Quote of Richter on his 'Grey Paintings', in a letter to nl:Edy de Wilde, 23 February 1975; as cited on collected quotes on the website of Gerhard Richter: on 'Grey-paintings' https://www.gerhard-richter.com/en/quotes/subjects-2/grey-paintings-9
1970's
Variant: It [grey color] makes no statement whatever... It has the capacity that no other color has, to make 'nothing' visible. To me grey is the welcome and only possible equivalent for indifference, non-commitment, absence of opinion, absence of shape (note 99).... but, grey like formlessness and the rest, can be real only as an idea.... The painting is then a mixture of grey as a fiction and grey as a visible, designated area of color.
“Colour's forbidden, only Nuance!”
Pas la Couleur, rien que la nuance!
Source: "Art poétique", from Jadis et naguère (1884), Line 14; Sorrell p. 125
Original
Pas la Couleur, rien que la nuance!
"Art poétique", from Jadis et naguère (1884)
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Paul Verlaine 11
French poet 1844–1896Related quotes
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“Diplomacy, of course, is a subtle and nuanced craft”
Address to United Nations General Assembly http://www.reagan.utexas.edu/archives/speeches/1987/092187b.htm (21 September 1987)
1980s, Second term of office (1985–1989)
Context: Diplomacy, of course, is a subtle and nuanced craft, so much so that it's said that when the most wily diplomat of the nineteenth-century passed away, other diplomats asked, on reports of his death, "What do you suppose the old fox meant by that?"
“It is forbidden to walk on the grass. It is not forbidden to fly over the grass.”
Games for Actors and non-Actors (1992)
“The victimization of children is nowhere forbidden; what is forbidden is to write about it.”
Source: Thou Shalt Not Be Aware : Society's Betrayal of the Child
“Nuance: for best results apply with sledge hammer.”
The Well-Spoken Thesaurus (2011)
“Human lips are now forbidden to utter His name, for being the only God, He needs no name.”
Der Dichter, 1910. Alle Verk, x. 23.
“I painted only [in pure colours] at Arcueil and at the Luxembourg Gardens.”
As quoted by J. P. Crespelle, The Fauves, Oldbourne Press, London 1962, p. 66
one of the paintings which Marquet painted in 1898 at the Luxembourg Gardens was titled simply 'Le Luxembourg', see: Francois Fosca, Albert Marquet (Paris: Editions Nouvelle Revue Francois, 1922), pl, 16.
As quoted in A Dictionary of Scientific Quotations (1991) edited by Alan Lindsay Mackay, p. 153