Edgar Degas Quotes
"A painting requires a little
mystery, some vagueness, some
fantasy. When you always make
your meaning perfectly plain
you end up boring people."
"It is very good to copy what one sees; it is much better to draw what you can't see
any more but is in your memory. It is a transformation in which imagination and memory
work together. You only reproduce what struck you, that is to say the necessary."
"I really have a lot of stuff in my head; if only there were insurance companies for
that as there are for so many things."
"What is certain is that setting a piece of nature in place
and drawing it are two very different things."
"A picture is something that requires as much trickery,
malice, and vice as the perpetration of crime, so create
falsity and add a touch from nature."
"How awful it is not being able to see clearly any more! I
have had to give up drawing and painting and for years now
content myself with sculpture ... But if my eyesight
continues to dim I won't even be able to model any more.
What will I do with my days then?"
"Your pictures would have been finished a long time ago if I
were not forced every day to do something to earn money."
- Letter to Jean-Baptiste Faure,art collector, 1877.
"A painting is above all a product of the artist's imagination, it must never be a copy.
If, at a later stage, he wants to add two or three touches from nature, of course it
doesn't spoil anything. But the air one sees in the paintings of the masters is not
the air one breathes."
"It is essential to do the same subject over again, ten times, a hundred times. Nothing
in art must seen to be chance, not even movement."
"Painting isn't so difficult when you don't know ... But when you do ... it's quite a
different matter!"
"You have to have a high conception, not of what you are doing, but of what you may do
one day: without that, there's no point in working."
"I'm glad I haven't found my style yet. I'd be bored to death."
"I assure you no art was ever less spontaneous than mine. What I do is the result of
reflection and study of the great masters; of inspiration, spontaneity, temperament ...
I know nothing."
"Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things"
"What a delightful thing is the conversation of specialists! One understands absolutely
nothing and it's charming."
"Nothing in art should seem accidental, not even movement."
"Monet's pictures are always too draughty for me."
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