“At a given time some concrete forms are simply there in vision, not less than colors and brightnesses.”
Source: Gestalt Psychology. 1930, p. 150
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Wolfgang Köhler 12
German-American psychologist and phenomenologist 1887–1967Related quotes

Spirit has arrived at the age of maturity...
Quote in 'Comments on the basic of concrete painting', Paris, January 1930, in 'Art Concret', April 1930, pp. 2–4
1926 – 1931
“But some children have clearer vision than adults.”
Prisonner of Fire (1974)

“It is not bright colors but good drawing that makes figures beautiful.”
As quoted in The Quotable Artist (2002) by Peggy Hadden, p. 32.
undated quotes

Paris 1923
As quoted by Marius de Zayas, in 'The Arts', New York, May 1923
Quotes, 1920's, "Picasso Speaks," 1923

Quote from Rauschenberg, Andrew Forge, H.N. Abrams, New York n.d., p. 12
1980's

Human Nature and Social Theory (1969)
Context: What about the utopian thinkers of all ages, from the Prophets who had a vision of eternal peace, on through the Utopians of the Renaissance, etc.? Were they just dreamers? Or were they so deeply aware of new possibilities, of the changeability of social conditions, that they could visualize an entirely new form of social existence even though these new forms, as such, were not even potentially given in their own society? It is true that Marx wrote a great deal against utopian socialism, and so the term has a bad odor for many Marxists. But he is polemical against certain socialist schools which were, indeed, inferior to his system because of their lack of realism. In fact, I would say the less realistic basis for a vision of the uncrippled man and of a free society there is, the more is Utopia the only legitimate form of expressing hope. But they are not trans-historical as, for instance, is the Christian idea of the Last Judgment, etc. They are historical, but the product of rational imagination, rooted in an experience of what man is capable of and in a clear insight into the transitory character of previous and existing society.

“Love is a universal migraine.
A bright stain on the vision
Blotting out reason.”
"Symptoms of Love," lines 1-3, from More Poems (1961).
Poems