Seven Days in the Art World Quotes

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Seven Days in the Art World Seven Days in the Art World by Sarah Thornton
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Seven Days in the Art World Quotes Showing 1-27 of 27
“The term bohemian has a bad reputation because it's allied to myriad clichés, but Parisians originally adopted the term, associated with nomadic Gypsies, to describe artists and writers who stayed up all night and ignored the pressures of the industrial world.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Our lives are constantly changing. Different things become relevant at different times in our lives. We are motivated by our changing sensibilities. Why can that not be applied to art?”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Although the art world reveres the unconventional, it is rife with conformity. Artists make work that "looks like art" and behave in ways that enhance stereotypes. Curators pander to the expectations of their peers and their museum boards. Collectors run in herds to buy work by a handful of fashionable painters. Critics stick their finger in the air to see which way the wind is blowing so as to "get it right". Originality is not always rewarded, but some people take real risks and innovate, which gives a raison d'être to the rest.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“I'm an atheist, but I believe in art. I go to galleries like my mother went to church. It helps me understand the way I live.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“إن التصوير فن بصري قح يصعب علينا تمام أن نتحدث عنه أو نفسره بغير مايلائمه أو يتماشى معه . ص213”
سارة ثورنتون, Seven Days in the Art World
“الفن ليس مايسرالعين فقط و إنما ما يعصف بالذهن. ص228”
سارة ثورنتون, Seven Days in the Art World
“The newsletter contributes to the illusion of transparency,” he admits. “People are overinformed and undereducated. They have this veneer of knowledge.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Art is about experimenting and ideas, but it is also about excellence and exclusion. In a society where everyone is looking for a little distinction, it’s an intoxicating combination.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“The contemporary art world is what Tom Wolfe would call a "statusphere." It's structured around nebulous and often contradictory hierarchies of fame, credibility, imagined historical importance, institutional affliction, perceived intelligence, wealth, and attribution such as the size of one's art collection.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“ما أن يوافق الفنان على الترشح للجائزة فإنه ينتقل إلى منطقة ومناخ غريبين يتطلبان منه قدرا عاليا من الثقة بالنفس حتى يتأقلم مع فحص الجمهور له و أعماله . ص219”
سارة ثورنتون, Seven Days in the Art World
“The function of museums is to make art worthless again. They take the work out of the market and put it in a place where it becomes part of the common wealth.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Who, in 2007, would have thought that a drawing by Willem De Kooning would be a safer asset than shares in Lehman Brothers? By autumn 2008, this would clearly be the case.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days In The Art World
“Art needs motives that are more profound than profit if it is to maintain its difference from—and position above—other cultural forms.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days In The Art World
“إن الاختلاف في الرأي يوسع المدارك لكن تنازع المصالح يعمينا عن الحقيقة. ص224”
سارة ثورنتون, Seven Days in the Art World
“العمل الفني العظيم هو ذلك العمل الذي يتيح لك أن تنظر إليه ومن دون أن ينغص عليك أو يثير في نفسك الضيق و لا يعني ذلك أنه عمل قابل لأي تأويل أو تفسير لكن هذا يعني تحديدا أنه عمل لا ينطوي على معنى ثابت محدود. ص220”
سارة ثورنتون, Seven Days in the Art World
“إن اعتقادك بأنك لا محالة فائز بالجائزة هو أفضل وسيلة لتعذيب ذاتك. ص219”
سارة ثورنتون, Seven Days in the Art World
“Buying is an extremely satisfying, macho act”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Kelly wears her hair swept back in an odd 1940s pompadour that one writer assumed must be her “auxiliary brain.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Talent is a double-edged sword. What you are given is not really yours. What you work at, what you struggle for, what you have to take command of—that often makes for very good art.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Takashi Murakami,”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Although the art world is frequently characterised as a classless scene where artists from lower-msddle-class backgrounds drink champagne with high-priced hedge-fund managers, scholarly curators, fashion designers and other "creatives," you'd be mistaken if you thought the world was egalitarian or democratic. Art is about experimenting with ideas, but it is also about excellence and exclusion. In a society where everyone is looking for a little distinction, it's an intoxicating combination.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Art is more like real estate than stocks. Some Warhols are like studio apartments in midblock buildings with northern exposures, while other Warhols are penthouse properties with 360-degree views. A share of Cisco, however, is always just a share of Cisco.” Judging”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days In The Art World
“I have to agree with Artforum publisher Charles Guarino: “It’s the place where I found the most kindred spirits—enough oddball, overeducated, anachronistic, anarchic people to make me happy.” Finally,”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days In The Art World
“Although Ségalot is wearing a conventional navy suit, his hair stands on end, thick with gel, neither in nor strictly out of fashion but in its own universe of style. Ségalot never studied art. He acquired an MBA, then worked in the marketing department of L’Oréal in Paris. As he explains, “It is not by chance that I went from cosmetics to art. We are dealing with beauty here. We are dealing in things that are unnecessary, dealing with abstractions.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Their hatred is so passionate that I can't help but wonder if they're attracted to each other." S”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“As art objects move through time and space, people “throw ideas, language, all kinds of interpretations at them. Some of it sticks and some of it doesn’t.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World
“Art accumulates meaning through an extended collaborative act,” she said. “You put into words something that everyone has seen.”
Sarah Thornton, Seven Days in the Art World