If the world really looks like that I will paint no more!
Ninety per cent of the theory of Impressionist painting is in . . . Ruskin's Elements.
I think only of my painting, and if I were to drop it, I think I'd go crazy.
What can be said about a man who is interested in nothing but his painting? It's a pity if a man can only interest himself in one thing. But I can't do any thing else. I have only one interest.
No one but myself knows the anxiety I go through and the trouble I give myself to finish paintings which do not satisfy me and seem to please so very few others.
I never draw except with brush and paint...
No, I'm not a great painter. Neither am I a great poet.
I do what I can to convey what I experience before nature and most often, in order to succeed in conveying what I feel, I totally forget the most elementary rules of painting, if they exist that is.
Apart from painting and gardening, I'm not good at anything.
The real subject of every painting is light.
I am very depressed and deeply disgusted with painting. It is really a continual torture.
Most people think I paint fast. I paint very slowly.
I still have a lot of pleasure doing them, but as time goes by I come to appreciate more clearly which paintings are good and which should be discarded.
I know well enough in advance that you'll find my paintings perfect. I know that if they are exhibited they'll be a great success, but I couldn't be more indifferent to it since I know they are bad, I'm certain of it.
I would advise young artists to paint as they can, as long as they can, without being afraid of painting badly.
No one is an artist unless he carries his picture in his head before painting it, and is sure of his method and composition.
I'm working hard with more determination than ever. My success at the Salon led to my selling several paintings and since your absence I have made 800 francs; I hope, when I have contracts with more dealers, it will be better still.
While adding the finishing touches to a painting might appear insignificant, it is much harder to do than one might suppose...
I am following Nature without being able to grasp her...I perhaps owe having become a painter to flowers.
I would advise young artists . . . to paint as they can, as long as they can, without being afraid of painting badly . . . . If their painting doesn't improve by itself, it means that nothing can be done - and I wouldn't do anything!
The effect of sincerity is to give one's work the character of a protest. The painter being concerned only with conveying his impression, simply seeks to be himself and no one else.
Zaandam has enough to paint for a lifetime.
I'm in fine fettle and fired with a desire to paint.
I'm not performing miracles, I'm using up and wasting a lot of paint...
I haven't many years left ahead of me and I must devote all my time to painting, in the hope of achieving something worthwhile in the end, something if possible that will satisfy me.
Critic asks: 'And what, sir, is the subject matter of that painting?' - 'The subject matter, my dear good fellow, is the light.
I'm never finished with my paintings; the further I get, the more I seek the impossible and the more powerless I feel.
I am good at only two things, and those are gardening and painting.