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I will try to account for the degree of my aesthetic emotion. That, I conceive, is the function of the critic.
Clive Bell
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Clive Bell
Age: 83 †
Born: 1881
Born: September 16
Died: 1964
Died: September 18
Art Critic
Art Historian
Painter
Great Shefford
Berkshire
Arthur Clive Heward Bell
Trying
Aesthetic
Account
Degree
Accounts
Critics
Degrees
Function
Conceive
Emotion
Critic
More quotes by Clive Bell
It is the mark of great art that its appeal is universal and eternal.
Clive Bell
There must be some one quality without which a work of art cannot exist possessing which, in the least degree, no work is altogether worthless.
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Cezanne is the Christopher Columbus of a new continent of form.
Clive Bell
The starting-point for all systems of aesthetics must be the personal experience of a peculiar emotion. The objects that provoke this emotion we call works of art.
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We all agree now - by 'we' I mean intelligent people under sixty - that a work of art is like a rose. A rose is not beautiful because it is like something else. Neither is a work of art. Roses and works of art are beautiful in themselves.
Clive Bell
Detail is the heart of realism, and the fatty degeneration of art.
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Comfort came in with the middle classes.
Clive Bell
Civilized people can talk about anything. For them no subject is taboo.... In civilized societies there will be no intellectual bogeys at sight of which great grownup babies are expected to hide their eyes.
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We have no other means of recognising a work of art than our feeling for it.
Clive Bell
Let the artist have just enough to eat, and the tools of this trade: ask nothing of him. Materially make the life of the artist sufficiently miserable to be unattractive, and no-one will take to art save those in whom the divine daemon is absolute.
Clive Bell
Only reason can convince us of those three fundamental truths without a recognition of which there can be no effective liberty: that what we believe is not necessarily true that what we like is not necessarily good and that all questions are open.
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It would follow that 'significant form' was form behind which we catch a sense of ultimate reality.
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Art and Religion are, then, two roads by which men escape from circumstance to ecstasy. Between aesthetic and religious rapture there is a family alliance. Art and Religion are means to similar states of mind.
Clive Bell