I always felt I needed to teach to survive.

Pop art is the inedible raised to the unspeakable.

Art is man's distinctly human way of fighting death.

But I think doctors have always been either honest or dishonest.

I think the leaders inevitably express the people they are leading.

Architecture should be dedicated to keeping the outside out and the inside in.

It took me fifty years to deal with the Holocaust at all. And I did it in a literary way.

People like me, who care about printing, constitute the tiniest lunatic fringe in the nation.

Of course, I did lots of what would be called graphic design now, what used to be called commercial art.

I always felt that I had anxiety of survival in terms of livelihood even when I was making plenty of money.

I think there is an element of nihilism about, but I don't think most artists feel their work is meaningless.

The art schools... you get young kids doing the most vile and meaningless crap. I think they believe every bit of it.

I think if you touch ordinary people, they're simply ordinary people, the way they've always been. They work hard, they don't have really as much as they should.

Works of art produced in the contemporary world are a further expression of that. But I don't think there is an active, ongoing nihilist self-consciousness in the artist.

There is, however, a change going on in the world. There's far more interest in drawing now than there has been in a long, long time. Schools are beginning to teach drawing again in a serious and meaningful way.

I think it has other roots, has to do, in part, with a general anxiety in contemporary life... nuclear bombs, inequality of possibility and chance, inequality of goods allotted to us, a kind of general racist, unjust attitude that is pervasive.

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