
Top 81 Quotes About Jackson Pollock
#1. Kyle, you are a mellow dude ... You can't be with an agitator. And that's what she is. An agitator. She's a Jackson Pollock and you're a Thomas Kinkade.
Genevieve Dewey
#2. Dali's Reclining Woman Wearing a Chemise looks like a dead slaughtered doll, and I can see preying eagles, broken arrows, and jazz musicians in Jackson Pollock, and because I believe that Man Ray and Duchamp were lovers.
Dionne Brand
#3. It would have been the equivalent of Jackson Pollock's attempts to copy the Sistine Chapel.
Malcolm Cowley
#4. I think we're in an age where artists really have an incredible range of materials at their command now. They can use almost anything from household items - Jackson Pollock used house paint - to, you know, advanced computer systems, to good old oil paint and acrylic paint.
Bill Viola
#5. A monochrome Jackson Pollock," Jane says, and then tells Tiny, "We gotta bolt. This band is like a root canal sans painkiller".
John Green
#6. The history of American art, in a way, begins with Jackson Pollock and his big paintings. This theme of bigness - all painters and sculptors have dealt with it ever since.
Michael Heizer
#7. Many of the most accomplished people of our era were considered by experts to have no future. Jackson Pollock, Marcel Proust, Elvis Presley, Ray Charles, Lucille Ball, and Charles Darwin were all thought to have little potential for their chosen fields.
Carol S. Dweck
#8. Unfortunately, there was no Jackson Pollock of the camera.
Edward Ruscha
#9. Jackson Pollock said once, "I don't really feel that many people in this world are alive." He said, "That's why I like you, Tom. You're alive."
Tom Robbins
#10. I'd rather sit next to Brian for two hours in a dark theater than have a wall painting party with Jackson Pollock
Jandy Nelson
#11. Somebody can paint with a fine brush like Monet and do millions of little dots or somebody can splatter it up there like Kandinsky or Jackson Pollock and go "Yep, that's art." That's okay.
Patrick Wilson
#12. Before they did all those shows on Jackson Pollock, I loved the way he formulated his paintings. I loved Basquiat - I was into the whole Beat generation, Kerouac, etc., and all those artists talked about that and Kerouac, so I just got in the middle of being spontaneous.
Matt Schulze
#13. I love Francis Bacon. I just saw a great Jackson Pollock exhibit at the Dallas Museum when I was home for Thanksgiving.
Owen Wilson
#14. Decades ago, Gerhard Richter found a painterly philosopher's stone. Like Jackson Pollock before him, he discovered something that had been in painting all along, always overlooked or discounted.
Jerry Saltz
#15. It's impossible in our postmodern era for anyone to be original
for anybody to do what Jackson Pollock did ...
Irving Sandler
#16. Like punk rock, like Jackson Pollock, like Jack Kerouac, it was truly human, a mix of perfect beauty and cathartic error.
Yann Martel
#17. Like what Jackson Pollock used to say. He thought the creation of the painting was the art, and the painting was just what was left. He didn't know why people wanted to buy his paintings.
Andy Reynolds
#18. I'm interested in Jackson Pollock's kind of art, where art is beautiful, but it's nothing, and yet it's incredible.
Taylor Swift
#19. Who among us has not gazed thoughtfully and patiently at a painting of Jackson Pollock and thought "What a piece of crap?"
Rob Long
#20. Chaos can be structured as non-chaos. That we know from Jackson Pollock.
Eva Hesse
#21. I'm a postmodern commentator, and so, in a cheeky parallel to James Joyce or James Kelman, I get to places, verbally, that are a little unusual - when I talk about Jocky Wilson and end up sounding like a Jackson Pollock of the commentary box.
Sid Waddell
#22. I was a student at Harvard, and that's where I learned about so-called avant-garde music. Jackson Pollock, abstract expressionism and painting were well known at this time.
Henry Flynt
#23. ... she wore a masterpiece smile with smudges of paint and graphite across her cheek, and her eyes were a Jackson Pollock painting.
Ellie Lieberman
#24. I have no fear of making changes, destroying the image, etc., because the painting has a life of its own.
Jackson Pollock
#25. A real friend is someone you say a sentence to and they know ten thousand words behind that sentence.
Jackson Pollock
#26. Painting is no problem. The problem is what to do when you're not painting.
Jackson Pollock
#27. He drove his kind of realism at me so hard I bounced right into nonobjective painting.
Jackson Pollock
#28. When I am in my painting, I'm not aware of what I'm doing.
Jackson Pollock
#31. Bums are the well-to-do of this day. They didn't have as far to fall.
Jackson Pollock
#32. The process is only a means to an end-creating the painting I want. It doesn't mean anything itself. It's only a way of creating a result.
Jackson Pollock
#33. There is no accident, just as there is no beginning and no end.
