Sunday, March 10, 2013

Among eye-flies

 
“Sensuality, as long as it is straightforward did not repel him, but this derived sensuality - the sort that classes a mistress among motor-cars if she is beautiful, and among eye-flies if she isn't - was alien to his own emotions . . . It was, in a new form, the old, old trouble that eats the heart out of every civilization: snobbery, the desire for possessions, creditable appendages; and it is to escape this rather than the lusts of the flesh that the saints retreat into the Himalayas.” ― E.M. Forster, A Passage to India
“It seems obvious, looking back, that the artists of Weimar Germany and Leninist Russia lived in a much more attenuated landscape of media than ours, and their reward was that they could still believe, in good faith and without bombast, that art could morally influence the world. Today, the idea has largely been dismissed, as it must in a mass media society where art's principal social role is to ...be investment capital, or, in the simplest way, bullion. We still have political art, but we have no effective political art. An artist must be famous to be heard, but as he acquires fame, so his work accumulates 'value' and becomes, ipso-facto, harmless. As far as today's politics is concerned, most art aspires to the condition of Muzak. It provides the background hum for power.” ― Robert Hughes, The Shock of the New
 
“One needs to properly possess only a couple of great thoughts--they shed light on many stretches whose illumination one would never have believed in.” ― Georg Simmel, The View of Life: Four Metaphysical Essays with Journal Aphorisms
 
“We have wasted History like a bunch of drunks shooting dice back in the men's crapper of the local bar.” ― Charles Bukowski

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