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mysterious simplest seems
Experience has shown that science frequently develops most fruitfully once we learn to examine the things that seem the simplest, instead of those that seem the most mysterious. Marvin Minsky
mysterious quite
Butterflies... not quite birds, as they were not quite flowers, mysterious and fascinating as are all indeterminate creatures. Elizabeth Goudge
mysterious-universe knowing frightened
I don't feel frightened by not knowing things. Richard P. Feynman
mysterious wonderful reverence
There are two questions that get to us all: Are we alone in the Universe? And, where did we come from? For me, science provides a much more satisfactory way to seek answers than does any religion I've come across. With that said, the universe is mysterious and wonderful. It fills me with reverence for nature and our place among the stars; our place in space. Bill Nye
painting people stop
People stop and say 'Why are you painting on a building?' Bob Murray
painting far-away form
There are forms that can only be seen when you are near a painting, others only appear when you are far away. Robert Henri
painting stem contrast
Painting stems from a sense of organisation, the sensed positions of contrasts. Not that it is about this. Roy Lichtenstein
painting someday get-back
I hope to actually get back to painting someday... soon. I sort of transitioned into cartooning from painting. Max Cannon
painting hell process
I'm not interested in painting; I'm not interested in making a picture. Then what the hell am I interested in? I must be interested in this process. Philip Guston
painting wells ifs
There are so many good ones to paint and if you paint as well as you really can and keep out of all other things and do that, it is the true thing. Ernest Hemingway
painting abandoned monet
Monet's work would have been even greater if he had not abandoned figure-painting. Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
painting someday louvre
Someday my paintings will be hanging in the Louvre. [Vincent Van Gogh] Irving Stone
painting function painter
The painter sees the semblance of things and repeats it. That is, without fabricating the things himself, he fabricates their semblance; and, if that no longer recalls any object, this artificially produced semblance functions only because it is scrutinized for likeness to a familiar - that is, object-related - semblance. Gerhard Richter