You know, artists don't really have all that much experience of life. We make a huge amount out of the small experience that we do have.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
There's a power in what we hold as artists, and part of that comes with responsibility... to share the human experience and really allow that to be seen.
So much of what we do as artists is a combination of personal experience and imagination, and how that all creeps into your work is not so linear.
Artists don't really want to be marginalized. They believe that everybody should be able to appreciate the experience that an artist gives them, an experience that connects us to each other in a deep way.
Artists change how we see the world - and that can have value in the way people do business.
Many artists use their own lives as a kind of case study to examine what it's like to be human.
For every artist, experience is never complete until it has been reproduced in creative work.
You know, for a long time I have been of the opinion that artists don't necessarily know what they're doing. You don't necessarily know what kind of universal concept you're tapping into.
You get to a point where you really can't manage more artists, because representing artists takes a lot of time.
All artists are people of growth. It's like food, you take the good and leave the rest.
Artists usually don't make all that much money, and they often keep their artistic hobby despite the money rather than due to it.