A collection makes its own demands. Many artists have been collectors. I think of it rather as an illness. I felt it was using up too much energy.
Howard HodgkinI don't really have a historical overview of my work at all. I'm not an art historian. I don't see that there's this period and that period.
Howard HodgkinEventually, a collection ceases to be a personal indulgence and assumes its own identity. In fact, it becomes a thing in its own right - rather like Frankenstein's monster.
Howard HodgkinYou keep on balancing and balancing and balancing until the picture wins, because then the subject's turned into the picture.
Howard HodgkinI want my pictures to be things. I want them to be made up of marks that are physically and individually self-sufficient.
Howard HodgkinMy friends tend to be writers. I think writers and painters are really all the same-we just sit in our rooms.
Howard HodgkinI'm vulnerable to criticism. Any artist is, because you work alone in your studio and, until recently, critics were the only way you'd get any feedback.
Howard HodgkinIn the United States there has been a kind of a structure in the Modern art world. The New York School was nearly a coherent thing-for a minute.
Howard HodgkinThe picture surface recedes just as much in the 20th century as it did in the 15th. The techniques of making pictures have hardly changed.
Howard HodgkinI find old copies of National Gallery catalogues, which are written in the dryest possible prose, infinitely soothing.
Howard HodgkinI don't look at the work of my contemporaries very much; I tend to look at pictures by dead artists. It's much easier to get near their paintings.
Howard HodgkinIn England, it's thought to be morally suspect to worry about what your surroundings look like.
Howard HodgkinCollecting has been my great extravagance. It's a way of being. I collect for the same reason that I eat too much-I'm one of nature's shoppers.
Howard HodgkinA painting is finished when the subject comes back, when what has caused the painting to be made comes back as an object.
Howard Hodgkin