"We can learn, among other things, that a life lived with art in mind might itself be a kind of art." (3)
"But having spent much of my own life looking at it, I have come to feel that everything, even the most ordinary daily affair, is enriched by the lessons that can be gleaned from art: that beauty is often where you don't expect to find it; that it is something we may discover and also invent, then reinvent, for ourselves; that the most important things in the world are never as simple as they seem but that the world is also richer when it declines to abide by comforting formulas." (5)
"Bonnard is the great example of an artist who made the most of a relationship that, to outsiders, seemed tragic, but which proves that all relationships are finally unknowable except to those inside them." (11)
"And on one level, that's the art's optical point: it's about looking hard enough to recognize, say, that things appear different when seen out of the corner of your eye or squinting into the sun or staring from light into shadow." (13)
"As Bonnard proves, a circumscribed world can be made to seem enormous through a rich enough imagination." (20)
Bonnard: "It is better to be bored on one's own than with others" (22)
"The inherent poignancy in any photograph, whether a Stieglitz or a family memento, entails both the private memory it tries to preserve, by stopping time, and also the hope, however tiny or even unconscious on an amateur's part, that something interesting might result in the expression on the face of a beloved relative or in some other serendipitous gem captured when the camera's shutter is released." (32)
"This picture would be less likable, I suspect, if we learned that a professional had planned it, because the amateur's fluke reminds us of a basic fact in life, which is heartening: that art is out there waiting to be captured, the only question being whether we are prepared to recognize it." (45)
"Art on one level already may be a state of mind. Of course it is first of all a physical object with which we interact in the moment. But after we have seen a work, what do we take away except a memory of it? And memory is thought, a mental seed planted by the artist, which is reproduced in as many different variations as the number of people in whom the memory exists. What makes art good is partly its power to proliferate as a variable memory, an intangible concept, filtered through individual consciousness." (81)
"Be alert to the senses. Elevate the ordinary. Art is about a heightened state of awareness. Try to treat everyday life, or at least parts of it, as you would a work of art." (84)
"'Life makes sense not when reason tells you that everything is as it should be,' he wrote. 'Life makes sense when some imponderable and apparently random event confirms your most irrational prejudices about the world." (85)
"Collecting is way to bring order to the world, which is what museums, our public collectors, do." (95)
"Just as art promises wonderment - an access to a realm beyond the everyday, through the experience of which we may understand the everyday better - a collection of things, even everyday things, promises wonderment, too, as these things become no longer everyday, having been enshrined by a collector." (97)
"Connoisseurship entails making distinctions through slow, comparative observation, whether it involves paintings or wooden ducks." (104)
Sol LeWitt: "Don't worry about cool. Make your own uncool. Make your own, you own world." (119)
"Art, not unlike raising a child, may entail much sacrifice and periods of despair, but, with luck, the effort will produce something that outlives you." (130)
"Novelty in creative endeavors usually arises from routine - you have to be familiar with something before you know what is novel." (151)
On Giorgio Mornadi: "His message - look slowly and hard at something subtle and small - was simple but turned out to be plenty." (172)
"Even via a benign and comfortable form of travel, a modest pilgrimage may restore to the act of looking at art its desired and essential otherness. It can get us back to the root of art as an expression of what's exceptional in life." (177)
"On the other hand, Kelley's pictures tell us that the world is full of small miracles. Its basic democratic message is that these miracles - whether they are squashed pats of butter or fluttering flags - are accessible to all of us, at almost any time, if we are just prepared to look for them. This is the message of all great art that celebrates the beauty of ordinary things." (214)
"A vivid memory can play a mysterious role in the imagination out of proportion to its significance, like a smell or some notes of music or a breeze that triggers the recollection of a pleasant trip or a childhood game or a lost relative." (215)
"Thiebaud invites us to bring a careful discrimination to our appreciation of the world around us...It is typical of an artist like Thiebaud to make the best of this mundane situation - waiting in an airport - and to see art in what might appear to be a waste of time." (223)