Top 31 Quotes & Sayings by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a French painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.
Last updated on October 10, 2024.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Comte Henri Marie Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec-Monfa was a French painter, printmaker, draughtsman, caricaturist and illustrator whose immersion in the colorful and theatrical life of Paris in the late 19th century allowed him to produce a collection of enticing, elegant, and provocative images of the sometimes decadent affairs of those times.

Of course one should not drink much, but often.
Love is when the desire to be desired takes you so badly that you feel you could die of it.
Philandering impedes, as everyone knows, the ability to concentrate. — © Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Philandering impedes, as everyone knows, the ability to concentrate.
The harmony of the luncheon is achieved by a combination of the two main courses which are the focus of the menu.
I paint things as they are. I don't comment.
The cafes bore me; going downstairs is a nuisance. Painting and sleeping - that's all there is.
The body of a beautiful woman is not made for love; it is too exquisite.
I have always been a pencil.
My dear Mama, you are definitely the hen who hatched a famous duck.
I have tried to do what is true and not ideal.
Never be tempted by water. The water tap should be sealed at lunchtime. If, for example, a sauce goes wrong, adding water doesn't help at all; one only achieves a taste of dishwater.
A professional model is like a stuffed owl. These girls are alive.
Jealousy will drive you mad.
Marriage is a dinner that begins with dessert.
Love is when the desire to be desired takes you so badly, that you feel you could die of it!
It is easy to finish things. Nothing is simpler. Never does one lie so cleverly as then.
The wise woman patterns her life on the theory and practice of modern banking. She never gives her love, but only lends it on the best security and at the highest rate of interest.
When a figure painter executes a landscape he treats it as if it were a face; Degas' landscapes are unparalleled because they are visionary landscapes.
Monet's work would have been even greater if he had not abandoned figure-painting.
I am certainly not regenerating French art, but am struggling hard to accomplish something on an unlucky piece of paper which has done me no harm at all, and on which, believe me, I am doing nothing that is good... I hope things will improve eventually; as it is, I am pretty wretched.
[People] want me to finish things. But I see them in such a way and paint them accordingly. ... Nothing is simpler than to complete pictures in a superficial sense. Never does one lie so cleverly as then.
Love is a disease which fills you with a desire to be desired.... - Comte de Toulouse
Bonnat tells me, 'Your painting isn't bad, it is chic, but even so it isn't bad, but your drawing is absolutely atrocious.' So I must gather my courage and start once again.
I do not know if you bridle your pen, but when my pencil moves, it is necesary to let it go, or - crash!... nothing more. — © Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
I do not know if you bridle your pen, but when my pencil moves, it is necesary to let it go, or - crash!... nothing more.
Only the human figure exists; landscape is, and should be, no more than an accessory; the painter exclusively of landscape is nothing but a bore.
I paint things as they are. I don't comment. I record.
Novelty is seldom the essential... make a subject better from its intrinsic nature.
In our time there are many artists who do something because it is new; they see their value and their justification in this newness. They are deceiving themselves; novelty is seldom the essential. This has to do with one thing only; making a subject better from its intrinsic nature.
I don't belong to any school. I work in my corner. I admire Degas.
I can paint until I'm forty. After that I intend to dry up.
I had placed my stick on the table, as I do every evening. It had been specially made to suit my height, to enable me to walk without too much difficulty. As I was standing up, a customer called to me: 'Monsieur, don't forget your pencil.' It was very unkind, but most funny.
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