Walter J. Phillips

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It is evident that no derivative laws can teach the young student to see and apprehend colour in nature. His perception needs development as urgently as his muscles.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Law
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Do not think me fussy when I specify tidiness. It is essential... In printing, remember that cleanliness and order wait upon success.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Thinking
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A horizontal or vertical line lacks energy, compared with one that deviates from either. The difference between these graphic expressions is the difference between movement and repose.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Expression
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A mistake in drawing becomes difficult to detect when the eye is familiar with it.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Mistake
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The play of sunlight is amusement enough for a lazy man.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Men
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In most natural scenes there is a prevailing colour, which the landscape painter must learn to identify, and which must prevail also in a slightly exaggerated form, in his painting, for the sake of truth, harmony and unity.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Unity
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The syllogism art for art's sake refers to that kind of painting which disregards, or is contrary to, public taste.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Art
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The character of the subject must influence the choice of the method of its representation.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Character
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There must be a judicious arrangement of all the parts. Considered conversely, the artist's task is to fill his panel with a design that conforms to its shape and is beautiful in itself.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Beautiful
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It is the incompetent and the neglected artist who charges the public with ignorance, stupidity, and indifference. He raves loudly, but he is incomprehensible, even inarticulate, in his work.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Ignorance
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In painting, whether colour reflection is apparent or not, every hue must echo neighbouring hues, so that homogeneity may be attained.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Reflection
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It is the sense of unfamiliar envelopment that is impressive, whether in the living grays of hoarfrost, the crimson of the heavens at sunset, or the golden suffusions of autumn.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Sunset
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The true artist and the sane collector never will tolerate insincerity and impudence.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Artist
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The rewards of art are not always commensurate with its quality. It affords a precarious living.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Art
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Realism is condemned by those artists whose poverty of technique does not permit them to express it.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Artist
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Is the artist impelled by spiritual forces, by the divine afflatus, by conscious or unconscious emulation of others? Do angles whisper in the ears of the chosen few, and create for them visions of aethereal beauty? Do landscape painters of genius walk the plains of Heaven? Or is it only vanity that urges him to paint?
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Spiritual
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Perhaps the ideal life is that of the week-end artist, who preserves the integrity of his own aesthetic ideals because of his economic independence... If his daily grind is hateful he has his weekly solace in art.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Art
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Watercolour painting is notoriously difficult - so much depends on directness and speed, and certainty of intention. Tentative or fumbling touches are disastrous, for they cannot be obliterated easily.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Painting
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Many a painter has lived in affluence, in high esteem, who lacked the divine spark, and who is utterly forgotten to-day.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Sparks
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Every successful painter has worked hard. He cannot rest after having gained a certain degree of facility in drawing, and expect to retain it. He must advance or fall behind. Without practice he will forget; his eye will fail him; and his hand will deny its master.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Fall
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The portrait painter... If he insults his sitters his occupation is gone. Whether he paints the should instead of the features, or the latter with all its natural blemishes, he is as presumptuous as if he shouted, 'What a face. Hide it.' which would never do, although it is analogous to what landscape painters are doing every day.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Portraits
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Not only does a lens distort forms, but the ordinary plate makes an unholy mess of colour in its tone relations. Yellow becomes black, and blue white. Black sunflowers against a white sky - what a travesty!
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Photography
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Rhythm is as necessary in a picture as pigment; it is as much a part of painting as of music.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Painting
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Many rules for the creation of colour schemes have been published in recent years, but, while they are popular in commercial studies, I know of no creative artist who employs them. They are, per se, restrictive; their use precludes any chance of adventuring in this interesting field.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Artist
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Tradition is a prop for social security.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Tradition
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Etching will suggest subtle variations of tone, the most delicate shadings, all with black lines, which, as far as lines go, are unsurpassed for sheer beauty.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Black
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The impression of wood-grain... must be considered, not only as regards texture and visibility, but for the occasional possibility of the expression of form. A soft wood, with hard annulations, such as fir, prints very dearly.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Expression
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When technique is obtrusive it becomes mere mannerism, a conscious striving for effect. It is only a means to an end - the manner of putting paint to paper. It hardly embraces the expressive side of painting.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Mean
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For an intelligent estimate of your technique go to another artist working in the same medium.
- Walter J. Phillips
Collection: Artist