You have to see a building to comprehend it. Photographs cannot convey the experience, nor film.

You can get anything from Mozilla Firefox-based themes to nature themes to your own photographs.

I did find a wonderful girl last year, but the photographs that we did were more about motorcars.

I don't take any photographs. I travel a lot by myself, and I feel weird taking photos on my own.

I never question what to do, it tells me what to do. The photographs make themselves with my help.

Our photographs are filthier and our stories are more disgusting. We make no effort to be artistic.

You can easily take photographs at a wedding - no one would question it. But funerals are different.

I became an adult in an extreme way. I was recently sorting some old photographs and I found another.

You get a lot of people requesting photographs but I tend to keep myself to myself, pull my cap down.

The newspapers turn a blind eye to how they get their material as long as they have great photographs.

I get into all sorts of trouble with my publicists and with newspapers because I won't do photographs.

I don't use composers. I research music the way I research the photographs or the facts in my scripts.

Most of the photographs people take with their cameraphones are of little value in terms of documentary.

I barely remembered my father; I'm confused between genuine memory and the few photographs that survived.

Photographs are things that should be pinned on a wall, and when you stop liking them - just tear them up!

The most interesting thing was looking out the window and taking photographs of different places on Earth.

I look back at old photographs and videotapes, and I go, Who was I trying to be? Who was I doing this for?

The notion of time bothers me. You look at thirty-year-old photographs and realize how the time has passed.

The way we dress on 'Mad Men' is so associated with old photographs, with people's parents and grandparents.

Creating films and photographs through situations that few others could experience is my life's inspiration.

Some guys can run fast, some guys can sing, I found I could take photographs that people were interested in.

A lot of people who look at my photographs think it is an easy joke, but it does take a bit of thinking about.

Even the photographs of Henri Cartier-Bresson, with all due respect to him, are notoriously burned and dodged.

If I feel confident wearing something, I think it translates in photographs. It changes my demeanor and posture.

I still like to walk around and take photographs, but it's hard to do that if a lot of people are looking at you.

I'm not a businesswoman... I never looked after my negatives and you need that to prove you took the photographs.

I like dark humor. I think the world is very funny and tragic, and my photographs are basically dark Jewish humor.

I feed on art more than I ever do on photographs. I can admire photography, but I wouldn't go to it out of hunger.

The producers came across some of my photographs. They thought that I resembled Ambedkar closely. So they invited me.

I like to choose the people I take photographs of, but when you make your living off it, you've got to take everybody.

Sometimes I've gotten photographs back and people have literally shaven off pieces of me, and I tell them to put it back.

When words become unclear, I shall focus with photographs. When images become inadequate, I shall be content with silence.

Biographers search for traces, for evidence of activity, for signs of movement, for letters, for diaries, for photographs.

I always take photographs when I attend a funeral. Most people there know who I am and expect me to be there with my camera.

I've always painted or drawn pictures or taken still photographs; now I shoot movies. It's just about making images, really.

For me, I've got no interest in being a celebrity, and I have no interest in doing photographs, going to this party or that.

My wife made me a book of photographs she took of our road trip across the United States. Makes for a good coffee table book.

I really like the structure of my body. It moves well, it looks good, it photographs well, it understands gesture and nuance.

I've always been interested in photographs, collecting them not systematically but randomly. They get lost, then turn up again.

I've exhibited quite a few of my photographs. I expand them digitally till they're very big. It's an art school thing, I suppose.

While in college, I used to get my ideas from photographs in 'National Geographic.' I started painting palm trees and motorboats.

I take photographs with love, so I try to make them art objects. But I make them for myself first and foremost - that is important.

One of the most cherished photographs in my life is a picture of me with John Lennon - who I met back in 1971 at an anti-war rally.

In school I was in the dark room all the time, and I've always collected stray photographs; there's a great deal of memory in them.

No one could possibly look all the time like my photographs. It is dreadfully hard to live up to them. They stare at me everywhere.

I know plenty of people who do, who get their holidays paid for and in return have their photographs taken on the beach, but not me.

If there is any jarring at all in my photographs, it's because we are so used to ingesting pictures of everywhere looking beautiful.

I have a toy giraffe on my bed. I've got photographs over my desk as well as a mask of a giraffe in my kitchen. I am totally hooked.

I left Facebook after Facebook groups began appearing about me and suddenly your personal photographs start becoming public property.

I have photographs taken of me at the time I was addicted, and thought I looked good. I see them today and realize my eyes were dead.

Share This Page