“There are no holidays for art; and that’s just fine with the artist.”
Elfriede Jelinek book The Piano Teacher
P 29
The Piano Teacher (1988)
Source: 1956 - 1967, Art-as-Art Dogma' part II, (1964), pp. 156-157
“There are no holidays for art; and that’s just fine with the artist.”
Elfriede Jelinek book The Piano Teacher
P 29
The Piano Teacher (1988)
Arthur Wesley Dow (1857–1922) painter from the United States
"Talks on the Appreciation of Art", The Delinator (Jan 1915)
Other
William Empson (1906–1984) English literary critic and poet
Some Versions of Pastoral (London: Chatto & Windus, 1935) p. 15.
Other
“Helnwein is a very fine artist and one sick motherfucker.”
Gottfried Helnwein (1948) Austrian photographer and painter
Robert Crumb, letter to his San Francisco art-dealer Martin Muller, 1992
Ad Reinhardt (1913–1967) American painter
Source: 1956 - 1967, Art-as-Art Dogma' part II, (1964), p. 155
“The artist is the creator of beautiful things. To reveal art and conceal the artist is art's aim.”
Oscar Wilde book The Picture of Dorian Gray
Source: The Picture of Dorian Gray
Barnett Newman (1905–1970) American artist
Quote of 1942; in Barnett Newman', by Thomas B. Hess, museum of Modern art, New York 1971; as cited in Abstract Expressionism: Creators and Critics, ed. Clifford Ross, Abrahams Publishers, New York 1990, p. 124-125
1940 - 1950
Patrick Swift (1927–1983) British artist
X magazine (1959-62)
Context: It is not necessary to subscribe to the tiresome conception of the artist as rampaging Bohemian to understand that the activity of painting is socially useless, or at best occupies a dubious position... In the remote purity of his solitariness, where the work of art is made, the artist is supremely the anti-social creature.
Harold Rosenberg (1906–1978) American writer and art critic
Source: Art & Other Serious Matters, (1985), p. 271, "Being Outside"