抄牆壁上的大師名言,抄到最後一個時,美術館人員很好心送我一支鉛筆
我想可能原子筆的墨水若揮發到空氣中、傷到作品
所以就很高興地收下
不過真正進場看展時我就沒用到XD
以下是我辛苦抄下來的,雖說Google大神可以找到其他人抄的
不過還是一個字一個字打比較實在
(剛剛去別人的部落格看,才發現自己只抄到一面牆= =)
Lipchitz: In the midst of death there is love and procreation and birth. This is how the sculpture came about, as a hopeful and optimistic recreation to tragedy.
Van Gogh: Making sketches amounts to a planting of seeds that grow into paintings.
Matise: That which I dream of is an art of balances, of purity, of tranquility, without disquieting or preoccupying subjects, which is... an emollient, a balm for the mind, a thing analogous to a trusty armchair which absolves the body of its weariness.
Modigliani: I try to formulate with the greatest clarity the truth above art and life, in the way that I experienced it.
Gauguin: The work of a man is the explanation of that man.
Bastida: By reason of his native genius and stubborn will-power he became what he is- the painter of vibrating.
-by James Gibbons Huneker
Sisley: All painting presents some thing with which the painter has fallen in love.
Delaunay: Even if art cannot liberate itself from the object, it can leave behind a description.
Barque: Art is made to disturb. Science reassures.
Miró: I don't invent anything. Everything is here.
Manet: The truth is this, art should be the writing of life.
Pissarro: Paint liberally and without hesitation to preserve the freshness of the first impression.
Utrillo: In all works of art, human feeling should have priority over aesthetic systems of pictorial methods.
Pegas: Painting, it is very easy when you don't know how to paint. Once you know, it is very difficult.
Boudin: All that is painted directly from the subject has always a force, a power, a touch of life that one loses in the studio. That first impression is the best. One must attach oneself to it and refuse to budge from it.
(這是漏抄的部分,感謝好心的Eliza大大提供)
Mary Stevenson Cassatt 1844-1926 American Impressionist Painter and Printmaker
I have touched certain people with my artistic sensibility - they have received the sensations of love and life. To what can one compare this joy for an artist?
Georges Rouault 1871-1958 French Fauvist and Expressionist painter
The artist renounces all the theories, both his own and those of others. He forgets all when facing his canvas.
Fernand Leger 1881-1955 French Cubist Painter,
The figure of a human is no more important than that of a key or a bicycle.
Pablo Picasso 1881-1973 Spanish Cubist Painter and Sculptor
I have directed my life towards learning how to draw like a child.
Andre Derain 1880–1954 French Fauvist Painter
Color is the materialization of light. Thus it is also a materialization of the spirit. Color fixes the light. Where there is light, there is spirit.
Juan Gris 1887–1927 Spanish Cubist Painter and Sculptor
Cézanne made a cylinder out of a bottle. I start from the cylinder to create a special kind of individual object. I make a bottle - a particular bottle - out of a cylinder.
Jules Pascin 1885-1930 Bulgarian-born French Expressionist Painter
Oh, how stupid are the people that they cannot see taht all my capatities as a painter are revealed in my drawing and not in the painthings which require a whole set-up appurtenance.
Claude Monet 1840–1926 French Impressionist Painter
Color is my daily obsession, my joy and my torment.
Auguste Rodin 1840–1917 French Sculpture-Impressionism Sculptor
When a good sculptor shapes a human body, he does not only represent musculature, but also the life that reanimates it.
Paul Cézanne 1839-1906 French Post-Impressionist Painter
When color is in its fullness, form is in its plenitude.
Henri Julien Félix Rousseau 1844-1910 French Post-Impressionist painter
As I enter the greenhouse in the Jardin des Plantes and I see strange plants from nations exotic, it seems as if I have entered into a dream.
Marcel Duchamp 1887-1968 French Futurist Painter
The great enemy of art is good taste.
Marsden Hartley 1877-1943 American Modernist Painter
The forms are only those which I have observed casually from day to day. There is no hidden symbolism whatsoever in them…
Pierre-Auguste Renoir 1841-1919 French Impressionist Painter
You arrive before nature with theories, and nature casts them all to the ground.
Pierre Bonnard 1867-1947 French Impressionist Painter
Painting must return to its initial object, the examination of the interior lives of human beings.
Georgia O'Keeffe 1887-1986 American Painter
I said to myself "I have things in my head that are not like what anyone has taught me - shapes and ideas so near to my - so natural to my way of being and thinking that it hasn t occurred to me to put them down." I decided to start anew to strip away what I had been taught.
Yves Tanguy 1900 – 1955 French-born US Surrealist Painter
The painting develops before my eyes, unfolding its surprises as it develops.
Marc Chagall 1887-1985 Russian-born French Surrealist Painter
My circus performs in the sky.
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