| Sometimes you can tell a large story with a | Photography is my passion. - Alfred |
| tiny subject. - Eliot Porter | Stieglitz |
| | |
| Keep it simple. - Alfred Eienstaedt | "Simply look with perceptive eyes at the |
| | world about you, and trust to your own |
| You can find pictures anywhere. It's simply a | reactions and convictions. Ask yourself: |
| matter of noticing things and organizing them. | "Does this subject move me to feel, think |
| You just have to care about what's around you | and dream? Can I visualize a print - my own |
| and have a concern with humanity and the | personal statement of what I feel and want to |
| human comedy. - Elliott Erwitt | convey - from the subject before me?" |
| | - Ansel Adams |
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Saginaw |
Denver |
Cuyahoga Falls |
Lincoln |
Casper |
Springfield |
Manteca |
Wadsworth |
Henderson |
Princeton |
Huntsville |
Monrovia |
Portsmouth |
Hoover |
High Point |
Delano |
Jackson |
Longview |
North Highlands |
Detroit |
International Falls |
Muncie |
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| Photography is about finding out what can | The camera makes everyone a tourist in other |
| happen in the frame. When you put four | people's reality. - Susan Sontag |
| edges around some facts, you change those | |
| facts. - Gary Winogrand | The virtue of the camera is not the power it |
| | has to transform the photographer into an |
| You've got to push yourself harder. You've got | artist, but the impulse it gives him to keep on |
| to start looking for pictures nobody else could | looking. - Brooks Anderson |
| take. You've got to take the tools you have and | |
| probe deeper. - William Albert Allard | One should really use the camera as though |
| | tomorrow you'd be stricken blind. |
| | - Dorothea Lange |
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