“The most interesting thing about artists is how they live”
Source: The Writings of Marcel Duchamp
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Marcel Duchamp66
French painter and sculptor 1887–1968Related quotes
“The most interesting thing I learned during this time was how small a nuclear warhead was.”
Robert B. Laughlin (1950) American physicist
On his experiences in the military during his training on how to fire Pershing missiles.
Nobel Prize autobiography (1998)
Context: Oklahoma is laid back and rather beautiful, with rolling brown hills not unlike the ones in California. The Pershing missiles, on the other hand, were not beautiful. They were horrible weapons of war — solid-fuel rockets five feet in diameter at the base, long as a moving van, and capable of throwing a tactical nuclear warhead 500 miles. They were launched from trucks and required a team of 10 men to service and fire. The most interesting thing I learned during this time was how small a nuclear warhead was. The nose cone of a Pershing is only about 18 inches in diameter at the base. I had not been interested at all in nuclear weaponry as a student, and so I had never thought through carefully about their "efficiency". It is sobering thought that these missiles were actually deployed in continental Europe in those days and that on at least one occasion, namely the 1973 Arab-Israel war, there was an alert serious enough to leave the commanding officers trembling.
Luis Alfaro (1963) Chicano performance artist, writer, theater director, and social activist
On calling himself a “citizen artist” in “The Artist as Leader: Luis Alfaro” https://www.uncsa.edu/kenan/artist-as-leader/luis-alfaro.aspx (Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts)
“The most important thing about mathematics is how it resides in the human brain.”
William Thurston (1946–2012) mathematician
Foreword to Teichmüller Theory
Carl Andre (1935) American artist
Source: Artists talks 1969 – 1977, p. 14
“Most people's lives are governed by willpower. An artist is someone who has no will.”
Bram van Velde (1895–1981) Dutch painter
1960's, Conversations with Samuel Beckett and Bram van Velde' (1965 - 1969)