Protect me from what I want.
Jenny Holzer
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Expiring for love is beautiful but stupid.
I'd paint long strips of canvas and abandon them on the beach, or put bread out in geometric patterns for the pigeons downtown. I wanted people to find something nice and intriguing to puzzle over. Then I'd go back to see if the things were still there, or if anyone would notice.
The desperate things seem to require attention, the lovely things seem to elicit celebration. If I had to choose, I would go to the awful in the hope that doing something could yield a happier result.
One thing that changed when I moved upstate was that I became interested in different materials. I started making the stone benches because I was seeing rocks.
The most profound things are inexpressible.
I think of a piece, and then people who are competent fabricate it. But lately I've started finger painting, which probably should be a joke but isn't!
That's the test of street art - to see if anybody stopped. People would cross out ones they didn't like and would star others. I liked that people would engage with them.
Sloppy thinking gets worse over time.
I wanted to support things that are helpful to people and maybe bash what I think is dangerous. So I switched from being everybody to being myself.
The epiphany for me was that I wasn't a writer, and I had to do something with these texts. I put them in the streets as posters.
Company makes my day.
I used language because I wanted to offer content that people - not necessarily art people - could understand.
On the worst days, I don't feel like an artist.
I'm always trying to bring unusual content to a different audience - a non-art-world audience.
When my daughter was young, she thought all electronic signs were mine.
It's fun wandering around other people's minds.
One of the glories and terrors of working in public is that you do see if your output means anything to anyone.
I began to see that the short texts I was writing were poster material.
Well, I think in trying to make life seem real enough that one is moved to do something about the more atrocious things. By going really far afield into a completely fake world, maybe there's a chance to make things resonant somehow - or in this case, truly terrifying. To make it as bad as the real stuff that's happening.
I moved to New York in the 1970s and started writing when I was at the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program.
So much of art-making is about reducing things to the essentials, so I don't feel particularly crippled by this. I don't want it to look natural because then I would be making a documentary film.
I am not free because I can be exploded anytime.
I'd been doing projects outdoors for the public. I made pigeons eat geometry by putting bread out in rhomboids and triangles. I don't know if this activity made sense, but the work was available.
I suspect you've noticed that making art can be lonely.
I get up about four times a night and go back to sleep, or not. Then I swill tea around 8 a.m. I answer e-mail, while I stall thinking about whatever scares me.
I seldom have my stuff up unless I'm testing it. If I'm worrying about a painting, I put it up and see if I detest it quickly or slowly. Otherwise I have things by other artists.
I really like doing the laundry, because I succeed at it. But I loathe putting it away. It is already clean.
It can be kind of gruesome at times, making things alone.
It's necessary to start most work alone. But I'm tickled to death when I can pull somebody in or join someone, whether it's borrowing poetry or traveling with an associate.
I wanted to be an abstract painter, but I was rotten at it.