“In art as in love, instinct is enough.”
En art comme en amour, l'instinct suffit.
Le Jardin d'Épicure [The Garden of Epicurus] (1894)
Original
En art comme en amour, l'instinct suffit.
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Anatole France 122
French writer 1844–1924Related quotes

Timoleon http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1018&context=libraryscience, Art (1891)
“Love isn't rational, it's instinctive”
Source: Deadly Little Secret

"Anarchism" article in Encyclopedia Britannica (1910) "The Historical Development of Anarchism", as quoted in Anarchism: A Collection of Revolutionary Writings (1927), p. 288
Context: The best exponent of anarchist philosophy in ancient Greece was Zeno (342-267 or 270 B. C.), from Crete, the founder of the Stoic philosophy, who distinctly opposed his conception of a free community without government to the state-Utopia of Plato. He repudiated the omnipotence of the State, its intervention and regimentation, and proclaimed the sovereignty of the moral law of the individual — remarking already that, while the necessary instinct of self-preservation leads man to egotism, nature has supplied a corrective to it by providing man with another instinct — that of sociability. When men are reasonable enough to follow their natural instincts, they will unite across the frontiers and constitute the Cosmos. They will have no need of law-courts or police, will have no temples and no public worship, and use no money — free gifts taking the place of the exchanges. Unfortunately, the writings of Zeno have not reached us and are only known through fragmentary quotations. However, the fact that his very wording is similar to the wording now in use, shows how deeply is laid the tendency of human nature of which he was the mouthpiece.

“True love has no rules: it lives by instinct.”
Original: Il vero amore non ha regole: vive d'istinto.
Source: prevale.net

“… and then, I have nature and art and poetry, and if that is not enough, what is enough?”

“In art the best is good enough.”
In der Kunst ist das Beste gut genug.
Italian Journey (March 3, 1787)
“Art loves chance, and chance loves art.”
Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Book VI, sec. 4, 1140a.

Quoted in Kristine Stiles & Peter Howard Selz: Theories and documents of contemporary art (1996), p. 671

“If life were enough for vitality, there would be no art.”
Oluşmak (To Become) Aphorisms (Pan Publishing House, Istanbul, 2011)