I look at my first appointment book from 1965 and I get dizzy. I was constantly in a phone booth calling photographers.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Almost everybody I know has this sense of overdosing on information and getting dizzy living at post-human speeds.
The photographers are always around. Wherever I go, they start clicking incessantly. I am always like, 'At least give me a heads-up, as, many times, I look so disheveled. What will people think?'
I came to photography by accident.
There're only a few photographers I've ever felt really comfortable with.
I was known as a 35-mm photographer with a view-camera mentality.
I was walking down the street wearing glasses when the prescription ran out.
Well, I like to think that my illness has prevented me from rising to any number of dizzy heights.
I give so much credit to the 'Up' team who created appointment viewing on the weekends for us and some of the smartest conversations on television.
In 1985, I saw a tape of myself where my eyes were puffy. I looked very tired and bedraggled and not as youthful as I would like to have been.
At some point during my travels, I had a slight change of focus which would end up defining the rest of my career. I began taking pictures of people. In addition to all the buildings, street signs and fire hydrants, I started photographing some of the interesting humans that passed by me on the street.
No opposing quotes found.