Gertrude Stein citations
Page 6

Gertrude Stein, née le 3 février 1874 à Allegheny West en Pennsylvanie et morte le 27 juillet 1946 à l'hôpital américain de Neuilly-sur-Seine près de Paris, est une poétesse, écrivaine, dramaturge et féministe américaine. Elle passa la majeure partie de sa vie en France et fut un catalyseur dans le développement de la littérature et de l'art moderne. Par sa collection personnelle et par ses livres, elle contribua à la diffusion du cubisme et plus particulièrement de l'œuvre de Picasso, de Matisse et de Cézanne. Wikipedia  

✵ 3. février 1874 – 27. juillet 1946  •  Autres noms Gertruda Steinová, Gertruda Stein
Gertrude Stein photo
Gertrude Stein: 160 citations0 J'aime

Gertrude Stein: Citations en anglais

“They were regular in being gay, they learned little things that are things in being gay, they learned many little things that are things in being gay, they were gay every day, they were regular, they were gay, they were gay the same length of time every day, they were gay, they were quite regularly gay.”

Gertrude Stein

"Miss Furr and Miss Skeene"
This story about two lesbians, written in 1911, and published in Vanity Fair magazine in July 1923, is considered to be the origin of the use of the term "gay" for "homosexual", though it was not used in this sense in the story.
Geography and Plays (1922)

“I have always noticed that in portraits of really great writers the mouth is always firmly closed.”

Gertrude Stein

What Are Masterpieces and Why Are There So Few of Them (1936), Afterword of a later edition

“Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose.”

Gertrude Stein

"Sacred Emily"
This statement, written in 1913 and first published in Geography and Plays, is thought to have originally been inspired by the work of the artist Sir Francis Rose; a painting of his was in her Paris drawing-room.
See also the Wikipedia article: Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose
Nigel Rees explains the phrase thus: "The poem 'Sacred Emily' by Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) is well-nigh impenetrable to the average reader but somehow it has managed to give a format phrase to the language. If something is incapable of explanation, one says, for example, 'a cloud is a cloud is a cloud.' What Stein wrote, however, is frequently misunderstood. She did not say 'A rose is a rose is a rose,' as she might well have done, but 'Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose' (i.e. no indefinite article at the start and three not two repetitions.) The Rose in question was not a flower but an allusion to the English painter, Sir Francis Rose, 'whom she and I regarded' wrote Constantine Fitzgibbon, 'as the peer of Matisse and Picasso, and whose paintings — or at least painting — hung in her Paris drawing-room while a Gauguin was relegated to the lavatory.'" - Sayings of the Century, page 91
Geography and Plays (1922)

“A master-piece … may be unwelcome but it is never dull.”

Gertrude Stein

What Are Masterpieces and Why Are There So Few of Them (1936)

“Romance is everything.”

Gertrude Stein

"Advertisement"
Useful Knowledge (1928)

Auteurs similaires

Maya Angelou photo
Maya Angelou4
poétesse, actrice et militante américaine None
George Bernard Shaw photo
George Bernard Shaw15
dramaturge et scénariste irlandais None
Bertolt Brecht photo
Bertolt Brecht13
dramaturge, metteur en scène, critique théâtral et poète al… None
Marcel Pagnol photo
Marcel Pagnol27
écrivain, dramaturge, cinéaste et producteur français None
Jean Anouilh photo
Jean Anouilh27
dramaturge français None
Richard Bach photo
Richard Bach8
écrivain américain None
Jean-Paul Sartre photo
Jean-Paul Sartre119
philosophe, dramaturge, romancier, nouvelliste et essayiste… None
Kurt Vonnegut photo
Kurt Vonnegut29
écrivain américain None
Karl Kraus photo
Karl Kraus8
écrivain autrichien None
Stefan Zweig photo
Stefan Zweig55
écrivain autrichien None