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Art & Creativity Quote by Edmond De Goncourt

"A painting in a museum hears more ridiculous opinions than anything else in the world"

About this Quote

A museum painting, De Goncourt implies, isn’t just an artwork; it’s a captive audience. Hung in a public shrine where people feel licensed to pronounce, it becomes the silent recipient of everyone’s half-digested philosophy, social signaling, and tourist fatigue. The joke lands because the painting “hears” nothing, yet is made to endure an endless soundtrack of certainty. Personification lets De Goncourt mock the viewers rather than the art: the canvas is dignified; the commentary is the clown show.

The line carries the distinctive acid of a 19th-century man of letters watching culture become a spectator sport. De Goncourt moved in Parisian art circles during a period when museums were increasingly public institutions and taste was becoming democratized, then monetized, then performed. In that setting, the “ridiculous opinions” aren’t merely bad takes; they’re the social function of the museum itself. People don’t just look. They establish identity: provincial versus Parisian, bourgeois versus bohemian, cultivated versus merely wealthy. The gallery becomes a theater of class anxiety where everyone auditions as someone who “gets it.”

There’s a defensive tenderness underneath the sneer. De Goncourt is protecting art’s autonomy against the chatter that tries to domesticate it into moral lessons, plot summaries, investment advice, or personal confession. He’s also puncturing the modern reflex to turn aesthetic experience into instant commentary. The painting endures; our opinions arrive loud, fragile, and convinced they’re the main event.

Quote Details

TopicArt
Source
Verified source: Idées et sensations (Edmond De Goncourt, 1866)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Ce qui entend le plus de bêtises dans le monde est peut-être un tableau de musée. (Page 94 (in the 1904 Charpentier/Fasquelle reprint scan; original 1866 pagination may differ)). This is the French original in Edmond & Jules de Goncourt’s own work. The commonly-circulated English version (“A painting in a museum hears more ridiculous opinions than anything else in the world”) is a loose translation/paraphrase of this sentence. The earliest publication of Idées et sensations is 1866 (often described as selected extracts/maxims drawn from their Journal). The linked PDF is a 1904 reprint (Bibliothèque-Charpentier / Eugène Fasquelle); it reliably contains the text, but its page number may not match the 1866 first edition’s pagination.
Other candidates (1)
If Ignorance Is Bliss, Why Aren't There More Happy People? (John Lloyd, John Mitchinson, 2009) compilation95.0%
... A painting in a museum hears more ridiculous opinions than anything else in the world . EDMOND DE GONCOURT Every ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Goncourt, Edmond De. (2026, February 15). A painting in a museum hears more ridiculous opinions than anything else in the world. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-painting-in-a-museum-hears-more-ridiculous-53244/

Chicago Style
Goncourt, Edmond De. "A painting in a museum hears more ridiculous opinions than anything else in the world." FixQuotes. February 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-painting-in-a-museum-hears-more-ridiculous-53244/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A painting in a museum hears more ridiculous opinions than anything else in the world." FixQuotes, 15 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-painting-in-a-museum-hears-more-ridiculous-53244/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.

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A Painting in a Museum Hears More Ridiculous Opinions
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About the Author

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Edmond De Goncourt (May 26, 1822 - July 16, 1896) was a Writer from France.

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