My Day (1935–1962)
Source: This is My Story
Context: If man is to be liberated to enjoy more leisure, he must also be prepared to enjoy this leisure fully and creatively. For people to have more time to read, to take part in their civic obligations, to know more about how their government functions and who their officials are might mean in a democracy a great improvement in the democratic processes. Let's begin, then, to think how we can prepare old and young for these new opportunities. Let's not wait until they come upon us suddenly and we have a crisis that we will be ill prepared to meet. (5 November 1958)
“It takes intelligence and training, self-discipline and fine-sensibility, to gain renewed life through leisure occupation. America now suffers spiritual poverty, and art must become more fully American life before her leisure can become culture.”
'Painting and Culture' p. 56
Search for the Real and Other Essays (1948)
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Hans Hofmann 67
American artist 1880–1966Related quotes
“The more simple the society, the more leisured its way of life.”
Man's Rise to Civilization (1968), p. 29
“Everybody was saying we must have more leisure. Now they are complaining they are unemployed.”
In 1981, in reference to an economic recession, as quoted in "Long line of princely gaffes", BBC News (1 March 2002)
1980s
Bill Moyers interview (2002)
Context: I used to say that arts were talked about in the arts and leisure page. Now, why would it be arts and leisure? Why do we think that arts are leisure? Why isn't it arts and science or arts and the most important thing in your life? I think that art has become a big scarlet letter in our culture.
It's a big "A." And it says, you are an elitist, you're effete, or whatever those things... do you know what I mean? It means you don't connect. And I don't believe that. I think we've patronized our audiences long enough.
You can do things that would bring people to another place and still get someone on a very daily mundane moving level but you don't have to separate art from the masses.
"The Plight of Culture" (1953), p. 31
1960s, Art and Culture: Critical Essays, (1961)
Edward B. Titchener, An Outline of Psychology (1916), p. 1.
Letter to G W Rusden (8 June 1876), published in The Letters of Anthony Trollope (1983), p. 691
Source: Leisure, the Basis of Culture (1948), Leisure, the Basis of Culture, p. 27