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Ben nicholson insights

Explore a captivating collection of Ben nicholson’s most profound quotes, reflecting his deep wisdom and unique perspective on life, science, and the universe. Each quote offers timeless inspiration and insight.

Satire is fascinating stuff. It's deadly serious, and when politics begin to break down, there is a drift towards satire, because it's the only thing that makes any sense.

I see man more as an instrument or an agent more than anything else.

I'm not an expert, but I want to be.

I'm interested in locating the holy grail of the minimum means to express the most complex ideas.

Very rarely are we directing or cutting someone elses boards. We concept, direct, shoot, animate and edit almost everything that comes through here.

Realism' has been abandoned in the search for reality: the 'principal objective' of abstract art is precisely this reality.

I feel most strongly about Jerusalem, because architects ultimately have to address that city.

When I left school I went on trip around the world - I only got as far as Australia, but like a bloody fool I cut it short because of a girl. It's probably one of my big regrets in life.

Politics are beautiful. They enable a community to live collectively with one another. It's not about stabbing each other in the back it's about enabling people to reach their dreams and pursue happiness.

I haven't done any building designs since the Loaf House.

Student journeys which were important to me were Sicily, Greece, and Egypt, where I really saw these buildings, and that is where you're able to grasp what things mean.

The kind of painting which I find exciting is not necessarily representational or non-representational, but it is musical and architectural... Whether this visual relationship is slightly more or slightly less abstract is, for me, beside the point.

The Irish and British, they love satire, its a large part of the culture.

If you're into architecture and you're from the West, everything is hors d'oeuvres for working to rebuild the Temple. Ultimately you're led there. You can't escape it.

I have a book of buildings from 25,000 BC. These are huts built out of mammoth bones. These buildings were beautifully made, from the bones of the body into shelter.

The latest page I've been working is about the organization of the pantheon of the gods. Who's indebted to whom, how they are related, who screwed whose uncle or grandmother, all of that.

I started producing work with an ecstatic addiction.

You can just drift unhappily towards this vision of heaven on earth, and ultimately that is what architecture is a vision of: Heaven on earth, at it's best.

The beast for me is greed. Whether you read Dante, Swift, or any of these guys, it always boils down to the same thing: the corruption of the soul.

I deeply believe in pluralism. I believe in the close proximity of multiple systems or agnostic systems.

What I feel bad about is not having published very much in the last few years.

Painting' and 'religious experience' are the same thing. It is a question of the perpetual motion of a right idea.

Any ideal system is its own worst enemy, and as soon as you start to implement these visions of grandeur, they just fall apart and turn into a complete tyranny.

At this present time, matter is still the best way to think of architecture, but I'm not so sure for very long. The computer is radicalizing the way we think about our world.

We are pushing hard to find quality advertising clients.

The corruption of the American soul is consumerism.

I'm just interested in meditating on certain ideas, and I like to draw: that's my way of thinking.