| A mad, keen photographer needs to get out | Above all, it's hard learning to live with vivid |
| into the world and work and make mistakes. | mental images of scenes I cared for and failed |
| - Sam Abell | to photograph. It is the edgy existence within |
| | me of these unmade images that is the only |
| One should really use the camera as though | assurance that the best photographs are yet to |
| tomorrow you'd be stricken blind. | be made. - Sam Abell |
| - Dorothea Lange | |
| | [Photography] is a way of feeling, of touching, |
| The virtue of the camera is not the power it | of loving. What you have caught on film is |
| has to transform the photographer into an | captured forever . . . it remembers little things, |
| artist, but the impulse it gives him to keep on | long after you have forgotten everything. |
| looking. - Brooks Anderson | - Aaron Siskind |
|
|
Austin |
Chicago |
Bayside |
Sumter |
Orange Park |
Slidell |
Charlotte |
Pasadena |
Fort Myers Beach |
Monterey |
San Francisco |
North Bergen |
Morrisville |
Hannibal |
Tucumcari |
San Benito |
Atascadero |
Carrollton |
Fairfield |
St Charles |
Northwood |
West Yellowstone |
Montgomery |
Brookhaven |
Plant City |
Kansas City |
East Peoria |
Woonsocket |
Attleboro |
|
|
| Memory is very important, the memory of | You can find pictures anywhere. It's simply a |
| each photo taken, flowing at the same speed | matter of noticing things and organizing them. |
| as the event. During the work, you have to be | You just have to care about what's around you |
| sure that you haven't left any holes, that you've | and have a concern with humanity and the |
| captured everything, because afterwards it will | human comedy. - Elliott Erwitt |
| be too late. - Henri Cartier Bresson | |
| | A picture is the expression of an impression. If |
| Photography records the gamut of feelings | the beautiful were not in us, how would we |
| written on the human face, the beauty of the | ever recognize it? - Ernst Haas |
| earth and skies that man has inherited and the | |
| wealth and confusion man has created. | |
| - Edward Steichen | |
|