Lee Friedlander quotes:

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  • Photographs also show the way that the camera sees. It's not just me or you or anybody else. The camera does something that is different from our own setting.

  • [Garry Winogrand] was a bull of a man and the world his china shop.

  • At first, my presence in my photos was fascinating and disturbing. But as time passed and I was more a part of other ideas in my photos, I was able to add a giggle to those feelings.

  • Sometimes just the facts of the matter make it interesting.

  • The West to me is where the landscape is,

  • The camera is not merely a reflecting pool and the photographs are not exactly the mirror, mirror on the wall that speaks with a twisted tongue.

  • When you take a picture you haven't a clue that it is going to be what it is. Maybe you have a clue but you don't really know. There are too many possibilities. Part of the game is how many balls you can juggle. It is to me. When you are 12 you can juggle two. Maybe when you are 50 you can juggle five. That is an interesting concept to me: how much I can put in and still make it pull together?

  • ... a mysterious intersection of chance and attention that goes well beyond the existential surrealism of the 'decisive moment'.

  • ... photographs are so loaded with information. They're remarkable. As I said, you get both the tree and the forest.

  • Anything that looks like an idea is probably just something that has accumulated, like dust. It looks like I have ideas because I do books that are all on the same subject. That is just because the pictures have piled up on that subject. Finally I realize that I am really interested in it. The pictures make me realize that I am interested in something.

  • I retired from everything except work.

  • I suspect it is for one's self-interest that one looks at one's surroundings and one's self. This search is personally born and is indeed my reason and motive for making photographs.

  • I take more to the subject than to my ideas about it. I am not interested in any idea I have had, the subject is so demanding and so important.

  • If one really knew what one was doing, why do it? It seems to me if you had the answer why ask the question? The thing is there are so many questions.

  • It fascinates me that there is a variety of feeling about what I do. I'm not a premeditative photographer. I see a picture and I make it. If I had a chance, I'd be out shooting all the time. You don't have to go looking for pictures. The material is generous. You go out and the pictures are staring at you.

  • The idea that the snapshot would be thought of as a cult or movement is very tiresome to me and, I'm sure, confusing to others. It's a swell word I've always liked. It probably came about because it describes a basic fact of photography. In a snap, or small portion of time, all that the camera can consume in breadth and bite and light is rendered in astonishing detail: all the leaves on a tree, as well as the tree itself and all its surroundings.

  • The world makes up my pictures, not me.

  • With a camera like that you don't believe you're in the masterpiece business. It's enough to be able to peck at the world.

  • I always wanted to be a photographer. I was fascinated with the materials, but I never dreamed I would be having this much fun. I imagined something much less elusive, much more mundane.

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