| 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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| [Photography] is a way of feeling, of touching, | A great photograph is one that fully expresses |
| of loving. What you have caught on film is | what one feels, in the deepest sense, about |
| captured forever . . . it remembers little things, | what is being photographed. - Ansel |
| long after you have forgotten everything. | Adams |
| - Aaron Siskind | |
| | You learn to see by practice. It's just like |
| It is not the language of painters but the | playing tennis, you get better the more you |
| language of nature which one should listen to. | play. The more you look around at things, the |
| . . . The feeling for the things themselves, for | more you see. The more you photograph, the |
| reality, is more important than the feeling for | more you realize what can be photographed |
| pictures. - Vincent Van Gogh | and what can't be photographed. You just have |
| | to keep doing it. - Eliot Porter |
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Chicago |
Dallas |
Omaha |
Memphis |
Yonkers |
Champaign |
Northbrook |
Brooklyn |
Farmington |
Paris |
Ormond Beach |
Oak Forest |
Collinsville |
Webster |
Mifflintown |
Metairie |
Fredericksburg |
Bowling Green |
Waynesboro |
Pleasanton |
Marshall |
Mechanicsburg |
Columbia |
Eureka |
Lugoff |
Fisher Island |
New Stanton |
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| Pictures you have taken have an influence on | My own eyes are no more than scouts on a |
| those that you are going to make. | preliminary search, for the camera's eye may |
| That's life! - John Sexton | entirely change my idea. - Edward |
| | Weston |
| ...words and pictures can work together to | |
| communicate more powerfully than either | The virtue of the camera is not the power it |
| alone. -William Albert Allard | has to transform the photographer into an |
| | artist, but the impulse it gives him to keep on |
| Photography records the gamut of feelings | looking. - Brooks Anderson |
| written on the human face, the beauty of the | |
| earth and skies that man has inherited and the | |
| wealth and confusion man has created. | |
| - Edward Steichen | |
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