Richard Diebenkorn Quotes
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If you get an image try to destroy it.
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One wants to see the artifice of the thing as well as the subject.
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I don't go into the studio with the idea of 'saying' something. What I do is face the blank canvas and put a few arbitrary marks on it that start me on some sort of dialogue.
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As a work progresses, its power to elicit and dictate response mounts. There seems to be an optimum moment when this power is at its greatest which just precedes the point where 'elicit' is no longer apt usage. 'Dictates' is the word for this condition and tyranny is the adversary.
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All paintings start out of a mood, out of a relationship with things or people, out of a complete visual impression
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When I am halfway there with a painting, it can occasionally be thrilling... But it happens very rarely; usually it's agony... I go to great pains to mask the agony. But the struggle is there. It's the invisible enemy.
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Don't be a Pollyanna!
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Maybe the given person, cup, or landscape is lost before one gets to painting. A figure exerts a continuing and unspecified influence on a painting as the canvas develops. The represented forms are loaded with psychological feeling. It can't ever just be painting.
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Use and respond to the initial fresh qualities but consider them absolutely expendable.
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I would like the colors, their shapes and positions to be arrived at in response to and dictated by the condition of the total space at the time they are considered.
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In a successful painting everything is integral - all the parts belong to the whole. If you remove an aspect or element you are removing its wholeness.
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Abstract means literally to draw from or separate. In this sense every artist is abstract for he must create his own work from his visual impressions. A realistic or non-objective approach makes no difference. The result is what counts.
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My freedom will be so much the greater and more meaningful, the more narrowly I limit my field of action and the more I surround myself with obstacles.
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I keep plastering it until it comes around to what I want, in terms of all I know and think about painting now, as well as in terms of the initial observation.
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I trust the symbol that is arrived at in the making of the painting. Meaningful symbols aren't invented as such, they are made or discovered as symbol later.
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I can never accomplish what I want - only what I would have wanted had I thought of it beforehand.
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Attempt what is not certain. Certainty may or may not come later. It may then be a valuable delusion.
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Mistakes can't be erased, but they move you from your present position.
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I came to mistrust my desire to explode the picture and supercharge it in some way… what is more important is a feeling of strength in reserve – tension beneath calm.
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Don't 'discover' a subject of any kind.
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My freedom consists in my moving about within the narrow frame that I have assigned myself for each one of my undertakings.
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All paintings start out of a mood, out of a relationship with things or people, out of a complete visual impression. To call this expression abstract seems to me often to confuse the issue. Abstract means literally to draw from or separate. In this sense every artist is abstract . . . a realistic or non-objective approach makes no difference. The result is what counts.
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Do search, but in order to find other than what is searched for.
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I want painting to be difficult to do.
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Somehow don't be bored, but if you must, use it in action. Use its destructive potential.
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My father didn't think being an artist was a respectable or worthy goal for a man. He hoped I would see my way to more serious work and would find myself turning towards medicine, law, or business.
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I have found in my still-life work that I seem to be able to tell what objects are important to me by what tends to stay in the painting as it develops.
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And I can just see that sometimes the technique is blasting powder rather than steady struggle.
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