Faaborg Museum Quotes & Sayings
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Top Faaborg Museum Quotes

I think a single sentence by Van Gogh is better than the whole work of all the art critics and art historians put together. — John Olsen

In print, people can do anything to you. Everything you do is picked apart. People love it; they're waiting for you to make a mistake. — Brian May

All the things you think you should have done that you didn't do, and all of the things that you shouldn't have done, accept them. You did (or did not) do them. That's Reality. That's happened. No changing the past. — Peter McWilliams

Photography is a strong tool, a propaganda device, and a weapon for the defense of the environment ... and therefore for the fostering of a healthy human race and even very likely for its survival. — Eliot Porter

Past and future to him were the realities; the present dull, meaningless, only significant if, as now, going back along the sands, he could say to himself: 'Later on, I shall remember. — Elizabeth Taylor

There are tree main bulwarks of defence against new thoughts: to pay no heed, to give no credence, and finally to assert that it had already long existed. — Arthur Schopenhauer

Someone pays me a hundred bucks every Tuesday to DJ. I don't think I'll ever give that up. — Shannyn Sossamon

The Hoodmen are far from being the worst of the servants of the Cult of the Unwritten Book, but they are among the most peculiar. You know when you're trying to remember a word and it's on the tip of your tongue but you can't seem to get it out? Well, that's because the Hoodmen have eaten it. They eat all the words that are on the tips of other people's tongues. They thrive on misplaced words, savoring all the lost potential of each expression. They're also able to convert words into electricity. Mr. Steele took an entire phrase. — Grant Morrison

[W]e ignore the Whole, we're taken in by the parts. We're seduced by objects of our consciousness — Steve Hagen

Out-of-whack emotions are always a good beginning point for identifying beliefs that aren't really true, an easy red flag for our inquiry. Exaggerated emotions of anxiety or discouragement invite us to trace them back to the thoughts that are creating them. — Virginia H. Pearce