“When I got back to Ornans, I spent a few days hunting. I quite like the subject of violent exercise... It makes the most surprising painting you can imagine. There are thirty life-size figures in it. It is the moral and physical history of my studio”
            Quote from a letter of Courbet to Bruyas, (December 1854); as cited in 'Courbet Speaks',  'Courbet-dossier', Musée-dOrsay http://www.musee-orsay.fr/en/collections/courbet-dossier/courbet-speaks.html 
1840s - 1850s
        
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Gustave Courbet 30
French painter 1819–1877Related quotes
                                        
                                        Source: The Burning Page (2016), Chapter 24 (p. 322) 
Context: “I have spent most of my life preferring books to people,” Irene said sharply. “Just because I like a few specific people doesn’t change anything.”
                                    
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                        
                                        Israels in his letter to Amercian art-sellers Moulton & Ricketts, 27 June 1910; as cited in Jozef Israëls, 1824 – 1911, ed. Dieuwertje Dekkers; Waanders, Zwolle 1999, p. 188 
Quotes of Jozef Israels, after 1900
                                    
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                        
                                        02-Mar-2009, Hull City OWS 
No kidding!
                                    
                                        
                                        second side of the first tape 
1975 - 1992, Oral history interview with Joan Mitchell, 1986
                                    
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                        
                                        In a  conversation https://intelligence.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/01-16-2014-conversation-on-existential-risk.pdf with Luke Muehlhauser and Eliezer Yudkowsky, January 2014; part of this is quoted by Carl Shulman in  "Population ethics and inaccessible populations" https://reflectivedisequilibrium.blogspot.com/2014/08/population-ethics-and-inaccessible.html 
Context: So one crazy analogy to how my morality might turn out to work, and the big point here is I don't know how my morality works, is we have a painting and the painting is very beautiful. There is some crap on the painting. Would I like the crap cleaned up? Yes, very much. That's like the suffering that's in the world today. Then there is making more of the painting, that's just a strange function. My utility with the size of the painting, it's just like a strange and complicated function. It may go up in any kind of reasonable term that I can actually foresee, but flatten out, at some point. So to see the world as like a painting and my utility of it is that, I think that is somewhat of an analogy to how my morality may work, that it's not like there is this linear multiplier and the multiplier is one thing or another thing. It's: starting to talk about billions of future generations is just like going so far outside of where my morality has ever been stress-tested. I don't how it would respond. I actually suspect that it would flatten out the same way as with the painting.
                                    
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                        
                                        http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jI_sg_mBSLk 
About his singing. 
Interview with Buenos Dias a Todos, 2008
                                    
 
                            
                        
                        
                        “When I reached thirty I looked back on my past.”
                                        
                                        Go Rin No Sho (1645), Introduction 
Context: When I reached thirty I looked back on my past. The previous victories were not due to my having mastered strategy. Perhaps it was natural ability, or the order of heaven, or that other schools' strategy was inferior. After that I studied morning and evening searching for the principle, and came to realise the Way of strategy when I was fifty.
Since then I have lived without following any particular Way. Thus with the virtue of strategy I practise many arts and abilities — all things with no teacher. To write this book I did not use the law of Buddha or the teachings of Confucius, neither old war chronicles nor books on martial tactics. I take up my brush to explain the true spirit of this Ichi school as it is mirrored in the Way of heaven and Kwannon. The time is the night of the tenth day of the tenth month, at the hour of the tiger.
                                    
 
        
     
                             
                            