Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American artist Dan Colen.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Daniel Colen is an American artist based in New York. His work consists of painted sculptures appropriating low-cultural ephemera, graffiti-inspired paintings of text executed in paint, and installations.
As opposed to putting too much confidence in myself, or in an image or a scene or a set of brushes, I really want to allow the oil paint to perform, to show me the things that it wants to do, beyond my imagination.
I try very hard to handle things equally: ideas, materials, and images.
At the end of the day, you can't have a vision; you have to have a hope. This is where the miracle comes in.
It's such a weird self-confidence that an artist has - to conceive of this thing that serves no function and say, 'I'm going to really work hard for it and give it and it's just going to matter to people.' You really have to believe it all on your own.
For all the drama we all have with our families and all the tension and hostility, I couldn't have done this without my family. Being the people that they are - they're crazy - made it possible for me to be crazy and to live a lifestyle of my own design.
The different bodies of my work end themselves when there's no more discovery to be had.
It's such a paradox. You come from this place where you want fame; you don't want to be bourgeois, but you want to be successful. You want to be accepted, but you also want to be going against the grain. You want to be on the outside, but you want to be on the inside.
A lot of my work involves instilling objects with the power of touch - a transference of soul, spirit, energy through actions.
Art class was my thing, but not any other class.
A lot of my work is about what's abstract and what's pictorial. Is it bubblegum, or is it an abstract painting using bubblegum? The energy comes from walking that line and watching things dip this way and that.
I'm trying to equalise the world to say there is no high and low.
I think that artworks are like these spiritual objects: I think that they have energies and powers beyond what the eye can see.
Love is important. I didn't have the energy to be giving it to somebody else in a way that they deserved, and I knew that. So I've always been scared to go too far with somebody I care for because I knew there would come a day when I'd need to pick up and finish a painting for the next three months. That day is inevitable.
All of these mechanisms we have for celebrating are so double-edged. So much sorrow comes out of joy.
Art is kind of the lens through which I think about God.
It takes a lot of help - nature, friends, family, craftsmen - for me to make what I make.
I used to kind of go for it, right? Like, I'd be the one who would say, 'All right, there's Kate Moss. I'm going to try to make out with her.'
A lot of my work is about equalizing things and kind of destroying any barrier between what's high and low, or what's deep or what's shallow, complex or simple. I hope I'm ever-changing.
I've always been interested in moments of disbelief... I don't know if they possess any magic, but they do have something.
Its such a paradox. You come from this place where you want fame; you dont want to be bourgeois, but you want to be successful. You want to be accepted, but you also want to be going against the grain. You want to be on the outside, but you want to be on the inside.
Its such a weird self-confidence that an artist has - to conceive of this thing that serves no function and say, Im going to really work hard for it and give it and its just going to matter to people. You really have to believe it all on your own.
At the end of the day, you cant have a vision; you have to have a hope. This is where the miracle comes in.