Шпигельман, Арт цитаты

Арт Шпигельман — американский художник и писатель, автор и издатель романов-комиксов. Наиболее известен по комиксу «Маус», получившему Пулитцеровскую премию. Wikipedia  

✵ 15. Февраль 1948
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Шпигельман, Арт: Цитаты на английском языке

“There's a therapeutic aspect to all making, but the nature of working is to compress, condense, and shape stuff, not to just expunge it. It's not just an exorcism.”

As quoted in "Art Spiegelman on ‘Breakdowns’ Redux and the Dark Side of Tina Fey" by Rebecca Milzoff in New York magazine (8 October 2008).

“Disaster is my muse.”

Источник: Maus I: A Survivor's Tale: My Father Bleeds History

“No, darling! To die it's easy… But you have to stuggle for life!”

Вариант: To die, it's easy. But you have to struggle for life.
Источник: The Complete Maus

“Comics seem to be cooking these days. It's like being a rock star.”

As quoted in "Breakfast with the FT: Art Spiegelman 'Drawn from Memory'" in Financial Times (29 November 2008).

“I was asking the school shrink, 'Has anyone ever told you the top of your head looks like a penis?' I thought that was a really funny thing to tell a bald shrink.”

As quoted in "Breakfast with the FT: Art Spiegelman 'Drawn from Memory'" in Financial Times (29 November 2008).

“A manifesto, a diary, a crumpled suicide note, and a still relevant love letter.”

On his work Breakdowns : A Portrait of the Artist as a Young %@?*! (1978; 2008) as quoted in "Art Spiegelman on ‘Breakdowns’ Redux and the Dark Side of Tina Fey" by Rebecca Milzoff in New York magazine (8 October 2008) http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2008/10/art_spiegelman_on_breakdowns_r.html.

“I became a philosophy major literally to understand why I should put up with this shit.”

After taking all the difficult art classes, Spiegelman was required to take the easy ones to obtain an arts major. He discusses here switching instead to a philosophy major; as quoted in "Breakfast with the FT: Art Spiegelman 'Drawn from Memory'" in Financial Times (29 November 2008).

“What Franz Kafka was to the first half of the 20th century, Philip K. Dick is to the second half.”

As quoted in The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick : Selected Literary and Philosophical Writings (1995) edited by Lawrence Sutin, p. x.