Top 27 Quotes & Sayings by Ad Reinhardt

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American artist Ad Reinhardt.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Ad Reinhardt

Adolph Dietrich Friedrich Reinhardt was an abstract painter active in New York for more than three decades. He was a member of the American Abstract Artists (AAA) and part of the movement centered on the Betty Parsons Gallery that became known as abstract expressionism. He was also a member of The Club, the meeting place for the New York School abstract expressionist artists during the 1940s and 1950s. He wrote and lectured extensively on art and was a major influence on conceptual art, minimal art and monochrome painting. Most famous for his "black" or "ultimate" paintings, he claimed to be painting the "last paintings" that anyone can paint. He believed in a philosophy of art he called Art-as-Art and used his writing and satirical cartoons to advocate for abstract art and against what he described as "the disreputable practices of artists-as-artists".

Art is too serious to be taken seriously.
Art is Art. Everything else is everything else.
I tried to oppose the academic to the marketplace. — © Ad Reinhardt
I tried to oppose the academic to the marketplace.
I taught a lot of art history, especially Chinese, Japanese, and Indian. But the painting classes came back. The nudes came back. Not so much the still lifes. So now our department is the worst department, partly because it has the worst facilities.
The job at Brooklyn is interesting because Brooklyn reflects what happened to university art departments everywhere. It might be the worst department now, and yet at one point it was the best in the country.
Now almost every artist outside of New York is connected with some school or some museum school, and even in New York the majority are. That's an interesting fact when you take the idea of making money, making a living selling paintings. Only a dozen or two painters do that.
Only a bad artist thinks he has a good idea. A good artist does not need anything.
Sculpture is something you bump into when you back up to look at a painting.
If some student came up and wanted to know where to study painting, you'd want to suggest someplace, but there's no place. I wouldn't know where to send a student to study.
My paintings are the last paintings one can make.
I like the idea of the museum world and the university-academic situation where artists talk to each other or where artists or art students study with artists.
Painting cannot be the only activity of a mature artist.
My painting represents the victory of the forces of darkness and peace over the powers of light and evil.
We all name ourselves. We call ourselves artists. Nobody asks us. Nobody says you are or you aren't.
The only and one way to say what abstract art or art-as-art is, is to say what it is not.
An artist who dedicates his life to art, burdens his art with his life, and his life with his art.
There is a black which is old and a black which is fresh. Lustrous black and dull black, black in sunlight and black in shadow.
The artist as businessman is uglier than the businessman as artist.
The ugliest spectacle is that of artists selling themselves. Art as a commodity is an ugly idea... The artist as businessman is uglier than the businessman as artist.
The one object of fifty years of abstract art is to present art-as-art and as nothing else, to make it into the one thing it is only, separating and defining it more and more, making it purer and emptier, more absolute and more exclusive - non-objective, non-representational, non-figurative, non-imagist, non-expressionist, non-subjective. the only and one way to say what abstract art or art-as-art is, is to say what it is not.
I want to emphasize the idea of black as intellectuality and conventionality.
It is not right for painters to think that painting is like prostitution, that 'first you do it for love, then you do it for others, and finally you do it for money.
The more an artist works the more there is to do. — © Ad Reinhardt
The more an artist works the more there is to do.
Art is not the spiritual side of business.
As for a picture, if it isn't worth a thousand words, the hell with it.
The artist should once and forever emancipate himself from the bondage of appearance.
As an artist I would like to eliminate the symbolic pretty much, for black is interesting not as a color but as a non-color and as the absence of color.
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