
Thoreau) sh
Interpretation
Interpretation
in art is the revenge of the intellect
(Susan Sontag) ih
Knowledge
Where is the
wisdom we have lost in knowledge? Where
is the knowledge we have lost in
information? (T. S. Eliot) sh
The artist need
not know very much; best of all let him
work instinctively and paint as naturally
as he breathes or walks. (Emil Nolde) dd
The little I
know I owe to my ignorance. (George
McGovern) sh
Teachers open
the door, but you must enter by yourself.
(Chinese Proverb) sh
Education is an admirable thing, but it
is well to remember from time to time
that nothing that is worth knowing can be
taught. (Oscar Wilde) sh
Light
There are
two kinds of light--the glow that
illuminates, and the glare that obscures.
(James Thurber) sh
Loneliness
My
loneliness was born when men praised my
talkative faults and blamed my silent
virtues. (Kahlil Gibran) sh
Love
I love
California; everything is so artificial.
(David Hockney) dd
Where is the
love in this? That is the most important
question about any activity or
relationship. Ask it when things get
sticky. Its usually the thing that
is out of whack. So how do I get my whack
back? Pray, meditate, go to the deeper
places within. Thats always a good
start. Love is a slow, sweet thing. When
we get going too fast we can leave it
behind. Stop. Let love catch up to you.
Go back and get it. Carry it. It only
slows you down if you are going in the
wrong direction. (John McEnulty) sh
Every artist is an unhappy lover. (Iris
Murdoch) ih
I can always be
distracted by love, but eventually I get
horny for my creativity. (Gilda Radner)
ih
A painting is
like a man. If you can live without it,
then there isnt much point in
having it. (Lila Wallace) ih
Mediocrity
Mediocrity
knows nothing higher than itself, but
talent instantly recognizes genius. (Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle) d
Sometimes I
worry about being a success in a mediocre
world. (Lily Tomlin) sl
Memory
Memory
moderates prosperity, decreases
adversity, controls youth and delights
old age. (Lactantius Firmianus) sh
Methodology
Only when he
no longer knows what he is doing does the
painter do good things. (Edgar Degas) ym
Modernism
An
unsettling element in modern art is that
common symptom of immaturity, the dread
of doing what has been done before.
(Edith Wharton) ih
Mysteries
Watercolor
is a swim in the metaphysics of life...a
mirror of one's own character. Let it be
unpredictable and colorful. (Anonymous)
mp
In Art there is
only one thing that counts; the thing you
can't explain. (Georges Braque) eb
You can count
how many seeds are in the apple, but not
how many apples are in the seed. (Ken
Kesey) d
The scenery of
mountains painted on the ever-changing
azure canvas of the sky, the mysterious
mechanism of the human body, the rose,
the grren grass carpet, the magnanimity
of souls, the loftiness of minds, the
depth of love - all these things remind
us of a God who is beautiful and noble.
(Paramahansa Yogananda) sl
Nature
There is a
harmony in autumn, and a lustre in its
sky. (P.B. Shelley) sl
Obscurity
If I could I
would always work in silence and
obscurity, and let my efforts be known by
their results. (Emily Bronte) sh
Painting
Painting is
just another way of keeping a diary.
(Pablo Picasso) ym
Passion
Each one of
us has a fire in our heart for something.
It's our goal in life to find it and to
keep it lit. Mary Lou Retton) sl
Absence
diminishes commonplace passions and
increases great ones, as the wind
extinguishes
candles and kindles fire. (La
Rochefoucauld) sh
Perception
If the doors
of perception were cleansed everything
would appear to man as it is, infinite.
(William Blake) pd
Perfection
Errors like
straws upon the surface flow: / Who would
search for pearls must dive below. (John
Dryden) sh
Pleasure
Man is not
free to refuse to do the thing which
gives him more pleasure than any other
conceivable action. (Stendhal) ym
Prayer
To pray is
to ask the laws of the universe to be
annulled on behalf of a single
petitioner. (Ambrose Bierce) sh
To give pleasure
to a single heart by a single act is
better than a thousand heads bowing in
prayer. (Mahatma Gandhi) sh
I launch myself
with the most beautiful prayer I know,
the most beautiful thought. Then I let go
and see what surprise, what new discovery
the universe has in store for me.
Thinking I know stops that, blocks the
divine light. (McEnulty) sh
Production
I produce
music as an apple tree produces apples.
(Camille Saint-Saens) ih
Progress
Progress in
art does not consist in reducing
limitations, but in knowing them better.
(Georges Braque) eb
Rehabilitation
The hope of
the world lies in the rehabilitation of
the living human being, not just the body
but also the soul. (Vaclav Havel) pd
Relaxation
Men seek out
retreats for themselves in the country,
by the seaside, on the mountains... But
all this is unphilosophical to the last
degree... when thou canst at a moment's
notice retire into thyself. (Marcus
Aelius Aurelius) sh
Every now and
then go away, have a little relaxation,
for when you come back to your work your
judgment will be surer. Go some distance
away because then the work appears
smaller and more of it can be taken in at
a glance and a lack of harmony and
proportion is more readily seen.
(Leonardo Da Vinci) sh
Repose
We will
never have repose. The present is
perpetual. (Georges Braque) eb
Revenge
You will find that silence or very gentle
words are the most exquisite revenge for
insult. (Judge Hall) sh
Risk
If you risk
nothing, then you risk everything. (Geena
Davis) d
Rules
Hell, there
are no rules here; we're trying to
accomplish something. (Thomas A. Edison)
d
Sight
You cannot
depend on your eyes when your imagination
is out of focus. (Mark Twain) sj
Standards
The nice
thing about standards is that there are
so many of them to choose from. (Andrew
S. Tanenbaum) sh
Success
Success
supposes endeavor. (Jane Austin) ih
How far you go
in life depends on your being tender with
the young, compassionate with the aged,
sympathetic with the striving and
tolerant of the weak and strong. Because
someday in life you will have been all of
these. (George Washington Carver) sh
Success breeds
confidence. (Beryl Markham) ih
Sometimes I
worry about being a success in a mediocre
world. (Lily Tomlin)
Suffering
Pain is
inevitable. Suffering is optional. (M.
