"For art to exist, for any sort of aesthetic activity to exist, a certain physiological precondition is indispensable: intoxication"
About this Quote
The subtext is anti-ascetic. Nietzsche’s late work is a long indictment of cultures that moralize weakness and call it virtue. If your ideal is restraint, purity, self-denial, then art becomes suspicious: too sensuous, too disruptive, too attached to pleasure and illusion. Intoxication names the opposite posture - not escapism, but an energized yes to appearances, to excess, to the productive lie. In that state, the artist doesn’t submit to the world’s meanings; they generate meanings.
Context matters: Nietzsche is writing against the long European habit of treating reason as the adult in the room and the body as a problem to be managed. He’s also revising his own earlier romance with Wagnerian transcendence. Here, the “ecstasy” isn’t necessarily mystical; it’s muscular, terrestrial: the creator’s heightened confidence that form can be imposed, that chaos can be stylized. Art, in this view, isn’t made by neutral observers. It’s made by people temporarily overfilled with life.
Quote Details
| Topic | Art |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Götzen-Dämmerung (Twilight of the Idols) (Friedrich Nietzsche, 1889)
Evidence: Zur Psychologie des Künstlers. - Damit es Kunst giebt, damit es irgend ein ästhetisches Thun und Schauen giebt, dazu ist eine physiologische Vorbedingung unumgänglich: der Rausch. (Chapter: "Streifzüge eines Unzeitgemässen" (Skirmishes of an Untimely Man), section 8: "Zur Psychologie des Künstlers"). This is the original German wording in Nietzsche’s own text (Götzen-Dämmerung). The widely-circulated English quote is a translation/paraphrase of this sentence, often rendered as: “For art to exist, for any sort of aesthetic activity (or perception) to exist, a certain physiological precondition is indispensable: intoxication.” The passage appears in the chapter "Streifzüge eines Unzeitgemässen" (often translated "Skirmishes of an Untimely Man" or similar), aphorism/section 8, titled "Toward a psychology of the artist" / "Zur Psychologie des Künstlers." The book was written in 1888 and first published in 1889. Page numbers vary by edition, so the most stable locator is chapter + section number. Other candidates (1) The Very Best of Friedrich Nietzsche (David Graham, 2014) compilation95.8% ... For art to exist, for any sort of aesthetic activity to exist, a certain physiological precondition is indispensa... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Nietzsche, Friedrich. (2026, February 18). For art to exist, for any sort of aesthetic activity to exist, a certain physiological precondition is indispensable: intoxication. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-art-to-exist-for-any-sort-of-aesthetic-245/
Chicago Style
Nietzsche, Friedrich. "For art to exist, for any sort of aesthetic activity to exist, a certain physiological precondition is indispensable: intoxication." FixQuotes. February 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-art-to-exist-for-any-sort-of-aesthetic-245/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"For art to exist, for any sort of aesthetic activity to exist, a certain physiological precondition is indispensable: intoxication." FixQuotes, 18 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-art-to-exist-for-any-sort-of-aesthetic-245/. Accessed 27 Feb. 2026.







