NITCH

Photo of Anne Sexton

Anne Sexton // "Watch out for intellect, because it knows so much it knows nothing and leaves you hanging upside down, mouthing knowledge as your heart falls out of your mouth."

Photo of Keith Richards

Keith Richards // "To me, life is a wild animal. You hope to deal with it when it leaps at you."

Photo of Virginia Woolf

Virginia Woolf // "It is poetry that I want now...long poems; I want the concentration, and the romance, and the words all glued together, fused, glowing."

Photo of David Lynch

David Lynch // "Life is filled with abstractions and the only way we make heads or tails of it is through intuition. Intuition is seeing the solution. It’s emotion and intellect going together."

Photo of Zadie Smith

Zadie Smith // "I think the traditional 'feminine' arts of homemaking or dressmaking or whatever are shamefully undervalued. They’re doing what I’m doing: making a space for another person to be in. Creating an architecture for life. There’s no greater task but also no more mundane one."

Photo of Michel Foucault

Michel Foucault // "What strikes me is the fact that in our society, art has become something which is related only to objects and not to individuals, or to life. That art is something which is specialized or which is done by experts who are artists. But couldn't everyone's life become a work of art? Why should the lamp or the house be an art object, but not our life?"

Photo of Charles Bukowski

Charles Bukowski // "Ben phoned and said, 'There’s a rumor going around that you’re dead.' ...'Well,' I said, 'Maybe the dead can’t tell, maybe I’m dead...' 5 years ago somebody started it: 'Bukowski’s dead.' Now it’s beginning again. They want me dead very much. I seem to be very much on the mind of the death-wishers. It’s irritating to some that a man nearing sixty continues to write. It should give them some hope instead of rancor. I’ll die, my friends, I have no doubt of that. But I think that the history of our streets would have less ugly names if we could celebrate men’s lives also.'"

Photo of Miles Davis

Miles Davis // "There’s no shortcut. I’m no accident. People like to say it’s natural. It’s not so. You have to practice and you have to study."

Photo of Hermann Hesse

Hermann Hesse // "This day will never come again and anyone who fails to eat and drink and taste and smell it will never have it offered to him again in all eternity. The sun will never shine as it does today...You must play your part and sing a song, one of your best."

Photo of Aldous Huxley

Aldous Huxley // "Take the piano teacher...he always says, Relax, relax. But how can you relax while your fingers are rushing over the keys? Yet they have to relax. The singing teacher and the golf pro say exactly the same thing. And in the realm of spiritual exercises we find that the person who teaches mental prayer does too. We have somehow to combine relaxation with activity… The personal conscious self being a kind of small island in the midst of an enormous area of consciousness... What has to be relaxed is the personal self, the self that tries too hard, that thinks it knows what is what, that uses language. This has to be relaxed in order that the multiple powers at work within the deeper and wider self may come through and function as they should. In all psychophysical skills we have this curious fact of the law of reversed effort: the harder we try, the worse we do the thing."

Photo of Tove Jansson

Tove Jansson // "I want to show you cities and landscapes and teach you how to look at things in new ways and how to get along in places you don’t already know inside out. I want to put some life in you."

Photo of James Baldwin

James Baldwin // "Quite unpredictable things happen when the bulk of the population attains what we think of as a high cultural level... And this, I think, is because the effort of a Schoenberg or a Picasso (or a William Faulkner or an Albert Camus) has nothing to do, at bottom, with physical comfort, or indeed with comfort of any other kind. But the aim of the people who rise to this high cultural level...is precisely comfort for the body and the mind. The artistic objects by which they are surrounded cannot possibly fulfill their original function of disturbing the peace...which is still the only method by which the mind can be improved...they bear witness instead to the attainment of a certain level of economic stability and a certain thin measure of sophistication. But art and ideas come out of the passion and torment of experience: it is impossible to have a real relationship to the first if one’s aim is to be protected from the second."