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Robert rauschenberg insights

Explore a captivating collection of Robert rauschenberg’s most profound quotes, reflecting his deep wisdom and unique perspective on life, science, and the universe. Each quote offers timeless inspiration and insight.

My fascination with images open 24 hrs. is based on the complex interlocking if disparate facts heated pool that have no respect for grammar. The form then Denver 39 is second hand to nothing. The work then has a chance to electric service become its own cliché. Luggage. This is the inevitable fate fair ground of any inanimate object freightways by this I mean anything that does not have inconsistency as a possibility built in.

You have to have the time to feel sorry for yourself in order to be a good abstract expressionist.

Painting relates to both art and life. Neither can be made - I try to act in the gap.

Curiosity is the main energy.

The only thing that I could get with chance, and I never was able to use it, was that I would end up with something quite geometric or the spirit that I was interested in, indulging in, was gone.

My concern is never art, but always what art can be used for.

Very quickly a painting is turned into a facsimile of itself when one becomes so familiar with with it that one recognizes it without looking at it.

I don't want a picture to look like something it isn't. I want it to look like something it is.

Most artists try to break your heart, or they accidentally break their own hearts.But I find the quietness in the ordinary much more satisfying.

There was something about the self-confession and self-confusion of Abstract expressionism - as though the man and the work were the same - that personally always put me off because at that time my focus was in the opposite direction.

People ask me, 'Don't you ever run out of ideas?' In the first place I don't use ideas. Every time I have an idea it's too limiting, and usually turns out to be a disappointment. But I haven't run out of curiosity.

Painting is always strongest when in spite of composition, color, etc., it appears as a fact, or an inevitability, as opposed to a souvenir or arrangement.

There was a whole language that I could never make function for myself; it revolved around words like 'tortured', 'struggle'. 'pain'.. .I could never see these qualities in paint - I could see them in life and art that illustrates life. But I could not see such conflicts in the materials and I knew that it had to be in the attitude of the painter.

I'm not so facile that I can accomplish or find out what I want to know or explore enough of the possibilities and a way of making a painting, say, in just one painting or two paintings.

I refuse to be in this world by myself. I want an open commitment from the rest of the people.

A newspaper that you're not reading can be used for anything; and the same people didn't think it was immoral to wrap their garbage in newspaper.

Well, I like way downtown near the Battery. I lived down there at this time and for, I guess, the following well, this is where I moved to uptown and I've been here for four years and this is 1965.

This is a portrait of Iris Clert if I say so.

And all of this, all these physical aspects of painting at that time excited me very much. You could do a picture in just black and white. I mean all the things, whether you're soliciting permission or not, do give you permission

So that ideas of sort of relaxed symmetry have been something for years that I have been concerned with because I think that symmetry is a neutral shape as opposed to a form of design.

I'm quite taken aback when I get something that appears to be technically a good photograph, because it's not necessarily my intention.

Success is a worn down pencil.

Even at this late date, I go into my studio, and I think 'Is this going to be it? Is it the end?' You see, nearly everything terrorizes me. When an artist loses that terror, he's through.

I like photographs of anything uninteresting. Maybe just two doors on a wall... The point is to be uninteresting.

By the time you establish your priorities, there really isn't any fun or need to interest yourself in what you're doing. And this I find disastrous.

I think a painting is more like the real world if it's made out the real world.

This was my first encounter with art as art (he saw 'Pinky' painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence and 'The Blue Boy" painted by Thomas Gainborough).. ..somebody actually MADE those paintings.. ..(it) was the first time I realized you could be an artist.

For me there is no difference between art and life.

I feel strong in my belief, based on my widely traveled collaborations, that a one-to-one contact through art contains potent peaceful powers, and is the most non-elitist way to share information, hopefully seducing us into creating mutual understandings for the benefit of all.

There's a moment for everyone when you fall into your own shadow and the fact is that it's your shadow and you're forced to live in it. And this is nothing to celebrate or not celebrate. It simply is.

One has to believe in what one is doing, one has to commit oneself inwardly, in order to do painting. Once obsessed, one ultimately carries it to the point of believing that one might change human beings through painting. But if one lacks this passionate commitment, there is nothing left to do. Then it is best to leave it alone.

I don't think there's anything really wrong with influence because I think that one can use another man's art as material either literally or just implying that they're doing that, without it representing a lack of a point of view.

The artist's job is to be a witness to his time in history.

Screwing things up is a virtue. Being correct is never the point. I have an almost fanatically correct assistant, and by the time she re-spells my words and corrects my punctuation, I can't read what I wrote. Being right can stop all the momentum of a very interesting idea.

I had been working purely abstractly for so long, it was important for me to see whether I was working abstractly because I couldn't work any other way, or whether I was doing it out of choice.

I've not been cursed with talent, which could be a great inhibitor.

Every time I've moved, my work has changed radically.

While my classmates were reading their textbooks, I drew in the margins.

