Tuesday, April 9, 2024
As you are now
So once was I
— Epitaph on grave of Zeruiah H Slebbins, who died March 7, 1787 aged 25 years
Monday, April 8, 2024
I hope it's born with eyes.
— E*
Sunday, April 7, 2024
Artistic.
— Lily on the sand
Saturday, April 6, 2024
Subway introduced its new deal, the $6 6-inch sandwich, a significant decrease in value from the previous $5 Footlong promotion.
— @starworldlab
Friday, April 5, 2024
When you paint every day, all year long, then the subject is essentially the act of working.
— Jim Dine via @hyperallergic
Thursday, April 4, 2024
To be incoherent means to be free from what you were doing before, to be free from yourself.
— Gaetano Pesce, Pin-Up via @pinupmagazine
Wednesday, April 3, 2024
In pop's earliest days Roy Lichtenstein, often billed as the movements most sober member, was busy defending its funny side, "A lot of people get upset if they find something which they think is supposed to be humorous in art. They think it's supposed to be a joke on them instead of with them"
— Blake Gopnik, Warhol
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
Throughout his career Warhol almost always threw bones like this to insiders who always loved to play spot the precedent.
— Blake Gopnik, Warhol
Monday, April 1, 2024
De Antonio who was there to witness Warhol's effort, recognized the courage it took. "As soon as you say "commercial art" it's simply judged "oh what a nice drawing" and it passes, or "does it sell shoes?" And then it passes. But to put "art" up for real, then you're being judged. Your ego is on the line in a very hard way." Warhol's challenge, and he knew it, was to step up and make works that truly mattered and that were recognized by others as mattering.
— Blake Gopnik, Warhol
Sunday, March 31, 2024
To Farley, creativity has always been a volume business.
— Brett Martin, "Why Did This Guy Put a Song About Me on Spotify?," The New York Times Magazine
Saturday, March 30, 2024
Even two decades later, the noted film critic Jonas Mekas was still arguing for the idea that “there is no art, that everything is craft.”
— Blake Gopnik, Warhol
Friday, March 29, 2024
But, you know, for a woman. She has the baby. And then she has that connection, right? For a guy it's so abstract.
— Dougie, "Green Queen," The Curse
Thursday, March 28, 2024
If you really want to separate your work from everyone else's, every time you come to a Y in the road, don't think about which way to go; automatically take the toughest route.
— Richard Serra via @irwinadam
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
It has been moving so quickly that the only record is airplane tickets and articles in magazines from the various trips and exhibitions, someday I suppose these will constitute my biography. Now I regret that I didn't continue to write constantly.
— Keith Haring, June 7, 1986 journal entry via Brad Gooch, Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring
Tuesday, March 26, 2024
He was also starting to worry about the mortality of his materials, and so, of his legacy.
— Brad Gooch, Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring
Monday, March 25, 2024
The world will, however, go on without me being there to see it, it just won't be "my" world then. That is what interests me most about the situation that I am in now. I am making things in the world that won't go away when I do. If this "success" had not happened, then maybe the world would not know these things after I go away. But now ! know, as I am making these things, that they are "real" things, maybe more "real" than me, because they will stay here when I go.
— Keith Haring, 24th birthday journal entry via Brad Gooch, Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring
Sunday, March 24, 2024
These things make this small room seem like a very big room." He wrote in one of his typed statements. "This room stretches all over the world and spans several years. These things that I have, the things that I keep with me, what I choose to keep around me, what I like to look at, who I think about, what I think I am."
— Brad Gooch, Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring
Saturday, March 23, 2024
He tried to do his spoken word poetry things and people still talk about how horrible it was. Because it wasn't fun, it was repetitive word play. But unless you were studying them, you didn't care.
— Drew Straub via Brad Gooch, Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring
Friday, March 22, 2024
It came into my head because it's a natural human instinct to combine those two things.
— Lily on calling someone a "goose spider"
Thursday, March 21, 2024
“I said, ‘Well, you did get to experience the artwork, because the exclusion of men is the artwork,’” Ms. Kaechele said.
— Natasha Frost, "A Museum’s Feminist Artwork Excluded Men. So One Man Took It to Court.," The New York Times