Stephen Bayley Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Stephen Bayley's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Critic Stephen Bayley's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 22 quotes on this page collected since October 13, 1951! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by Stephen Bayley: more...
  • I have no particular interest in antiquities or antiques, but I like things to meet a certain aesthetic.

  • I just don't understand how you can not be concerned about your appearance. From time to time I'm vilified as the person who cares about the look of a teapot - and it's not that I believe my taste is superior , I just can not believe that other people don't care.

    "Stephen Bayley interview: prize exhibit". Interview with Lynn Barber, www.theguardian.com. December 3, 2000.
  • That's one of the things about getting older isn't it? You suddenly realise that you are what you set out to be. And there are no role models any more.

    "Stephen Bayley interview: prize exhibit". Interview With Lynn Barber, www.theguardian.com. December 3, 2000.
  • Watteau is no less an artist for having painted a fascia board while Sainsbury's is no less effective a business for producing advertisements which entertain and educate instead of condescending and exploiting.

  • Everyone has taste, yet it is more of a taboo subject than sex or money. The reason for this is simple: claims about your attitudes to or achievements in the carnal and financial arenas can be disputed only by your lover and your financial advisers, whereas by making statements about your taste you expose body and soul to terrible scrutiny. Taste is a merciless betrayer of social and cultural attitudes. Thus, while anybody will tell you as much (and perhaps more than) you want to know about their triumphs in bed and at the bank, it is taste that gets people's nerves tingling.

    Sex   Attitude   Simple  
    Stephen Bayley (2000). “General Knowledge”, Booth-Clibborn
  • Interior design is a travesty of the architectural process and a frightening condemnation of the credulity, helplessness and gullibility of the most formidable consumers - the rich.

    Design   Rich   Process  
    Stephen Bayley (1991). “Taste: The Secret Meaning of Things”, Pantheon
  • While there is a great value in things that are old, it seems that the overwhelming challenge in Britain in the late 20th century is to make every effort to see value in the contemporary and in the future.

  • It is sometimes easier to have furniture made than to find things.

  • It is the fragrant lack of practicality that makes high-heeled shoes so fascinating: in terms of static mechanics they induce a sort of insecurity which some find titillating. If a woman wears a high-heeled shoe it changes the apparent musculature of the leg so that you get an effect of twanging sinew, of tension needing to be released. Her bottom sticks out like an offering. At the same time, the lofty perch is an expression of vulnerability, she is effectively hobbled and unable to escape. There is something arousing about this declaration that she is prepared to sacrifice function for form.

  • Fashion is the most intense expression of the phenomenon of neomania, which has grown ever since the birth of capitalism. Neomania assumes that purchasing the new is the same as acquiring value... If the purchase of a new garment coincides with the wearing out of an old one, then obviously there is no fashion. If a garment is worn beyond the moment of its natural replacement, there is pauperization. Fashion flourishes on surplus, when someone buys more than he or she needs.

  • You are what you pretend to be.

    Stephen Bayley, Roger Mavity (2011). “Life's a Pitch: How to Sell Yourself and Your Brilliant Ideas”, p.161, Random House
  • My wife and I both love cooking - I am an advanced male - so we argue about who gets to rustle up dinner.

    Wife   Cooking   Males  
  • The assumption must be that those who can see value only in tradition, or versions of it, deny man's ability to adapt to changing circumstances.

  • As the twentieth century ends, commerce and culture are coming closer together. The distinction between life and art has been eroded by fifty years of enhanced communications, ever-improving reproduction technologies and increasing wealth.

    Stephen Bayley (2000). “General Knowledge”, Booth-Clibborn
  • I have put [the word] "discoveries" in inverted commas because scientific results, perhaps as much at least as artistic achievements, are a product of contemporary taste, driven by momentary appetites rather than eternal verities.

  • I have a character failing. I am quite incapable of identifying with anything whole-heartedly. Whatever I am doing, I am always planning to do something else. I would rather travel than arrive.

    "Stephen Bayley interview: prize exhibit". Interview With Lynn Barber, www.theguardian.com. December 3, 2000.
  • I wouldn't mind someone lobbing hand grenades at me, but having to reset the timer on the video recorder puts me into a blood-spitting frenzy.

    Blood   Hands   Mind  
    "Stephen Bayley interview: prize exhibit". Interview with Lynn Barber, www.theguardian.com. December 3, 2000.
  • Fashion is primitive in its insistence on exhibitionism, which withers in isolation. The catwalk fashion show with its incandescent hype is its apotheosis. A ritualized gathering of connoiseurs and the spoilt at a spotlit parade of snazzy pulchritude, it is an industrialized version of the pagan festivals of renewal. At the end of each seasonal display, a priesthood is enjoined to carry news of the omens to the masses.

  • If you were born in Britain after World War II, you see a continuous atmosphere of decline, moral and economic and political.

  • You must never aspire to 'finish' a house, you can merely hope to start it, and from then on it's an evolutionary process.

    House   Process   Aspire  
  • Taste is more to do with manners than appearances. Taste is both myth and reality; it is not a style.

    Reality   Style   Taste  
    Stephen Bayley (2000). “General Knowledge”, Booth-Clibborn
  • It is the fragrant lack of practicality that makes high-heeled shoes so fascinating: in terms of static mechanics they induce a sort of insecurity which some find titillating.

Page 1 of 1
We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 22 quotes from the Critic Stephen Bayley, starting from October 13, 1951! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
Stephen Bayley quotes about: