Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Man's soul is strengthened by suffering.
Renaissance always comes out of depression.
I am ready to rot in jail that art may live.
A piece of sculpture has to be more than a block of wood.
A city of homes should not be built as a business center.
Genius knocks on the door and gets no answer but its own echo.
I have labored to make the record of the great men of my time.
Mount Rushmore is eternal. It will stand until the end of time.
American art ought to be monumental, in keeping with American life.
No man can ever repay the brooding mother love to which he his life.
America has no monuments to ideas; her monuments are erected to individuals.
Each succeeding civilization forgets its predecessor. Civilizations are ghouls.
The aim of art is to understand and establish order, which is another form of beauty.
Democracy has betrayed the race, because education has not served man as was expected.
There is something in sheer volume that awes and terrifies, lifts us out of ourselves.
Art is not what most people think it to be. It is not an occupation of one-railed people.
Art does not exist for itself; it is but an avenue through and by which humanity expresses itself.
Nothing in life is without cause and effect. Nothing is merely a shell. Everything has some motive.
Art in America should be American, drawn from American sources, memorializing American achievement.
A monument's dimensions should be determined by the importance to civilization of the events commemorated.
I am ready to rot in jail for the rest of my life rather than admit that my small-minded enemies are right.
Nebraska people have the heart and power to create real beauty and art if they will only wake up and do it.
Beauty is like a soul that hovers over the surface of form. Its presence is unmistakable in art or in life.
You have here In New York one of the greatest and most picturesque and artistic structures in the world. I mean the Brooklyn Bridge.
Forget about getting a bank balance and don't be satisfied with things being good enough. Accept only that which is good or the best.
An artist will starve unless he is near big centers of population. We should create many of these cultural centers right in our own slums.
Motherhood is heroism. It is God-given, and yet men treat women as though of similar common clay, when in fact they are but lower than the angels.
Out of the west came Lincoln, and all that he had he gave to the preservation of the Union that had been bought so dearly and was falling to pieces.
For many years I had been aware that women were not only most important creations in the universe, but the nearest approach that man could reach to the divine.
The Greeks, the Italians, and the Indians, from whom we get our ideas, erect monuments to ideas; we erect ours to men, and of such monuments we have an oversupply.
We have been concentrating on the banks, business and our bellies. We have neglected the spiritual and cultural. It was because Rome and Athens neglected these things that they fell.
Women have always been the world's burden bearers. Ever since history began the great burden of the world's faith, its belief in immortality has been carried in the arms of its women.
You may go from the Battery to Harlem, and in our monuments and statues of public men you will see the slavish adherence to Greek and Roman ideals, from which our artists cannot get away.
Ten thousand years from now our civilization will have passed without leaving a trace. A new race of people will inhabit the earth. They will come to Mount Rushmore and read the record we have made.
Stone Mountain Memorial is the greatest project of its sort ever conceived. It should be finished, because it represent an idea as deep, as basic as the rocks on which our wonderful continent rests.
The purpose of the memorial is to communicate the founding, expansion, preservation, and unification of the United States with colossal statues of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt.
Lincoln has been my first love, and as always with first loves, it fixed a standard. So I scaled sunlit heights with Lincoln and produced the colossal marble head in the rotunda of the capitol of the United States.
I believe and find in my study of art that the real artist is nine-tenths of the time a craftsman, and it is only in that small one-tenth of the time that he rises to the elevated position of a prophet and a master.
That is how America gets her art: Contracting firms get the contract and the honor. Starving artists do the work. The government pays for sculpturing thousands of dollars, of which the sculptor gets a hundred or so.
Washington and Lincoln mean as much to us as any two men could mean to a civilization, a people, and age, but I told Mr. Coolidge when he dedicated this monument that this rock is being carved with a monument that will outlive our government.
If you are an artist, you may live with Lincoln. You sit with him, your coat is spread to keep the snow from the grave of Ann Rutledge; you will walk with Washington through the snow and suffer with him as you note the bloodstained footsteps at Valley Forge.
Hence, let us place there, carved high, as close to heaven as we can, the words of our leaders, their faces, to show posterity what manner of men they were. Then breathe a prayer that these records will endure until the wind and rain alone shall wear them away.
I was born in the Golden West, reared in the arms of the Church, deluged with saints to draw from, and suckled on Italian art: my slates were covered from end to end with portraits of Savonarola, Fra Angelico, and Wild Bill and Sitting Bull; I knew all equally well and admired them about alike.
I have a very unsatisfactory and incomplete knowledge of Brooklyn and cannot discuss specifically either what you can do here or what possibilities the city shows in an artistic way. I am not a foreigner but coming here as I do after a long stay abroad, I think things here strike me much as they strike a foreigner.
There is none of that feeling about art that you meet everywhere in Europe. There you will hear people say, 'Oh, you must see such-and-such a statue at 4 o'clock in the afternoon; then the light is beautiful,' or, 'See this monument in the early morning; the light is best for it then.' Do you ever hear anything like that from an American?