The Importance of Being Iceland Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The Importance of Being Iceland: Travel Essays in Art The Importance of Being Iceland: Travel Essays in Art by Eileen Myles
675 ratings, 4.11 average rating, 48 reviews
The Importance of Being Iceland Quotes Showing 1-5 of 5
“(Interviews Ntozake Shange) “What do you think an artist’s job is?”
“To keep our sensibilities alive, so we aren’t numb by our struggles to survive. That’s what I think our job is right now.”
Eileen Myles, The Importance of Being Iceland: Travel Essays in Art
“For all these reasons (...) working class intellectuals like big words and their sentence formation is excessively ornate. It's what they think of as 'smart'. Pomposity. It's an embarrassing condition of being unsophisticated and not knowing what is truly smart which is simplicity and modernism; certainly it was twenty years ago that I learned to write. But the working class person is above all afraid to seem dumb so in acting 'smart' and footnoting everything they betray the insecurity and weightiness of the unexperienced conclusion, which is an imitation of what writers are like. In general I think writers are not smart. They are something else and each writer can fill in a word here, but smart is not what that word is.”
Eileen Myles, The Importance of Being Iceland: Travel Essays in Art
“For some reason I just want to mention another German artist I like a lot. Imi Knoebel. He once described hiding in an attic during the bombing of Dresden and how the flashes of bombs filled a triangular shaped window in the room he was in and the experience contributed to his love of simple shapes. Is that love or merely imprinting. It was simple and strong and one is forced in a way to see the world the way it IS shaped. Art becomes a momory more than anything else. A kind of chooser. It shows how we were touched.”
Eileen Myles, The Importance of Being Iceland: Travel Essays in Art
“He had studied philosophy as a young man, but clay really spoke to him. I like mud, he explained. And then he went on to explain the Earth's magnetism, and why clay does stick together and it's about ions and stuff. And there are specific muds, or clays. For instance, this: red. Deep deep beautiful red. Albany slip. I stand there in awe, slipping around in worlds of specialization. The endless details, but the Earth is a big wad of it, mud. And that would be a huge start, to know that you liked it. There it is.”
Eileen Myles, The Importance of Being Iceland: Travel Essays in Art
“For some reason I just want to mention another German artist I like a lot. Imi Knoebel. He once described hiding in an attic during the bombing of Dresden and how the flashes of bombs filled a triangular shaped window in the room he was in and the experience contributed to his love of simple shapes. Is that love or merely imprinting. It was simple and strong and one is forced in a way to see the world the way it IS shaped. Art becomes a memory more than anything else. A kind of chooser. It shows how we were touched.”
Eileen Myles, The Importance of Being Iceland: Travel Essays in Art