56+ Patricia Piccinini Quotes On Art, Education And Strange

Quick Jump To
  • Top 10 Patricia Piccinini Quotes
  • Patricia Piccinini Quotes About Art
  • Short Patricia Piccinini Quotes
  • Life Lessons
  • Famous Patricia Piccinini Quotes

Top 10 Patricia Piccinini Quotes

  1. How does contemporary technology and culture changes our understanding of what it means to be human. What is our relationship with - and responsibilities towards - that which we create.
  2. The illusion of life is crucial for the work, otherwise the ideas wouldn't be able to jump across, people wouldn't engage with it.
  3. Perhaps because of this, many have looked at my practice in terms of science and technology, however, for me it is just as informed by Surrealism and mythology.
  4. I don't think 'Dark Heart' has to be malevolent. It conveys a sense of depth. There is a sense of questioning turmoil.
  5. Melbourne is a fantastic place to work, but it's not the centre of the world.
  6. I work with whatever mediums seems best suited to evoking the sorts of thoughts and emotions I am interested in playing with.
  7. I started thinking of digital imaging, not photography, in 1994 as it seemed the most appropriate way to deal with ideas of biotechnology and advertising. My practice is conceptual.
  8. The way we look at nineteenth-century English social realism and appreciate the working classes of the emerging industrial revolution.
  9. I struggle in life to find a sense of joy in things.
  10. We always use plywood rather than MDF for structural stuff for the same reasons [stability].

Patricia Piccinini Short Quotes

  • I don't want the ideas to be limited by what I can physically do. The ideas come first.
  • It's interesting to work with what's important today, which is meaningful for our everyday lives.
  • I would say my work is anti-ironic.
  • I don't connect accessibility with lowest common denominator.
  • If there are moments in my work when people find joy and humour, that's a real success for me.
  • I have a database of all my works that I maintain to keep track of works and editions.
  • The studio keeps notes on the details of editions and production processes and the like.
  • Now that other people have my works, it's really important to me that what they have has longevity.
  • Materials are very important to me, and always have been.
  • Artists make worlds for people to walk through.

Patricia Piccinini Quotes About Art

A child came up to me and asked 'am I dreaming?' I had a similar experience coming to the Art Gallery of South Australia when I was a child. My mum had done a workshop here and it stayed with me. It's an important formative time. — Patricia Piccinini

Most of the work I make uses materials that are a bit outside of the traditional fine art world. — Patricia Piccinini

I have been interested in visual arts since high school and, after realising that I had absolutely no interest in the economics degree I had undertaken at ANU, I started a BFA in Sydney which I completed at VCA in Melbourne. — Patricia Piccinini

I use whatever media I think will best express my ideas and therefore I don't have a lot invested in the idea of photography specifically. I am more interested in Art. — Patricia Piccinini

Patricia Piccinini Famous Quotes And Sayings

I think people perceive my creatures as absurd because they look different, but at the same time, they are a little bit familiar. I want people to feel a kind of empathy with them. When you think about it, all nature is kind of strange looking.. in fact, I'm a strange a looking creature. — Patricia Piccinini

The idea that we can have a new life form, what does it say about the zoo's main purpose, which is to preserve life? What does it say when the artificial and real animal can have the same attraction to people? — Patricia Piccinini

In the studio we use a pretty wide range of materials for the sculptures; silicone, fibreglass, human and animal hair, ABS plastic, dental acrylic, traditional and high-tech plasters, stainless steel, automotive paint, plywood, Britannia metal, found objects and taxidermy animals. — Patricia Piccinini

We tend to be talking to fabricators in the film and special effects or automotive customisation worlds. That having been said, I'm sure as more and more artists come to use these sorts of media, the expertise amongst conservators is going to keep pace with that. — Patricia Piccinini

I certainly don't see the humour in my work as something that detracts from its seriousness. It's just a way of making difficult messages more palatable. — Patricia Piccinini

In one hundred years time people will look back and think 'these people were really worried about the environment, they were looking at things to do with global warming, and this is why they were making work about these issues'. — Patricia Piccinini

It's much easier to do something that's seen as being serious because people accept it right away, they don't question what you do, they just accept, because they think you must be right. — Patricia Piccinini

Skywhale is ambiguous. I think she is beautiful, but a lot of people think she is grotesque. You are drawn in and repelled at the same time, and it has to have that dynamic. My work has a certain element of abject mutation, uncertainty and darkness. Even she is dark - I mean she has ten breasts. — Patricia Piccinini

