Sunday, November 24, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Peter Greenaway

« All quotes from this author
 

How can an opera express this complicated question of bedsheets?

 
Peter Greenaway

» Peter Greenaway - all quotes »



Tags: Peter Greenaway Quotes, Authors starting by G


Similar quotes

 

My theory of technique, if I have one, is very far from original; nor is it complicated. I can express it in fifteen words, by quoting The Eternal Question And Immortal Answer of burlesk, viz. "Would you hit a woman with a child?— No, I'd hit her with a brick." Like the burlesk comedian, I am abnormally fond of that precision which creates movement.

 
E. E. Cummings
 

The most elegant way of solving the opera problem would be to blow up the opera houses.

 
Pierre Boulez
 

It is no longer possible for lyric poetry to express the immensity of our experience. Life has grown too cumbersome, too complicated. We have acquired values which are best expressed in prose.

 
Boris Pasternak
 

It is better to have the child in the chimney corner moved by what happens in the poem, in spite of his ignorance of its real meaning, than to have the poem a puzzle to which that meaning is the only key. Still, complicated subjects make complicated poems, and some of the best poems can move only the best readers; this is one more question of curves of normal distribution. I have tried to make my poems plain, and most of them are plain enough; but I wish that they were more difficult because I had known more.

 
Randall Jarrell
 

Behind the complicated details of the world stand the simplicities: God is good, the grown-up man or woman knows the answer to every question, there is such a thing as truth, and justice is as measured and faultless as a clock. Our heroes are simple: they are brave, they tell the truth, they are good swordsmen and they are never in the long run really defeated. That is why no later books satisfy us like those which were read to us in childhood—for those promised a world of great simplicity of which we knew the rules, but the later books are complicated and contradictory with experience; they are formed out of our own disappointing memories.

 
Graham Greene
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact