“If the stroke of the brush is so important, it is because it expresses precisely what is not there.”
quote 1985 - from CF, 44; p. 69
Karel Appel, a gesture of colour' (1992/2009)
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Karel Appel 58
Dutch painter, sculptor, and poet 1921–2006Related quotes

“My brush-strokes start in nothing and they end in nothing, and in-between you find the image.”
Quote from 'The eye of the beholder', Carlo McCormick
Karel Appel – the complete sculptures,' (1990) not-paged

Quote in his letter to brother Theo, from Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, 10 Sept. 1889; as quoted in Vincent van Gogh, edited by Alfred H. Barr; Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1935 https://www.moma.org/documents/moma_catalogue_1996_300061887.pdf, (letter 605), pp. 33-34
1880s, 1889

Quote of her notebooks about rendering, 1885-86; as cited in Berthe Morisot, ed. Delafond and Genet-Bondeville, 1997, p. 46
1881 - 1895

“A great cricketer must be an artist and express himself in his strokes.”
All On A Summer's Day (1953).
'The Continuing Insult to the English Language' (The Monthly, May 2006)
Essays and reviews
Context: ... by now some of the editors and subeditors [on Fleet Street] are themselves products of the anti-educational orthodoxy by which expressiveness counts above precision. It would, if the two terms were separable. But they aren't. Beyond a certain point - and that point is reached early - precision is what expressiveness depends on.

Source: Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mount Everest Disaster
A.M. MacEachren (2004). How Maps Work: Representation, Visualization, and Design, The Guilford Press. p. 161
“What ideas are convenient to express inevitably becomes the important content of a culture.”
Ch 1: Medium is the Metaphor, p. 7
Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business (1985)