THINGS WE MADETHINGS WE FOUND

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quotes by The Made Shop

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I expect anything that happens.

Flannery O’Connor

(no idea where she said this/wrote this, nor the context from which it is pulled, but this sentence may be one of the best confessions of faith a realist can make.)

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When your work speaks for itself, don’t interrupt
— Henry Kaiser (via rafaleandro)

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Just because I rock doesn’t mean I’m made of stone.

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Cynics are, in the end, only idealists with awkwardly high standards.

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Happy is he who still loves something he loved in the nursery: He has not been broken in two by time; he is not two men, but one, and he has saved not only his soul but his life.
— Chesterton

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I heard the siren scream, but that was all there was to that-an eighteen-inch margin again. A man was killed by a falling cornice. I was not a party to the tragedy, and again the inches counted heavily. I mention these merely to show that New York is peculiarly constructed to absorb almost anything that comes along (whether a thousand-foot liner out of the East or a twenty-thousand-man convention out of the West) without inflicting the event on its inhabitants; so that every event is, in a sense, optional, and the inhabitant is in the happy position of being able to choose his spectacle and so conserve his soul.”
E.B. White, excerpt from “Here is New York

(via warden)

This almost happened to me in front of my apartment when the cornice fell 5 stories right above our entry.

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I don’t think I can swear in my head voice.
— Katie Chastain, finalizing lyrics. (via nathanjohnson)

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  • Tom: “We don’t have to label what we’re doing. I just… I need some consistency. I need to know you won’t wake up tomorrow and feel a different way.”
  • Summer: “I can’t promise you that. Nobody can. Anyone who does is a liar.”

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The world, somebody wrote, is the place we prove real by dying in it
— ? {via}

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slaughterhouse90210:
“All grown-ups were children first. (But few remember it).”  — Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, The Little Prince

slaughterhouse90210:

“All grown-ups were children first. (But few remember it).”
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, The Little Prince

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Steinbeck's East of Eden

ronenreblogs:

damadesign:

In uncertainty I am certain that underneath their topmost layers of frailty men want to be good and want to be loved. Indeed, most of their vices are attempted short cuts to love. When a man comes to die, no matter what his talents and influence and genius, if he dies unloved his life must me a failure to him and his dying a cold horror. It seems to me that if you and I must choose between two courses of thought. or action, we should remember our dying and try so to live that our death brings no pleasure to the world. We have only one story. All novels, all poetry, are built on the neverending contest in ourselves of good and evil. And it occurs to me that evil must constantly respawn, while good, while virtue is venerable as nothing else in the world is.” (this book is turning a page in my life)

I haven’t read this book yet. I want to.

Someone close to me has a tattoo from it.

(still)

Glad you posted this, Amanda. How’s North Carolina? :)

Yes. One of my favorite books.

I got into a long, heated argument about this book with a girl foolish girl at a barbeque. She was saying she admired but didn’t like (like = approve of) East of Eden because she thought Steinbeck had an “unredemptive,” “cynical,” and “hopeless” view of the world. I, of course, started talking about the intentional fallacy and how it really couldn’t matter less what Steinbeck thought of the world; nor, really, what he thought of East of Eden. I said we should be concerned with the work in and of itself and on its own terms. She said that was a selfish way to think of a book (i.e. to be more concerned with my relation to the art/work than with the artist’s/author’s relation to the art/work).

But, so, and, as a creative person I both make my own art/work and consume other people’s art/work. When making things, I’m totally and exhaustively concerned with my relation to the work as author. When consuming I’m totally and (almost) exhaustively concerned with, again, my relation to the work over the author’s relation to the work. I assume (or at least hope) that other people viewing my work don’t care what I was thinking when I made it.

And of course this is selfish. But I don’t think art/work can be made nor consumed as anything other than a single self/author. This doesn’t rule out artistic collaboration nor a cultural/communal appreciation and understanding of works of art. But this creative collaboration or communal consumption of art is still (and only, and necessarily) a community insofar as it is made of individuals creating or consuming on their own, in parallel or series, with other selves.

As a final dig note, can anyone read the above quoted excerpt and think that East of Eden, on its own terms, is either unredemptive, cynical, or hopeless?

QEDB (quod erat demonstrandum, bitches!)

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The unreal is more powerful than the real. Because nothing is as perfect as you can imagine it. Because it’s only intangibles, ideas, concepts, beliefs, fantasies that last. Stone crumbles. Wood rots. People, well, they die.

Chuck Palahniuk, Choke.

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[Ronen, this seems quite relevant to our “tension” conversation earlier today, no? Am I correct in assuming you would agree with this quote? For the record, I do not. Agree, that is.]

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One doesn’t want to be a victim of good luck.
Ronen V

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[He] was said to have lunched every day at the Eiffel Tower’s summit cafe because it was the only place in Paris where he did not have to look at it.

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It is a rare mind indeed that can render the hitherto non-existent blindingly obvious. The cry ‘I could have thought of that’ is a very popular and misleading one, for the fact is that they didn’t, and a very significant and revealing fact it is too.

Douglas Adams (via spytap)

(via ronenreblogs)

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