He who is not willing to ask the contribution of any mind other than his own will soon find himself reduced to the most miserable of all imitations, which is to say the imitation of his own works.


As quoted in: Nineteenth-century Theories of Art (University of California Press, 1987), p. 117


He who is not willing to ask the contribution of any mind other than his own will soon find himself reduced to the most miserable of all imitations,...

He who is not willing to ask the contribution of any mind other than his own will soon find himself reduced to the most miserable of all imitations,...

He who is not willing to ask the contribution of any mind other than his own will soon find himself reduced to the most miserable of all imitations,...

He who is not willing to ask the contribution of any mind other than his own will soon find himself reduced to the most miserable of all imitations,...