"There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer"
-Ansel Adams
— 10.06.2007, 10:34:06
\"There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer\"
-Ansel Adams
— 10.06.2007, 10:34:06
...
"Pick a theme and work it to exhaustion... the subject must be something you truly love or truly hate."
-Dorothea Lange
— 25.05.2007, 07:50:08
\"Pick a theme and work it to exhaustion... the subject must be something you truly love or truly hate.\"
-Dorothea Lange
— 25.05.2007, 07:50:08
Ansel Adams, who refers to photographers as artists, points out: \'Some of the worst artists, after all, are the most sincere... the only things that distinguish the photographer from everybody else are his pictures,\' he should be judged by them, he argues, because \'major art, by definition, can stand independent of its maker\'\".
— 25.05.2007, 07:48:38
...
Ansel Adams, who refers to photographers as artists, points out: 'Some of the worst artists, after all, are the most sincere... the only things that distinguish the photographer from everybody else are his pictures,' he should be judged by them, he argues, because 'major art, by definition, can stand independent of its maker'".
...
"There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer" -Ansel Adams
— 10.06.2007, 10:34:06
\"There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer\" -Ansel Adams
— 10.06.2007, 10:34:06
...
"Pick a theme and work it to exhaustion... the subject must be something you truly love or truly hate." -Dorothea Lange
— 25.05.2007, 07:50:08
\"Pick a theme and work it to exhaustion... the subject must be something you truly love or truly hate.\" -Dorothea Lange
— 25.05.2007, 07:50:08
Ansel Adams, who refers to photographers as artists, points out: \'Some of the worst artists, after all, are the most sincere... the only things that distinguish the photographer from everybody else are his pictures,\' he should be judged by them, he argues, because \'major art, by definition, can stand independent of its maker\'\".
— 25.05.2007, 07:48:38
...
Ansel Adams, who refers to photographers as artists, points out: 'Some of the worst artists, after all, are the most sincere... the only things that distinguish the photographer from everybody else are his pictures,' he should be judged by them, he argues, because 'major art, by definition, can stand independent of its maker'".
— 25.05.2007, 07:48:38