I don't think he (Joseph Albers, fh) ever realized that it was his discipline that I came for. Besides, my response to what I learned from him was just the opposite of what he intended.. ..I was very hesitant about arbitrarily designing forms and selecting colors that would achieve some predetermined result, because I didn't have any ideas to support that sort of thing - I didn't want color to serve me, in other words.

An empty canvas is full only if you want it to be full.

I am sick of talking about What and Why I am doing. I have always believed that the WORK is the word. Action is seen less clearly through reason. There are no shortcuts to directness.

Photography is the most direct communication in non-violent contacts.

I don't think of myself as making art. I do what I do because I want to, because painting is the best way I've found to get along with myself.

A canvas is never empty.

You can't make either life or art, you have to work in the hole in between, which is undefined. That's what makes the adventure of painting.

This telegram is a work of art if I say it is.

I don't like masterpieces having one-night stands in collectors' homes between auctions.

A pair of socks is no less suitable to make a painting with than wood, nails, turpentine, oil and fabric.

I still have a struggle reading (dyslexia, fh) and so I don't read much.. ..Probably the only reason I'm painter is because I couldn't read yet I love to write, but when I write I know what I'm writing, but when I'm reading I can't see it, because it goes from all sides of the page at once. But that's very good for printmaking.

I think that in the last twenty years or so, there's been a new kind of honesty in painting where painters have been very proud of paint and have let it behave openly.

It is impossible to have progress without conscience

I feel as though the world is a friendly boy walking along in the sun.

I always have searched for a point of view that a participant could change.

I'm sure we don't read old paintings the way they were intended

If you don't have trouble paying the rent, you have trouble doing something else; one needs just a certain amount of trouble.

I want my paintings to look like what's going on outside my window rather than what's inside my studio.

But I was in awe of the painters; I mean I was new in New York, and I thought the painting that was going on here was just unbelievable

And I think a painting has such a limited life anyway

Having to be different is the same trap as having to be the same.

It's so easy to be undisciplined. And to be disciplined is so against my character, my general nature anyway, that I have to strain a little bit to keep on the right track.

Basically painting is total idiocy.

I never allowed myself the luxury of those brilliant, beautiful colors until I went to India and saw people walking around in them or dragging them in the mud. I realised they were not so artificial.

The working process is ideally freeing my mind.

You wait until life is in the frame, then you have the permission to click. I like the adventure of waiting until the whole frame is full.

For the first time, I wasn't embarrassed by the look of beauty, of elegance, because when you see someone who has only one rag as their property, but it happens to be beautiful and pink and silk, beauty doesn't have to be separated... I have always said that you shouldn't have biases, you shouldn't have prejudices. But before that [before his trip to India, circa 1975] I'd never been able to use purple, because it was too beautiful.

An empty canvas is full.

Work is my joy... Work is my therapy, I don't know anybody who loves work as much as I do.

I got so I was really just sick of sculpture.

I always have a good reason for taking something out but I never have one for putting something in. And I don't want to, because that means that the picture is being painted predigested.

I wouldn't use the same color in a picture in more than one place

And also the new excitement and variety of ways that the abstract expressionists were applying paint. You could put it on as though it were colored air and it would be painting.

It is neither Art for Art, nor Art against Art. I am for Art, but for Art that has nothing to do with Art. Art has everything to do with life, but it has nothing to do with Art.

Art is a means to function thoroughly and passionately in a world that has a lot more to it than paint.

And I think that even today, New York still has more of this unexpected quality around every corner than any place else. It's something quite extraordinary

I don't mess around with my subconscious

If I declare it to be so, then this is a portrait.

Sometimes I have taken photographs and just felt so excited that I could barely hold the camera steady, and the photo was boring.

I used to think of that line in Allen Ginsberg's 'Howl', about the 'sad cup of coffee'.. ..I have had cold coffee and hot coffee and lousy coffee, But I've never had a sad cup of coffee.

My art is about paying attention - about the extremely dangerous possibility that you might be art.

I usually work in a direction until I know how to do it, then I stop, At the time that I am bored or understand - I use those words interchangeably - another appetite has formed.

With me, it's much more a matter of accepting whatever happens, accepting all these elements from the outside and then trying to work with them in a sort of free collaboration.

There was a whole language that I could never make function for myself in relationship to painting, and that was attitudes like tortured, struggle, pain.

It's when you've found out how to do certain things, that it's time to stop doing them, because what's missing is that you're not including the risk.

There is no reason not to consider the world as one gigantic painting.

I don't really trust ideas - especially good ones... Rather, I put my trust in the materials that confront me, because they put me in touch with the unknown.

I prefer images that are less specific, so there is room for everyone's imagination.

I really feel sorry for people who think things like soap dishes or mirrors or Coke bottles are ugly, because they're surrounded by things like that all day long, and it must make them miserable.

I was much happier when I had less responsibility... when my only responsibility was to my work and to myself.

I don't think any one person, whether artist or not, has been given permission by anyone to put the responsibility of the way things are on anyone else

You begin with the possibilities of the material.

Understanding is a form of blindness. Good art, I think, can never be understood.

Being right can stop all the momentum of a very interesting idea.