Wednesday, October 16, 2019
In today’s world, there is competition to be more concerned than anyone else. In Bloom’s, there was competition to be the most exactingly delighted.
— Dwight Garner, "Harold Bloom, a Prolific Giant and Perhaps the Last of a Kind," The New York Times
Tuesday, October 15, 2019
You should be able to explain your book in one sentence.
— Pablo
Monday, October 14, 2019
It's great to love your family.
— Sid
Sunday, October 13, 2019
What are you going to draw next?
— Otter as we draw on "Kid O Free Play Magnatab" in the car
Saturday, October 12, 2019
I love that we love the same things.
— Lily after I texted her a photo of the "PREPARING" screen my name was on in a Panera
Friday, October 11, 2019
An institution stops serving its function when it starts looking out for its own survival.
— Amos Kennedy
Thursday, October 10, 2019
We probably sell more reissues than we did of the originals.
— Steve Frykholm on historic Herman Miller chair designs (potentially not verbatim)
Wednesday, October 9, 2019
Rapid serial visual presentation.
— What a student was thinking of exploring for her artist book
Tuesday, October 8, 2019
Holy fuck! You can see why I want to check out. You haven't been here for 30 minutes and I'm doing bullshit and improv.
— Sid, amazed at how fast I copied the contents of four of his transcribed journals from CDs to his hard drive
Monday, October 7, 2019
Fraud is forever.
— Angela on digital fraud in user attention data as modern version of physical magazine subscriber inflation strategies
Sunday, October 6, 2019
The major deciphering of the Rosetta Stone hieroglyphics was done by Jean-François Champollion (1790-1832). He realized that some of the signs were alphabetic, some were syllabic, and some were deteriminatives (signs that deterimined how the preceding glyphs should be interpreted).
— Philip B. Meggs, Meggs' History of Graphic Design
Saturday, October 5, 2019
The mature Roosevelt wrote nothing that he could not entrust to posterity. Many of his purported "family" letters were quite obviously written for publication.
— Edmund Morris, The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt
Friday, October 4, 2019
But that I must not dream of taking it up as a dilettante.
— Theodore Roosevelt, via Edmund Morris, The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt
Thursday, October 3, 2019
The words you use to look up YouTube videos are like what they call paintings in museums.
— Lily
Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Nothing obliged us to make these departures from our original conception for the platform, yet we did so anyway. That’s the paradox of control: you want to do what it wants you to do.
— The Editors of Triple Canopy, "The Binder and the Server"
Tuesday, October 1, 2019
At one time his work was displayed in the United Nation’s gift shop, next to the works of the Navaho’s, the only two artisans chosen to represent the United States.
— http://www.rolfedesigns.com/wrolfe.htm
Monday, September 30, 2019
Poor books.
— Lily after ad for Downton Abbey: The Official Film Companion played on NPR
Sunday, September 29, 2019
She was interested in the philosophical shift from examining what things mean, the classical task of criticism, to examining how they came to mean it. But this idea, popularized, risked suggesting that meaning was a mere construction and that language, literature, and art were no more than the sum of the biases of a dominant group.
— Benjamin Moser, Sontag: Her Life and Work
Saturday, September 28, 2019
There was a Maintenance Man and a Janitor!
— Sondern on spyfall.crabhat.com game
Friday, September 27, 2019
“Believe me, many more people will see that selfie once I share it than will listen to this speech,” Bukele insisted, simultaneously underselling his own speaking skills, shortchanging the reach of the United Nations communications shop, and overstating the appetite of the global public for still photos of random smiling bearded dudes standing behind podiums.
— John Hayward, "Hayward: El Salvador’s Millennial President Warns U.N. May Go the Way of Blockbuster, Takes Selfie," Breitbart