“I was a healthy, strong, cheerful boy, and like to take great walks in and around The Hague... I sometimes got a blow from Nature. And if I got such a blow later, I could draw and paint what I saw. I recorded it in a few scribbles.”
version in original Dutch / citaat van J. H. Weissenbruch, in het Nederlands: Ik was een gezonde, stevige, vroolijke jongen, en maakte graag grote wandelingen in en om Den Haag.. ..Ik kreeg soms een klap van de Natuur. En als ik later die klap had, kon ik teekenen en schilderen, wat ik zag en gezien had. In een paar krabbels legde ik het vast.
Source: J. H. Weissenbruch', (n.d.), p. 21
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Jan Hendrik Weissenbruch 10
Dutch painter of the Hague School (1824-1903) 1824–1903Related quotes

translation from original Dutch, Fons Heijnsbroek, 2018
version in original Dutch / origineel citaat van Willem Maris: Voor zover ik mij herinneren kan, was ik voor mijn twaalfde jaar 's Morgens voor, en 's middags na schooltijd al in de weilanden aan 't teekenen van koeien en daar mijn broers 4 en 6 jaar ouder waren als ik - genoot ik natuurlijk van hen het eerste onderwijs in het teekenen en later in het schilderen.
Quote of Willem Maris, in his letter in 1901; as cited in 'Zó Hollands - Het Hollandse landschap in de Nederlandse kunst sinds 1850', Antoon Erftemeijer https://www.franshalsmuseum.nl/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/zohollands_eindversie_def_1.pdf; Frans Hals museum | De Hallen, Haarlem 2011, p. 36

American Acheivement interview (1996)
Source: The Joy Luck Club
Context: Reading for me was a refuge. I could escape from everything that was miserable in my life and I could be anyone I wanted to be in a story, through a character. It was almost sinful how much I liked it. That's how I felt about it. If my parents knew how much I loved it, I thought they would take it away from me. I think I was also blessed with a very wild imagination because I can remember, when I was at an age before I could read, that I could imagine things that weren't real and whatever my imagination saw is what I actually saw. Some people would say that was psychosis but I prefer to say it was the beginning of a writer's imagination. If I believed that insects had eyes and mouths and noses and could talk, that's what they did. If I thought I could see devils dancing out of the ground, that's what I saw. If I thought lightning had eyes and would follow me and strike me down, that's what would happen. And I think I needed an outlet for all that imagination, so I found it in books.

“When I got my first commission after Habitat, for a few weeks I couldn't draw.”
CBC television interview, used for many years in CBC Montreal's sign-on montage

Source: Quotes, 1960 - 1970, Questions to Stella and Judd' - September 1966, p. 120

In an interview by Henry Geldzahler, 'Art International 1.', February 1964, p. 48
1950 - 1968

What Up Gangsta
Song lyrics, Get Rich or Die Tryin' (2003)