“A lot of the people who live here [Miami] are island people -- from Cuba, Haiti. People are very vibrant, and color is important living here. You're inspired every day by the sun, the sky, the landscape, the lushness. [Artist Romero Britto's] painting and artwork reflect that.”
www.nytimes.com (February 2, 2007)
2007, 2008
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Gloria Estefan195
Cuban-American singer-songwriter, actress and divorciada 1957Related quotes
P. W. Botha (1916–2006) South African prime minister
As cited in Dictionary of South African Quotations, Jennifer Crwys-Williams, Penguin Books 1994, p. 441
Paul Smith (musician) (1979) English rock singer
About a free Tyneside gig. <br class="br"> What's On North East http://www.whatsonne.co.uk/gb/music/news/interview-paul-smith-maximo-park
“People here worship the sun." "Yes, but my people worship the God who made the sun.”
Gilbert Morris (1929–2016) American writer
Source: Till Shiloh Comes
“Private air is a way of living for people who come here.”
Bruno Magras (1951) French politician
Saint Barthélemy <br class="br">Bruno Magras (2016) cited in: " As the Jet Set Arrives in St. Barts, Is There Trouble in Paradise? https://www.townandcountrymag.com/society/money-and-power/a8523/bruno-magras-st-barts/" in Town&Country, 28 November 2016.
“Here, lads, we live by the law of the taiga. But even here people manage to live.”
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn book One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
Kuziomin, in the Ralph Parker translation (1963).
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (1962)
Context: Here, lads, we live by the law of the taiga. But even here people manage to live. D’you know who are the ones the camps finish off? Those who lick other men’s left-overs, those who set store by the doctors, and those who peach on their mates.
Clare Boothe Luce (1903–1987) American writer, politician, ambassador, journalist and anti-Communist activist
Europe in the Spring, ch. 12 (1940)
Barack Obama (1961) 44th President of the United States of America
2016, Remarks to the People of Cuba (March 2016)
Willa Cather book Death Comes for the Archbishop
Book VII, Ch. 4
Death Comes for the Archbishop (1927)
Context: The sky was as full of motion and change as the desert beneath it was monotonous and still, — and there was so much sky, more than at sea, more than anywhere else in the world. The plain was there, under one's feet, but what one saw when one looked about was that brilliant blue world of stinging air and moving cloud. Even the mountains were mere ant-hills under it. Elsewhere the sky is the roof of the world; but here the earth was the floor of the sky. The landscape one longed for when one was away, the thing all about one, the world one actually lived in, was the sky, the sky!