Jackson Pollock
#34. I've been thinking of death a lot, and I am amazed by its inevitability, frightened, as we all are, of the totally unknown, and yet feel a long sleep is somehow earned by those of us who live on the edge.
Jackson Pollock
#35. New needs need new techniques. And the modern artists have found new ways and new means of making their statements ... the modern painter cannot express this age, the airplane, the atom bomb, the radio, in the old forms of the Renaissance or of any other past culture.
Jackson Pollock
#36. I am doubtful of any talent, so whatever I choose to be, will be accomplished only by long study and work
Jackson Pollock
#37. It doesn't matter how the paint is put on, as long as something is said.
Jackson Pollock
#38. In response to the question, 'How do you know when you're finished?' Pollock replied, 'How do you know when you're finished making love?
Jackson Pollock
#39. I don't work from drawings. I don't make sketches and drawings and color sketches into a final painting.
Jackson Pollock
#40. The pictures I contemplate painting would constitute a halfway state and attempt to point out the direction of the future - without arriving there completely
Jackson Pollock
#42. My paintings do not have a center, but depend on the same amount of interest throughout.
Jackson Pollock
#45. I can control the flow of paint: there is no accident.
Jackson Pollock
#47. Abstract painting is abstract. It confronts you. There was a reviewer a while back who wrote that my pictures didn't have any beginning or any end. He didn't mean it as a compliment, but it was.
Jackson Pollock
#48. The strangeness will wear off and I think we will discover the deeper meanings in modern art.
Jackson Pollock
#50. Technic is the result of a need new needs demand new technics total control denial of the accident States of order organic intensity energy and motion made visible memories arrested in space, human needs and motives acceptance
Jackson Pollock
#52. It is only when I lose contact with the painting that the result is a mess. Otherwise there is pure harmony, an easy give and take, and the painting comes out well.
Jackson Pollock
#53. The painter locks himself out of his own studio. And then has to break in like a thief.
Jackson Pollock
#54. Painting is self-discovery. Every good artist paints what he is.
Jackson Pollock
#55. On the floor I am more at ease. I feel nearer, more part of the painting, since this way I can walk around it, work from the four sides and literally be in the painting.
Jackson Pollock
#57. The secret of success is ... to be fully awake to everything about you.
Jackson Pollock
#59. If people would just look at the paintings, I don't think they would have any trouble enjoying them. It's like looking at a bed of flowers, you don't tear your hair out over what it means.
Jackson Pollock
#60. You can't learn techniques and then try to become a painter. Techniques are a result.
Jackson Pollock
#61. I don't work from drawings and colour sketches into a final painting. Painting, I think, today - the more immediate, the more direct - the greater the possibilities of making a direct - of making a statement.
Jackson Pollock
#62. My concern is with the rhythms of nature I work inside out, like nature.
Jackson Pollock
#63. I'm very representational some of the time, and a little all of the time. But when you're painting out of your unconscious, figures are bound to emerge.
Jackson Pollock
#64. Well, painting today certainly seems very vibrant, very alive, very exiting. Five or six of my contemporaries around New York are doing very vital work, and the direction that painting seems to be taken here - is - away from the easel - into some sort, some kind of wall, wall painting ...
Jackson Pollock
#65. I want to express my feelings rather than illustrate them.
Jackson Pollock
#66. The painting has a life of its own. I try to let it come through.
Jackson Pollock
#67. Today painters do not have to go to a subject matter outside of themselves. Most modern painters work from a different source. They work from within.
Jackson Pollock
#70. The modern artist is working with space and time and expressing his feelings rather than illustrating.
Jackson Pollock
#71. It [abstract art] should be enjoyed just as music is enjoyed after a while you may like it or you may not.
Jackson Pollock
#72. People have always frightened and bored me consequently I have been within my own shell.
Jackson Pollock
#74. The modern artist ... is working and expressing an inner world - in other words - expressing the energy, the motion, and other inner forces.
Jackson Pollock
#75. I've had a period of drawing on canvas in black - with some of my early images coming thru -, think the non-objectivists will find them disturbing - and the kids who think it simple to splash a 'Pollock' out.
Jackson Pollock
#76. When I say artist I mean the man who is building things - creating molding the earth - whether it be the plains of the west - or the iron ore of Penn. It's all a big game of construction - some with a brush - some with a shovel - some choose a pen.
Jackson Pollock
#77. As to what I would like to be, it is difficult to say. An artist of some kind. If nothing else I shall always study the Arts.
Jackson Pollock
#78. When I'm painting, I'm not aware of what I'm doing. It's only after a get acquainted period that I see what I've been about. I've no fears about making changes for the painting has a life of its own.
Jackson Pollock
#79. I continue to get further away from the usual painter's tools such as easel, palette, brushes, etc.
Jackson Pollock
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