Zitat des Tages von Howard Hodgkin:
I hate painting.
In the United States there has been a kind of a structure in the Modern art world. The New York School was nearly a coherent thing-for a minute.
My friends tend to be writers. I think writers and painters are really all the same-we just sit in our rooms.
Collecting has been my great extravagance. It's a way of being. I collect for the same reason that I eat too much-I'm one of nature's shoppers.
The picture surface recedes just as much in the 20th century as it did in the 15th. The techniques of making pictures have hardly changed.
I once was interviewed and got so exasperated that I said, 'What do you want, a shopping list?' They kept asking, 'What's in this picture?'
My language is what I use, and if I lost that, I wouldn't be able to say anything.
I'm vulnerable to criticism. Any artist is, because you work alone in your studio and, until recently, critics were the only way you'd get any feedback.
A painting is finished when the subject comes back, when what has caused the painting to be made comes back as an object.
I am happy for people to talk about my pictures, but I wish devoutly that I was not expected to talk about them myself.
I am isolated as an artist, not as a person.
You keep on balancing and balancing and balancing until the picture wins, because then the subject's turned into the picture.
I fell through a crack for years. Historically, I am a nothing because I fit in no category. I can only be me.
I don't really have a historical overview of my work at all. I'm not an art historian. I don't see that there's this period and that period.
I don't look at the work of my contemporaries very much; I tend to look at pictures by dead artists. It's much easier to get near their paintings.
In England, it's thought to be morally suspect to worry about what your surroundings look like.
Matisse was very clear about saying that you have to blow your own trumpet and explain yourself, which I think has been slightly forgotten.
I think words come between the spectator and the picture.
I look at my pictures, and I think, 'Well, how did I do that?'
When I finish a painting, it usually looks as surprising to me as to anyone else.
I find old copies of National Gallery catalogues, which are written in the dryest possible prose, infinitely soothing.
I don't think you can lightly paint a picture. It's an activity I take very seriously.
A collection makes its own demands. Many artists have been collectors. I think of it rather as an illness. I felt it was using up too much energy.
I think that words are often extraneous to what I do.