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Joseph Kosuth Quotes

American sculptor and theorist, Birth: 31-1-1945
1.
Anything can be art. Art is the relations between relations, not the relations between objects.
Joseph Kosuth

2.
All art (after Duchamp) is conceptual (in nature) because art only exists conceptually.
Joseph Kosuth

3.
I liked that the work itself was something other than simply what you saw It meant you could have an art work which was that idea of an art work, and its formal components weren't important.
Joseph Kosuth

4.
Seeing is not as simple as looking.
Joseph Kosuth

5.
Forget your ideas about art. Make a shopping list of everything you like about what you've done. Include qualities that you've seen in your life, in the world, and possibly in art that you like. Take this list and make a work that satisfies all of the things on your list without caring if it looks like art.
Joseph Kosuth

Similar Authors: Peter Drucker Thomas Paine Pablo Picasso Charles Darwin Marshall McLuhan Ai Weiwei Hannah Arendt Thomas Hobbes Henri Matisse Jean Baudrillard Michelangelo John Cage Salvador Dali Paul Gauguin Leon Trotsky
6.
When objects are presented within the context of art (and until recently objects always have been used) they are as eligible for aesthetic consideration as are any objects in the world, and an aesthetic consideration of an object existing in the realm of art means that the object's existence or functioning in an art context is irrelevant to the aesthetic judgment.
Joseph Kosuth

7.
That celebrated marriage of science and art, photography, seemed at the time to join together how we look at the world, art, with how we were coming to know it, science.
Joseph Kosuth

8.
I am only describing language, not explaining anything.
Joseph Kosuth

Quote Topics by Joseph Kosuth: Art Photography World Language Opinion Simple Relate Eye Empty Mean Shopping Ideas Explaining Views Seeing Differences Relation Together Looks Caring Important Describing
9.
Change art to include yourself.
Joseph Kosuth

10.
Making something new to look at is a futile and empty act if its only audience is the eyes.
Joseph Kosuth

11.
Photography, as an invention, was both art and science. The view it gave us of the world was in some measure acceptable because it was a product of our vision of the world; and it did so as part of the same process which seemed to impart 'truth': science.
Joseph Kosuth

12.
Unlike the marks of a painting, the photo seems to organize its 'opinions' in relation to the world; even when the photographs have clearly been manipulated, the 'opinions' seem to have all the more force, with the suggested 'participation of the world' articulating that 'opinion' as a difference.
Joseph Kosuth