Robert Henri Art Quotations
Robert Henri Quotes about:
Art Quotes from:
- All Art Quotes
- Sun Tzu
- Oscar Wilde
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Jerry Saltz
- Gerhard Richter
- Pablo Picasso
- William Shakespeare
- Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
- Niccolo Machiavelli
- Andy Warhol
- Susan Sontag
- Seth Godin
- Henri Matisse
- Vincent Van Gogh
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Rajneesh
- Henry David Thoreau
- John Ruskin
- Bruce Lee
- Samuel Johnson
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Growing Up Quotes
The work of the art student is no light matter. Few have the courage and stamina to think it through. You have to make up your mind to be alone in many ways. We like sympathy and we like to be in company. It is easier than going it alone. But alone one gets acquainted with himself, grows up and on, not stopping with the crowd. It costs to do this. If you succeed somewhat you may have to pay for it as well as enjoy it all your life.
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Honesty Quotes
The man who has honesty, integrity, the love of inquiry, the desire to see beyond, is ready to appreciate good art. He needs no one to give him an 'Art Education'; he is already qualified. He needs but to see pictures with his active mind, look into them for the things that belong to him, and he will find soon enough in himself an art connoisseur and an art lover of the first order.
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Perseverance Quotes
There are people who buy pictures because they were difficult to do, and are done. Such pictures are often only a record of pain and dull perseverance. Great works of art should look as though they were made in joy. Real joy is a tremendous activity, dull drudgery is nothing to it.
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Thinking Quotes
The world will see many fashions of art and most of the world will follow the fashions and make none. These cults - these 'movements' - are absolutely necessary, or at any rate their causes are, for somewhere in their centres are the ones who bear the Idea, the ones who have questioned, 'But what do I think?' and 'How shall I say it best?
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Ordinary Moments Quotes
The object, which is back of every true work of art, is the attainment of a state of being, a state of high functioning, a more than ordinary moment of existence. In such moments activity is inevitable, and whether this activity is with brush, pen, chisel, or tongue, its result is but a by-product of the state, a trace, the footprint of the state.
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