„Art is a guaranty of sanity.“
Louise Bourgeois, "Art is a Guaranty of Sanity," title of 2000 drawing, Pencil on pink paper, 27.9 x 21.5 cm. Collection Museum of Modern Art, New York
Also found elsewhere as "Art is a guarantee(sic) of sanity, that is the most important thing I have said."
Variante: Art is a Guaranty of Sanity.
Ähnliche Zitate
— Julia Cameron, buch The Artist's Way
Quelle: The Artist's Way
— Kurt Schwitters German artist 1887 - 1948
Quelle: 1940s, I is Style (2000), p. 45 : in a letter (11 November 1940) to Käthe Steinitz, sent from the internment camp on Isle of Man, England.

„Sanity doesn’t suffer, ever.“
— Byron Katie American spiritual writer 1942
Loving What Is: Four Questions That Can Change Your Life (2002)

„Sanity and happiness are an impossible combination.“
— Mark Twain American author and humorist 1835 - 1910

„Sanity itself is a kind of convention.“
— Robert Louis Stevenson, buch The Silverado Squatters
The Hunter’s Family
The Silverado Squatters (1883)

„Collective madness is called sanity..“
— Paulo Coelho Brazilian lyricist and novelist 1947
Quelle: Veronika Decides to Die

— Clive Barker author, film director and visual artist 1952
Part Eleven “The Dream Season”, Chapter vi “Death Comes Home”, Section (p. 507)
(1987), BOOK THREE: OUT OF THE EMPTY QUARTER

„Sanity is a madness put to good uses.“
— George Santayana 20th-century Spanish-American philosopher associated with Pragmatism 1863 - 1952
Quelle: The Essential Santayana: Selected Writings

„Sanity is a small box; insanity is everything.“
— Charles Manson American criminal and musician 1934 - 2017

„I have seizures of momentary sanity.“
— Oscar Levant, buch The Memoirs of an Amnesiac
The Memoirs of an Amnesiac (1965)

„Poetry is an affair of sanity, of seeing things as they are“
— Philip Larkin English poet, novelist, jazz critic and librarian 1922 - 1985
Required Writing-Miscellaneous Pieces 1955-1982 Farrar Strauss 1984
Kontext: Poetry is an affair of sanity, of seeing things as they are, to recreate the familiar, eternalizing the poet's own perception in unique and original verbal form.