Ross Wetzsteon
As George Russell defined a literary movement: “Five or six men who live in the same town and hate each other.
— Ross Wetzsteon
Gertrude’s remedy for her mood swings was to print up hundreds of black-bordered calling cards embossed with the single word “Woe,” which she handed out gaily declaring, “Woe is me.
— Ross Wetzsteon
It might be said of Miss [June] Barnes,” [T.S. Eliot] wrote, “who is incontestably one of the most original writers of our time, that never has so much genius been combined with so little talent.
— Ross Wetzsteon
[I’t was [Barnett] Newman who made the famously wry remark, “Aesthetics is for the artist as ornithology is for the birds,
— Ross Wetzsteon
There is only one thing left for you to do,” John Sloan advised one artist. “Pull off your socks and try with your feet.
— Ross Wetzsteon
© Spoligo | 2024 All rights reserved