“Art is apotheosis; often, the complaint of beauty.”
Dejan Stojanovic (1959) poet, writer, and businessman
Dancing of Sounds http://www.poetrysoup.com/famous/poem/21378/Dancing_of_Sounds <br class="br">From the poems written in English
“Art is apotheosis; often, the complaint of beauty.”
Dejan Stojanovic (1959) poet, writer, and businessman
Dancing of Sounds http://www.poetrysoup.com/famous/poem/21378/Dancing_of_Sounds <br class="br">From the poems written in English
Donald Judd (1928–1994) artist
Donald Judd (1967), quoted in: Alexander Alberro, Blake Stimson (1999) Conceptual Art: A Critical Anthology. p. 204
1960s
“All art is a form of artifice. For in art there can be no prejudices.”
Arthur Symons (1865–1945) British poet
Preface to Silhouettes kindle ebook 2012 ASIN B0082UH208.
“The essence of all beautiful art, all great art, is gratitude.”
Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) German philosopher, poet, composer, cultural critic, and classical philologist
André Malraux (1901–1976) French novelist, art theorist and politician
André Malraux, Les voix du silence [Voices of Silence] (1951) Part IV, Chapter VI
Les voix du silence [Voices of Silence] (1951)
Context: The great Christian art did not die because all possible forms had been used up; it died because faith was being transformed into piety. Now, the same conquest of the outside world that brought in our modern individualism, so different from that of the Renaissance, is by way of relativizing the individual. It is plain to see that man's faculty of transformation, which began by a remaking of the natural world, has ended by calling man himself into question.
Kim Stanley Robinson (1952) American science fiction writer
Source: Blue Mars (1996), Chapter 9, “Natural History” (p. 433)
Jacques Barzun (1907–2012) Historian
"Culture High and Dry" (1984), p. 14
The Culture We Deserve (1989)
Context: Scholarship has yielded to the irresistible pull that science exerts on our minds by its self-confidence and the promise of certified knowledge. But, to repeat, the objects of culture are not analyzable, not graspable by the geometric mind. Great works of art are great by virtue of being syntheses of the world; they qualify as art by fusing form and contents into an indivisible whole; what they offer is not "discourse about," nor a cipher to be decoded, but a prolonged incitement to finesse. So it is paradoxical that our way of introducing young minds to such works should be the way of scholarship.
“All contemporary forms of art have secret bonds in common.”
Eugène-Melchior de Vogüé (1848–1910) French diplomat, orientalist, travel writer, archaeologist, philanthropist and literary critic
Russian Novelists (1887), page 141 (translated by Jane Loring Edmands)
Robert Motherwell (1915–1991) American artist
Motherwell's writing in 1944; as cited in 'Robert Motherwell, American Painter and Printmaker' https://www.theartstory.org/artist-motherwell-robert-life-and-legacy.htm#writings_and_ideas_header, on 'Artstory' <br class="br">1940s