Cy Twombly Art Quotes

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We cannot guess what incident or influence arranged our lives or ambitions in the way that it did, or whether in fact it was something deeper. And most mysterious of all is why artists become artists, and why they become the artists they are.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
His passions and enthusiasms extended to paintings of all kinds, as well as to history, mythology, music, and much else, and he did not care if others did not share them. He was learned in a non-scholarly way. For him, culture was a living thing, not a box full of treasures to be plundered.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
At first he looked out of touch, then he looked inevitable, and then he looked great.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
I’m asking them to empty themselves,” the photographer said of his process of giving his subjects so many instructions for how to position their body that they “become unaware, almost, of being photographed.”2
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
Eros weaver of myth, Eros sweet and bitter, Eros bringer of pain.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
the hero’s art is not about imagination, we see here, but perseverance in the face of endless tedium.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
copy of Leonardo da Vinci’s destroyed masterpiece peaking through at the edges.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
The paintings of Fifty Days live together permanently at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
My daughter was making, that day in Chicago, an entirely unconscious but quite basic assumption about people and the work they do. She was assuming that the glory she saw in the work reflected a glory in its maker, that the painting was the painter as the poem is the poet, that every choice one made alone—every word chosen or rejected, every brush stroke laid or not laid down—betrayed one’s character. Style is character.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
I need to talk to her,” Joan Didion’s young daughter said after seeing Georgia O’Keeffe’s Sky Above Clouds at the Art Institute of Chicago.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
And, of course, the flowers: irises, lilies, bellflowers, peonies, chrysanthemums, tulips, tea roses, dried roses, black roses, palm leaves, calla lilies, hibiscus, dried garlic, plastic and paper and fabric.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
The quagliarola must have started.” Quagliarola, a word in no standard Italian dictionary, is the local term for the yearly migration of quail from North Africa to the Italian coast. This
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
I’m held by nothing, I hold on to nothing, I belong to nothing. / All sensations seize me, and none endure.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
His work is as much a form of behavior as a product of craft.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
irrational, involuntary, accidental, free, random,
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
as if each painting is an hour of the day,
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
Black Mountain College: Sprouted Seed, edited by Mervin Lane, and Black Mountain Book by Fielding Dawson; for a more in-depth history of the ethos, freedom, and collaborative spirit of the college, see Black Mountain College: Experiment in Art,
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
Agnes Martin to Robert Ryman,
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
Part of the knack of looking at his paintings, as with swimming, is just to relax,” writes Martin Gayford. At which point, “Twombly’s art, far from being dauntingly avant-garde, is very easy to enjoy.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
But Yau overstates the case. Culture for Twombly was both a “living thing” and “a box of treasures to be plundered.” These are not mutually exclusive, especially for Twombly.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
The Image cannot / be dis possessed of a / PRIMORdial / freshness / which IDEAS / CAN NEVER CLAIM.”1
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
the feeling of deskilling that Twombly had spent a lifetime seeking and perfecting.4
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
And yet, to describe Twombly’s abstract paintings, or to look at reproductions, tiny postage stamps a poor proxy for his floor-to-ceiling canvases, is to miss why they capture the imagination. “A Twombly looks,” writes one critic, “the way thinking sometimes feels.”8 And that is Twombly’s gift, the bewildering slipstream between thinking and feeling—a gift I’ve spent years trying to understand.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
the yellow of fresh egg yolks, and the warm purple of a healing bruise, fire reds and candy pastels of blue and pink and white rising up only to descend into a chaotic central mass, like a hornet hive, before trailing off in dark marks at the far left of the canvas. Black lines, like primitive boats with crosshatched oars, open into a shimmering sea of white.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
In time, he made the name his own, signing it again and again, his handwriting so distinctive, and essential, to his process as a painter.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
The problem and pleasure of writing about any artist is that the life and the art always overlap, are always in conversation. No neat divide. No way to write about one without the other. Life and art are never separate conversations. It’s easy to read—and overread—the biographical in Twombly’s art. He practically dares you.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)
He wrote to Daura of his desire to paint all summer in Virginia, a place where he thrived as an artist—without school and with the freedom to paint from morning to late at night as he wished, copying from the masters when he ran out of his own ideas.
Joshua Rivkin (Chalk: The Art and Erasure of Cy Twombly)