Source: The Natural History of the Soul (1745), Ch. VI Concerning the Sensitive Faculty of Matter
“The spectator of a sculpture, modern or ancient, is not called to examine his own or the sculptor's knowledge of anatomy but to participations, so to say, a participation where the motions which have strangulated the carver, while working, must operate the same mysterious attraction and inexpressible miracle of forms and lines, its dramaticism, its graphic tragedy, or its smiling gaiety and happiness: its words carved out of forms and sown with lines into phrases of philosophy, religion.”
n.p.
1960 - 1968, Plastic Language, Ossip Zadkine
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Ossip Zadkine 31
French sculptor 1890–1967Related quotes
Sämtliche Werken, ed. Josef Nadler (1949-1957), vol. III, p. 32.
Quote of Henri Moore in 'The Listener', 24 April 1941, pp. 598-9; as cited in Henry Moore writings and Conversations, ed. Alan Wilkinson, University of California Press, California 2002, p. 104
1940 - 1955
Source: Philosophy and the Return to Self-Knowledge (1997), p. 191
quote from an extract of 'Barbara Hepworth – the Sculptor carves because he must, The Studio, London, vol. 104, December 1932, p. 332
1932 - 1946
Manifesto (1919)