I pretty much keep everything; we have drawers full of samples and tests and every old catalogue and magazine. — Patricia Piccinini

My practice is focused on bodies and relationships; the relationships between people and other creatures, between people and our bodies, between creatures and the environment, between the artificial and the natural. — Patricia Piccinini

Ideas rather than methods are central to they way I work, although drawing plays a central generative role in everything I do. — Patricia Piccinini

I put a lot of time and thought into my work, which I see as a sort of respect for both the work and the audience, and I have always been very concerned that the materiality of the work reflects that. — Patricia Piccinini

I have had sculptures cast in bronze, silver and aluminium. My drawings are all graphite or pigment ink and gouache on paper. — Patricia Piccinini

For one work we developed a human hair felt, which involved collecting and sorting hundreds of kilos of human hair, and then blending it will a tiny percentage of black merino followed by carding and felting. — Patricia Piccinini

My Father is a photographer, so it was always around. I was trained in painting, so I learnt a lot of skills about composition, light, colour, the formal attributes of images. — Patricia Piccinini

Of course, all my work is photographed and I also take quite a lot of photographs of work in production. — Patricia Piccinini

Thinking is a social process. I talk to everyone from children to anthropologists and philosophers. I try my ideas out on people and they talk back to you. That's how ideas get formed. — Patricia Piccinini

I tend to work towards specific exhibitions, so there will often be a big push towards the end when we're finishing off a bunch of stuff. — Patricia Piccinini

As we get older, our world gets smaller and we start to doubt and question. We are really suspicious of difference. — Patricia Piccinini

We did have one work where it looked like the fibreglass was discolouring, but it turned out it was reacting to the foam it was packed against in storage. We repaired it and sent it back with better packing. — Patricia Piccinini

I feel that there's hardly any irony in my work; if there's anything, there'll be sincerity, which people sometimes find hard to deal with. — Patricia Piccinini

We always use resin instead of polyurethane, even though it takes more work and is in places where it can't be seen, because resin tends to be more UV stable than urethane. — Patricia Piccinini

I am particularly interested in the way that the everyday realities of the world around us change these relations. — Patricia Piccinini

Obviously, I don't make an entire edition all at once, so the studio often goes back to produce editions, but that's a bit different. I guess I'm always thinking about the next work. — Patricia Piccinini

In the studio we spend a lot of time working our what materials will work best and also last. We do tests and come back to them years later to see how they are still performing, and this leads our decisions. — Patricia Piccinini

I finished VCA at the height of the last big recession in the early 90s, and seeing that I was not going to be able to join one of the dwindling number of commercial galleries, I started an ARI called the Basement Project which ran for three years. Things came a little at a time and all of a sudden it's 20 years later and I'm still making art, which is really all I ever wanted to do. — Patricia Piccinini

The studio does a lot of testing before we settle on a system. Unfortunately, this means that price tends to come pretty far down the list. — Patricia Piccinini

I usually have several things on the go. Whether it is my own drawings for the next work that I am working on while a sculpture is being fabricated or several works at different points in production. — Patricia Piccinini

Quality and longevity are the primary criteria, along with repairability and ease of production. — Patricia Piccinini

The silicone we use is the hardest, most UV stable we can get, and we have done enormous amounts of testing and research to get a paint solution that is extremely hardy and repairable. — Patricia Piccinini

I don't set out to make something that is repulsive and that would scare people. I know that some people don't like what I make, and don't find it cute, but that's hard for me to understand. — Patricia Piccinini

For me it is a matter of respect for the ideas in the work and the people who look at them. I absolutely hate it when works come back to the studio for repair, and I try to make sure that they never do. — Patricia Piccinini

Life Lessons by Patricia Piccinini

  1. Patricia Piccinini's work encourages us to reflect on the implications of technology on our lives, and to consider the ethical and moral implications of our actions.
  2. Through her art, Piccinini encourages us to think critically about our relationship with technology and the environment, and to consider the consequences of our choices.
  3. By exploring the boundaries of the human experience, Piccinini's work encourages us to question our assumptions and to think deeply about the implications of our actions.
Citation

Feel free to cite and use any of the quotes by Patricia Piccinini. For popular citation styles (APA, Chicago, MLA), go to citation page.

Embed HTML Link

Copy and paste this HTML code in your webpage