Hidden art Quotes

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Hidden art Hidden art by Edith Schaeffer
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Hidden art Quotes Showing 1-10 of 10
“There is no occasion when meals should become totally unimportant. Meals can be very small indeed, very inexpensive, short times taken in the midst of a big push of work, but they should be always more than just food.”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art
“It is not a waste to write beautiful prose or poetry for one person's eyes alone!”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art
“It is not necessary to have an extravagant food budget in order to serve things with variety and tastefully cooked. It is not necessary to have expensive food on the plates before they can enter the dining room as things of beauty in colour and texture. Food should be served with real care as to the colour and texture on the plates, as well as with imaginative taste. This is where artistic talent and aesthetic expression and fulfillment come in.”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art
tags: food
“Everyone who has any talent at all in sketching, painting, sculpturing or carving, should have the opportunity to use that talent. The expression is important for the person, and can tremendously enrich the lives of other people. What can you do?”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art
“Ideas carried out stimulate more ideas.”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art
tags: art
“One active artist gives courage and incentive, and germinates ideas in others for producing more art.”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art
tags: art
“I feel very strongly that this modern fear of the home becoming non-existent can be countered only if those of us who want to be sure our little spot is really a home take very practical measures to be sure that it is just that, and not a collection of furniture sitting in some sort of enclosure being protected from wind and storm.”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art
“Human beings were made to interact with growing things, not to be born, live, and die in the midst of concrete set in the middle of polluted air!”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art
“It seems to me that, whether it is recognized or not, there is a terrific frustration which increases in intensity and harmfulness as time goes on, when people are always daydreaming of the kind of place in which they would like to live, yet never making the place where they do live into anything artistically satisfying to them. Always to dream of a cottage by a brook, while never doing anything original to the stuffy boarding-house room in a city; always to dream of a rock, glass, and timber house on the cliffs above the sea, while never putting anything of yourself into the small village brick house; or to dream of what you could do with a hut in the jungle yet never to think of your inherited family mansion as anything but a place to mark time, is to waste creativity by not allowing it to grow and develop through use. Trying out all the ideas that come to you, within the limits of your present place, money, talents, materials and so forth, will not use up everything you want to save for the future, but will rather generate and develop more ideas.”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art
“People so often look with longing into a daydream future, while ignoring the importance of the present. We are all in danger of thinking, "Some day I shall be fulfilled. Some day I shall have the courage to start another life which will develop my talent," without ever considering the very practical use of that talent today in a way which will enrich other people's lives, develop the talent, and express the fact of being a creative creature.”
Edith Schaeffer, Hidden art