Source: Art & Other Serious Matters, (1985), p. 55, "Evidences of Surreality"
“No work which is destined to become a classic can look like the classics which have preceded it. In art, as in biology, there is heredity but no identity with the ascendants. Painters inherit characteristics acquired by their forerunners; that is why no important work of art can belong to any period but its own, to the very moment of its creation. It is necessarily dated by its own appearance. The conscious will of the painter cannot intervene.”
Quote from 'On the Possibilities of Painting,' lecture, Sociétés des études philosophiques et scientifiques pour l'examen des idées nouvelles, Sorbonne, Paris (1924-05-15), printed in the Transatlantic Review, # 16 (June 1924), pp. 482-488; trans. Douglas Cooper in Horizon, # 80 (August 1946), pp. 113-122
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Juan Gris 6
Spanish painter and sculptor 1887–1927Related quotes
Source: Fiction Sets You Free: Literature, Liberty and Western Culture (2007), pp. 5-6.

Source: The Life of a Painter - autobiography', 1946, Letters of the great artists', 1963, p. 248

“Each work of art is a complete entity existing in its own right and by its own particular logic.”
Nano Reid (1950)
Context: Each work of art is a complete entity existing in its own right and by its own particular logic. It has its own reality and is independent of any particular creed or theory as a justification for its existence. This is not to say that artistic development may be considered as a self-sufficient process unrelated to social reality, because art is always concerned with the deeper and fundamentally human things; and any consideration of art is a consideration of humanity. But it does mean that we cannot apply the principles and logic of the past to a new work of art and hope to understand it. The eternal verities with which the artist is concerned do not change, but our conception of art does, as does our conception of form, and these must be extended if we are to understand fully and basically the meaning of a new work. It is a complex matter, but the elemental principles are always simple. The mass of modern art theory that developed around the fantastic changes of this century's painting can be largely ignored; only one or two fundamental principles are important. Probably most important in the new aesthetics from the painter's point of view was the statement of Degas, seventy years ago, in his unheeded advice to the Impressionists. He spoke then of a "Transformation in which imagination collaborates with memory... It is very well to copy what one sees; it is much better to draw what one has retained in one's memory”…This attitude, and all it implies, underlines the work of practically every painter of importance since 1900. Ultimately, it meant that the day of stage props and models was gone, and that imagination was recognised as the most important quality in an artist.

“Each work of art generate its own rules”
Singing School

Discourse no. 6, delivered on December 10, 1774; vol. 1, p. 150.
Discourses on Art
Source: 1940 - 1950, The Plasmic Image 2. 1943-1945, p. 124

“Whenever a work's structure is intentionally one of its own themes, another of its themes is art.”
Quoted by Ted Nelson in Literary Machines (1982)