“… [T]o me, craft work is the ultimate. Maybe I got this idea from the autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini, who was employed as a sculptor to the state and church, making coins and things. While he admired Michelangelo, he also made fun of his spiritual angst with art. I think a master craftsman is someone who is unpretentious. He has a physical object in front of him and, while he works with a higher aim, he doesn’t let his personality get in the way of his art. It’s simply about the task at hand and to make it as functional and necessary to the world as he can. So much of what people are making now is unnecessary. It’s useless. I want to make something that’s useful to someone, somewhere.” — Cass Mccombs, Interview on Pitchfork. (via stervenson) December 16, 2011