Laurie Anderson Quotes (49 Quotes)


    Why do you have to translate and decode things? Just let the image be. It will have a special kind of reality that it won't once it's decoded.

    If there are bases on the moon, that would be the end of the moon as we know it.

    It's just such a great miracle when things do work, and they work for such a wild variety of crazy reasons.

    When you think of the Caribbean today, you think of clear blue warm water, ... Probably about 12 million years ago, it was more like the eastern Pacific it was a bit cooler. There was greater seasonal change in temperatures, and there were more nutrients around.

    People are really suffering these days. There's a lot of corporate triumph and a lot of personal despair as they wonder what are they working for.


    I'm an average enough person to point to the things I've gotten to see that are awe-inspiring.

    Besides all those whaling details, Moby Dick is about someone who's looking for something so huge, something they've wanted all their life, yet they know when they find it, it will kill them.

    Writing about music is like dancing about architecture.

    I'm not usually where I think I am. It's kind of spooky.

    My work is more about trying to ask good questions and not trying to come up with big shows. Every fashion company is doing that, every car company is doing that.


    A lot of the work in United States is highly critical of technology. I'm using 15,000 watts of power and 18 different pieces of electronic equipment to say that.

    I just sort of wish people would dance differently. It reminds me of teenage sex.

    A lot of words in English confuse the idea of life and electricity, like the word livewire.

    My secret dream is to write an epic poem. That's probably the most pretentious thing I've said.


    One of the things I learned from working on the Olympics was, the world does not need another big multimedia show.

    A lot of artists who have a certain style are expected to more or less keep doing their style. It's so easy to get into that rut of production.

    At the School of Visual Arts in New York, you can get your degree in Net art, which is really a fantastic way of thinking of theater in new ways.

    Writers want to summarize: What does this mean? What did we learn from this? That's a very 19th-century way of thinking about art, because it assumes that it should make our lives better or teach us something.

    It's good to take a longer view and think, What would I really like to do if I had no limitations whatsoever?

    The only stuff I don't like are Broadway musicals. I hate them. I don't even like to talk about it. I can't bear musicals.


    Paradise is exactly like where you are right now... only much, much better.

    I have written a lot about snakes. There's something pretty primordial about it.

    I've never really had a hobby, unless you count art, which the IRS once told me I had to declare as a hobby since I hadn't made money with it.



    I don't take compliments so well. I always hang my head and shuffle and kind of try to immediately forget.

    People only stutter at the beginning of the word. They're not afraid when they get to the end of the word. There's just regret.

    Something that has so much power must have life. Instruments have life.

    I think artists who are attracted to working on the Net will adjust their work to the capabilities of a very small screen.

    The thing that's characteristic of my performance is that I literally do drag the whole studio onto the stage.


    I see and write things first as an artist, second as a woman, and third as a New Yorker. All three have built-in perspectives that aren't neutral.

    Performance art is about joy, about making something that's so full of kind of a wild joy that you really can't put into words.

    The promoter called and said, 'What should we do' People were calling to say they were sure it was canceled, but I thought that to have a public event that night would be a good idea.

    I see that it has huge benefits for us understanding how and why diversity changes over time and how that might be applied to evaluate potential effects of future environment and climate changes,

    I so much appreciate it when anybody tries to make something and tries to be an artist - I'm happy to see the work.

    As a New Yorker, I'm someone who lives on an island and looks across to America.

    I think a lot of people in Washington are extremely suspicious of NASA.

    I have written a few children's books. The first book that I wrote was for children. It was called "The Package", and it was a mystery story in pictures. It had no words.


    When love is gone, there's always justice. And when justice is gone, there's always force. And when force is gone, there's always Mom. Hi, Mom!


    My job is to make images and leave the decision-making and conclusion-drawing to other people.


    I really like books that you can kind of hear as much as think about, that are so graphic and visual.

    As an artist I'd choose the thing that's beautiful more than the one that's true.


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