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Chris Ofili Quotes

British painter, Birth: 10-10-1968
1.
I was listening to a lot of hip hop, music like Public Enemy that was about raising consciousness, and I realised I could feed that directly into my work, using images in a way that was a bit like sampling - taking images from diverse places, exploring the contradictions without trying to hide the seams.
Chris Ofili

2.
The studio is a laboratory, not a factory. An exhibition is the result of your experiments, but the process is never-ending. So an exhibition is not a conclusion.
Chris Ofili

3.
There's a magic that comes from playing entirely to who you are. I've got my specialist subject - in the Mastermind sense - and I wouldn't change it, or who I am.
Chris Ofili

4.
There was a point in time where the thought of people even talking about me made me anxious. Physically.
Chris Ofili

5.
The studio is a place where I can experiment before I'm prepared for an idea to become a body of work, or a new way of working, or a way of working that can sustain me over a period of time.
Chris Ofili

Similar Authors: Winston Churchill Francis Bacon John Ruskin Leonardo da Vinci William Blake Henry Miller Pablo Picasso Vincent Van Gogh Andy Warhol Alan Moore David Hockney Henri Matisse Samuel Richardson Robert Genn Robert Henri
6.
When I left the Royal College, I decided I would only make paintings that I would want to look at myself, that felt close to my life.
Chris Ofili

7.
Sometimes, as I feel a door or an exit point in my work is closing, I'll try to create an opening so as not to stifle the creative process, which I see as a process that's never-ending.
Chris Ofili

8.
In the end, it doesn't really matter what you paint. It's all just a routine to connect yourself finally with other people.
Chris Ofili

Quote Topics by Chris Ofili: Thinking Art People Factories Body Ideas Talking Perception Who I Am Studios Hip Hop Enemy Doors College Exhibitions Looks Process Way Made Mastermind Sudden Change Magic School Listening Creative Routine Trying Want
9.
When I was painting in art school - and I think many painters in the 1980s worked similarly - a finished painting would often be constructed from lots of other paintings underneath. Some of these individual layers of painting were better than others, but that was something that you would often only realise retrospectively.
Chris Ofili

10.
Often I think changes within my work have been seen as sudden changes or sharp changes, but for me they're not that sudden. They have been there in the studio, but not so much in public.
Chris Ofili

11.
I'm aware that success can overwhelm you. The perception of you can be elevated to such a status that it's not you any more.
Chris Ofili