All I really wanted to do was wildlife photography.
I take a lot of pride in my photography.
I like to get rid of things; I don't collect many things. But I do keep great photography and art books.
Of course, I won't be abandoning photography, because it is my life.
Every viewer is going to get a different thing. That's the thing about painting, photography, cinema.
Generally, the French highly promote culture and the arts, and photography is in their blood.
I think landscape photography in general is somewhat undervalued.
My son does a little photography, but he's not involved the way I was.
The clue to book jacket photography is to look friendly and approachable, but not too glamorous.
In the '70s, in Britain, if you were going to do serious photography, you were obliged to work in black-and-white. Color was the palette of commercial photography and snapshot photography.
Photography used to be not for the faint of heart. Its rigors would weed out the not-so-committed pretty quickly. You had to crank the f-stop ring yourself!
Like Robert Mapplethorpe, Helmut Newton, and so many others before me, sexual imagery has always been a part of my photography.
When I moved to New York I started to do a lot of TV commercials. It just kind of naturally evolved from still photography to commercials.
I hate profile photos.
Photography is not a fine art at all.
My uncle was a photographer for 'The Irish Times.'
The camera photographs what's there.
I'm so drawn to photography because you can convey a complex story in a single frame.
Perhaps 'photography' has become so all-pervasive that it no longer makes sense to think about it as a discreet practice or field of inquiry. In other words, perhaps 'photography,' as a meaningful cultural trope, is over.
I did painting before I did photography.