Taste Quotes
23 quotations about Taste
What is exhilarating in bad taste is the aristocratic pleasure of giving offense.
A man's palate can, in time, become accustomed to anything.
Bad taste is a species of bad morals.
Between good sense and good taste there lies the difference between a cause and its effect.
No taste is so acquired as that for someone else's quality of mind.
Every orientation presupposes a disorientation.
Taste is the feminine of genius.
Taste is nothing but an enlarged capacity for receiving pleasure from works of imagination.
My tastes are aristocratic, my actions democratic.
Taste cannot be controlled by law.
Taste may change, but inclination never.
What is food to one man is bitter poison to others.
Good taste is the first refuge of the non creative. It is the last ditch stand of the artist.
Errors of taste are very often the outward sign of a deep fault of sensibility.
All of life is a dispute over taste and tasting.
Taste is tiring like good company.
Taste is the enemy of creativeness.
Ah, good taste! What a dreadful thing! Taste is the enemy of creativeness.
I wish you all manner of prosperity, with a little more taste.
Good taste is the worst vice ever invented.
Taste has no system and no proofs.
To possess taste, one must have some soul.
Good taste is the excuse I have given for leading such a bad life.
Authors on Taste
Charles Baudelaire
Napoleon Bonaparte
Christian Nevell Bovee
Jean De La Bruyere
Cyril Connolly
Hans Magnus Enzensberger
Lord Edward Fitzgerald
William Hazlitt
Victor Hugo
Thomas Jefferson
Francois De La Rochefoucauld
Lucretius
Marshall Mcluhan
Jonathan Miller
Friedrich Nietzsche
Francis Picabia
Pablo Picasso
Alain-Rene Le Sage
Dame Edith Sitwell
Susan Sontag