Sentences with Ugliness, Sentences about Ugliness in English

Sentences with Ugliness, Sentences about Ugliness in English

1. Beauty is variable, ugliness is constant.

2. Beauty in art is often nothing but ugliness subdued.

3. Ugliness is in a way superior to beauty because it lasts.

4. I have no right to beauty. I had been condemned to masculine ugliness.

5. Familiarity is a magician that is cruel to beauty but kind to ugliness.

6. Time takes the ugliness and horror out of death and turns it into beauty.

7. God gives us the ugliness so we don’t take the beautiful things in life for granted.

8. What I like about cities is that everything is king size, the beauty and the ugliness.

9. Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months.

10. Love and war always go together. They are the peaks of human emotion! Evil and good, beauty and ugliness.

11. It is very necessary to have markers of beauty left in a world seemingly bent on making the most evil ugliness.

12. Part of the reason for the ugliness of adults, in a child’s eyes, is that the child is usually looking upwards, and few faces are at their best when seen from below.

13. Abstraction brings the world into more complex, variable relations it can extract beauty, alternative topographies, ugliness, and intense actualities from seeming nothingness.

14. I was amazed and upset by the looks I got just walking around the studio… It illuminates the ugliness and the beauty that exists within each of us, and that’s what this story represents to me.

15. The opposite of love is not hate, it’s indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it’s indifference. The opposite of faith is not heresy, it’s indifference. And the opposite of life is not death, it’s indifference.

16. I like to have Chinese furniture in my home as a constant and painful reminder of how much has been destroyed in China. The contrast between the beauty of the past and the ugliness of the modern is nowhere sharper than in China.

17. A lot of us grow up and we grow out of the literal interpretation that we get when we’re children, but we bear the scars all our life. Whether they’re scars of beauty or scars of ugliness, it’s pretty much in the eye of the beholder.

18. Who knows better than artists how much ugliness there is on the way to beauty, how many ghastly, mortifying missteps, how many days of granitic blockheadedness and dismaying ineptitude there is on the way to accomplishment, how partial all accomplishment is, how incomplete?

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