Barbara Kruger’s influences

“On a formal visual level, I’d say that about 85 percent of my work as an artist has been informed by my job as a graphic designer. People who don’t understand or don’t know about the history of graphic design – if they’re mainly art historians – might just look at my work and say “Constructivism”or “John Heartfield”. As someone who only went to art school for a year and a half, I didn’t know who Heartfield was until I curated a show at the Kitchen, New York, in 1980 and someone asked me why there was no Heartfield in it. Critics always focus on the fine art/Constructivism end of my work, rather than thinking that this was somebody who had a job, who had a training in cropping photographs and who pasted words over them. And those words, when you were in a layout department, didn’t say anything they just said, “A, B, C, D, E, F, G”. My job afterwards as an artist, in many ways, was to make that sort of device meaningful.

I don’t like to talk about my influences, but certainly they include 30 years of New York tabloid newspapers, plus the films of Sam Fuller, that black and white stuff.”

— Barbara Kruger (via)

Gary Panter on commercial art

“The main thing that I stress to my students is the separation of personal expression versus commercial art. I really think that you’re just set to get your heart broken if you go into commercial art trying to do your art there. Some people can and it’s natural for them, but you really have to serve people, and that’s the idea of it. When you do commercial illustration— and I’ve said this a billion times because someone said it to me when I was in college-you need to take your ego out and put it in a box to be a commercial artist. On the other side, you can be Captain Nemo, and you should be. I try and encourage my students just to stick with it because attrition must be gigantically huge for artists.”

— Gary Panter

Orlando on selves

“How many different people are there not—Heaven help us—all having lodgment at one time or another in the human spirit? Some say two thousand and fifty-two. So that it is the most usual thing in the world for a person to call, directly they are alone, Orlando? (if that is one’s name) meaning by that, Come, come! I’m sick to death of this particular self. I want another. Hence, the astonishing changes we see in our friends. But it is not altogether plain sailing, either, for though one may say, as Orlando said (being out in the country and needing another self presumably) Orlando? still the Orlando she needs may not come; these selves of which we are built up, one on top of another, as plates are piled on a waiter’s hand, have attachments elsewhere, sympathies, little constitutions and rights of their own, call them what you will (and for many of these things there is no name) so that one will only come if it is raining, another in a room with green curtains, another when Mrs. Jones is not there, another if you can promise it a glass of wine—and so on; for everybody can multiply from his own experience the different terms which his different selves have made with him—and some are too wildly ridiculous to be mentioned in print at all.”

— Virginia Woolf, Orlando: A Biography

Michael Parenti on humanity

“Not only must we love social justice more than personal gain, we also must realize that our greatest personal gain comes in the struggle for social justice. And we are most in touch with our own individual humanity when we stand close to all of humanity.”

— Michael Parenti

Bernie Wrightson on Frankenstein

Bernie Wrightson on his Frankenstein illustrations:

“I’ve always had a thing for Frankenstein, and it was a labor of love. It was not an assignment, it was not a job. I would do the drawings in between paying gigs, when I had enough to be caught up with bills and groceries and what-not. I would take three days here, a week there, to work on the Frankenstein volume. It took about seven years.”

— (via)

Lou Danziger on education

“I believe ultimately that great education is self-education, especially in the arts. The students are not empty bottles waiting to be filled. They’re full. What is needed is to get the stuff out. An ideal education develops confidence, ego strength and a thirst to discover one’s possibilities. I think a good teacher doesn’t teach but creates an environment or climate where people learn.”

— Lou Danziger

Anaïs Nin on escape

“We do not escape into philosophy, psychology, and art – we go there to restore our shattered selves into whole ones.”

— Anaïs Nin

Sergio Toppi on style

“My style is often described as unique, but I have been drawing for a long time now, so the influences come from everywhere. It’s important to look around and be aware of what’s happening.

But the main thing is to find a personal voice. When you work in comics, in any artistic field, the most difficult thing is researching for a personal style. Which way you’ll find it, I don’t know. There is no formula. It happens.”

— Sergio Toppi

May Sarton on talent

“A talent grows by being used, and withers if it is not used. Closing the gap between expectation and reality can be painful, but it has to be done sooner or later. The fact is that millions of young people would like to write, but what they dream of is the published book, often skipping over the months and years of very hard work necessary to achieve that end — all that, and luck too. We tend to forget about luck.”

— May Sarton

Mike Mignola on influences

“I look at a lot of art; the illustrators attracted me early on because I could understand what they were doing, making a picture of a pirate, whatever, I got that. But as I have gotten older my influences have become much more impressionistic, those that are more abstract. As a young artist at art school, Van Gogh didn’t necessarily do anything for me, but now those shapes and flat areas of color, those textures, they drive me crazy. Edward Hopper is the same kind of thing. It is something that was also in Frazetta, those bold, strong shapes. As I look at the piece on my drawing table right now, it is a relatively simple image of Hellboy against an old religious piece of art. But I’m going back into this and breaking it up into little shapes, almost turning it into a mosaic knowing that I’ll be able to say to my colorist: ‘Give me all these dots of another color.’ That’s a very impressionist, painterly technique. Currently, this is the way that my brain is working. I really dislike the whole slick airbrush approach, it just doesn’t gel with my work. If it ever worked! It certainly doesn’t anymore. Finding these ways to add a certain richness to the art by breaking it up into little shapes has all come from looking at these painters.”

— Mike Mignola