Persons [ ] Μy Success will Always be Less than my Failure | Alberto Giacometti, 1901-1966

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Μy Success will Always be Less than my Failure | Alberto Giacometti, 1901-1966Bust2Bof2BAnnette2BVIII252C2B1962 1
Alberto Giacometti, Small self-portrait, 1921   Alberto Giacometti, Bust of Annette VIII, 1962
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“It is impossible to do a thing the way I see it because the closer I get the more differently I see.”

“The human face is as strange to me as a countenance, which, the more one looks at it,
the more it closes itself off and escapes by the steps of unknown stairways.”

“The object of art is not to reproduce reality, but to create a reality of the same intensity.”

“Artistically I am still a child with a whole life ahead of me to discover and create.
I want something, but I won’t know what it is until I succeed in doing it.”

“The one thing that fills me with enthusiasm is to try, despite everything,
to get nearer to those visions that seem so hard to express.”

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Alberto Giacometti, The Palace at 4 a.m., 1932
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“When I see a head from a great distance, it ceases to be a sphere
and becomes an extreme confusion falling down into the abyss.”

“The head is what matters. The rest of the body plays the part of
antennae making life possible for people and life itself is inside the skull.”

“At first, one sees the person who is modelling; but little by little, all of the
possible sculptures that could be made come between artist and model.”

“The more I work, the more I see things differently, that is, everything gains
in grandeur every day, becomes more and more unknown, more and more
beautiful. The closer I come, the grander it is, the more remote it is.”

“That’s the terrible thing: the more one works on a picture,
the more impossible it becomes to finish it.”

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Alberto Giacometti, 1927
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“All the art of the past rises up before me, the art of all ages and all civilizations,
everything becomes simultaneous, as if space had replaced time. Memories of
works of art blend with affective memories, with my work, with my whole life.”

“In every work of art the subject is primordial, whether the artist knows it or not.
The measure of the formal qualities is only a sign of the measure of the artist’s
obsession with his subject; the form is always in proportion to the obsession.”

“All the sculptures of today, like those of the past, will end one day in pieces…
So it is important to fashion ones work carefully in its smallest recess and
charge every particle of matter with life.”

“Taste for things of the past evolves, doesn’t it? What was a
masterpiece a hundred years ago is no longer so today.”

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Alberto Giacometti, The Invisible Object (Hands Holding the Void) 1935    Alberto Giacometti, Suspended Ball, 1931.

“I paint and sculpt to get a grip on reality… to protect myself.”

“When I make my drawings… the path traced by my pencil on the sheet of paper is,
to some extent, analogous to the gesture of a man groping his way in the darkness.”

“If we master a bit of drawing, everything else is possible.”

“I’ve tried doing so, for it was never my intention to paint only with gray. But in the course of my
work I have eliminated one color after another, and what has remained is gray, gray, gray!”

“Only reality interests me now and I know I could
spend the rest of my life in copying a chair.”

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Alexander Liberman, Alberto and Annette Giacometti, 1950

“Art is the residue of vision.”

“When you look at art made by other people, you see what you need to see in it.”

“I’ve been fifty thousand times to the Louvre. I have copied everything in drawing, trying to understand.”

“It was always disappointing to see that what I could really master in terms of form boiled down to so little.”

“In a burning building I would save a cat before a Rembrandt.”

“When one lives with problems of importance, the prostitute is ideal.
You pay, and whether or not you fail is of no importance. She doesn’t care.”

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Alberto Giacometti, Surrealist Table, 1933       Alberto Giacometti, Throat Cut, 1930-33
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“All I can do will only ever be a faint image of what I see and my success
will always be less than my failure or perhaps equal to the failure.”

“I don’t know if I work in order to do something, or in order to know why I can’t do what I want to do.”

“What I am looking for is not happiness. I work solely because it is impossible for me to do anything else.”

“The form is always the measure of the obsession.”

“In the past I have never thought about loneliness when working, and I don’t think about it now.
Yet there must be a reason for the fact that so many people talk about it.”

“The older I grow, the more I find myself alone.”

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Alberto Giacometti modeling a bust, 1965

“Once the object has been constructed, I have a tendency to discover in it,
transformed and displaced, images, impressions, facts which have deeply moved me.”

“If only someone else could paint what I see, it would be
marvellous, because then I wouldn’t have to paint at all.”

“Failure is my best friend. If I succeeded, it would be like dying. Maybe worse.”

“The more you fail, the more you succeed. It is only when everything is lost and – instead of
giving up – you go on, that you experience the momentary prospect of some slight progress.
Suddenly you have the feeling – be it an illusion or not – that something new has opened up.”

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Man Ray, Woman Holding Giacometti’s Disagreeable Object, 1931-32    Ottilia, Bruno, Alberto and Diego, Stampa, 1910
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“If the glass there in front of me astounds me more than all the glasses I’ve seen in painting, and if I even think that the greatest architectural wonder of the world couldn’t affect me more than this glass, it’s really not worth while going to the Indies to see some temple or other when I have as much and more right in front of me.”

“I don’t know who I am or who I was. I know it less than ever. I do and I don’t identify myself with myself. Everything is totally contradictory, but maybe I have remained exactly as I was as a small boy of twelve.”

 Alberto Giacometti, 1901-1966

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Alberto Giacometti, Hands Holding a Void, 1935    Alberto Giacometti, Skeleton in a Cage and Seahorse, 1933
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Alberto Giacometti, Seated Nude, 1961
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Alberto Giacometti, Letter to Pierre Matisse, 1947
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Alberto Giacometti, Composition I, 1935         Alberto Giacometti, The Cage, 1930-31
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Alberto Giacometti, The Palace at 4 a.m, 1932
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Alberto Giacometti modeling a bust 1965
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Gordon Parks, Alberto Giacometti, 1951
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Henri Cartier-Bresson, Annette and Alberto Giacometti, Paris, c. 1946
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Herbert Matter, Alberto Giacometti’s studio                       Ernst Scheidegger, Annette Giacometti and Friend, c 1950
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Herbert Matter, Alberto Giacometti
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Alberto Giacometti and Samuel Beckett looking at tree sculpture for Waiting for Godot
Alexander Liberman, Alberto, Diego and Annette Giacometti, 1950s
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 Annette and Alberto Giacometti, 1951       Sabine Weiss, Annette and Alberto Giacometti, 1954
Annette Arm (1923–1993) was born in Pregny, near Geneva. After taking a secretarial course, she worked at the Red Crossduring the Second World War. This was when she met Alberto Giacometti — a refugee in Switzerland since January 1942 – in a brasserie. In July 1946, she joined him in Paris, and they were married in 1949. Up until  Alberto’s death in 1966, Annette was his main female model.
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Annette posing  as a model for Alberto Giacometti, Paris, 1962
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Jacques-André Boiffard, Alberto Giacometti, 1931
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Cuno Amiet, Portrait of Alberto Giacometti, 1910   Giovanni Giacometti, The painter (Alberto Giacometti), 1921
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Henri Cartier Bresson, Alberto Giacometti, 1961        Robert Doisneau, Alberto and Anette Giacometti in Café Express, Paris, 1957
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H.C. Bresson, Giacometti on the way to his Studio, Stampa, 1961   Alberto with his sister Ottilia Giacometti, 1923
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Yannis Tsarouchis and Alberto Giacometti in Milan, 1961
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Henri Cartier-Bresson, Alberto Giacometti, Rue d’Alésia, Paris, 1961

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