Fritz Wotruba Quote

What nevertheless subsists is the desire of an absolute ideal form, a form which can adapt itself to any setting and to any scale.


p. 7 - The Human Form: Sculpture, Prints, and Drawings, 1977


What nevertheless subsists is the desire of an absolute ideal form, a form which can adapt itself to any setting and to any scale.

What nevertheless subsists is the desire of an absolute ideal form, a form which can adapt itself to any setting and to any scale.

What nevertheless subsists is the desire of an absolute ideal form, a form which can adapt itself to any setting and to any scale.

What nevertheless subsists is the desire of an absolute ideal form, a form which can adapt itself to any setting and to any scale.