Top 25 Quotes & Sayings by Kit Williams

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English author Kit Williams.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Kit Williams

Christopher "Kit" Williams is an English artist, illustrator and author best known for his 1979 book Masquerade, a pictorial storybook which contains clues to the location of a golden jewelled hare created by Williams and then buried "somewhere in Britain".

As I was working I noticed that the way I designed the differential gearing actually created a spare drive that sat directly below the emperor's feet, or where they would be if he were to sit in the chariot.
I made every single piece myself, each individual component, so it was quite time consuming.
The dog and the rabbit are telling us not to chase unattainable material goals. — © Kit Williams
The dog and the rabbit are telling us not to chase unattainable material goals.
The dog, the rabbit and the hoop all feature in the painting, and take the place of the orrery.
If we listen human instinct actually tells us what we need, but advertising makes us want things we don't need and things we can't have.
Having designed and built several clocks during my career it suddenly occurred to me that when you look at the face of a clock both hands have the same center.
Newton, of course, was the inventor of differential calculus so his place in the tale is quite special.
In the fairy tale the painting represents the here and now. The book is actually divided into five sections, through which the key character, the muse, leads us.
The chariot was purchased by a private collector who took it home to New York. I take pleasure in knowing that it was built to last for at least a thousand years.
He was so tenacious he defied the distraction of women by refusing to have them in his presence, just as later in life he denied his blindness by calling for more and more candles.
The engine of ancient society was religion but the engine of contemporary society, as I see it, is advertising.
Today she is the lady of death, which I believe is the best muse to have.
If you look closely you can see that they are all interconnected, symbolic of a never-ending circle in which it is simply impossible for the dog to catch the rabbit.
I think most artists find it difficult to part with their work but it's the parting that keeps us alive and keeps us working. In the case of the chariot, although it's been sold I actually still have it, just in another form.
You see, my ambition was not to confound the engineering world but simply to create a beautiful piece of art.
I took lots of photographs and had planned to write a treatise on how it worked, but I quickly got bored with that idea and wrote a scientific fairy tale instead.
In practical terms the South Pointing Chariot was a simple direction finder. It could have been made to point in any direction - north, south, east or west.
I started by looking at what others had done before me. You see, over the years there have been attempts by many different people to reconstruct the chariot.
The original item looked like a little hand cart with the figure of a man mounted on a platform between the wheels. The man's outstretched arm always pointed south.
Once upon a perfect night, unclouded and still, there came the face of a pale and beautiful lady. The tresses of her hair reached out to make the constellations, and the dewy vapours of her gown fell soft upon the land.
The rabbit is significant in that the handle on the original South Pointing Chariot was carved in the form of a rabbit. Because the handle extended out front it meant that wherever the rabbit went the chariot had to follow.
She's not happy about the life she is living but to jump through the hoop would mean to succumb to death. — © Kit Williams
She's not happy about the life she is living but to jump through the hoop would mean to succumb to death.
The hoop is there to remind us not to jump through it, not to submit to someone else's control.
Practical! On Wednesday afternoons I could be practically anything. What's up?
It inspired all sorts of whims and fancies that I ultimately wove into a fairy tale complete with muse, the earth, the moon, some famous inventors, a dog and a rabbit.
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