Bill > Bill's Quotes

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  • #1
    John Cage
    “Value judgments are destructive to our proper business, which is curiosity and awareness.”
    John Cage

  • #2
    Charles Fourier
    “The philosophers say that the passions are too lively, too fiery; in truth they are weak and languid. All around one sees the mass of men endure the persecution of a few masters and the despotism of prejudices without offering the slightest resistance... their passions are too weak to permit them to derive audacity from despair.”
    Charles Fourier

  • #3
    Charles Fourier
    “The method of doubt must be applied to civilization; we must doubt its necessity, its excellence, and its permanence.”
    Charles Fourier

  • #4
    Marcel Duchamp
    “All this twaddle, the existence of God, atheism, determinism, liberation, societies, death, etc., are pieces of a chess game called language, and they are amusing only if one does not preoccupy oneself with 'winning or losing this game of chess.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #5
    Marcel Duchamp
    “As soon as we start putting our thoughts into words and sentences everything gets distorted, language is just no damn good—I use it because I have to, but I don’t put any trust in it. We never understand each other.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #6
    Marcel Duchamp
    “I don't believe in art. I believe in artists.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #7
    Marcel Duchamp
    “The creative act is not performed by the artist alone; the spectator brings the work in contact with the external world by deciphering and interpreting its inner qualifications and thus adds his contribution to the creative act.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #8
    Marcel Duchamp
    “I have forced myself to contradict myself in order to avoid conforming to my own taste.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #9
    Marcel Duchamp
    “I like living, breathing better than working...my art is that of living. Each second, each breath is a work which is inscribed nowhere, which is neither visual nor cerebral, it's a sort of constant euphoria.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #10
    Marcel Duchamp
    “Destruction is also creation.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #11
    Marcel Duchamp
    “What I have in mind is that art may be bad, good or indifferent, but, whatever adjective is used, we must call it art, and bad art is still art in the same way that a bad emotion is still an emotion.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #12
    Marcel Duchamp
    “Art is not about itself but the attention we bring to it.”
    Marcel Duchamp
    tags: art

  • #13
    Marcel Duchamp
    “If a shadow is a two-dimensional projection of the three-dimensional world, then the three-dimensional world as we know it is the projection of the four-dimensional Universe. ”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #14
    Marcel Duchamp
    “To all appearances, the artist acts like a mediumistic being who, from the labyrinth beyond time and space, seeks his way out to a clearing.”
    Marcel Duchamp
    tags: art, dada

  • #15
    Marcel Duchamp
    “The most interesting thing about artists is how they live”
    Marcel Duchamp, The Writings of Marcel Duchamp

  • #16
    Marcel Duchamp
    “Since a three-dimensional object casts a two-dimensional shadow, we should be able to imagine the unknown four-dimensional object whose shadow we are. I for my part am fascinated by the search for a one-dimensional object that casts no shadow at all.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #17
    Marcel Duchamp
    “Among our articles of lazy hardware, I recommend the faucet that stops dripping when no one is listening to it.”
    Marcel Duchamp
    tags: humor

  • #18
    Marcel Duchamp
    “Let us consider two important factors, the two poles of the creation of art: the artist on one hand, and on the other the spectator who later becomes the posterity; to all appearances the artist acts like a mediumistic being who, from the labyrinth beyond time and space, seeks his way out to a clearing”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #19
    Anaïs Nin
    “The light was crude. It made Artaud's eyes shrink into darkness, as they are deep-set. This brought into relief the intensity of his gestures. He looked tormented. His hair, rather long, fell at times over his forehead. He has the actor's nimbleness and quickness of gestures. His face is lean, as if ravaged by fevers. His eyes do not seem to see the people. They are the eyes of a visionary. His hands are long, long-fingered.
    Beside him Allendy looks earthy, heavy, gray. He sits at the desk, massive, brooding. Artaud steps out on the platform, and begins to talk about " The Theatre and the Plague."
    He asked me to sit in the front row. It seems to me that all he is asking for is intensity, a more heightened form of feeling and living. Is he trying to remind us that it was during the Plague that so many marvelous works of art and theater came to be, because, whipped by the fear of death, man seeks immortality, or to escape, or to surpass himself? But then, imperceptibly almost, he let go of the thread we were following and began to act out dying by plague. No one quite knew when it began. To illustrate his conference, he was acting out an agony. "La Peste" in French is so much more terrible than "The Plague" in English. But no word could describe what Artaud acted out on the platform of the Sorbonne. He forgot about his conference, the theatre, his ideas, Dr. Allendy sitting there, the public, the young students, his wife, professors, and directors.
    His face was contorted with anguish, one could see the perspiration dampening his hair. His eyes dilated, his muscles became cramped, his fingers struggled to retain their flexibility. He made one feel the parched and burning throat, the pains, the fever, the fire in the guts. He was in agony. He was screaming. He was delirious. He was enacting his own death, his own crucifixion.
    At first people gasped. And then they began to laugh. Everyone was laughing! They hissed. Then, one by one, they began to leave, noisily, talking, protesting. They banged the door as they left. The only ones who did not move were Allendy, his wife, the Lalous, Marguerite. More protestations. More jeering. But Artaud went on, until the last gasp. And stayed on the floor. Then when the hall had emptied of all but his small group of friends, he walked straight up to me and kissed my hand. He asked me to go to the cafe with him. ”
    Anaïs Nin

  • #20
    Antonin Artaud
    “This is why a tainted society has invented psychiatry to defend itself against the investigations of certain superior intellects whose faculties of divination would be troublesome.

    No, van Gogh was not mad, but his paintings were bursts of Greek fire, atomic bombs, whose angle of vision would have been capable of seriously upsetting the spectral conformity of the
    bourgeoisie.

    In comparison with the lucidity of van Gogh, psychiatry is no better than a den of apes who are themselves obsessed and persecuted and who possess nothing to mitigate the most appalling states of anguish and human suffocation but a ridiculous terminology. To a man, this whole gang of pected scoundrels and patented quacks are all erotomaniacs.”
    Antonin Artaud

  • #21
    Ezra Pound
    “The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
    Petals on a wet black bough.”
    Ezra Pound



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