John Updike Quotes About Art

We have collected for you the TOP of John Updike's best quotes about Art! Here are collected all the quotes about Art starting from the birthday of the Novelist – March 18, 1932! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 14 sayings of John Updike about Art. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • Photography is the first art wherein the tool does most of the work.

    John Updike (2009). “More Matter: Essays and Criticism”, p.669, Random House
  • What art offers is space - a certain breathing room for the spirit.

  • Writing and rewriting are a constant search for what it is one is saying.

  • The educational aspect of art shows has become overbearing: some of exhibits can leave you bleary from trying to read the walls. Presumably a piece of art is timeless and it can say something to us. You are taking away the right of art to talk for itself.

  • Art imitates Nature in this; not to dare is to dwindle.

    Nature  
  • Professionalism in art has this difficulty: To be professional is to be dependable, to be dependable is to be predictable, and predictability is esthetically boring - an anti-virtue in a field where we hope to be astonished and startled and at some deep level refreshed.

    "A Few Words In Defense Of The Amateur Reader" by John Updike, www.nytimes.com. February 19, 1984.
  • Art is like baby shoes. When you coat them with gold, they can no longer be worn.

    Baby  
  • Customs and convictions change; respectable people are the last to know, or to admit, the change, and the ones most offended by fresh reflections of the facts in the mirror of art.

    John Updike (1991). “Odd Jobs: Essays and Criticism”, Alfred A. Knopf
  • Man makes one journey all his living days, Down through the realms of music and of art; Down through the halls of fame and glorious praise; Down through the tears and triumphs of the heart To some sweet woman waiting some place there. For her he builds his cities and makes war, Seeks gold and glorious wealth to store.

  • Whatever art offered the men and women of previous eras, what it offers our own, it seems to me, is space - a certain breathing room for the spirit. The town I grew up in had many vacant lots; when I go back now, the vacant lots are gone. They were a luxury, just as tigers and rhinoceri, in the crowded world that is making, are luxuries. Museums and bookstores should feel, I think, like vacant lots - places where the demands on us are our own demands, where the spirit can find exercise in unsupervised play.

    Men  
    "A Few Words In Defense Of The Amateur Reader" by John Updike, www.nytimes.com. February 19, 1984.
  • I would rather have as my patron a host of anonymous citizens digging into their own pockets for the price of a book or a magazine than a small body of enlightened and responsible men administering public funds. I would rather chance my personal vision of truth striking home here and there in the chaos of publication that exists than attempt to filter it through a few sets of official, honorably public-spirited scruples.

    John Updike's tstimony given before the Subcommittee on Select Education of the House of Representatives Committee on Education and Labor in Boston, Massachusetts, January 30, 1978.
  • American art in general... takes to surreal exaggerations and metaphors; but its Puritan work ethic has little use for the playful self-indulgence behind Parisian Surrealism.

  • Government money in the arts, I fear, can only deflect artists from their responsibility to find an authentic market for their products.

    John Updike (2012). “Odd Jobs: Essays and Criticism”, p.132, Random House
  • Unlike the older, more humanly shaped arts, which begin with a seed and accumulate their form organically, photography clips its substance out of an actual continuum.

    John Updike (2009). “More Matter: Essays and Criticism”, p.670, Random House
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