Source: For the Discovery of a Zone of Images', Piero Manzoni, 1957, pp. 16-17
“There comes a point where individual mythology and universal mythology are identical. In this context it is clear that there can be no concern with symbolism and description, memories, misty impressions, of childhood, pictoricism, sentimentalism: all this must be absolutely excluded. So must every hedonistic repetition of arguments that have already been exhausted, since the man who continues to trifle with myths that have already been discovered is an aesthete, and worse.”
Source: For the Discovery of a Zone of Images', Piero Manzoni, 1957, pp. 18-19
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Piero Manzoni 16
Italian artist 1933–1963Related quotes
2001
                                        
                                        Aphorism 109 
Novum Organum (1620), Book I 
Context: Another argument of hope may be drawn from this — that some of the inventions already known are such as before they were discovered it could hardly have entered any man's head to think of; they would have been simply set aside as impossible. For in conjecturing what may be men set before them the example of what has been, and divine of the new with an imagination preoccupied and colored by the old; which way of forming opinions is very fallacious, for streams that are drawn from the springheads of nature do not always run in the old channels.
                                    
Source: For the Discovery of a Zone of Images', Piero Manzoni, 1957, pp. 16-17
                                        
                                        Introduction, p. xviii 
"Quotes", The Great Code: The Bible and Literature (1982)
                                    
“Memory is the medium of the must-have-been.”
                                        
                                        Book I, Chapter 1, p. 30 
The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind (1976)