Time is not important, but art is.
Any art which can be subjected to an analytical process is, by this very fact, removed from the possibility of being art.
I want my paintings to have a light of their own, they must glow from inside.
Art is precisely that condition which pertains when, after all analysis and reduction to parts has taken place, there remains a 'quality' which is more than the sum of those parts, which could not exist in any other form, and which cannot be caught, or held, or contained.
Ideally there is a type of continuum which flows from life through the artist's sensibility and his materials. . . the concreteness of the object and its own life , through the spectator, with his expectations, interpretations, back into life.
There must be something in oneself which is essential. Therefore I refrain from referring to a landscape or certain objects when speaking of a picture. The hand is cleverer than the mind.
I believe that one of the most important properties of a work of art is an attempt to reconcile opposites, and in their fusion to achieve a 'wholeness' or 'oneness,' the experiencing of which should be revelatory - both for the artist and the spectator - something akin to the experience of enlightenment in terms of religion.
Mathematics is a dangerous profession; an appreciable proportion of us go mad.
Photography records the gamut of feelings written on the human face, the beauty of the earth and skies that man has inherited, and the wealth and confusion man has created. It is a major force in explaining man to man.
My uncle and my grandfather both worked in the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
That is the wonderful ecological mind that Gregory Bateson talks about - the patterns that connect, the stories that inform and inspire us and teach us what is possible