| Once photography enters your bloodstream, | Sometimes you can tell a large story with a |
| it's like a disease. - Anon | tiny subject. - Eliot Porter |
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| There is nothing worse than a sharp image of | No place is boring, if you've had a good |
| a fuzzy concept. - Ansel Adams | night's sleep and have a pocket full of |
| | unexposed film. - Robert Adams |
| [Photography] is a way of feeling, of touching, | |
| of loving. What you have caught on film is | A picture is the expression of an impression. If |
| captured forever . . . it remembers little things, | the beautiful were not in us, how would we |
| long after you have forgotten everything. | ever recognize it? - Ernst Haas |
| - Aaron Siskind | |
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| One should really use the camera as though | Photography is about finding out what can |
| tomorrow you'd be stricken blind. | happen in the frame. When you put four |
| - Dorothea Lange | edges around some facts, you change those |
| | facts. - Gary Winogrand |
| Photography suits the temper of this ageof | |
| active bodies and minds. It is a perfect | Photography records the gamut of feelings |
| medium for one whose mind is teeming with | written on the human face, the beauty of the |
| ideas, imagery, for a prolific worker who | earth and skies that man has inherited and the |
| would be slowed down by painting or | wealth and confusion man has created. |
| sculpting, for one who sees quickly and acts | - Edward Steichen |
| decisively, accurately. - Edward Weston | |
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