John F. Carlson - From the Art category:
A picture is a work of art, not because it is 'modern,' nor because it is 'ancient,' but because it is a sincere expression of human feeling. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Artists category:
The artist himself is often surprised at the finished work of art. He cannot tell 'how it happened', nor could he repeat the feat at someone's bidding. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Colour category:
Good colour really means good taste; and 'powerful' colour means a reserve, to give a climax its full force, and not 'red, white, and blue all over. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Emotion category:
We must not imitate the externals of nature with so much fidelity that the picture fails to evoke that wonderful teasing recurrence of emotion that marks the contemplation of a work of art. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Expression category:
A work of art in paint should be beautiful and expressive as abstract colour and form and should not interest us necessarily in any 'story' outside of itself – or else it belongs to the field of illustration. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Gradation category:
The eye and soul are caressed in the contemplation of form and colour. The subtle changes of colour over a surface – transitions that are like music – are intangible in their reaction upon us. There is an immediate sensuous appeal! (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Happiness category:
Rest assured that if you work every day at your art, using the materials nearest at hand, you will gradually discover such beauty in them that they will fill you with happiness. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Harmony category:
In the anxiety to get beautiful colour harmony do not exhaust all combinations on one canvas. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Interest category:
It is the ability to determine consciously what it is that interests him, and why, that differentiates the artist from the art student. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Masters category:
This art of conservation is strength, and makes the masterpiece a masterpiece. Otherwise, the man who simply brought all the different colors obtainable, and squeezed them out upon the canvas to give it 'full force,' would be the greatest master, instead of being merely extravagant. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Memory category:
If you train yourself in memory work, you fearlessly attack and rearrange your material, for you can retain your original impression. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Mysteries category:
The underlying principles or fundamentals should be so hidden away by the beauty they are eventually to support, that it would require much digging to disclose them. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Nature category:
The more we advance, the more we realize with Whistler that nature is never right. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Peace category:
To the artist, the forest is an asylum of peace and dancing shadows. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Photography category:
If you're going to paint from photos, make sure you've painted for at least ten years. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Plein-Air category:
It is a curious fact that out-of-door nature is to the beginner an enormously overloaded 'property room.' He sees, for instance, the myriad of leaves upon the tree long before he sees the tree at all. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Quality category:
Art is the transmittable, personal impression of one quality in the quantity before us. It is the ability to determine consciously what it is that interests him, and why, that differentiates the artist from the art student. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Reality category:
Too much reality in a picture is always a disappointment to the imaginative soul. We love suggestion and not hard facts. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Spontaneity category:
Do not be afraid that too much labour over the composition is going to kill the spontaneity. Those who absorb and digest their experiences are, of a sudden, mountains of strength and can produce pictures with spontaneous start and finish. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Strength category:
Reserve is strength; overstatement is weakness. No one cares to hear the singer's topmost notes when the voice is 'nigh onto breaking.' (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Technique category:
Art is a thing so much of the imagination, of the soul, that it is difficult to descend to the fundamentals of technique and yet make it plain to the student that these are but the 'means' and not an end in themselves. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Trust category:
Trust your feelings entirely about colour, and then, even if you arrive at no infallible colour theory, you will at least have the credit of having your own colour sense. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Understanding category:
You will learn to paint trees only by understanding them, their growth, their nature, their movement – and realizing that they are conscious living things. A tree seldom if ever encroaches upon the liberty of another tree. It never wastes its growth in unnecessary twistings. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Values category:
The great paintings are the ones with the most subtle value relationships. The closer you could bring your values and still distinguish between them, the stronger you were as a painter. (John F. Carlson)
John F. Carlson - From the Wonder category:
Clouds are fascinating to paint because they are the only element in a landscape that possesses free movement. (John F. Carlson)
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