Top 12 Quotes & Sayings by Julie Mehretu

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Ethiopian artist Julie Mehretu.
Last updated on November 7, 2024.
Julie Mehretu

Julie Mehretu is an Ethiopian American contemporary visual artist, known for her multi-layered paintings of abstracted landscapes on a large scale. Her paintings, drawings, and prints depict the cumulative effects of urban sociopolitical changes.

I always wanted to be an artist, but I didn't really know how someone could make a life out it.
I'm really interested in the nondefinitive element of abstraction.
I don't ever work in a way where something is an illustration of an event, but when something is occurring at the same time I see it as very informed by that. — © Julie Mehretu
I don't ever work in a way where something is an illustration of an event, but when something is occurring at the same time I see it as very informed by that.
That's what I'm interested in: the space in between, the moment of imagining what is possible and yet not knowing what that is.
People look at film in a gallery, and if they walk out after two minutes they know they haven't seen the whole work. But then people look at a painting for two minutes and think they've seen it. Certain paintings are made to be consumed fast. But some require a slowed-down time. You have to go back to them.
When you're not a mom, you can get up in the middle of the night, paint, sleep all morning... you can't do that when you have two children!
You're not just this person who's from your own specific experiences, but the collective experience of what makes you who you are because of time.
Race always comes up in the conversation of Detroit.
I'm not trying to spell out a story. I still think you feel the painting, and the reason you read the mark is because you also feel the mark.
The erasure itself became the action. It seemed to suggest a moment in terms of how sad or pessimistic you can feel in a political environment or a historical situation. But it felt like a really hopeful gesture in the painting.
The investigation of making is illuminating towards that moment rather than the other way around, a reversal of the way that I would approach making a painting before. I think that it gets to a richer illumination of the moment, which is what I was trying to do at the beginning but going about it a little backwards.
The earlier, more analytic impulse was to use very rational but kind of absurd techniques or tendencies—mapping, charting, and architecture—to try and make sense of who I was in my time and space and political environment. But there’s only so much truth to a theoretical understanding of something.
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