to create for the artistic joy
- Things people say of a man do not alter a man, he is what he is, public opinion is of no value whatsoever. To create not for the artistic joy, but for the amusement of people means to suppress individualism, forget culture, annihilate style, and surrender everything that is valuable.
- true artist and amusing craftsman
linked mentions for "to create for the artistic joy":
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true artist and amusing craftsman
The true artist is a man who believes absolutely in himself, because he is absolutely himself, takes no notice whatever of the public, a beautiful
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change conformity, disobedience, and novelty
original virtue through disobedience art as mode of individualism to create for the artistic joy public beauty and novelty change predictable human
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individualism realisation receptivity and imagination
art as mode of individualism true artist and amusing craftsman to create for the artistic joy receptivity and imaginative medium be thyself and the
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pip-boy
The Fallout franchise, known for its blend of post-nuclear apocalypse and 1950s American nostalgia, critiques consumer culture. However, its TV adaptation prioritizes spectacle over depth, lacking the philosophical substance of sci-fi greats like Dune or works by Philip K. Dick.
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training wheels
In my journaling and coaching, I use a construct of a tricycle — a bicycle with the additional wheels intended for young children. ‘Training
The true artist is a man who believes absolutely in himself, because he is absolutely himself, takes no notice whatever of the public, a beautiful
original virtue through disobedience art as mode of individualism to create for the artistic joy public beauty and novelty change predictable human
art as mode of individualism true artist and amusing craftsman to create for the artistic joy receptivity and imaginative medium be thyself and the
The Fallout franchise, known for its blend of post-nuclear apocalypse and 1950s American nostalgia, critiques consumer culture. However, its TV adaptation prioritizes spectacle over depth, lacking the philosophical substance of sci-fi greats like Dune or works by Philip K. Dick.
In my journaling and coaching, I use a construct of a tricycle — a bicycle with the additional wheels intended for young children. ‘Training