Kathleen Casey) sh
Survival
God gives
every bird his worm, but he does not
throw it into the nest. (Swedish proverb)
sh
Technology
With the
most primitive means the artist creates
something which the most ingenious and
efficient technology will never be able
to create. (Kasimir Malevich) ih
Thinking
Few people
think more than two or three times a
year. I've made an international
reputation for myself by thinking once or
twice a week. (George Bernard Shaw) pd
Timeliness
We work not
only to produce but to give value to
time. ( Eugene Delacroix) dd
It is never too
late to be what we might have been.
(George Eliot) d
I thought I
should do it for my time. (Judy Fox) ih
Trust
But we need
to trust the outcome, to not be defeated
in our hearts, ever, knowing that the
very core of our being cannot be undone.
Not without our consent. (John McEnullty)
sh
Truth
Power is not
revealed by striking hard or often, but
by striking true. (Honore de Balzac) sh
As scarce as
truth is, the supply has always been in
excess of the demand. (Josh Billings) sh
A few observations and much reasoning
lead to error; many observations and a
little reasoning to truth. (Alexis Carre)
sh
The truth must
dazzle gradually / Or every man be blind.
(Emily Dickinson) sh
If you are out
to describe the truth, leave elegance to
the tailor. (Albert Einstein) sh
He who sees the
truth, let him proclaim it, without
asking who is for it or who is against
it. (Henry George) sh
Our enemies come
nearer the truth in the opinions they
form of us than we do in our opinion of
ourselves. (La Rochefoucauld) sh
Tyranny
One should
respect public opinion insofar as is
necessary to avoid starvation and keep
out of
prison, but
anything that goes beyond this is
voluntary submission to an unnecessary
tyranny. (Bertrand Russell) d
Understanding
Every one of
us sees 'green' differently. So
everything is an approximation of
understanding. (Nick Bantock) sl
I hear and I
forget. I see and I remember. I do and I
understand. (Confucius) d
To paint, to
love, to dream, to make money, to eat
healthily, to dance, to sing, to think,
to say: everything, nothing, to
understand. (Vartini) v
Uniqueness
Nothing that
God ever made is the same thing to more
than one person. That is natural. There
is no single face in nature, because
every eye that looks upon it, sees it
from its own angle. So every man's
spice-box seasons his own food. (Zora
Neale Hurston) sh
It has bothered
me all my life that I do not paint like
everybody else. (Henri Matisse) dd
The painter,
being concerned only with giving his
impression, simply seeks to be himself
and no one else. (Claude Monet) ih
Unknowns
It is the
unforeseeable that creates the event.
(Georges Braque) eb
Windows
Most people
are mirrors, reflecting the moods and
emotions of the times; few are windows,
bringing light to bear on the dark
corners where troubles fester. The whole
purpose of education is to turn mirrors
into windows. (Sydney J. Harris) sh
Words
I have
nothing to say and Im saying it
(John Cage) dd
A good quotation
gets out the mental screwdriver and
adjusts the setscrew. (Joan Larsen) jl
A torn jacket is
soon mended; but hard words bruise the
heart of a child. (Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow) sh
Too many words
spoil the poem. (McEnulty) sh
The words of the
scholar are to be understood. The words
of the master are not to be understood.
They are to be listened to as one listens
to the wind in the trees and the sound of
the river and the song of the bird. They
will awaken something within the heart
that is beyond all knowledge. (Anthony de
Mello) sh
Words are like
leaves; and where they most abound / Much
fruit of sense beneath is rarely found.
(Alexander Pope) sh
Work
I have been
told repeatedly that I am so lucky to be
able to paint so well. Funniest thing,
the more I paint, the luckier I get.
(Anonymous) mp
Anyone can do
any amount of work, provided it isn't the
work he is supposed to be doing at that
moment. (Robert Benchley) sh
What they call
talent is nothing but the capacity for
doing continuous work in the right way.
(Winslow Homer) dd
Work is of two
kinds: first, altering the position of
matter at or near the earth's surface
relative to other matter; second, telling
other people to do so. The first is
unpleasant and ill-paid; the second is
pleasant and highly paid. (Bertrand
Russell) sh
An artist never
really finishes his work, he merely
abandons it. (Paul Valery) d
Worry
Worry is
like a rocking chair - it gives you
something to do but it doesn't get you
anywhere. (Dorothy Galyean) sh
ü
(RG note) There you have a miniature
version of the effort so far. The
associate editors and myself will weed,
check attribution and add the material we
have on our various systems. In a week or
so it will begin to be posted at http://painterskeys.com/quotations.htm
Please feel free
to copy this material to friends or
colleagues. Invite them to join in. We
are very much open to suggestions and
recommendations. Thank you for writing rgenn@saraphina.com
If you would
like to see selected responses to the
previous letter "Dealer
Loyalty," please go to: http://www.painterskeys.com/clickbacks/loyalty.htm
You may be
interested to know that artists from 73
countries have visited these sites since
June 1, 2000. That includes J Warden of
somewhere in Great Britain who submitted
this quotation: "Very few people
possess true artistic ability. It is
therefore both unseemly and unproductive
to irritate the situation by making an
effort. If you have a burning, restless
urge to write or paint, simply eat
something sweet and the feeling will
pass." (Fran Lebowitz)
The board is
presently meeting to discuss the
suitability of this quotation.
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