Quote by Paul Klee
Children also have artistic ability, and there is wisdom in there

Children also have artistic ability, and there is wisdom in there having it! The more helpless they are, the more instructive are the examples they furnish us and they must be preserved free of corruption from an early age. – Paul Klee

Other quotes by Paul Klee

Beauty is as relative as light and dark. Thus, there exists no beautiful woman, none at all, because you are never certain that a still far more beautiful woman will not appear and completely shame the supposed beauty of the first. – Paul Klee

Category:
Beauty
Author
Paul Klee
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When looking at any significant work of art, remember that a more significant one probably has had to be sacrificed. – Paul Klee

Category:
Sacrifice
Author
Paul Klee
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Color has taken possession of me; no longer do I have to chase after it. I know that it has hold of me forever… Color and I are one. I am a painter. – Paul Klee

Category:
Color
Author
Paul Klee
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Other Quotes from
Age
category

To be seventy years young is sometimes far more cheerful and hopeful than to be forty years old. – Oliver Wendell Holmes (Thanks Janice!)

Category:
Age

Every age can be enchanting, provided you live within it. – Brigitte Bardot

Category:
Age

There is no self-knowledge but an historical one. No one knows what he himself is who does not know his fellow men, especially the most prominent one of the community, the masters master, the genius of the age. – Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel

Category:
Age

Like our shadows, our wishes lengthen as our sun declines. – Edward Young, Night Thoughts

Category:
Age

Random Quotes

Jealousy—Tormenting yourself, for fear you should be tormented by another. – Paul Chatfield

Category:
Jealousy

In the music business, especially the country music business, every 10 years or so youre going to have this changing of the guard, this wave of new artists that comes in. – Jason Aldean

Category:
Business

Families are like fudge — mostly sweet with a few nuts. – Author Unknown

Category:
Family

Sir Walter, being strangely surprised and put out of his countenance at so great a table, gives his son a damned blow over the face. His son, as rude as he was, would not strike his father, but strikes over the face the gentleman that sat next to him and said Box about: twill come to my father anon. – John Aubrey

Category:
Father