“Today a reader, tomorrow a leader.” InspirationalBookTodayHappinessReadingLeadershipAttitudeLeaderLearningTeacherReaderWise WordsTomorrowOptimismCriticsReading BooksLeaders Of Tomorrow Author:Margaret Fuller
“Studio Ghosts: When you're in the studio painting, there are a lot of people in there with you - your teachers, friends, painters from history, critics... and one by one if you're really painting, they walk out. And if you're really painting YOU walk out.” PeopleIfsInspirationalArtWalksTeacherPaintingCriticsStudiosGhostPainter Author:Philip Guston
“The nearest approach to the infallible in literary judgment is represented in the colossal work of the teacher of all these three [Edmund Gosse, Edward Dowden and George Saintsbury], the greatest critic that ever lived - not an Englishman, but a Frenchman, the wonderful Sainte-Beuve.” ThreeTeacherWonderfulJudgmentApproachCriticsEnglishmenInfallibleColossalFrenchmen Author:Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve
“You know, I really don't think you learn from teachers. You learn from work. I think what you learn, really, is how to be- you have to be your own toughest critic, and you only learn that from work, from seeing work.” ThinkingKnowsTeacherSeeingPhotographyCriticsBe You Author:Garry Winogrand
“Progress is slow partly from mere intellectual inertia. In a subject where there is no agreed procedure for knocking out errors, doctrines have a long life. A professor teaches what he was taught, and his pupils, with a proper respect and reverence for teachers, set up a resistance against his critics for no other reason than that it was he whose pupils they were.” LongReasonTeachTeacherProgressSubjectsTaughtIntellectualErrorsMereCriticsResistanceDoctrineProfessorsReverenceLong LifeProceduresPupilsKnockingInertia Author:Joan Robinson
“My writing of fiction comes under a very general heading of those teachers, critics, scholars who like to try their own hand once or twice in their lives.” WritingTryingHandsFictionTeacherCriticsScholarHeadings Author:George Steiner
“In any case, once you're dealing on a nonverbal level, ambiguity is unavoidable. But it's the ambiguity of all art, of a fine piece of music or a painting - you don't need written instructions by the composer or painter accompanying such works to 'explain' them. “Explaining” them contributes nothing but a superficial 'cultural' value which has no value except for critics and teachers who have to earn a living.” NeedsArtValuesLevelsCasesTeacherPiecesWrittenPaintingFineCriticsPainterInstructionComposerSuperficialExplainingAmbiguityNonverbal Author:Stanley Kubrick
“Many critics have become de facto teachers. That is a lot of responsibility, and I think it should be wielded with care. Most people appreciate sincere guidance.” PeopleThinkingShouldCareResponsibilityTeacherAppreciateCriticsGuidanceSincere Author:Michael Hersch