Quoted from a biographical note written by Tatlin in 1929, published in Tatlin', Weingarten; Kunstverlag Weingarten, 1987), p. 328; as quoted by Vasilii Rakitin, in The great Utopia - The Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde, 1915-1932; Guggenheim Museum, New York, 1992, p. 34
Quotes, 1926 - 1954
“Árt is dead. Long live Tatlin's new machine art.”
Grosz and Heartfield, 1920: text on their billboard at the Dada fair in Berlin
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George Grosz 9
German artist 1893–1959Related quotes
“The Revolution is dead. Long Live the Revolution”
Source: The Rise of China and the Demise of the Capitalist World-Economy (2008), Chapter Two, "Accumulation, Basic Needs, and Class Struggle: the Rise of Modern China"
“The League is dead; long live the United Nations!”
Last speech before the League of Nations (8 April 1946)
"On the American Dead in Spain", New Masses (February 14, 1939)
“It is never the machines that are dead.
It is only the mechanically-minded men that are dead.”
Book II, Chapter V.
Crowds (1913)
"Dreaming of My Deceased Wife on the Night of the Twentieth Day of the First Month" (《江城子·乙卯正月二十日夜记梦》), in Song of the Immortals: An Anthology of Classical Chinese Poetry, trans. Yuanchong Xu (Beijing: New World Press, 1994), p. 202
“Sirs, I have tested your machine. It adds a new terror to life and makes death a long-felt want.”
Page 183
His reply to a gramophone company who had asked for a testimonial.
Beerbohm Tree (1956)
"Lines to Robert Lowell"; translation by Louis Simpson and Vera Dunham, from Vera Dunham and Max Hayward (eds.) Nostalgia for the Present (New York: Doubleday, 1978) p. 111.
Source: State and Revolution