| Memory is very important, the memory of | The camera makes everyone a tourist in other |
| each photo taken, flowing at the same speed | people's reality. - Susan Sontag |
| as the event. During the work, you have to be | |
| sure that you haven't left any holes, that you've | One should really use the camera as though |
| captured everything, because afterwards it will | tomorrow you'd be stricken blind. |
| be too late. - Henri Cartier Bresson | - Dorothea Lange |
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| Photography is about finding out what can | The virtue of the camera is not the power it |
| happen in the frame. When you put four | has to transform the photographer into an |
| edges around some facts, you change those | artist, but the impulse it gives him to keep on |
| facts. - Gary Winogrand | looking. - Brooks Anderson |
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San Francisco |
Chicago |
Dallas |
San Antonio |
Birmingham |
Cleveland |
Vancouver |
Norfolk |
Lubbock |
Richardson |
El Cajon |
Greenville |
Norwich |
Medford |
Oxford |
Great Neck |
West Bend |
Paris |
Concord |
Grayson |
Somerset |
Walnut Creek |
Warsaw |
Jean |
Walla Walla |
Erick |
Greensburg |
Cooperstown |
Galena |
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| Keep it simple. - Alfred Eienstaedt | Above all, it's hard learning to live with vivid |
| | mental images of scenes I cared for and failed |
| Sometimes you can tell a large story with a | to photograph. It is the edgy existence within |
| tiny subject. - Eliot Porter | me of these unmade images that is the only |
| | assurance that the best photographs are yet to |
| You learn to see by practice. It's just like | be made. - Sam Abell |
| playing tennis, you get better the more you | |
| play. The more you look around at things, the | Now to consult the rules of composition before |
| more you see. The more you photograph, the | making a picture is a little like consulting the |
| more you realize what can be photographed | law of gravitation before going for a walk. |
| and what can't be photographed. You just have | Such rules and laws are deduced from the |
| to keep doing it. - Eliot Porter | accomplished fact; they are the products of |
| | reflection . . . - Edward Weston |
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