Aphorisms by Peter Schmidt

Posted on August 10, 2012
Filed Under Aphorisms, metaphor | 4 Comments

Thanks to Jim Finnegan, proprietor of the ursprache blog and author of the aphoristically amazing Tramp Freighter, I read Peter Schmidt’s The Thoughts Behind the Thoughts, just published by Mindmade Books. The German-English artist Schmidt co-authored the enigmatic aphorisms of Oblique Strategies (Geary’s Guide, p. 233) with Brian Eno. According to Mindmade’s Guy Bennett, “In 1970 Peter Schmidt created this mixed-media work by combining extant prints from his studio and aphoristic writings mined from his journals. Sets of 55 ‘thoughts’ were assembled onto thick card stock, boxed, and given away to friends, family, and colleagues, such as Jasia Reichardt, Robert Wyatt, and Brian Eno. In exploring the pathways leading to the creative process, they constitute a sort of ante-ars poetica, and in so doing strongly prefigure the Oblique Strategies, which Schmidt later created in collaboration with Brian Eno.” Schmidt’s Thoughts are a bit more ethereal than Oblique Strategies but have the same kind of surreal practicality, as applicable to daily life as to artistic dilemmas. A sampling is below. Order the chapbook here.

 

You don’t save time
by going faster

 

Depression is a form
of cowardice

 

The scales are good
if you know how they err

 

Avoid misplaced hungers

 

You cant keep stopping
all the time just to be
yourself

Comments

4 Responses to “Aphorisms by Peter Schmidt”

  1. Lori Ellison on August 14th, 2012 4:51 pm

    These are as pithy yet enigmatic as it gets.

  2. marty rubin on August 14th, 2012 6:42 pm

    If you’re in a hurry, don’t go.

  3. Jay Friedenberg on August 29th, 2012 4:32 pm

    When we slow down, we may actually speed up (save time), is another way to phrase his first.

  4. marty rubin on September 15th, 2012 2:08 pm

    Tears have always been easier to shed than explain.

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